"Drive down 11th
Street," Shields said. "Someone paid $280,000 for a concrete block house
and tore it down."
Most of the new buyers moving in are coming from out of town, Underwood
said.
"They're young -- late 20s, early 30s," Underwood said. "And they're
buying $200-,
$300-, $400,000 houses. I can't believe how many people can come up
with that kind of money. A lot of times it's double incomes, but a lot of
times it's not."
The biggest problem Shields said, is the scarcity of homes.
"There's hardly anything to sell," Shields said. "I have people who
want to move in, but I don't have anything to show them."
She said that few homeowners are cashing in by selling their beach
homes to buy bigger homes for less money elsewhere.
But Kirk Farber sure thought about it. He came oh-so-close to selling
the home he's owned and lived in on 10th Street in Atlantic Beach since
1985.
"My mom's a Realtor; she became one about seven years ago," he said.
"So every time I'd talk to her, she'd tell me that prices in Atlantic
Beach and San Marco are going crazy."
He's refinanced a couple of times over the years, each time amazed at
the appraisal. He bought it for $72,000, but two months ago, it was
appraised at $290,000. He's sure he could get more than $300,000 for the
1,800-square-foot block home with three bedrooms and two baths.
Farber said he's taken a lot of money out of his house already by
refinancing. He's put some back in remodeling, but he's also paid business
debts, invested in the stock market and started a college fund for his
2-year-old.
Still, he figures that if he sold his house, he would walk out with
$150,000.
"And that's not bad," he said.
Last year, he decided to take the money and run across the
Intracoastal. He and his wife signed a contract to buy a house (more
house, less money) off Hodges Boulevard.
But then there was talk of being transferred to Arizona. He was with an
Internet startup company that was moving its employees out to Tucson.
Farber, a database manager and trainer, talked management into letting him
stay in Florida and work from home.
But the uncertainty of the situation made him pull out of the contract
for the new house and stay in Atlantic Beach. Two weeks ago, the company
downsized and most of the employees, including Farber, lost their jobs.
"That's the dot-com world," he said.
He's not worried about finding something else; it's still the dot-com
economy. But the past year has made him appreciate where he lives.
"I started walking my dog a lot and realized how much I love the beach,
how fortunate my wife and I are to live here. We still talk about moving,
about getting more bang for the buck, but we're two blocks from the
beach."
So the Farbers are going ahead with work on the house -- adding a
driveway and enlarging the porch.
And that's what a lot of Atlantic Beach homeowners are doing.
"We can tell people to improve all you want," Shields said, "and you'll
still get your money out."
That's what Ramin and Shelly Partow did. He's one of the original
partners in Flamers, which has grown from one burger stand in The
Jacksonville Landing food court to more than 70 locations around the
country. They've lived on 11th Street for eight years and recently looked
into moving to Ponte Vedra Beach, but they decided to stay.
Ramin Partow talked about the financial end of it -- "It's such a
diverse-value neighborhood. A few blocks away, you've got oceanfront homes
at $1.5 million plus."
And he talked about the ambience.
"It's a closely knit neighborhood. And you've got accessibility to the
beach that you don't have in Ponte Vedra."
The Partows decided to remodel in a very major way. They went forward
to the street with an addition, went up to a second story, added a garage.
Their old 2,600-square-foot brick home is now a 4,600-square-foot
stucco house. Partow said it cost about $100 a square foot.
But it's done, except for the front yard, which is awaiting
landscaping. Partow stood in the front yard and pointed out similar
projects. Across the street to the left was once a 1,600-square-foot block
house -- now it's 4,000 square feet and shingled. Across the street to the
right, the old house was torn down and a new gray stucco built.
Just around the corner on 12th Street, George Cummings stood watering
his lawn and couldn't help but chuckle at it all. He's 79 years old and
has lived there since 1955, when he built his home after moving from New
Jersey with Prudential Insurance Co. He has a pretty good handle on
selling prices. He checks out real estate transactions in the Times-Union;
he even goes online to the Duval County Property Appraiser's database (pawww.coj.net/pub/property/lookup.htm) to see what sold for
what.
"I see homes with a lot less house than mine going for $250,000," he
said.
He pointed out one home on his street that has changed hands often over
the years, the last time for more than $300,000.
"And every time someone else moves in," he said, "there's a line of
plumbers and electricians out the door.
"But land, they don't make anymore -- that's the old saying," Cumming
said. "If someone offered me $300,000, would I take it? No. Where would I
go? I've got three children, eight grandchildren and two
great-grandchildren. This is the ideal place for them to come in the
summer."
There's the question, of course, if the higher prices will change the
eclectic nature of Atlantic Beach. But Shields said she hasn't seen the
demographics change much so far.
"Incomes are going up," she said. "A lot of money has been made in the
stock market. Interest rates are down. And a lot of young people are
making a lot more money than they used to. People like the quiet type of
prominence instead of a glitzy, gated community.
"But I'm sure there's not nearly as many rentals."
She said that while rents have gone up, they haven't kept pace with
sale prices.
In other words, that home that sold for $130,000 five years ago would
command enough rent to pay the mortgage. But that house might be $280,000
now, and the rent hasn't more than doubled.
Former Atlantic Beach mayor Lyman Fletcher said the basic nature of the
town hasn't changed much.
"I suppose that over time, it could affect the diversity," Fletcher
said. "But I haven't seen anything dramatic. You see a lot affluence.
People have more money, but you see people more involved in the community.
"I think the things that have always made this area special," Fletcher
said, "respect for the environment, respect for the trees and the intimacy
-- I would hope that most of the people moving here are coming for those
reasons."