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Four new developments to make pricey Cape Town 'more accessible' for young buyers

22 Dec 2020

Young property development consultancy Evo is putting their money where their mouth is to show first-time buyers that owning property before 30 is possible.

“Developments have always been an attractive option for homeowners because of the low initial transaction costs, such as not paying transfer duties or sometimes no attorneys fees. Now, with Covid, dropping prices for new units are allowing first-time buyers to invest in a would-be expensive area, which is proving especially appealing for tenants who want to buy, or would-be buyers in outer-lying areas.

Evo was launched six years ago by Emmanual Germanis, Matthew McWilliams and Stephan Germanis.

This is according to Evo Properties, a sales and letting property-brokerage and property-development consultancy, that manages several hundred tenants for local and international investors, in residential properties across the Southern Peninsula

As a team all aged under 30, they put their money where their mouths are. “Buyers see us owning our own property, so they ask us for our advice a lot, and being able to report back that experience and insight to them makes them feel more secure,” says Emanuel Germanis, founder and managing director of Evo Properties in Cape Town.

Next year, the company will launch four new developments, one of which is a 21-unit micro-apartment block going up in Woodstock’s Cavendish Square, opposite the police station, which it will retain full ownership of and rent out the apartments.

'Middle-market property recovery'

The company’s track record in this blossoming inner-city suburb includes the full consulting and management, including sales, of Urban Artisan Apartments, the 51-unit residential and retail property development a stone’s throw from Woodstock’s bustling Biscuit Mill.

Germanis and his team are also working on a new affordable housing development called The Archive in Observatory, where a 30sqm apartment will sell at R799 999.

Exterior view of The Artisan in Woodstock. "New developments are proving appealing for first-time buyers looking to invest in a would-be expensive areas." (Photo: Supplied)
Interior view of The Artisan in Woodstock. Market conditions show a rebound in the middle-income, favouring tenants who want to buy, or would-be buyers in outer-lying areas looking to invest closer to the city. (Photo: Supplied)
(Photo: Supplied)
With South Africa’s middle property market (R750k-R2,6mil) showing the greatest improvement in activity, with the recovery driven mainly by younger (under 35) first-time buyers taking advantage of competitive pricing, lower transfer duties and interest rates at a half-century low with prime at 7%. Industry-wide data cited in FNB’s Property Barometer report for November showed that mortgage applications were reaching multi-year highs; year-to-date applications volumes are approximately 9% above the same period in 2019. The construction sector has also shown a 71% uptick in December, despite being much lower than before the impact of Covid pandemic, on the back of a higher number of residential, non-residential buildings and construction work. 

Germanis says his company has experienced this on the ground, with millennials buying now. For example, he says, “Despite a perception that the student-housing market took a battering, we actually saw the opposite.”

Younger would-be buyers across all racial groupings who’d been living with their parents or in Cape Town’s outer-lying suburbs are now deciding to move out and are looking closer to town, in areas like Mowbray, Observatory and Woodstock, where the social benefits include making new friends, building communities in hip, up-and-coming neighbourhoods, and saving on transport costs.

'Multi-let arrangements'

Properties that previously accommodated students in communal setups are now being converted into multi-let arrangements, and are attracting a growing number of out-of-towners, both local and from Gauteng, into suburbs close to the University of Cape Town and Cape Town’s CBD.

“There’s big demand from young professionals, men and women in their 20s, who work for the likes of Amazon or Woolworths Financial Services. Low interest rates, but also a demand for more privacy and space for them to work from at home, is really driving demand.” This goes hand-in-hand, Germanis says, with a trend of owners spending more on renovating their properties and enlarging their workspace areas.

Beyond central city growth

But the central city isn’t the only area showing impressive growth.  “The market is showing us that people are believing in their own place of residence,” says Germanis, especially when looking at suburbs like Mitchells Plain. “People who work for Telkom, Eskom and SARS, for instance, earn excellent salaries and want to remain in those areas, whether it’s buying for the first time or investing in something a little bigger.”

Colorado Park has become the Bishopscourt of Mitchells Plain, he says. “We sold a property there for 15% over the asking price within 48 hours.” Germanis puts this down to not only people responding to the company’s online ads and social media, but also word-of-mouth. “Those areas are heavily community-driven, and everyone’s chatting to everyone else, so word gets out about a particular property.”

Digital marketing has remained at the forefront of how, Matthew McWilliams, Evo’s marketing director, has grown an impressive database of postgraduate students and young working professionals wanting to buy or rent.

“Facebook and Instagram remain our top platforms, but we also see plenty of traffic through our website and first-to-market online apartment reservation system.” If tenants see an apartment they’d like to rent, they can reserve it online through Evo’s system. “Keeping our website super-current, especially with great interactive renderings, helps buyers in Gauteng make easier decisions regarding Cape Town options,” he adds.

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