Here is a great article titled "In the Silicon Valley, Real Estate
Remains Strong," written by Prashant Gopal and recently published in Business Week.
In Silicon Valley, Real Estate Remains Strong
By Prashant Gopal Thu Jul 10, 8:08 AM ET
Mountain
Home Road in Silicon Valley's Woodside community is a pleasant,
tree-lined street. At first glance it might seem like any other upscale
suburb, until it becomes apparent that few of the homes are visible
from the road. That's because this, and streets like it all over
California's San Mateo and Santa Clara counties, are where Silicon
Valley's most powerful people live -- and they like their privacy.
Silicon
Valley's technology titans also try to keep a low profile when they put
their mansions up for sale -- especially when the prices equal the
value of many of the area's startups. The most expensive properties in
America's technology capital are often sold privately and without the
help of the multiple listing service.
But many of the homes
themselves are decidedly high-profile. Take, for instance, Oracle
(NasdaqGS:ORCL - News) Chief Executive Larry Ellison's 23-acre estate
in Woodside, which he bought in 1995 for $12 million before spending
more than $200 million to remake it into a 16th-century Japanese
palace, complete with an authentic tea house and strolling garden.
Silicon
Valley is dotted with similarly expansive mansions, often hidden behind
gates or giant redwood trees. Residents of Atherton, the area's most
exclusive community, include Eric Schmidt, chairman and CEO of Google
(NasdaqGS:GOOG - News); Charles Schwab, the founder of brokerage
Charles Schwab (NasdaqGS:SCHW - News); and Meg Whitman, former CEO of
eBay (NasdaqGS:EBAY - News).
Foreclosure-Free Zone
Unlike
other California markets that have been battered by foreclosures, real
estate in Silicon Valley, part of the pricey San Francisco Bay area,
has remained relatively strong and has been buoyed by the job growth in
the technology sector and some of the highest salaries in the nation.
The subprime problems that have vexed other parts of California have
been relegated to parts of San Jose and to the outskirts of Silicon
Valley. The towns with the best schools, including Palo Alto, Woodside,
Los Altos Hills, and Cupertino also tend to have the most robust
markets.
And luxury homes -- properties listed for more than
$3.5 million -- might be holding up best because buyers who can afford
these prices aren't concerned about interest-rate fluctuations or the
credit crunch. This could change if the stock market continues to
plunge and the nation falls into a deep recession, however.
"People
here in Silicon Valley are so rich," says Los Gatos Realtor Susan
Fagin. "When I first started in real estate 20 years ago, my dream was
to get a doctor as a client. Now, all we want is a Google employee as a
client."
A BusinessWeek.com survey of the most expensive
listings in Silicon Valley included 14 ranging from a $10.75 million
estate in Woodside to a $45 million manor in Los Altos Hills. The $45
million listing on Stonebrook Court includes a 30,000-square-foot
mansion, built in 1914, which "played host to Presidents and kings,
movie stars and celebrities," according to the property's online
description. It has a grand ballroom that is adorned with "16th-century
gilded Venetian ceiling paintings."
Asking Prices and "Gold"
The
market has slowed since the credit crisis began last summer, says Dave
Walsh, president of the Santa Clara County Assn. of Realtors and
vice-president of Alain Pinel Realtors in San Jose. But multiple offers
still come in for some listings, he says. "Most properties are not
selling above asking price anymore," Walsh says. "Now they're getting
asking price."
Median home prices in prime areas of Silicon
Valley are "plus or minus 5%" compared to a year ago, according to
Kenneth Rosen, chairman of the Fisher Center for Real Estate &
Urban Economies at the University of California, Berkeley. Commercial
real estate is even stronger. Apartment rents climbed 5% to 10% in the
first quarter compared to a year ago, he says. "Technology is doing
well and that's a big positive," Rosen says.
Teardowns, which
were popular during the housing boom in suburbs across the country, are
a visible sign of Silicon Valley's busy market. Buyers are making
offers on homes with the intention of knocking them down and replacing
them with mansions.
Drive a bit outside downtown Los Gatos, just
past the post office, and you'll find a 20-acre estate on sale for
$13.5 million. The owners of the property are empty-nesters and are
looking to move to a smaller property in town. The house itself is not
large compared to other Silicon Valley mansions in this range. But in
addition to the 8,200-square-foot main house, a caretaker's cottage,
and a guest house, the compound also has 45 minutes' worth of hiking
trails and a swimming pool large enough to paddle around in a kayak.
And the real attraction: 17 acres of undeveloped land that are more or
less as nature left them. A buyer could easily subdivide the sprawling
property and put up a few more houses here.
"In any of these
hillside communities, a parcel of land is like gold," says the
listing's agent, Dennis Byron, who has been selling Silicon Valley real
estate for 36 years. "Buildable pieces are valuable."
On the Down Low
Byron is careful not to reveal much about the sellers. Wealthy homeowners in Silicon Valley tend to value privacy.
Catherine
Marcus, a realtor with Sotheby's International Realty in San Francisco,
says one of her listings, a 5,200-square-foot home in Woodside,
recently sold for $7 million and "never made it to the market."
"An
agent called me and said, 'What do you have? I have a client that wants
to buy,'" she says. "At that level, people are very picky. Yes, people
think these people have all the money in the world and can afford
anything. They also want everything in the world so you have to go and
hunt it down." |