flexiblefullpage - default
Currently Reading

The Burgeoning BFR Market Gains a Major Investor

Advertisement
billboard - default

The Burgeoning BFR Market Gains a Major Investor

A Los Angeles-based investment firm plans to bring efficient designs to the fast-growing build-for-rent sector.


By
Novid Parsi, Utopia Contributing Editor
February 15, 2022
Multifamily build for rent complex - Oak Crest in Houston, TX
Oak Crest, one of the many multifamily developments recently acquired by TruAmerica, holds over 300 units. Photo courtesy TruAmerica

Even as home prices surge, the American dream of homeownership endures. “It’s not that people don’t want their own house, it’s that they can’t pay for it,” says Mitchell Rotta, senior managing director, TruAmerica MultiFamily.

In 2021, the median existing-home sales price was $346,900—an increase of $50,200 over the previous year, according to the National Association of Realtors. That was a jump of 16.9% in one year’s time.

“We need to provide a product that gives people what they’re looking for at the price points they can afford,” Rotta says.

TruAmerica believes that product is build-for-rent (BFR) homes. 

TRUAMERICA ACQUIRES THE LOT

Recently, TruAmerica, a Los Angeles-based investor and operator of multifamily developments, launched a new BFR development division. Its first BFR projects will be located in the suburban markets of the Southwest, Southeast, and Texas—or “the smile of the US,” Rotta says. Those markets represent about 60% of the firm’s $16.1 billion portfolio.

BFR appeals to individuals who want the single-family home experience—but without the costs and headaches that come with ownership. As such, TruAmerica’s new BFR focus dovetails with its history of providing multifamily housing to blue-collar and gray-collar workers, Rotta explains.

 

Mission Ranch TruAmerica build for rent development
Mission Ranch Apartments, another recent acquisition by TruAmerica, is a 295-unit Class-B property of one-, two-, and three-bedroom apartment homes

 

It also aligns with a larger trend. BFR is now the fastest-growing sector of the US housing market. The number of BFR homes increased 30% from 2019 to 2020, and they now account for 6% of new homes built in the US. In January, BFR investments exceeded $50 billion—up from $30 billion just three months earlier, according to John Burns Real Estate Consulting.

As the investor, TruAmerica will partner with third-party builders and contractors. It plans to start construction on its first handful of BFR communities by the end of the year. To appeal to a broad range of consumers, the units will run the gamut from townhomes to detached single-family homes to TruAmerica’s bailiwick: multifamily.

Some of its BFR developments will include both for-rent and for-sale homes. For TruAmerica, that mix of offerings would follow people’s life journeys: first, rent here; later, buy in the same community. “That allows us to create a mini master plan of products that cater to everyone,” Rotta says.

For now, TruAmerica is acquiring land parcels in states including Florida, North Carolina, and Texas. Land acquisition, Rotta says, involves “the biggest struggle” for BFR developments: managing the concerns of municipalities and residents. “It’s a new product segment, even though everything about it looks the same,” he says. People get concerned that this “new” product could introduce new problems. 

PROBLEMS WITH THE PROCESS?

Rotta addresses that through direct engagement. He educates communities on TruAmerica’s BFR projects and their objective: bringing more attainable housing to the marketplace. “Once you do that, you find more friends than enemies,” he says.

“Building a house isn’t all that difficult, but bringing the whole process together is,” says Rotta, who brings a diverse array of construction management experiences ranging from high-end custom homes to airport terminals.

The other main BFR challenge, as Rotta sees it, is one that any developer and builder working today knows all too well: high and uncertain construction costs. Mitigating that ongoing struggle involves “being diligent upfront on predicting costs and working with builder partners to have good, efficient designs.”

 

Ridgemont at Stringers Ridge
TruAmerica Multifamily has acquired Ridgemont at Stringers Ridge, a 226-unit multifamily community in Chattanooga, TN

 

To get those designs as efficient as they need to be, BFR should serve as a “gigantic runway for alternative building products,” Rotta says. Those can include panel systems, modular construction, and 3D printing—advances beyond traditional stick-frame construction.

“The industry in single-family homes, for the most part, has been a slow adapter of different technologies,” he says. “But we’re in a critical moment where labor pools are shrinking and the costs of traditional materials are increasing. The writing is on the wall for the homebuilding industry: We need to start doing things better.”

Advertisement
leaderboard2 - default
Advertisement
boombox1 -
Advertisement
native1 - default
halfpage2 -

More in Category

Delaware-based Schell Brothers, our 2023 Builder of the Year, brings a refreshing approach to delivering homes and measuring success with an overriding mission of happiness

NAHB Chairman's Message: In a challenging business environment for home builders, and with higher housing costs for families, the National Association of Home Builders is working to help home builders better meet the nation's housing needs

Sure there are challenges, but overall, Pro Builder's annual Housing Forecast Survey finds home builders are optimistic about the coming year

Advertisement
native2 - default
Advertisement
halfpage1 -

Create an account

By creating an account, you agree to Pro Builder's terms of service and privacy policy.


Daily Feed Newsletter

Get Pro Builder in your inbox

Each day, Pro Builder's editors assemble the latest breaking industry news, hottest trends, and most relevant research, delivered to your inbox.

Save the stories you care about

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet lorem ipsum dolor sit amet lorem ipsum dolor sit amet.

The bookmark icon allows you to save any story to your account to read it later
Tap it once to save, and tap it again to unsave

It looks like you’re using an ad-blocker!

Pro Builder is an advertisting supported site and we noticed you have ad-blocking enabled in your browser. There are two ways you can keep reading:

Disable your ad-blocker
Disable now
Subscribe to Pro Builder
Subscribe
Already a member? Sign in
Become a Member

Subscribe to Pro Builder for unlimited access

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipisicing elit, sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua.