GETAWAY
HOMES
By Jerry C. Davis

For seasonal getaways, retirement or investment, the condo on the water
somewhere near Chicago suddenly has captured the imagination of the second-home
buyer.
In just three years, the Wisconsin Dells, better known for its amphibious
"Ducks" and 85 other attractions (plus 62 miniature golf courses),
has come into prominence as a waterfront condo community.
In Madison and Lake Geneva, Wis., and New Buffalo, Mich., to name a
few other strong markets, well-designed waterfront condos enjoyed a surge
of buyer activity that defies the slow pace of other second-home sales
around the country.
Developer Michael Peterson is right in the middle of all the Wisconsin
action. He just completed the total sales of two developments in the Wisconsin
Dells area, is finishing another in Madison and is looking toward the
1992 opening of his next, in Lake Geneva.
Peterson is a builder of low-rise housing, strongly oriented to the water
with plenty of dock and marina space.
The Rockford native even chose the name Blue Water Development Co. to
ensure that he is not mistaken for a landlubber.
" I wouldn't do a development unless it was on the water,"
Peterson said. "It's healthier, more fun; it's where people today
want to be."
His success in fully selling two projects within two years at Wisconsin
Dells demonstrates the popularity of this type residential product. At
Lighthouse Cove in Lake Delton and Sunset Cove in the Wisconsin Dells,
an on-site rental program keeps most of the units occupied in the high
seasons.
Condo buyers may realize enough in rentals to nearly cover their mortgage
costs and expenses.
An organized rental program is not offered at Blue Water's flagship
development, Mariner's
|
Cove
at Lighthouse Bay, where the
last 30 of 75 units at Lake Mendota are going up on the north side of
Madison. That's about a three-hour drive from downtown Chicago.
As in his other developments, Peterson put in the amenities first at
Mariner's Cove. He believes that second-home buyers are naturally fearful
that the promised clubhouse, pool, tennis courts, fitness center and marina
facilities may never be built after the development sells out. So he puts
them in upfront.
"The amenities are a marketing tool for everything else," Peterson
said. "We want people to see the pools (indoor and outdoor), clubhouse
and marina so they will know that we are not just going halfway with this
project."
From one-bedroom condos-priced as low as $99,900 as a "loss leader"-to
units of up to four bedrooms, Blue Water Development still can offer a
variety of choices at the Madison project.
A typical one-bedroom unit of 1,400 square feet is priced from $99,900
to $165,900. A two-bedroom condo with 1,800 square feet would cost $159,900
to $219,900, and a three-bedroom of 2,379 square feet would cost $189,000
to $249,000. The development also has a few four-bedroom units of 2,940
square feet listed for $262,900.
Typical Blue Water buyers make about $70,000 a year. The company expects
about a third of its buyers to come from the Chicago area-not as good
as the Wisconsin Dells, where 80 percent to 90 percent were from metropolitan
Chicago.
Balconies are numerous at Mariner's Cove, some off master bedrooms that
are about 15 by 18 feet in size. Other units have glass-enclosed sun porches,
some facing the water, a few yards away.
The kitchens' oak trim matches wood used throughout the condominiums.
Kitchen-island food preparation areas and fireplaces are offered in many
units, and whirlpool tubs are standard.
If Madison is too far, Peterson is preparing to start the Cove of Lake
Geneva, two hours from Chicago in the Wisconsin resort |
community. Resales
are also available at the company's two developments in Wisconsin Dells.
A typical two-bedroom, two-bath resale at Lighthouse Cove recently was
offered at $115,000 for about 1,700 square feet. That unit originally
was sold two years ago by the developer for about $70,000.
At Lake Geneva, development recently started on condos and other housing
at Geneva National, an Anvan Development Corp. project with golf courses
designed by Arnold Palmer, Lee Trevino and Gary Player.
Condos at the Fairways of Geneva National, grouped four to a building,
start at $93,900 for about 1,010 square feet. Town houses of about 1,300
square feet in a section called the Woodlands start at $131,900. 
These units are not on the water, but most buyers probably will join
the elaborate Geneva National Club or Hunt Club for lakefront privileges.
South Cove in New Buffalo is meant for the boater as emphatically as
Geneva National is for the golfer. Maybe more so, because the condos in
the current phase at this development are literally built as an extension
of the owners' boat.
The prices of $190,000 and up include a slip for a large boat, valued
separately at $50,000. The 960 square feet can be designed to the buyer's
wishes. Most choose to use loft space as the sleeping area, and the level
extending from the boat slip for entertainment, dining and living off
the boat. A one-car garage is included. The success of these developments
ensures that more will be coming as soon as developers can find desirable
sites.
"We have studied successful developments like this in California,
Cape Cod and elsewhere," Peterson said. "I've never seen one
like our Madison project. It is a stepping-stone that will introduce us
in Lake Geneva and other Midwestern locations." |