Land
Development
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Introduction
Successful land development requires you as
the developer to go through a complex process of many interrelated parts.
While land development is both an art and a science, the most
important aspect of the process is its holistic nature. Each separate part
influences the others and a viable solution must take into account market
demands, budget constraints, and site conditions.
The process usually begins with an idea for the
creation of a new development that will serve the needs of the local
market. This new development should take its place as a good neighbor
within the local community by acknowledging its relationship to adjacent
land uses. It should also become economically viable for both its
inhabitants and the developer. Therefore, to produce a successful idea for
your project, you begin with a thorough understanding of what your
potential buyer needs and wants in a new development.
The Process
Instincts, timing, and planning play an important
role in creating a new development. Although you can cultivate sharp
instincts through experience, timing and planning can be improved if you
understand the process of land development and its various components. As
Figure 1.1 shows, creating a new development concept on a particular site
combines three distinct endeavors: researching existing conditions;
analyzing them for project opportunities, constraints, and costs; and
synthesizing the results into a coherent, functional plan that supports
the original development idea. The master plan is the basis for the design
of the development. It can consist of a drawing of the development's
layout on the site and a program, which is a written description of the
design components of lots, streets, and project amenities.
The process in which these three endeavors are
involved is not linear. At many points, you must retrace steps as you
discover new information and its effect on previous decisions. This
synthesizing information, discarding unworkable ideas, and then
reevaluating information to generate new ideas is the hallmark of the
process. Only when you appropriately modify original impressions and
decisions at various stages along the way can you produce a successful
project.
Where to Begin
You may approach the process from several different
standpoints. How it is begun influences the order of the process itself.
If you have already acquired a parcel of land, the process begins with
determining the most marketable use for the site. Another approach might
begin with a search for a suitable site that will support a previously
determined marketable idea. The process can also begin with efforts to
determine the best marketable idea for a given local area followed by the
search for the best site to accommodate the idea. Once the site and the
idea are placed together for serious consideration, the process of
researching, analyzing, and synthesizing data to produce the final master
plan is the same for each approach.
Key Elements
As described in Figure 1.2, the key elements of the
land development process are market research, site selection and analysis,
project design, site engineering, project costs, and financial feasibility
. Each element has a unique role to play. Market research involves
determining which type of buyers to capture; understanding their buying
power, lifestyle characteristics, and product demands; and matching
housing types and master plan concepts with those characteristics.
This part of the process can extend through to the
marketing and selling of the project.
Site selection and analysis involve developing a
list of desirable site characteristics; analyzing site conditions; and
evaluating all the physical, legal and political, and off-site
characteristics of a particular site for their contribution to the
project's success. Project design matches marketing information on buyer
preferences with site characteristics to produce a master plan and housing
types that best satisfy these requirements. Site engineering deals with
the physical handling of the topography and installing the infrastructure
to support the master plan.
Managing project costs involves determining both
soft costs (fees, marketing, and testing and investigating site
conditions) and hard costs (labor and materials) for the project together
with the schedule for completing each task. From this information, you can
then produce an accurate project cash flow. Financial feasibility refers
to determining the profitability of the project from sales forecasting and
project costs.
New Complexities
By providing housing, places of business, and jobs
for growing populations, land development remains an important part of the
national and local economies. However, in spite of its necessary role,
developers face more challenges in the form of regulatory requirements and
adverse site conditions than ever before. It is not uncommon now to
confront increased costs of site work and construction; shrinking
municipal budgets for providing community security, schools, and
infrastructure; and the growing public concern about decreasing
environmental quality, which many unfortunately associate with
development.
To compound these problems, growing public scrutiny
is producing more organized attempts to influence the way land is
developed. In many markets, the land with optimal development potential
has already been developed. Most of the remaining land contains many
restrictive qualities that caused developers to pass over it in the first
place. However, this land is frequently found in prime marketable
locations and may be worth developing if done correctly. But developing
this type of land profitably increases the importance of discovering,
analyzing, and synthesizing all the critical marketing, financial,
physical, legal and political, and off-site information to determine
project success.
The tenth edition of Land Development offers
you, the developer, a sound, general framework for successful land
development. However, each location can have different regulations,
development standards, and markets, so you are urged to become as familiar
as possible with the development process in your own community. Knowing
local conditions along with the general process will enhance your chances
of developing a successful project.
If you are a student of land development, use this
book to step into the professional developer's shoes. As the book walks
you through the process, try to imagine what it must be like to deal with
its many complexities on a daily basis. By the time you finish the book,
you should have a better grasp of the key components of this creative and
exciting process.
The Project Team
Successful land development relies on expertise from
a variety of professionals. Assembling the right mix of professionals and
consultants to provide the specialized knowledge required for creating a
viable project is one of the first milestones on the critical path to
project success.
An effective project team is needed to determine the
essential factors to investigate and analyze for each project. As the
project leader, you as the developer are responsible for assembling and
directing that project team. Primary members of the project team include
the people in charge of market research, financial analysis, land
planning, and design (see Figure 1.3). Once that team is assembled, proper
coordination of data and information from the professionals and
consultants is important to both project success and lower project costs.
Market Research and Financial Analysis
Consultants
You may either purchase market research information
or gather it with in-house capabilities. Similarly, an outside consultant
or in-house staff person may perform the financial analysis. The team
member responsible for market research directs efforts to determine the
appropriate buyer and discovers buyer preferences. The financial planner
determines the feasibility of the project under various sales rate
projections when all project costs are considered.
Project Planner
The project planner or director of the project
oversees the development of the master plan from the information about
buyer preferences and costs provided by marketing and financial planning,
as well as appropriate design concepts from other design team members. The
project planner might be a professional land planner, urban designer,
architect, or landscape architect. Although one of these professionals
might be in charge, each would require input from the other experts on the
project team during the process.
Another key member of the design team is the civil
engineer who might analyze all geotechnical conditions and determine
corresponding infrastructure requirements. The most Successful master
plans depend on the planner, architect, landscape architect, and engineer
working together to produce a developer's vision for the new development.
Auxiliary Advisers
At times, you may need to call in auxiliary project
consultants to help the primary team members in their decisions on the
master plan. These might include hydrologists, geologists, soil
scientists, environmental experts, construction managers, and attorneys.
The size of the project and the physical characteristics of the site will
help you select the kinds of consultants necessary. The project planner
should determine the need for additional consultants, advise you about
their respective roles, and coordinate the distribution of all information
among the project team.
The Developer
Successful integration of information from all
disciplines requires strong leadership. From the beginning, you should
clearly define the goals of the team to prevent duplication of work,
gathering of unnecessary information, and increased predesign and
preconstruction costs. You also need to clearly communicate up front how
information will be shared and the schedule for project deadlines. As
development progresses, you must coordinate through regular meetings the
efforts of team members as they create and implement the ideas of the
master plan. Throughout the process, provide clear guidance to keep the
team focused on those aspects of the project that are critical to its
success.
Although an effective project team is an expense
that you must bear up front, it can actually help to hold down the rising
costs of examining feasibility and complying with a more complex
regulatory climate. Changing regulations and political and environmental
impacts may create new project constraints and usually cannot be avoided.
However, an effective team can help you look for ways to turn project
constraints into opportunities for new designs with increased market
appeal.
One reason for this is that buyers have higher
expectations today about new developments. They expect more quality in
products tailored to their particular needs. They also expect more
customer service and follow-through after sale. Increasingly, quality in
the form of environmental and community sensitivity sells. Marketing a
development by emphasizing measures taken to preserve the natural features
of the land and integrity of the community can provide the foundation for
a quality-based approach with a strong appeal to the buyer.
Future Homebuyers
The so-called traditional family of mom, dad, a dog,
and one or more children no longer makes up most of the homebuying public.
In fact, the 1990 census reported that the traditional family represented
only 26.7 percent of U.S. households. Changing demographics show a
dramatic increase in older buyers, single parents with children, two
income families with no children, single buyers, and two unrelated single
buyers. These trends are expected to continue in the next 20 years and
future homebuyers will demand a different kind of product than the
traditional home and development.
Current trends translate into such new product
offerings as smaller, low-maintenance lots; access to public
transportation; fitness-oriented amenities; the two-master-suite home; and
convertible offices and bedrooms. As market niches grow more narrow, the
wise developer will continue to stay abreast of changing population
characteristics in order to provide the most marketable product in the
future.
Introduction |
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Land Development
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