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Manhattan Builders’ 5-Year Plan: 33,000 New Rentals and Condos

For developers, the next wave of construction could add to the pressure to find tenants and buyers.

Manhattan Builders’ 5-Year Plan: 33,000 New Rentals and Condos
Apartment buildings, right, stand across the East River from Manhattan as seen from the Roosevelt Island Tramway above Roosevelt Island in New York, U.S. (Photographer: John Taggart/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- There’s a surplus of homes in Manhattan, and here come tens of thousands more.

About 33,000 new units for sale or rent are expected within the next five years, with the largest concentrations in the northern and southern parts of the borough, according to an analysis from Marketing Directors, a new-development brokerage.

Manhattan Builders’ 5-Year Plan: 33,000 New Rentals and Condos

The trouble is, Manhattan is already flooded with high-end condos and apartments from a post-recession building boom -- a glut that’s put a damper on both rents and purchase prices as New Yorkers take their time to shop for the best deals. For developers, the next wave of construction could add to the pressure to find tenants and buyers.

“It’s really the top question we get from our developer clients, after ‘How much can we sell this for?’ and ‘How fast can we sell it?’” said Joshua Silverbush, director of market insights for the New York-based brokerage. “What else is coming up, and what are we competing against?”

Manhattan Builders’ 5-Year Plan: 33,000 New Rentals and Condos

An estimated 1,643 new rentals are expected to reach the market between now and the end of this year. The apartment pipeline will swell to 3,831 in 2021, according to the firm, which tallied both units that have secured and applied for building permits, as well as announced projects for which paperwork hasn’t begun.

More new condos are coming too -- more than 2,000 of them in 2019 alone. For projects with detailed sales plans, the average price per unit is $2.7 million, according to Silverbush. That suggests much of upcoming supply is smaller homes, and less focused on grand spaces aimed at ultra-wealthy investors, he said.

To contact the reporter on this story: Oshrat Carmiel in New York at ocarmiel1@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Debarati Roy at droy5@bloomberg.net, Christine Maurus

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