Wealthy Chinese buyers are a growing force in US real estate markets

 Wealthy Chinese buyers are a growing force in US real estate markets
While the influx of investment from China is lifting some markets, it is reshaping many others, real estate experts say. (Daniel Hertzberg/For The Washington Post)

After a long and painful slide following the real estate collapse in 2008, Seattle’s property market is enjoying one of the sharpest rises anywhere in the United States. Buoyed by a rapidly expanding economy that has brought tens of thousands of high-paying jobs to the city, real estate values have nearly doubled since 2009, according to the online real estate database Zillow.

Yet while technology billionaires gobble up estates from Puget Sound to Lake Washington, Jim Conlan, a real estate broker with Century 21 North Homes Realty in Seattle, says the real catalyst for the dramatic upswing can be found in China.

“To be honest, Chinese buyers have been flooding this market the past few years,” says Conlan, who has been selling homes in Seattle for more than 30 years. “Some of them buy homes sight unseen, while others travel here for a kind of real estate tourism and buy real estate after only one viewing.”

Seattle is not alone. For the fourth year in a row, buyers from China ranked first among foreign nationals purchasing property in the United States, according to a survey by the National Association of Realtors (NAR). U.S. home sales to Chinese nationals totaled $27.3 billion — exceeding the total dollar sales figure of the next four countries in the rankings combined, the survey showed.

Chinese investment in U.S. real estate could hit $50 billion by 2025, according to a report by the Rosen Consulting Group and the Asia Society.

While the influx of investment from China is lifting some markets, it is reshaping many others, real estate experts say. The torrent of cash is fueling sharply rising prices and dwindling housing supply while keeping homeownership out of reach of first-time buyers in some of the country’s most important real estate markets.

In San Francisco Bay-area locations such as Palo Alto and Woodside, home prices have risen by double digits in the past three years, while the number of buyers from China has nearly doubled since 2012, says Penelope Huang, a broker with Re/Max Distinctive Properties. The increased demand is making the area one of the toughest for younger buyers, she says.

“Listings are snapped up in a week or sometimes less in this market,” she says. “That kind of pace of sales directly affects first-time buyers.”

In New York, where big-spending financiers typically make real estate headlines in Manhattan, Chinese investors are increasingly gobbling up property farther away from the spotlight.

 Wealthy Chinese buyers are a growing force in US real estate markets
The influx of investment from China is reshaping many markets, including Seattle. (fotoVoyager/Getty Images/iStockphoto)

In middle-class areas of Brooklyn and Queens, the number of Chinese buyers has nearly doubled since 2012, estimates Jennifer Hsu, a broker with Halstead Property in Queens. “They’re now competing with buyers at the middle of this market,” she says, “and that added competition is making life tougher for people looking to buy their first home.”

The spending spree is also upending real estate fundamentals in smaller and mid-size markets from Portland, Ore., to Cambridge, Mass., with local would-be buyers increasingly being disconnected from the economies of their own cities.

Factors that typically influence real estate sales in most places, such as income levels and the strength of local economies, do not mean as much when large numbers of outside buyers from places such as China invade a market, says Nela Richardson, chief economist at national realty brokerage Redfin. “Local fundamentals aren’t necessarily the driving factors when that happens,” Richardson says. “That affects buyers who live in these places and can lead to locals essentially being priced out of their own markets.”

Real estate in the District of Columbia area has long been viewed as a gateway for foreign investment, mostly from Europe and the Middle East. But thanks to its relative affordability, increasing numbers of Chinese buyers have trickled into the D.C. housing market in the past few years, says Michael Rankin, managing partner of TTR Sotheby’s International Realty in the District.

“D.C. lacks the newer condo properties that you see in New York and Miami that typically appeal to buyers from China,” says Rankin, who estimates that foreign nationals overall make up about 20 percent of the D.C. market, up from about 15 percent five years ago. “But as we see more condo development, and prices here remain lower than other big cities, you’re likely to see more Asian buyers land in this market.”

 Wealthy Chinese buyers are a growing force in US real estate markets
As the wealth of Chinese citizens grows, some opt to shelter money in U.S. real estate, and West Coast cities such as Portland have proved desirable. (ablokhin/Getty Images)

Danielle Hale, managing director of housing research at the NAR, says that in many cases, Chinese buyers are also bidding up prices in markets where demand is already high. “That can cause prices to rise sharply and make it that much more difficult for locals to find a home to buy,” she says. “That’s particularly the case for many first-time home buyers looking for moderately priced homes.”

Chinese nationals started buying U.S. property in large numbers in the years after the real estate crash, when home prices plummeted in many U.S. markets.

Driven by expanding wealth in China and a desire for a haven against political instability, busloads of Chinese buyers began popping up in markets from California to New York.

Vanessa Chan says she viewed the U.S. market as a solid real estate investment when she bought a Manhattan apartment two years ago. The Hong Kong-based technology executive paid $1.25 million for a condo in a new tower in Midtown. “New York is a lot like Hong Kong in terms of prices, but the housing quality is a lot better,” says Chan, 37. “I also knew Manhattan property would appreciate much faster than some real estate investments in Asia.”

Chan’s broker, Elizabeth Schwartz of Compass, has worked with dozens of buyers from China. Although Chinese billionaires receive a lot of attention for purchasing trophy properties, she says that most Chinese buyers are looking for more moderately priced homes that give them a better return on their money.

“There’s a huge population of hardworking, educated Chinese who look to the U.S. for real estate investment,” Schwartz says. “But they come to this market not with money to just throw around, but rather to make informed, well-reasoned investment choices.”

In recent years, as their numbers have grown, Chinese buyers have targeted the higher end of many markets. The average home price for Chinese buyers in 2015 was $831,800, compared with $499,600 for all other international buyers, the study from Rosen Consulting Group shows.

That stream of cash at the top is fueling expensive housing projects in many markets.

Although the San Francisco Bay area has long been a sought-after location for Asian buyers, a flurry of high-end condominium projects is actively targeting wealthy foreign nationals from China.

“Many buyers from China simply want to diversify their assets outside of what is still a communist country,” says Alan P. Mark, president of the Mark Company, a sales and marketing firm that has launched four residential developments in San Francisco this year. “That means they’re looking for projects in prime locations that will rapidly appreciate.”

Among the new projects being touted by the Mark Company is 181 Fremont Residences, a 70-story, mixed-use tower with 67 condo units occupying the building’s top 16 floors.

The $665 million project, designed by Orlando Diaz-Azcuy Design Associates, includes homes ranging in price from $3 million to $15 million. Those prices rank among the highest for condominiums in San Francisco.

“Chinese buyers make up a small portion of the overall market here, but it’s a critical part of the luxury sector,” says Mark McLaughlin, chief executive of San Francisco-based Pacific Union. The real estate brokerage spends about $400,000 annually on corporate marketing in China, including having a Chinese-language website and advertising in Asian papers. McLaughlin estimates that buyers from China account for 15 to 20 percent of the San Francisco real estate market.

Wealthy buyers from South America have long fueled rising prices in Miami. But as their numbers dwindle — thanks to slumping economies in places such as Brazil, Venezuela and Argentina — developers are increasingly setting their sights on China.

“Prices in Miami look relatively cheap compared with places like New York and San Francisco,” says Vanessa Grout, president of CMC Real Estate. CMC Group is developing Brickell Flatiron, a 549-unit condo building in downtown Miami with prices ranging from $400,000 to more than $14 million. The project is being marketed to Chinese buyers via local brokerages, Grout says.

Although only about 2 percent of international buyers in Miami come from China, according to the Miami Association of Realtors, Grout says the Chinese share of the market is poised to grow.

“Chinese buyers typically buy in groups and buy more than one unit at a time,” says Grout, who attended the Beijing Luxury Properties Showcase last year. The trade show attracts thousands of wealthy Chinese looking at international properties. “We’ve learned quite a bit about the market for Chinese buyers coming to Miami, and we think it will only grow.”

Article source: https://www.washingtonpost.com/realestate/wealthy-chinese-buyers-are-a-growing-force-in-us-real-estate-markets/2016/10/13/15ab3cba-7441-11e6-8149-b8d05321db62_story.html

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Article source: http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/first-fully-automated-parking-garage-in-sf-bay-area-300343686.html

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Real estate nears tail end of market in East County

Frank Leung of Bay Point is selling his three-bedroom, 2.5-bath home after deciding to move out of the city. The asking price for his 1,826-square feet property is $479,500. There’s a good chance it will eventually sell for more than that, as East Contra Costa housing prices continue to skyrocket.

Fifteen miles to the east, in Antioch, residential property investor Jorge S. Vargas is selling a five-bedroom home at the corner of Lone Tree Way and Vista Grande Drive, which he said was originally built by a founding family of the city, for $1.4 million. He’s diverting his investments from the Bay Area and to Kansas City.

“This is the tail of the market; the last year of a seller’s market,” Vargas said. “It’s going to hit the roof in two or three years down the line.”

Vargas is correct, according to a San Francisco-based real estate data company that studies statistics and trends nationwide. In three years, this region, which has been one of the Bay Area’s most affordable, will be at its least affordable stage as the market nears its tipping point. But what goes up, must come down, and the unstable East County housing market has shown to be the last to rise and yet the first to fall.

When prices go up, it’s prime time to sell a home and also the most dangerous time to buy, according to HouseCanary, because the data suggests a market downturn and a decline in home values will follow.

HouseCanary’s data scientists analyze and interpret national public, MLS, private and and proprietary data in their calculations. The company has given each zip code a grade, from “A” to “F,” with with “A” markets typically the most desirable for homeowners. East Contra Costa County is significant to the Bay Area as a whole because it is comprised of markets HouseCanary has labeled “D” and “F.” Those are the markets that are the last to rise when the real estate industry is clicking and the first to decline in a downturn, making them unstable. When the growth of “D” and “F” zip codes outpaces the “A’s” and “Bs,” such as the case now in the Bay Area and beyond, the market is signifying that it is about to conclude one market cycle and begin another.

Right now, most homebuyers can afford homes only in the “D” and “F” zip codes, such as East Contra Costa.

“There is not enough room, by 2019, for prices to keep rising,” said Chris Stroud, the company’s co-founder and chief of research.

At the very peak, the market belongs to sellers. But in a decline, home buyers win while sellers lose values on their properties. The trick is to buy after the decline, not right before the peak.

The Haas School of Business at UC Berkeley studies real estate on the national scale. Christopher J. Palmer, assistant professor of real estate, said an upcoming large-scale decline in home prices is possible. However, any predictions must be based on factors outside the real estate industry.
Population growth, job growth and wage growth are some reasons for home prices to rise, he added.

“Just because, in the past, the house price growth that happened in this ripple-out fashion and then collapsed, doesn’t necessarily mean that is what’s going to happen again,” he said. “Just because we’re in that first stage doesn’t mean that we’re guaranteed to see that second stage.”
And in such improvement, it’s very possible for the higher-ranked markets to feel the effects before the lower-ranked markets. To complicate matter further, Palmer said the growth of underlying market forces, or fundamentals, appear to be happening right now, but can be superficially inflated by a “tech bubble” like the Bay Area experienced in 2000.

“The Dot-Com bust was much worse for the Bay Area than the 2008 recession,” he said.
In 2007, the last time real estate markets reached their peak, many lenders were engaged in poorly designed lending practices that approved low down payment mortgages. With such little equity in their homes, millions of buyers suffered after their homes lost value quickly, putting the the new buyers in a hole— they owed much more than their homes were actually worth. Federal legislation was passed to prevent lenders from giving such poor mortgages again.

In recent months, some lenders like Wells Fargo, Bank of America and JP Morgan Chase have begun offering mortgages for as little as 3 percent down. Buyers should continue to be cautious as prices approach the peak, Stroud said.
“Two years from now, I would not want to buy a massively expensive home for little money down,” he said.

Despite the availability of low interest rates, Palmer said the lending market as much tighter than it was before the 2007 recession. Much of that is due to Dodd-Frank legislation, enacted following the previous housing crises, which placed many restrictions on lenders to protect mortgage borrowers. While borrower-friendly rates are available, those with low FICO score can still expect to get rejected for most mortgage applications.

Palmer suggest that new home buyers stress-test their finances to ensure they can survive a market downturn.

“When you buy a house in a D and F submarket, or anywhere else, it makes sense to think through, ‘What would happen if house prices fell?” he said.

That advice is similar to what Antioch-based Realtor Rick Fuller gives buyers with whom he works. Fuller, who agreed the housing market remains strong in East Contra Costa County, encourages clients to avoid what he calls “creative” financing and view home purchases as long-term investments.

At the same time, he said East Contra Costa County is clearly a seller’s market at the moment, with far fewer homes on the market than people who want to buy them. The region will become even more popular once the Highway 4 expansion is complete and eBART begins serving the area.

“We think BART will add value to Brentwood and Oakley,” he said.
Fuller said he’s seeing $370,000 as a cut-off point, with homes below that amount selling quickly and those above taking longer. A combination of lower interest rates and higher rental rates are keeping buyers engaged, he said.

Both Stroud and Palmer agree that home prices are likely peaking and it is a good time to sell. Prices have stabilized. Palmer said low interest rates are also making the market attractive to buyers. Some markets are softening, although it’s not clear whether it is because a downturn is coming next, he said. Interest rates have approached rock bottom and home values have likely approached their peak, he added.

“If somebody is looking to sell and move, this is not a bad time to sell,” he said. “There would be no reason to wait because they think prices are going to go up.”
In East County, Pittsburg and Bay Point have the fastest-growing market, but it’s already showing signs of deceleration, Stroud said. HouseCanary projects a current growth up 13.8 percent in zip code 94565. The company predicts the number to dip to a 2.1 percent growth in 2019, and for that growth to be made due to inflation. Inflation will overtake home price growth in Antioch, Brentwood, Oakley, Discovery Bay, Byron and Bethel Island, according to the data.

A median mortgage payment in the 94565 zip code is currently 43.1 percent of a borrower’s income, according to HouseCanary data. In 2006, the year before the housing crash, it reached 66.8 percent. It bottomed out in 2012 at 23.1 percent. By 2019, HouseCanary analyses expect it to rebound again to a median payment of 52.3 percent of household income.

The most expensive zip code to own a home in East County, relative to income, is Byron. In 2006, borrowers were making median payments of 93.9 percent of monthly income to their mortgages. The median payment is resting at 75.2 percent this year, but HouseCanary is projecting the figure to increase to 87.6 percent by 2019. That’s comparatively more expensive than the San Francisco-Oakland-Hayward metropolitan statistical area, to which Contra Costa County belongs, as a whole.


East Contra Costa County Home affordability relative to median monthly income; percentage of income to mortgage payments.

Byron – 94514

2006: 93.9 percent of monthly income.

2012: 42.6 percent

2016: it’s 75.2 percent

2019 (projected): 87.6 percent

 

Pittsburg, Bay Point 94565

2006: 66.8 percent of monthly income

2012: 23.1 percent

2016: 43.1 percent

2019 (projected): 52.3 percent

 

Antioch 94509

2006: 72.5 percent of monthly income.

2012: 26 percent

2016: 41.7 percent

2019 (projected): 49.1 percent

 

Antioch 94531

2006: 53.2 percent of monthly income.

2013: 18.1 percent

2016: 31.7 percent

2019 (projected): 36.3 percent

 

Oakley 94561

2006: 49.9 percent of monthly income.

2012: 17.9 percent

2016: 31.7 percent

2019 (projected): 36.9 percent

 

Brentwood  94513

2006: 54.3 percent of monthly income.

2012: 22.3 percent

2016: 36.4 percent

2019 (projected): 41.9 percent

 

Discovery Bay 94505

2006: 44.4 percent of monthly income.

2012: 19.6 percent

2016: 32.4 percent

2019 (projected): 37 percent

 

Bethel Island 94511

2006: 67.5 percent of monthly income.

2012: 34.5 percent

2016: 57.2 percent

2019 (projected): 69.9 percent

 

San Francisco–Oakland–Hayward MSA (includes Contra Costa County)

2006: 91.4 percent of monthly income.

2012: 43.1 percent

2016: 71.7 percent

2019 (projected): 82.2 percent

Article source: http://www.eastbaytimes.com/2016/10/11/real-estate-in-east-county/

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In the land of the Eichler, a growing Bay Area…

SUNNYVALE — Fifty years ago, Vilma and Don Buck went looking to buy their first house. It didn’t take long to find the right one.

It was open, airy and filled with sunlight thanks to the floor-to-ceiling windows that lined the backside of the single-story tract home — a modest place, but, to them, a veritable palace.

Open the front door, and you could see clear through to the backyard. “Oh, the light,” said Vilma, a retired social worker, remembering her first look at the home, in 1966.

Never would she have guessed that her cozy neighborhood, filled with similarly cozy homes, would one day be on the front lines of a growing Bay Area battle over real estate — pitting one vision of California living against another.

In case you haven’t yet figured it out, the Bucks own an Eichler home. As do all their neighbors — including one young couple across the back fence who plan to knock theirs down and build a much larger two-story house on Sesame Drive. A “monster” house, as some neighbors call it. And here our story begins.

First in Palo Alto and now in Sunnyvale, owners have waged zoning battles in City Hall to prevent newcomers from knocking down Eichlers. Their goal: to protect and preserve their all-Eichler neighborhoods. In Sunnyvale alone, there are six petitions pending to bar the construction of McMansions amid the Eichlers.

“It’s the incongruity of a two-story house,” explained Don Buck, a retired De Anza College history professor who raised three children with Vilma in their 1,800-square-foot home. “It’s an oddity. It looks strange.”

f6173 sjm eichler 09xx 06 In the land of the Eichler, a growing Bay Area…
Many Eichler homes feature glass-enclosed atriums. Patrick Tehan/Staff

About 1,125 houses were built in Sunnyvale by developer Joseph L. Eichler, whose distinctive, midcentury tract homes create the sense of bringing the outdoors into their flowing, light-filled interiors. From 1949-74, Eichler — while based in Palo Alto and, later, San Francisco — built 10,500 houses across the region, even entire Eichler neighborhoods, from Walnut Creek to San Jose’s Willow Glen. What a concept: High-quality, affordable houses, attractive and architecturally distinctive to boot.

So why all the fuss right now? Bargains when they were built, Eichlers — like pretty much all Bay Area real estate — are worth a mint these days. Purchased for less than $30,000 in 1966, the Bucks’ home likely would fetch at least $1.7 million on today’s market.

But it’s more than that. With their minimalist modern lines and open floor designs — way ahead of their time — Eichlers have come to be regarded as “pieces of art,” said real estate agent Pelin Erdal, whose Saratoga-based firm has specialized in Eichlers since the 1980s. “Knock one down? People say, ‘Oh my gosh, why would you do that?’ Because that’s one less Eichler.”

Yet Eichlers aren’t for everyone. Maintenance can be complicated. Beams can rot. Plumbing, embedded in the concrete slab beneath the house, can leak. (Eichler was into radiant floor heating).

Which brings us back to Sesame Drive: After consulting with an engineer on the condition of their recently purchased Eichler, the Bucks’ neighbors — Alik Eliashberg and Lena Govberg — announced last year that they would raze it and construct a two-story house in its place. Word spread about this 3,600-square-foot home, approximately twice the size of most Eichlers in the Fairbrae Addition, a tree-lined neighborhood with its own community swim club — built by Eichler, of course.

Some neighbors feared for their privacy: Would second-story windows offer unimpeded views into the glass-lined living rooms and master bedrooms of the Eichlers below? Would the razing of one Eichler lead to more of the same — blow after blow to the Eichler neighborhood’s historic lifestyle and look?

“We told them, ‘We hope you understand we don’t want a lot of two-story houses around here,’?” Vilma Buck said.

“We don’t want any,” said her husband, Don.

After Eliashberg and Govberg announced their project, a complicated permitting process began with the city. There were public hearings at which neighbors voiced their suggestions and complaints, sometimes angrily. One day, standing with her daughter outside their house, Govberg was confronted by one neighbor who told her to move.

“It got personal,” her husband said.

Many neighbors sent letters to the city, stating their objections. One, written by Eric Petersen, a general contractor who specializes in Eichlers and lives in the Fairbrae Addition, likened the planned house to a “huge container ship” that would overwhelm the “little rowboats” around it.

In any case, the project was approved by the city; demolition and construction are expected to begin later this year. But it will be the last two-story house built in the vicinity. Neighbors have successfully petitioned the city for a zoning change that from now on will prevent anything but single-story construction in the surrounding blocks.

“I’m not going to let this happen to any more of my neighbors,” said Michelle Sullivan, who shares a back fence with Eliashberg and Govberg. She accuses the couple of subverting the community’s historic character.

“I believe you should have your property rights. I also believe there’s something called property responsibility,” said Sullivan, who, with her husband, led the door-to-door campaign for the single-story zoning change. “People need to understand you have a responsibility when you move into an Eichler community. … This is a really historic area.”

Several more petitions are circulating on surrounding blocks, as the single-story movement grows in the Fairbrae Addition, which has about 275 Eichlers. Given that the nearby Fairwood neighborhood (with its 215 Eichlers) is equally embroiled — and that five petitions already have passed in Sunnyvale, two this year — it’s likely that a substantial portion of the city’s 1,125 Eichlers will soon be protected from two-story invasions.

“I get calls every few weeks from people asking, ‘What do I have to do?’?” said Gerri Caruso, the city’s principal planner and one of the handlers of the petitions.

In the meantime, Eliashberg and Govberg have been preparing for their project. They recently sat down in their Eichler’s kitchen — a hummingbird buzzed through the adjoining atrium as they talked — and described their saga: how they originally planned to remodel, but were advised that renovations would be daunting and costly. New roof. New beams. New plumbing. It would be more efficient to knock down the Eichler and start fresh.

They reached out to their neighbors, explaining that they wanted to design a house that would fit the neighborhood and might even add an exciting splash of architectural newness. After all, building materials and construction techniques have changed since the time of Joseph Eichler. Here and there, the couple noted, Eichler himself built two-story homes.

“We live in this innovative, vibrant, melting-pot place, and the idea that everything must be the same seems very odd and very restrictive ?” Govberg said. “To me, this is not a museum. It’s our home, and I want to enjoy living here.”

They have made adjustments to their project’s design. For one thing, they won’t be able to see through the primary second-story window, the one that worries Michelle Sullivan — the glass will be heavily textured. They have offered to plant more trees and foliage to ease neighbors’ worries, and will raise the height of a backyard fence to 8 feet.

Some neighbors, their fears allayed, have given the project their blessing.

Even Don Buck has come around a bit. “They have been very accommodating, very pleasant, which is to their credit,” he said. “It’s just that it’s a two-story house, and it’s not very compatible with an Eichler neighborhood.”


Where you’ll find Eichler homes

  • There about 10,500 Eichlers in Northern California.
  • From 1949-74, they were built in tracts in Sacramento, Marin County and San Francisco; in Concord, Walnut Creek, Oakland and Castro Valley in the East Bay; and all over the South Bay and Peninsula, including Redwood City, Los Altos, Sunnyvale, Santa Clara, Cupertino, Mountain View, Los Gatos and San Jose.
  • Palo Alto has the most Eichlers: about 3,000, with two tracts that are on the National Register of Historic Places.
  • Sunnyvale has about 1,125 Eichlers. Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak grew up in one, as did Mayor Glenn Hendricks.
  • San Mateo’s The Highlands is the largest contiguous development of Eichler homes, with more than 700.
  • Concord boasts three Eichler tracts (Rancho del Diablo, Rancho de los Santos and Parkside), with about 175 homes.
  • Walnut Creek’s Rancho San Miguel has about 375 Eichlers.
  • For more information on Eichlers and issues involving the homes, see EichlerNetwork.com.

 

Article source: http://www.mercurynews.com/2016/09/12/in-the-land-of-eichler-a-growing-bay-area-real-estate-battle/

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Prometheus Real Estate Group Raises $128625 for Four Nonprofits

The funds will help house families of seriously ill children, provide therapeutic recreation to those with disabilities, reduce hunger and protect urban forests.

SAN MATEO, CALIF. (PRWEB) October 10, 2016

Prometheus Real Estate Group, the largest private owner of multifamily properties in the San Francisco Bay Area, is proud to announce that it has raised $128,625 for its 2016 regional and brand-wide nonprofit partners through the company’s POrCH (Promethean Outreach and Community Help) volunteer and giving program.

Committed to creating volunteer opportunities for employees and those who call Prometheus home, the company annually adopts not-for-profit organizations, providing them with both donations and volunteers. This year’s nonprofit partners, which were selected by Prometheus employees in each of its regions, are:

  • Family House, which operates in San Francisco. The organization provides temporary housing to families (many of which live below or at the low-income level) of seriously ill children receiving treatment at the UCSF Benioff Children’s Hospital. Family House received a donation of $35,260, which will cover the full stay of a family for more than 13 months.
  • Outdoors for All, which operates in Seattle, Washington. The organization delivers adaptive and therapeutic recreation for children and adults with disabilities. Outdoors for All received a donation of $29,585, which will help pay for a van to transport clients who rely on the organization.
  • Loaves Fishes Family Kitchen, which operates in the San Francisco Bay Area’s South Bay. The organization is dedicated to fighting hunger and helps feed 200,000 individuals annually. Loaves Fishes received a $34,195 donation, which will cover the cost of 13,678 hot meals for those in need.
  • Forest Park Conservancy, which operates in Portland, Oregon. The organization protects and fosters the ecological health of Forest Park, one of the nation’s largest urban forests. Forest Park Conservancy received a donation of $29,585, which will help maintain the 47 miles of soft surface trails in Forest Park, restore wildlife habitat, and engage the community.

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Prometheus Real Estate Group, Inc. is the largest private owner of multifamily properties in the San Francisco Bay Area, with a growing portfolio of more than 12,000 metropolitan-area apartments in the Bay Area, Seattle and Portland. Since its inception in 1965, Prometheus has specialized in the acquisition, development and management of high-quality residential and commercial properties throughout the western United States. Prometheus has a long history of award-winning approaches to development, management and general excellence. Its philosophy is centered on making the apartment experience more fun and interesting while providing a true sense of home. For more information, visit http://prometheusreg.com.

For the original version on PRWeb visit: http://www.prweb.com/releases/2016/09/prweb13725077.htm

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Article source: http://www.benzinga.com/pressreleases/16/10/p8546646/prometheus-real-estate-group-raises-128-625-for-four-nonprofits

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