Talk Back
Post a Comment
|
||||||||||
HousingZone Most Popular Stories
- International Residential Codes Available Online
- Growing your remodeling business in the current economy
- 2008 Remodeler of the Year
- Develop Land Or Buy Lots? Home Builders Face Dilemma
- ProBuilder Product Report: Kitchen Appliances
- What Can You Recycle?
- A smaller home can still be beautiful
- Wood vs. Engineered Lumber
- Myths and Facts About Automatic Fire Sprinklers
- How to Use Percentage-of-Completion Accounting
Partnering All the Way
Patrick L. O'Toole, Senior Editor
August 1, 2003
Professional Builder
![]() |
| Tom Stephani Photo by Marc Berlow |
Builder-developer: Tom Stephani, William Thomas Homes Inc., Crystal Lake
Project size: Approximately 8.5 acres
Proposed development: Build a small, 23-unit, traditional neighborhood with walking links to an existing downtown shopping district.
Landowner: An estate for a woman whose family owned the property for decades
Site considerations: Decades ago the site had been home to a large greenhouse that supplied orchids to the Chicago wholesale flower market. The buildings had long since been carted away, and all that remained were a couple of shacks, an old foundation and quite a bit of broken glass. Trees and foliage covered most of the site.
Deal story: Stephani knew of the family who owned the parcel and through a mutual acquaintance received an introduction to a family member who told him the property was in an estate that had not been liquidated. He made this contact just months before the piece was set to hit the market.
![]() |
| Four existing homes, in white, were incorporated into the new community. |
The vision he presented appealed to the seller, and so did the enhanced yield of the property as a residential use. Based on the positive response from the landowner, Stephani offered the following deal:
"It is rare in life that things turn out exactly the way you envision them or better," Stephani says. "In this case it turned out exactly and better."
© 2008, Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All Rights Reserved.


Digg This

