Younger market for Ventura?
Nothing doing for the next two years when it comes to building new homes. But then demand from a new generation of Californians will mean an updated version of the American Dream.• Low consumer confidence levels
• Too many units in the resale market and in foreclosure
• Uncertainties about prices and values, keeping legitimate buyers on the sidelines
• Unrealistic expectations regarding consumers’ housing purchase power
• Questions about the health of the banking system
• Concerns for the degree of the sub-prime /foreclosure problem
- Large households are plunging (25% decrease 200-2006 in households of more than 5 people) while small ones are growing (almost 20% increase in households of 1 or 2.)
- Over the next ten years, the age group that has been buying larger suburban homes (40-54 year olds) will drop by almost 4 million, while the younger group (25-39) will surge by more than 5 million. And aging baby boomers looking to potentially downsize will swell the ranks of 55 and up by nearly 14 million.
The huge baby boom generation is leaving the stage of wanting to move up (which usually meant moving outward from the urban core.) The next generation (the so-called Gen X cohort born between 1965-1978) is much smaller than the Gen Y group (born between 1979-96.) Raised on "Friends" and "Seinfeld," surveys that fully 71% of that group expect to live in an urban rather than suburban setting -- and one-third say they would pay more to not have to drive to work, shopping and entertainment. Rising fuel prices will only make that trade-off more attractive.
These trends are already reshaping metro areas like Portland and the Silicon Valley. In Portland, for example, the proportion of owners living in attached homes has shot up 54% in the last six years.
Here are Gardner's predictions about an evolution in the American Dream:
- Intown areas and inner suburbs will remain on an upward trajectory
- Diversity, walkablity and proximity to jobs will be keys to site selection and premiumsRenters will represent a steady stream of demand as Gen Y will shift toward homeownership in 2018
- Product types -- smaller and affordable and should have focus on design over size
- Suburbs will need to evolve to remain attractive to Gen Y with more walkable areas, including new and existing town centers – urbanizing suburban commercial nodes
- Master-planned communities will need a greater variety of product and higher connectivity
So, if Gardner's case is on target, what does it mean for Ventura?
The community Vision adopted in our 2005 General Plan actually anticipated this shift. More in-town attached housing in our historic Downtown and along the transit corridors of the Westside and Midtown. A greater variety of home types in more suburban settings. Improved transit as well as making walking and biking safer, more convenient and more attractive. Encouraging a greater mix of uses so residents have a choice about whether they get in their cars to shop, work or seek outdoor or indoor recreation. Promoting high wage, high value jobs to keep residents closer to home for making their living.
These principles appeal both to the younger cohort looking to buy their first dwelling as well as empty nesters ready to give up the big home and big yard. That puts Ventura in a strong position for long-term success as we welcome the next generation of families to live the American Dream along the California coast.






