West Linn Real Estate Market Activity — January 11 – 17, 2010
Ron Ares January 18th, 2010
We’re seeing plenty of activity in the West Linn real estate market in just the second week of the new year. Twenty-five new listings appear, and eight homes go sale pending with another eight closed.
Seven of the new listings are pre-sales for new construction in Barrington Heights on Beacon Hill Dr., between Wellington and Imperial.
Stay tuned later this week. I’ll be running the 2009 numbers and comparing them to the past couple years.
Newly Listed
| ADDRESS |
LIST PRICE
|
# BEDS
|
# BATHS
|
TOTAL SQ FT
|
$ PER SQ FT | TYPE OF HOME |
DATE LISTED
|
| 2505 WOODHILL CT | $259,000 | 3 | 2 | 1,394 | $186 | DETACHD | 1/14/10 |
| 4176 IMPERIAL DR | $274,900 | 3 | 2.1 | 1,877 | $146 | DETACHD | 1/14/10 |
| 2025 MARYLWOOD CT | $289,000 | 4 | 2 | 2,651 | $109 | DETACHD | 1/14/10 |
| 1245 BEXHILL ST | $315,000 | 3 | 2.1 | 1,823 | $173 | DETACHD | 1/15/10 |
| 22015 CHELAN LOOP | $349,500 | 3 | 2.1 | 1,729 | $202 | CONDO | 1/12/10 |
| 22911 CLARK ST | $416,000 | 5 | 2.1 | 2,827 | $147 | DETACHD | 1/11/10 |
| 1928 FURLONG DR | $493,500 | 3 | 2.1 | 2,570 | $192 | DETACHD | 1/13/10 |
| 2924 BEACON HILL DR | $498,000 | 3 | 2.1 | 2,164 | $230 | DETACHD | 1/13/10 |
| 2988 BEACON HILL DR | $525,000 | 4 | 2.1 | 2,606 | $201 | DETACHD | 1/13/10 |
| 1891 6TH AVE | $525,000 | 4 | 3.1 | 2,499 | $210 | DETACHD | 1/14/10 |
| 22720 KOBUK CT | $545,850 | 5 | 3.1 | 4,112 | $133 | DETACHD | 1/11/10 |
| 2330 CRESTVIEW DR | $545,950 | 5 | 3 | 3,500 | $156 | DETACHD | 1/13/10 |
| 2952 BEACON HILL DR | $588,000 | 3 | 2.1 | 2,897 | $203 | DETACHD | 1/13/10 |
| 2976 BEACON HILL DR | $598,000 | 4 | 2.1 | 3,126 | $191 | DETACHD | 1/13/10 |
| 1848 MANCHESTER CT | $618,000 | 4 | 2.1 | 3,398 | $182 | DETACHD | 1/13/10 |
| 3093 KENSINGTON CT | $629,000 | 4 | 3.1 | 4,048 | $155 | DETACHD | 1/11/10 |
| 2730 BEACON HILL DR | $649,000 | 4 | 2.1 | 3,317 | $196 | DETACHD | 1/13/10 |
| 1088 DOLLAR ST | $649,900 | 5 | 2.1 | 3,804 | $171 | DETACHD | 1/13/10 |
| 4782 COHO LN | $649,900 | 5 | 3.1 | 3,611 | $180 | DETACHD | 1/12/10 |
| 23351 SW BOSKY DELL LN | $649,950 | 3 | 3 | 2,862 | $227 | DETACHD | 1/15/10 |
| 2510 SW BUCKMAN RD | $699,900 | 3 | 2 | 2,183 | $321 | DETACHD | 1/15/10 |
| 21357 WATERFORD PL | $749,900 | 4 | 2.1 | 3,317 | $226 | DETACHD | 1/11/10 |
| 23720 SW STAFFORD HILL DR | $750,000 | 5 | 3.2 | 5,105 | $147 | DETACHD | 1/11/10 |
| 21510 S SHANNON LN | $989,000 | 3 | 3.1 | 3,915 | $253 | DETACHD | 1/11/10 |
| 22675 JOHNSON RD | $1,649,000 | 4 | 3.2 | 4,827 | $342 | DETACHD | 1/11/10 |
| AVERAGES | $596,250 | 3,046 | $195 |
Pending Sales
| ADDRESS |
LIST PRICE
|
TOTAL BEDS
|
TOTAL BATHS
|
TOTAL SQ FT |
$ PER SQ FT
|
TYPE OF HOME |
DOM
|
| 2165 SNOWBERRY RIDGE CT | $122,955 | 1 | 1 | 716 | $172 | CONDO | 44 |
| 5575 SUMMERLINN WAY | $183,500 | 2 | 2 | 1,290 | $142 | CONDO | 653 |
| 5889 PERRIN ST | $295,000 | 3 | 2 | 1,713 | $172 | DETACHD | 201 |
| 6345 CAUFIELD ST | $299,900 | 4 | 2.1 | 2,758 | $109 | DETACHD | 153 |
| 1985 HILLCREST DR | $300,900 | 5 | 3.1 | 3,300 | $91 | DETACHD | 47 |
| 6292 EVERGREEN DR | $395,000 | 4 | 3.1 | 3,293 | $120 | DETACHD | 44 |
| 3563 VISTA RIDGE DR | $414,900 | 3 | 2.1 | 2,750 | $151 | DETACHD | 316 |
| 18575 OLD RIVER DR | $749,900 | 4 | 3.1 | 3,179 | $236 | DETACHD | 305 |
| AVERAGES | $345,257 | 2,375 | $149 | 220 |
Closed Sales
| ADDRESS | ORIGINAL PRICE | SOLD PRICE | % CHANGE | # BEDS |
# BATHS
|
TOTAL SQ FT |
$ PER SQ FT
|
TYPE OF HOME | DOM |
| 3850 CEDAR OAK DR | $222,800 | $225,000 | 1% | 3 | 2 | 1,316 | $171 | DETACHD | 20 |
| 4060 SUMMERLINN DR | $304,900 | $232,000 | -24% | 3 | 3 | 1,683 | $138 | CONDO | 561 |
| 1514 HOLLY ST | $299,000 | $255,000 | -15% | 4 | 2 | 2,034 | $125 | DETACHD | 267 |
| 1781 BUSE ST | $449,000 | $292,500 | -35% | 4 | 2.1 | 2,804 | $104 | DETACHD | 467 |
| 1170 SWIFT SHORE CIR | $319,770 | $341,000 | 7% | 3 | 3.1 | 2,867 | $119 | DETACHD | 9 |
| 25225 SWIFT SHORE DR | $359,000 | $350,000 | -3% | 3 | 2.1 | 2,524 | $139 | DETACHD | 3 |
| 19737 SUNCREST DR | $425,000 | $425,000 | 0% | 3 | 2.1 | 2,552 | $167 | DETACHD | 45 |
| 6260 HAVERHILL CT | $639,000 | $580,000 | -9% | 4 | 2.1 | 3,456 | $168 | DETACHD | 266 |
| AVERAGES | $377,309 | $337,563 | -10% | 2,405 | $141 | 205 |
Criteria: Homes in the 97068 zip code, listed, ending or sold between the dates listed above as reported by the Regional Multiple Listing Service (RMLS ). DETACHD refers to Single Family Detached Residence, MFG refers to manufactured housing, and ATTACHD refers to single-family residences with some portion of the structure attached to another property, but not constituting CONDO ownership. DOM stands for days on market, or the number of days from when the listing became active and when it received an acceptable offer.
Related posts:
- West Linn Real Estate Market Activity – January 18-24, 2010
- West Linn Real Estate Market Activity — January 25 – 31, 2010
- West Linn Real Estate Market Activity – December 28, 2009 – January 3, 2010
- West Linn Real Estate Market Activity — January 4 – 10, 2010
- West Linn Real Estate Market Activity — February 22-28, 2010



Thanks Ron for posting the numbers this week. Really appreciate it. I wanted to ask your opinion on whether or not you felt the market is picking up. Are buyers coming out and looking at homes ? Is there pent up demand ? I’m guessing that the combination of new listings and the upcoming expiration of the tax credit, there are probably more people entering the market. But, it’s easy for me to be an armchair real-estate analyst. I was wondering what you’re observing on the ground. Thanks !
DJ,
My take is that we are in slow-thaw mode.
In the general metro market, properties below $300,000 seem to see plenty of activity due to the tax credit. But there aren’t that many single-family homes in West Linn under $300K and there aren’t many local move-up buyers. In West Linn, the only buyers I’ve talked with are coming from other states.
However, I think there IS pent-up demand and that it will slowly turn into active buying behavior — IF economic conditions stabilize, IF we stop bleeding jobs, and IF it translates into consumer confidence.
Then again, after government stimulus programs expire and as rates creep up in the second half of the year, who knows?
My $.02.
Hi Ron, thanks for your insights. I agree with your comments. The big “if” is what happens when all the stimulus programs expire. The public’s appetite for deficit spending has soured considerably, so I’m not sure if the government has the political capital to continue these expensive stimulus programs. I really hope that the economy and overall consumer optimism stabilizes after the government removes life support.
My take on the analysis I have done for the current market of properties above $500K is that they are returning to 1999 – 2003 pricing, pending condition and price point. Homes that needed work and sold at the height of the market are now sitting as they have not had the upgrades, sold for too much and there are less Buyers in the market with the where-with-all to purchase these homes; the ones that can, are picky, and should be. Homes that are move in ready and appealing will sell, but at the 2002+- pricing. This could change, but maybe not in the best interest of sellers. If rates tick up and jobs remain scarce, there will be more reductions in this price range to balance affordability. My gut is that sellers should price to sell now; waiting for a Spring Buyer will be disappointing. My advice to Buyers is to be sure you can afford what you buy and prepare to stay put for 10+ years. Also, stick with a fixed rate product at all costs. The American home is where you live, not where you make money; back to Real Estate Reality. Buyers should be keen on demanding all comps in the area they are buying, including short sales and REO’s. The market is the ‘whole market’ when purchasing. I know some Brokers would differ with this opinion, but the market is what it is. When the market went up and people overpaid for property, there was no discounting/adjustment for this. The comparables were all taken into account and drove the market higher, the opposite should be the norm now; allow prices to go in the other direction, affordable – it will all pan out in the long run, 10 – 15 years.