High-dollar homes still selling in Vail, Aspen despite lingering economic woes

By David O. Williams
Real AspenJuly 27, 2010

One sign the economy may be recovering is the recent resurgence of Colorado's high-end mountain real estate market.

Aspen Lakes Ranch, recently purchased by hedge fund operator John Paulson for $24. 5 million.
Photo by Bob Bowden

Eagle County, home to Vail and Beaver Creek ski areas, saw the dollar volume of real estate sales more than double in the first five months of 2010 compared to the same period in 2009, according to Land Title Guarantee Company.

While still far below the glory days of 2007, the upward trend is encouraging to brokers trying to figure out if the market has hit bottom, and it appears the nation's wealthiest home buyers may be feeling more confident about buying luxury mountain properties.

There were 12 transactions totaling $42 million in Vail Village in May – six of the homes selling for more than $4 million.

In the even higher-end Pitkin County real estate market – home to Aspen and Snowmass – the purchase last month of a $24.5 million ranch and home by hedge fund operator John Paulson is seen as a sign the luxury home boom days may be back sooner rather than later.

“It's a great sign for the Aspen market,” a broker told the online news site Real Aspen earlier this month. “If he is bullish on Aspen to the tune of $24.5 million, that gives other buyers incentive. They see that Aspen real estate is a sound investment.”

Paulson's purchase, however, isn't even close to the Pitkin County ranch record of $47 million in 2006. It's just the biggest sale since a $43 million ranch sale in July of 2009

Land Title's Trevor Theelke said the Paulson purchase would be a record in Eagle County, where the highest single-family home sale was for $24 million on Vail's Forest Road in 2006. The biggest ranch sale ever in Eagle County was the Castle Peak Ranch for $23 million in February of 2004.

More than 5,000 acres of un-platted land between Minturn and Red Cliff off the backside of Vail Mountain – including the abandoned mining town of Gilman – sold to a Florida developer for $32.75 million in December of 2004. Plans to develop that property into a private ski and golf community stalled when the global economy collapsed in the fall of 2008.

Still, Led Gardner of Slifer Smith & Frampton Real Estate – the top brokerage firm in Eagle County – said there have been a number of big sales even during the recession.

“We've seen here in the Vail Valley some of the highest priced sales over the last two years that we've ever had,” Gardner said. “We had a big one over in Beaver Creek at the top of Borders (Road) last year. We sold a $15 million home in Mountain Star a little over a year ago. Even when times were good those were really notable sales for our market here.”

He added that it's hard to compare the Aspen and Vail markets.

“A client of mine I'm working with now spent a day over in Aspen just last week and said, ‘Now I understand why I own in Vail,'” Gardner said. “Even if the market's way down over there, they start at such a high bar. You say a property's been reduced $5 million, you're still talking about a $10 million or $15 million property.”

Gardner doesn't necessarily view the Paulson sale in Aspen or other big sales in Eagle County as a sign that another mountain real estate heyday is right around the corner.

“I don't personally think that it's a sign that we've bounced and now everybody's jumping back in,” he said. “I just think there are select buyers out there who recognize the opportunity being presented and are taking advantage of it.”


comments: 0 Comments on "High-dollar homes still selling in Vail, Aspen despite lingering economic woes"

Be the first to comment below.

COMMENT
Comment Form Info  Comment Information
Real Aspen encourages you to post comments on our articles and blogs. Logged in email is required for monitoring purposes. Your email will not be published and will not be distributed to any third-party. Abusive, obscene, profane, threatening, libelous or defamatory comments are prohibited. By posting a comment, you agree to this policy and our terms of use. To report an abusive posting, please contact us.

To make a comment, please log in or create an account. This helps us prevent spam and other malicious attacks.

Please log in to comment

 

Create a user account to comment

Snow Report

  24hr snow mid dpth snow cond.
A-Basin n/a n/a
Aspen n/a n/a closed
BC n/a n/a closed
Breckenridge n/a n/a closed
Buttermilk n/a n/a closed
Copper n/a n/a closed
Crest. Butte n/a n/a closed
Eldora n/a n/a closed
Heavenly n/a n/a closed
Highlands n/a n/a
Howelsen n/a n/a closed
Keystone n/a n/a closed
Kirkwood n/a n/a closed
Loveland n/a n/a
Monarch n/a n/a closed
Northstar n/a n/a closed
Powderhorn n/a n/a closed
Purgatory n/a n/a closed
Silverton n/a n/a closed
Ski Cooper n/a n/a closed
Ski Granby n/a n/a closed
Snowmass n/a n/a closed
Steamboat n/a n/a closed
Sunlight n/a n/a closed
Telluride n/a n/a closed
Vail n/a n/a closed
WinterPark n/a n/a closed
Wolf Creek n/a n/a closed
More Weather Reports
VIDEO GALLERY
Vail powder day snow snake
Airing it out at Crested Butte
Feb. 17, 2011 Surprise 14 inches of Fresh Powder