Park City & Deer Valley

Real Estate Resource Center



Prudential Utah Real Estate

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Promontory Ranch Club

 

Promontory Golf Community

 

 

 

 

The Promontory Ranch Club is a 6,500-acre, 10-square mile recreational second home and private ranch club community with some of the most valued real estate properties nestled in the heart of Utah's Rocky Mountains just outside Park City. Promontory's unique mountain ranch setting is one of the largest real estate projects, which offers diverse year-round recreational amenities and activities for the multi-generational family.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Quick Facts

Total Units: Call more information

Location: East side of Park City overlooking Snyderville Basin and all 3 Park City Ski Areas

Property Type: Luxury Single Family Homes and Homesites

 

 

 

Location

All within minutes of each other, Deer Valley, Park City and The Canyons® Resorts are only minutes from Promontory. Promontory is just down the road from the charming ski town of Park City, Utah.

 

 

 

Amenities

Promontory is a gated community where private access to the slopes meets signature fairways from Jack Nicklaus and Pete Dye. Certainly you expect a resort community to offer private club facilities for your own gratification, and Promontory definitely delivers with heir ruggedly elegant Promontory Ranch Clubhouse. And steps away is something quite unexpected - a Kids-Only clubhouse. A haven where kids can be kids with supervised activities - allowing you to enjoy the facilities in the more adult realm next door.

 

 

Click Here to View Properties for Sale in the Promontory Area

 

 

*This information is subject to change without notice. Buyer is responsible to verify the accuracy of all information to the Buyers own satisfaction.

 

Park City End of Year Report: Prices Down & Sales Up

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Despite Troubling Stats, Park City Real Estate Remains Highly Desirable

 

Quarterly reports from the Park City Board of Realtors tend to emphasize the positive, and the 2010 End-of-Year Report released last week is no different even though people wishing for a quick market recovery will find it sobering.

That's because, said past-president Mark Seltenrich and new president Patrick Giblin, no matter how bad it is, Park City is faring better than the Utah average, which is faring better than the national average.

In other words, no matter how bad the news, it's still good news in comparison.

The bad news

"The outlook for 2011 is more of the same as what was seen in 2010," Seltenrich wrote in the report summary. "The market will continue to be very price sensitive it will continue to be a buyer's market ."

Median prices for all property types are down three percent from one year ago; mean average sale prices are down over seven percent, the summary said. Median prices for vacant land fell 50 to 60 percent in some areas, and 43 percent overall.

Sales of foreclosures account for more than one-third of all sales.

"Foreclosures will remain a major factor in the Park City market in 2011," the summary said.

In an interview Monday, Seltenrich said the mean average is down so low because high-end homes either aren't selling, or are selling for less.

An example of this is the King Road Estates auction last week at which no one bid higher than the value of the note on the home even though that amount was less than half the original asking price.

Giblin said the number of foreclosures in the market has been a "huge wake up call."

"It was hard to predict," he added. "We thought we were an island, a bubble in the sky."

Regarding vacant land prices, Seltenrich said "we must go through some pain to get to where we want to be."

Condominium sales are likely not better because financing continues to be a struggle, he said.

The total number of units sold is up from last year, but except for the past two years, there has not been so few units sold in over a decade even though there is more inventory in Summit and Wasatch counties now.

Lastly, the Heber Valley continues to experience the steepest sale-price declines and may not have bottomed out yet, they said.

Overall, Seltenrich said the area's real estate is, in many ways, still "bumping along the bottom of the market."

"We'll be seeing a little appreciation this year, but it will be small," he said.

Good in comparison

The board is not trying to hide or spin these facts, the two said, because much of it is good news when compared to the larger picture.

"The board tries to put that positive spin on things, and obviously there are a lot of negatives, but if we keep our noses to the grindstone and work together, the story in 2011 will be about pulling out and looking at the bright light at the end of the tunnel," Giblin said at the end of the interview.

According to the summary, total dollar volume in sales surpassed $1 billion because a large number of units sold for reasonable prices. That has only occurred six other times in history and is a 16-percent improvement over last year. Unit sales were up 20 percent over 2009.

Vacant-land sales were up 60 percent. Condo sales were up 22 percent. Single-family home sales were up over 26 percent and comprised 46 percent of all sales and 54 percent of total dollar volume, the summary said.

Property values in many neighborhoods appear to have bottomed out and are improving. There is reason to be optimistic about 2011, especially for single-family home prices, Seltenrich added.

Foreclosures and short sales continue to depress values, but the fact that they only comprise one-third of the market means sellers have adjusted to the new reality an important step to clear out inventory and to allow appreciation to begin again, Giblin explained.

What happened in the Park City real estate market in 2010 is simplified this way: prices came down and people are buying, they said.

That's good news, Seltenrich and Giblin said, because it speaks to the desirability of Park City real estate.

According to the National Association of Realtors, the number of sales in the West at the end of the year was down 1.5 percent.

According to Utah's Economy, a publication of Commerce Real Estate Solutions by Jim Wood at the University of Utah's Bureau of Economic and Business Research, the recession has so shaken Utah families that there is little appetite for homes.

"The lowest inflation and mortgage rates in 60 years, combined with 15 to 20 percent declines in home prices have done little to stimulate demand for housing," the newsletter said. "The current weakness is due primarily to a loss of demand."

Continued foreclosure rates in Utah which RealtyTrac.com has called some of the highest in the nation are only making it worse, it said.

But when the price is right, people are jumping on Park City real estate, Seltenrich and Giblin said.

"Prices are down, but not down that much," Seltenrich said.

Looking at graphs tracking the past 10 years, he would compare current sale price averages with the end of 2006 and early 2007 near the peak.

It also appears that the number of foreclosures in Summit County is in decline, the summary said.

Almost 400 more properties would need to sell in 2011 than in 2010 to get out of the units-sold slump, but the record set in 2005 was an anomaly and unsustainable, Seltenrich said.

Historically, Park City real estate appreciates at a five-to-seven-percent annual rate. There was a major dip around the time of the 2002 Winter Olympics; there was a steep increase in the middle of the decade, and then a sharp decline the last two years. But where Park City was in 2010 is really close to where it should be excluding the extreme peaks and troughs, he said.

"We're going in the right direction," he added.

Years from now, Seltenrich predicts, people will not look back on 2010 and 2011 as a dark period, but years of opportunity when they should have taken advantage of low prices and low interest rates.

by Andrew Kirk OF THE RECORD STAFF : The Park Record

 

For More Information on Park City and Deer Valley Contact:
Michael Lapay
Prudential Utah Real Estate
Mobile: 435-640-5700
Toll Free: 888-410-7653

mlapay@pureparkcityrealestate.com



http://www.pureparkcityrealestate.com/00B6DF
Posted on February 02, 2011 15:20:54 by Michael Lapay
 

Cash is King in Park City Real Estate

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Half of West Side Sales in 3rd Quarter were with Cash

 

 

The Park City housing market is thawing and unit sales are up from last year, yet it's still hard to get a loan. Experts say this apparent paradox is partly explained by an increase in cash purchases.

Luxury real estate attracts affluent buyers so cash purchases have always been common in Park City, but according to data compiled Rick Klein at Wells Fargo Home Mortgage, the percentage of property bought with cash is way up.

According to the National Association of Realtors, 29 percent of real estate nationally in September was paid for with cash. On the West Side of Summit County, 50 percent was. About 35 percent of single-family homes, over 50 percent of condominiums and nearly 80 percent of land sales were paid for with cash in the 3rd quarter.

For perspective, Klein compares that to the same period in 2007. In three years, that's a 65-percent increase for homes, double for condos and up 150 percent for land.

These buyers tend to be a mixture of investors and people unwilling to subject themselves to the lengthy and rigorous lending process banks have developed. And sometimes those are the same people, he added.

These cash purchases are usually for distressed properties, which continue to threaten the health of the market, but their number is declining, Klein said.

"Is it elevated? Yes. Is it also coming down? Yes," he said.

About one-third of purchases in today's market are of distressed real estate, but the flip side of that coin is two-thirds are normal sales, he said.

The increase of cash sales is having an interesting effect on local mortgage brokers, he said. It's a sign of recovery, but it doesn't help people in his business.

The uptick in sales means buyers are recognizing the bounce off the bottom has occurred and prices will begin rising. But with half the transactions being done with cash, there must be an even larger number of people who would like to buy now but can't get the financing.

"There have been 344 credit policy changes," Klein said.

He was recently asked to talk about "changes in the industry." Klein said that's like asking Jonah how he liked his cruise.

This is hurting first-time home buyers the most, he said. With tougher scrutiny of credit, many American families are failing to convince lenders they're ready for home ownership. That's hard to regular people, mortgage brokers, Realtors and home builders.

If a breadwinner was unemployed for several months in this economy, some lenders are asking to see proof of new employment for six months before they'll consider lending. It's hitting people who are already down, he said.

The irony is that the trend is still moving the market in a positive direction.

Mortgage agent Lisa Lundquist with Axiom Financial's Park City office said any movement in the market is a good thing. People are putting cash into real estate instead of the stock market and that will help her in the long run.

Rich Sonntag, managing director of the Promontory Club, agrees.

With roughly 80 percent of the most recent land purchases made in cash, Sonntag said buyers are broadcasting a message that it's time to get off the fence.

Sure a lot of people are being left out in the cold right now, but as these cash buyers snatch up real estate they are stabilizing pricing. As lenders become more confident about their appraisals, they'll loosen lending restrictions and allow more people into the game, he said.

He also agreed with Lundquist about investing. Gold promoters describe the precious metal as a hedge against inflation, but so many people have bought recently that gold is experiencing a bubble. Real estate is the best hedge against inflation, Sonntag said.

Right now it's the smart money that's buying, he said, and that will have short-term and long-term benefits. Cash buyers are purchasing what they are most confident about reselling as soon as lending restrictions loosen, he said.

They are improving the market and will profit when it is better, he added.

"It's the best support for next year's market," Sonntag said.

by Andrew Kirk OF THE RECORD STAFF : The Park Record

 

For More Information on Park City and Deer Valley Homes Contact:
Michael Lapay
Prudential Utah Real Estate
Mobile: 435-640-5700
Toll Free: 888-410-7653

mlapay@pureparkcityrealestate.com



http://www.pureparkcityrealestate.com/00B460
Posted on November 29, 2010 14:08:19 by Michael Lapay
 

Prudential Utah Real Estate - Recent Sales and Newly Pending Sales - Updated November 2nd, 2010

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Prudential Utah Real Estate Park City

Recent Sales & Pending Sales

Updated November 2nd, 2010

 

 

Newly Under Contract
Unit / Lot #
Subdivision Bed Bath Sq Ft / Acres List Price Date Sold
Deer Valley Dr
B304
Courchevel
1
1.5
912
$315,000  
N Lillehammer Ln
4305 The Lodges at Bear Hollow
3
2
1330
$299,999  
Norfolk Ave
  Old Town
3
2.5
1900
$1,050,000  
S Beaver Ranch Rd
Lot 1308
Timberlakes Area


1.14 Acres
$149,950  
Ridgepoint Dr
120
Ridgepoint
3
2.5
2137
$675,000  
Station Loop
  Blackhawk Station
3
2.5
1800
$360,000  
Woodside Ave
445 Quitten Time
3 3 1586 $545,000  
Oak Wood Dr
 Lot 56
The Oaks at Deer Valley
0.48 Acres
$799,000  
Red Tail Ct
  Bald Eagle Club
6 9.5 9311 $10,900,000  
Bitner Rd 0-17
Canyon Creek
2 2 1035 $179,900  
Angus Ct

Ranch Place
5
3
3262 $849,000  
Homestake Rd 345-U Claimjumper 4 3 1260 $299,900  
W Snowtop Ct   Snow Top 5 5.5 9528 $3,399,900  
Palomino Tl   Bison Bluffs 4 4 5264 $1,295,000  
Yamaha Ct 87 Racquet Club 3 3.5 1430 $359,000  
W Fox Hollow Ln G-2 Fox Point at Redstone 2 2 1038 $189,900  
E Cliffrose Ct Lot 33 Promontory     1.19 Acres $229,000  
TOTALS           $21,934,749  
               
Newly Closed
Unit / Lot #
Subdivision
Bed Bath
Sq Ft / Acres
List Price Date Sold
Bear View Dr
Lot 10
Cedar Draw Estates
    1.42 Acres
  10.22.10
W Deer Hill Rd

The Preserve
6
 8 8098 $3,200,000 10.26.10
Happiness Tl

Midway & Charleston Area
3
2
1674
$185,000 10.25.10
Pointe Rd
 J-12 Pinebrook Pointe
2
2
1232
$239,000 10.28.10
Woodland View Dr
 Lot 3  Alta Vista

  0.66 Acres $1,058,500 10.27.10
Deer Valley Dr E
C202
Lodges at Derr Valley
2 3 1407 $598,885 10.27.10
Three Kings Dr
4201
Silver Star at Park City
3
3.5 1985 $1,099,000 10.29.10
Sidewinder Dr
829
Prospector Square Condos
0
1
346
$89,750 10.27.10
W Silver Springs Rd

Southshore
4
3 2825
$599,000 10.28.10
N Deer Valley Dr
401 Chaparral 2
2
1242
$519,000 10.27.10
Meadowview Ct
C-13 Pinebrook Pointe
2
2
945 $209,800 10.29.10
Deer Valley Dr E 6215 Silver Baron 2 3 1685 $760,000 10.28.10
TOTALS           $9,295,385  

 

 

For More Information on Park City and Deer Valley Homes contact:
Michael Lapay
Prudential Utah Real Estate
Mobile: 435-640-5700
Toll Free: 888-410-7653

mlapay@pureparkcityrealestate.com

 

*This information contained here in was obtained from the Park City MLS and is deemed accurate.  However, we do not guarantee its accuracy and all information is subject to chagne without notice.

 



http://www.pureparkcityrealestate.com/00B31B
Posted on November 02, 2010 15:37:59 by Michael Lapay
 

Canyons Golf Course Press Release

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Summit County & The Canyons Launch The Canyons Golf Course

Golf Course has Estimated Completion Date of August 2013

 

Summit County, UT At a much-anticipated ground breaking on September 21, 2010, Summit County and The Canyons jointly announced the launch of construction on a long-planned golf course at The Canyons Resort. Elected officials, dignitaries, and staff from Summit County, The Canyons, Talisker and the Resort Village Management
Association gathered to celebrate the beginning of construction on The Canyons Golf Course, and praise the cooperation among these organizations as well as the property owners that made the golf course project a reality.


The golf course has been planned since Summit County approved a development plan for The Canyons area in 1999, and was originally expected to be open by 2002. A change of County government in 2009 and the purchase of The Canyons by Talisker Corporation in 2008 facilitated renewed effort to complete the golf course project. Officials
say the timing of the project has allowed for a masterful project plan.


"Since we bought The Canyons two years ago, we, together with Summit County and the RVMA, focused on alternative solutions to the obstacles of the past. With great cooperation, we all succeeded and now we move forward to get the golf course built," said Jack Bistricer, CEO of Talisker, owner of The Canyons. "Together with the new trails,
fantastic new lifts, restaurants and snowmaking, The Canyons is well on its way to becoming one of the very best all-season mountain destinations in the country."


The course will be constructed by The Canyons Golf Club, LLC, beginning in September, 2010 and is expected to be completed in August of 2013.


"We got it done. A golf course will make The Canyons a four season resort," said Summit County Manager Bob Jasper. "This project would not be possible without the outstanding cooperation of this community of individual land owners, the RVMA, and the leadership teams at Summit County and Talisker."


The environmentally sensitive 18-hole golf course, designed by award-winning golf course designer Gene Bates, will be open to the public. It is expected to be a significant asset to Summit County, increasing the year-round appeal for tourists to visit the area and providing additional recreational venues for residents. Although The Canyons has
generated strong winter season tax revenue for many years, economic analysis dictated that a golf course was essential to create a four-season mountain destination. County leaders hope the construction of the golf course will contribute to economic momentum for the County to include increased visitation and tax revenues, and Summit
County jobs.


Summit County is an 1880 square-mile region known for the quality and variety of its natural environment, recreational and cultural identities. With a population of approximately 40,000 spread over three distinct geographical areas, Summit County is a partnership of small communities that make up a richly diverse region blending agriculture, ranching, and tourism.


The Canyons, a Talisker mountain destination, offers 4,000 acres of exceptional skiing and snowboarding terrain, 176 trails, 5 world-class lodging properties including 35,000 square feet of flexible meeting space and a variety of dining options. Salt Lake City International Airport is just 35 minutes away and provides unparalleled access from anywhere in the world.

 

For More Information on Park City and Deer Valley Contact:
Michael Lapay
Prudential Utah Real Estate
Mobile: 435-640-5700
Toll Free: 888-410-7653

mlapay@pureparkcityrealestate.com

 

*This information is subject to change without notice. Buyer is responsible to verify the accuracy of all information to the Buyers own satisfaction.

 

 



http://www.pureparkcityrealestate.com/00B0DD
Posted on September 22, 2010 18:40:03 by Michael Lapay
 

Western Mountain Resorts First Quarter Sales 2010

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Park City, Utah Ranks Second in First Quarter Sales

As they say, it's so convenient to travel to Park City from anywhere in the states. 

You can hop on a plane in the morning and being on the golf course or ski slopes in the afternoon. 

Why wouldn't one want to live and vacation here!

 

    ASPEN*** WHISTLER* PARK CITY** STEAMBOAT SUMMIT CO SUN VALLEY** TELLURIDE TETON** VAIL McCALL** GRAND CO

Active

Listings

Homes
168 927 470 505 470 132 260 697 492 848
Condos
571 791 413 873 380 253 173 791 133 485
Land
102 850 736 347 290 147 222 283 1,154 832
Other
92 135 504 271 154 112 56 411 93 96
Total
932 2,703 2,123 1,996 1,294 644 711 2,182 1,872 2,261
 
                   

Units

Sold

Homes
22 114 29 68 36 12 25 70 72 37
Condos
41 133 33 91 31 23 18 145 14 33
Land
3 46 11 15 7 4 4 13 37 14
Other
13 8 33 14 3 19 2 17 2 0
Total
79 301 106 188 77 58 49 245 125 84
 
                   

Total

Volume

Sold

Homes
$34,067,000 $124,604,450 $21,152,250 $50,301,222 $25,970,081 $39,960,000 $52,587,750 $136,826,900 $18,285,477 $14,202,375
Condos
$27,654,000 $152,500,289 $19,707,920 $31,952,569 $17,345,800 $25,914,500 $22,124,100 $135,220,334 $1,829,344 $6,473,065
Land
$2,970,000 $13,894,910 $7,675,600 $8,078,025 $5,084,000 $1,980,000 $2,650,000 $3,509,000 $2,119,743 $1,930,450
Other
$2,005,500 $685,900 $14,907,725 $479,500 $474,000 $3,897,000 $575,000 $23,724,500 $512,000 $0
Total $0 $66,696,500 $291,685,549 $63,443,495 $90,811,416 $48,873,881 $71,751,500 $77,936,850 $299,280,734 $22,746,564 $22,605,890
                       

Average

Sale

Price

Homes   $1,548,500 $1,093,021 $729,388 $739,725 $721,391 $3,330,000 $2,103,510 $1,954,670 $253,965 $383,848
Condos   $674,488 $1,146,619 $597,210 $351,127 $559,542 $1,126,717 $1,229,117 $932,554 $130,667 $196,153
Land   $990,000 $302,063 $697,782 $538,535 $726,286 $495,000 $662,500 $269,923 $57,290 $137,889
Other   $154,269 $85,738 $451,749 $34,250 $158,000 $205,105 $287,500 $1,395,559 $256,000 $0
Total $0 $844,259 $969,055 $598,524 $483,039 $834,726 $1,237,095 $1,590,548 $1,221,554 $181,973 $269,118

* In Canadian dollars

** Disclosure: Undisclosed sales are reported at 95% of list price

 

 

For More Information on Park City and Deer Valley Homes Contact:
Michael Lapay
Prudential Utah Real Estate
Mobile: 435-640-5700
Toll Free: 888-410-7653

mlapay@pureparkcityrealestate.com



http://www.pureparkcityrealestate.com/00ABFD
Posted on June 08, 2010 17:12:38 by Michael Lapay