Seaside in Texas?

Seaside%2C%20Florida.jpgFirst, the Wall Street Journal discovered the Hamptons of Houston. Now, this Wall Street Journal ($) article reports that the popular Seaside beach community just east of Destin, Florida is the model for several similar projects under construction on the Texas Gulf Coast:

Inspired by Seaside, the Florida-panhandle resort community that relies heavily on traditional architecture and planning, Mr. [Tofigh] Sherazi is overseeing development of a $1 billion, 260-acre beachfront community that seeks to reflect Galveston’s past. The first of the project’s four phases, 160 lots for single-family homes, is sold out. The development is designed to include a pedestrian-friendly mix of homes, shops and two hotels. “This is going to be a real town,” he said.
Beachtown, as Mr. Sherazi’s project is called, is part of a wave of New Urbanism on the Texas coast, from Galveston to South Padre Island. A planning movement that advocates walking over driving and borrows heavily from the design of traditional neighborhoods, New Urbanism has been largely overlooked on the Texas coast, even as it has flourished in Florida and beyond. [. . .]
. . . In addition to Beachtown, a 93-acre, $175 million urban village known as Evia is taking shape in Galveston. The work of local developers, the project will include a total of about 350 residential units, with 70% of the 222 lots for single-family homes sold.
Near Corpus Christi, the Sea Oats Group, of Atlanta, is developing a 64-acre, $250 million project called Cinnamon Shore that casts itself as a traditional seaside village, complete with a town center. Sales began in February, and 42 of 82 lots in phase one are sold. And on South Padre Island, a development in excess of $250 million called the Shores of South Padre also portrays itself as New Urbanist, though local developer Richard Franke’s plan to include high-rise and midrise condominiums indicates he is no purist. “It’s quite different from anything else in our area,” said Mr. Franke. [. . .]
James Gaines, an economist at Texas A&M University’s Real Estate Center, said beachfront property in Texas costs about a fifth of the price of similar property in California, in part because of its geography. Except for Galveston and a few coastal areas near Houston, none of Texas beachfront property is near a major urban center.
In an effort to market Cinnamon Shore, Sea Oats compared the cost of beachfront lots and beachfront homes in a number of markets. A lot at Seaside costs about $2.98 million, according to the company, but lots at Cinnamon Shore are going for about $625,000. In the same survey, the company said a beachfront home at Cinnamon Shore is valued at no more than $1.5 million, while a similar home could cost as much as $6.9 million across the Gulf of Mexico in Sarasota, Fla.

One thought on “Seaside in Texas?

  1. Mr. Herrick,
    Thank you for posting the article on New Urbanism on the Texas coast. In the two years in Florida, New Urbanism has changed from an intelligent community planning tool into an excuse for developers to “pack” suburban sites. The quality of design that is now declared “New Urbanist” has significantly declined in Florida . I wonder it the same situation is happening in the Texas projects?
    My visits to many New Urbanist projects in Florida are posted at http://picasaweb.google.com/AestheticGrounds/NewUrbanismInFlorida
    At the end of the presentation, you can see the suburban infill projects that create a “street” as the sole public space. The backs of the townhouses are all asphlat or will be jammed against any neighbor that is ever built. These spaces are much, much smaller that Brooklyn or Queens rowhouse backyards.
    If you have the interest, a friend of mine and I published an academic article in Australia last month. http://www.desphilosophy.com The Forgotten Project on New Urbanism.

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