HYBRID HOUSING


Builders and developers are cautiously optimistic that this style of living will grow in popularity

Star Tribune (Minneapolis)

MINNEAPOLIS

Mary Myss never has to paint her Chaska, Minn., home, mow the lawn or shovel her driveway. That’s because her walkout rambler is in Pioneer Point, a subdivision of single-family homes that are maintained by a homeowners’ association.

“It’s one of the best-kept secrets,” said Myss. “It’s amazing that more people don’t know about it.”

Before moving to Chaska, Myss and her children lived in a big house in Wayzata, Minn., with an equally big yard that she was fine with tending — until she wasn’t.

“What put me over the edge was coming home from work in the winter after a snowfall and I couldn’t get up the driveway,” she said.

At Pioneer Point, she still has her own entrance, her own yard and her own deck, but none of the work to care for them.

Her $220 monthly assoc- iation fee covers lawn care, snowplowing, exterior repairs, maintaining the common grounds and even blacktopping the driveway.

“When I’m home, I’m sitting on my deck barbecuing and playing with my grandchildren rather than dealing with maintenance issues,” she said.

This type of housing — called manor homes, villas, cottage homes or detached townhouses — is tailored to people who want the privacy of a traditional single-family home with the convenience of a condo.

And although it accounts for only a tiny slice of the real-estate pie, builders and developers are cautiously optimistic that this hybrid style of house will grow in popularity, partly because it’s designed for a growing population: retiring baby boomers.

“Many of my buyers are people who just want to lock the door and leave to go to the lake or to a second home in the winter,” said builder Forrest Harstad, whose 69-lot development offers homes ranging from $200,000 to $400,000.

In the past, Harstad has built twinhomes and townhouses, but he said customers were looking for “homes that don’t share a common wall but everything was taken care of.”

K. Hovnanian Homes, a national builder based in New Jersey, is aiming at the 55-plus crowd with its Four Seasons at Rush Creek in Maple Grove, Minn. Homes range from $260,000 to $400,000. Owners pay $260 a month for the tennis courts, clubhouse, pool and fitness center, as well as lawn care.

According to John Nelson, Minnesota division director of marketing, many of the buyers are snowbirds.

“We’ve done more than 100 of this type of housing developments across the country,” said Nelson. “But it’s more common in the Southern market and East Coast, where there are more retirees.”

In Minnesota, empty nesters and retirees aren’t the only ones attracted to the low-maintenance housing. Some builders have discovered that busy young professionals and families with young children are interested, too.

“We started with ramblers for empty-nesters, but now we’re doing two-stories for families with young kids who like that kind of atmosphere,” said Tom Budzynski, owner of TJB Homes, whose St. Andrews Village in Blaine, Minn., offers a community pool and a park. About half of the 60 homes, which start at $300,000, have been sold.

Budzynski said the “no snow, no mow” amenity is giving his development a competitive edge in a tough housing market. “We have a model in a nearby development that’s not association-maintained,” he said. “We’re getting a lot more action at St. Andrews.”

The upscale Crosby Cove, a collection of $2 million-plus mansions on a channel leading to Lake Minnetonka, has attracted a mix of young families and seniors, said Jennifer Cramer-Miller, vice president of L. Cramer Builders, who also owns a home there.

“There’s so many inherent benefits, such as noise reduction, and it also unifies the neighborhood because they maintain it together,” she said.

In most developments, the homeowners’ association hires a management company to take care of services or contract the work out themselves.

One of the perks is that all the mowing, trimming and weed-whacking is done on the same day, leaving the rest of the week quiet.

Monthly fees range from $95 for basic mowing and snowplowing to $260 depending on the range of services and neighborhood amenities such as community pools, docks and parks.

But not everyone wants to live in a managed subdivision.

Associations have guidelines and often reserve the right to approve landscaping, exterior modifications, even paint colors.

Some subdivisions don’t allow fences or swing sets and gardens are scrutinized in case they impede lawn mowing.

Myss has no issues with the restrictions. “I do have to get permission to do anything,” she said.

“I can’t paint my house purple, but I view that as an advantage. And everyone’s lawn looks fantastic.”

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