Homebuilders in the Twin Cities metro are having their best summer in more than a decade — permits to build single-family houses outpaced last year for the second month in a row.
During June, homebuilders in the metro were issued 595 permits to build 1,061 housing units, according to data compiled by the Keystone Report for Housing First Minnesota. That included 558 single-family permits, 13 percent more than in June last year, and enough permits to build 503 attached units, a 30 percent increase over last year.
"Builders are still making up for the slowdown caused by the long winter," Tom Wiener, president of Housing First Minnesota, said in a statement. "Home buyers are feeling good about the economy and ready to buy."
Apartment developers are also feeling optimistic even after several record-breaking years and 2018 is expected to be no exception. Apartment construction is on pace to be the busiest ever.
After a significant decline in May, multifamily permits, which can be volatile from month to month, rebounded in June. They represented a more typical 47 percent of all planned units during June, mostly market-rate apartments.
The biggest projects receiving permits last month were in Edina, where Stevens Construction is building 165 units, and in Golden Valley, where Greystone Construction plans to build 98 units.
In Savage, Eagle Building pulled a permit to build 54 units and F. Kason Inc. pulled a permit for 42 units in Forest Lake.
Single-family construction is ramping up in large part because there's a shortage of existing houses on the market. Rising resale prices are narrowing the gap between new and used homes in some parts of the metro.