How much is a view worth?

How much is a view worth? Here is an excerpt from a MSN real estate.

 

It's a power thing

Real-estate market analyst Ernest V. Siracusa Jr. is experienced in pricing views in Southern California. He works for subdivision builders and developers, advising them on how much their new homes can sell for -- and how much more the same place with a panoramic sweep of the hills can command.

What makes people pay so dearly for a view? It's status, for one thing, says Siracusa, and the quiet and pleasure a view affords. Californians are particularly view crazy, he says. "It goes with the lifestyle of the population that lives here."

Also, you get privacy, an increasingly treasured commodity in a crazy, crowded world. "You don't have anybody behind you," he says. "Being on top of a hill separates you from people below."

There's the sense of freedom, of openness, of achievement, all highly valued by the human spirit. The feeling is, "'I own this place,' versus 'I'm cramped in a sardine can' where everybody's at the same level and you've got fences and houses and everybody's looking down at your yard."

A lot of science, a little intuition

When Siracusa launched The Siracusa Co. in Thousand Oaks, Calif., 35 years ago, he set about establishing some rules of thumb for himself. He analyzed the problem systematically over several years, comparing sale prices of identical subdivision homes (or methodically valuing and accounting for any differences) to arrive at a few guidelines for valuing a view.

"I set out to define this for myself in the real world," he says. "I tried to compare the same floor plans, lot sizes, get rid of the externals that could bias the price. I did it for a lot of tracts in a lot of different communities, looking at sale prices of new homes."

For example, he'd compare the sale price of a house on lot without a view ($314,990) with the price of an identical house near top of a hill with an unobstructed view ($344,990, a premium of 9.5%). Comparing each sale with others with similar types of views, he arrived at premium ranges for each category. The view premiums were remarkably similar in each category, he says.

"What really counts is the (ground level) view from the back, because that's where people live." A stunning view out the front door has little value, in Siracusa's opinion, because no one lives in the front of the house. "You can have a house literally across the street from open space, but a view from the front doesn't count. You give that zero view premium." What matters, he says, is what people see from the kitchen, master bedroom, dining and family rooms, the most-used rooms in a home.

Likewise, Siracusa gives little premium for second-story views. "It would be minimal, if I gave it anything. But take that same view and put it on the ground floor, it's worth a lot."

In high-rise buildings, view premiums rise with the elevator. "There's a status to being higher, and you tend to get a broader view as you go up higher," Siracusa says.

Pricing the view

Siracusa's research has been confirmed over time, at least in new subdivisions, he says. Here are the premiums he sees for homes in new Southern California subdivisions (with houses on each side and views ranging from 45 to 90 degrees):

  • 1% - 2.5%:A home on level ground overlooking unobstructed open space. For example, a house that would otherwise cost $300,000 would go for $307,500 (a 2.5% premium).
  • 3% - 5%: A home just high enough to look over rooftops with a partially obstructed view. "Not a real high-quality view," as Siracusa puts it.
  • 6% - 8%: A good unobstructed view but without much elevation; a home halfway up the hill, for example.
  • 9% - 12%: Atop the hill with an unobstructed view of a city or open space.
  • 15% - 20%: A water view. An outstanding, unobstructed view of a big lake or ocean can command up to 25% more in a development, Siracusa says. And oceanfront can cost 25% to 30% more. For example: A $500,000 house can run $625,000 with an outstanding water view. By the same token, a $1 million house jumps to $1,250,000 or more overlooking a lake.

It's a lot harder to isolate a view's value in older, resale homes. To do that, analysts compare prices of similar homes sold in the same market and time frame, eliminating all other differences but view. That's hard to do. Seemingly comparable houses can be quite different in subtle ways, including the quality of construction and materials, upgrades and maintenance, and those differences affect the price.

Among those who've tried to reduce a view's value to hard cash are Western Washington University marketing and finance professor Earl Benson and his colleagues. In the late '80s and '90s they scoured thousands of assessors' records in Bellingham, Wash., measured homes' distance from the water and performed fancy calculations to conclude that a $200,000 house with no view would sell for $317,600 if it had a full ocean view and $453,280 if it were right smack on the shore of a lake.

On average, Benson says, a full, unobstructed water view boosted a home's price about 60%; the closer the water, the higher the price. Partially blocked views still fetched a 10% to 20% premium. Today, with view properties even scarcer, he says, chances are that view premiums have risen: "The 60% that we estimated in the early '90s may be 80% or 100% today," he says.

 

 
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