Aug 22
Magnolia Condo Project Succumbs to Foreclosure
Finished before it was even started, the Magnolia condo project was forced into foreclosure in July 2008.
The Magnolia was to have been a five-story condominium building close to the downtown area, consisting of 139 units priced at between $220,000 and $600,000. Amenities were to include private balconies or courtyards, an outdoor pool on the second floor, a fitness center, rooftop gardens, retail space, and granite counter tops among others. The project was estimated to cost $40 million and would have covered three acres on the corner of South Lamar and West Gibson Street.
A series of events, combine with bad luck and difficult topology, have scuppered plans for these luxury condos.
In February of 2007, the lender who was to finance the construction, Fremont Investment & Loan from Los Angeles, reneged on its loan promise. It seems the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) refused to allow the lender to fund any new projects, as regulators tighten the purse strings on a nationwide scale.
Then, in October of 2007, the development company, Avena Development LLC, attempted to sell the project, and it was reported they had a buyer. The deal fell through in June of 2008 and foreclosure proceedings loomed. The undisclosed buyer backed out of the project purchase when they failed to find a partner to commit to the project.
The site is in a prime location, close to downtown and in a corner lot. There are projects with tree preservation and topography that were threatening to raise construction costs. Still, experts are cautioning against panic, saying this incident is isolated and “is related more to the specifics of the project and to the overall slowdown in residential sales and does not necessarily indicate the beginning of a trend in foreclosures.”
