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Falls Church Apartments Few and Far Between
BY PATRICIA LESLIE
Anyone who’s looking to make a move soon in Falls Church knows that it’s not only homes which are in short supply here, but the inventory of apartments is low, too.
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An online search for apartments found few available. Prices for some exceed large mortgage payments.
Apartments range from $1,515 to $2,953 for a one bedroom, and $1,750 to $6,704 for a two bedroom.
Modera Founder’s Row on West Broad has the highest price for a one bedroom, while the West Broad at the Harris Teeter building claims top prize for the priciest two bedrooms.
The less expensive units are found at Glen Apartments near West Street and Route 29 for the one bedroom, and at Roosevelt Towers on North Roosevelt for two bedrooms.
None of the high end apartments include utilities like what’s found at some lower-priced units, but pricier places offer amenities like a dog run, a pet spa, pet wash station, a pet park, complimentary moving assistance, a library lounge, fire pits in outdoor areas with TVs, and an upper deck for watching parades and fireworks.
Robert A. Young is the president of the Young Group which has 150,000 to 200,000 square feet of residential and commercial properties in Falls Church which are all leased up.
“We have no vacancy of any kind,” he said in a phone interview.
“It’s never happened in my 20 plus years I’ve owned property.” Typically, an occupancy of 92 to 93 percent for commercial properties is considered “excellent by industry standards,” he said.
From a landlord’s perspective, apartments in Falls Church are in “very, very good shape.” His rent increases for them have been below inflation, at only two to three percent, but “we’ve just done an assessment and found we’re pretty far behind the market,” so his tenants may find a five percent adjustment coming this year.
With a different perspective, Edward P. Novak, Jr., an area real estate developer and president and founder of Nova Ventures, says the market has settled down from its covid highs.
There’s been “a fairly significant slowdown” since the peak of last summer. “It’s not dramatic, but rents were raised by a significant amount” to cover labor and construction costs, and soaring inflation and interest rates.
Now, some commercial developers are having a hard time finding money to build.
“Demand has dropped a bit to a more normal level.”
The National Apartment Association says renters are pausing on making moves and have begun to combine households to save money. Vacancy rates nationally are projected to increase through 2024 and records show rental prices dropped September through November, 2022, although Zillow, a national real estate marketer, says rents were 8.4 percent higher than a year ago.