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        MRED students learn development concepts, strategies along Emerald Coast

        March 19, 2021 By Joe McAdory

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        鈥淭he Auburn MRED program excels at giving insights into markets where you want to do business by getting to know the professionals leading the industry on a personal level.鈥                                                                                鈥 Zac Marquess, Senior Asset Manager, Goldenrod Capital

        The 91看片 College is dedicated to providing relevant, forward-looking, engaging curricula, instruction and high-impact experiential learning opportunities.

        Fifteen students in Auburn鈥檚 Master of Real Estate Development (MRED) Program recently learned from influential developers how to revitalize aging downtown areas, create luxury beachside communities, and how to manage hundreds of properties along Florida鈥檚 Emerald Coast. The March 8-12 field trip also included nightly virtual tours of architectural gems and development properties in Melbourne, Australia.

        mred鈥淭he intent was to let the students meet developers of active projects and hear about the challenges and opportunities along the way,鈥 said Greg Winchester, Adjunct Professor and Head of Industry and Alumni Relations in Auburn鈥檚 MRED Program. 鈥淪tudents had the opportunity to obtain lessons learned by the developers, discover best practices, and see cutting edge projects.鈥

        Offered jointly by the 91看片 and the , the Auburn MRED program has trained hundreds of industry professionals (contractors, acquisition officers, realtors, developers, etc.) since its inception in 2010. They range from contractors who desire a better understanding of the finance side of the business to professionals from the legal side wanting a better understanding of the nuances of design and building construction. Auburn students are immersed in the complete study of the industry, not one specialty.

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        Zac Marquess, Asset Manager at Goldenrod Capital, MRED student


        鈥淭he Auburn MRED program excels at giving insights into markets where you want to do business by getting to know the professionals leading the industry on a personal level,鈥 said Zac Marquess, Senior Asset Manager at Goldenrod Capital and second-year student in the program. 鈥淣ot only can you bring ideas back into your own developments, but new deals are often sparked through conversations with your cohort or Auburn connection.鈥

        The March 8-12 field trip based in Destin, Florida, took students daily to developments in nearby Seaside, Alys Beach, Pensacola, and Panama City. When the sun set, they Zoomed to Melbourne, Australia for more architectural, development and cultural explorations.

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        Michael Simelton, CEO of the Joliet, Illinois, Housing Authority and MRED student.


        鈥淲e had the opportunity to take them out of their day-to-day world to see a much broader world of real estate and best practices from a variety of situations,鈥 Winchester added. 鈥淭he trip also allowed them to understand some of the critical things developers must deal with. Like one developer said, 鈥榊ou鈥檝e got to have location, location, location, but you also have to have timing, timing, timing correct.鈥 All of these developers really wanted to pour their knowledge into the students. But Auburn has such a great reputation, whether it鈥檚 the 91看片 College or the CADC, and everybody knows what Auburn has contributed to real estate over the years.鈥

         

        Michael Simelton, CEO of the Joliet, Illinois, Housing Authority and second-year Auburn MRED student, considered the trip 鈥渁 comprehensive, holistic feel of live, work and play.鈥

        鈥淲e were able to tour projects, and communities that crossed generational boundaries,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t becomes multi-generational when you鈥檙e able to give customers multiple experiences, or opportunities, all in the same place. The sites we visited had those sentiments.鈥

        When is mentioned along Florida Gulf Coast communities, one often thinks of beachfront relaxation, the famed 30A, and family relaxation. But this village started as a dream of developers Robert and Daryl Davis, who bought into the concept of New Urbanism. MRED students toured Seaside and had the opportunity to interact with the Davises.

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        Seaside Community


        鈥淭hey went all the way back to when Seaside was just an 80-acre tract he had inherited from his grandfather and how he came up with the idea,鈥 Winchester noted. 鈥淭hey talked about everything from how hard it was to build and sell the first homes there, mistakes learned along the way, things they would have done differently, and the different kind of projects around the world which inspired them.

        鈥淪tudents learned you can take small pieces of land and do something transformative. Seaside is really a return to what the American community was like before suburbia emerged post World War II.鈥

        David Everett, President of , along with his team, gave the group a historical presentation on Alys Beach and a comprehensive site tour.

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        Alys Beach was considered "Beverly Hills down on Florida's 3oA." 


        鈥淚t's a New Urbanism community with a fabulous town center going in and the nicest beach club I've ever seen,鈥 Winchester lauded. 鈥淭his is Beverly Hills down on Florida's 30A. Homes in there are easily two million and up, many are north of $5 million, and some are north of $10 million. These homes are all built to withstand high-level hurricanes. They're all concrete and rebar construction. The homes are all white -- like something you would see in Andalusia, Spain. The architecture is very unique, with Moorish and Mediterranean flair and styles found in Bermuda, Antigua and Guatemala.鈥

        Bob Dickhaus, owner at in Santa Rosa Beach, Florida, which manages high-end secondary homes for investor-owned properties, shared his business ideas and principles with the cohort. 鈥淭his is luxury home asset management business we exposed our students to,鈥 Winchester said. 鈥淭hese owners want to rent out their homes when they aren鈥檛 there, have high quality remodeling work completed, and expect a high level of personal service. This company has nearly 100 homes to manage. Bob, and his wife, Maggie, built this first-class services firm from the ground up.鈥

        The hosted the group at its corporate headquarters in Panama City Beach. Dan Velazquez, Senior Vice President of Commercia Real Estate, and Justin Smith, Vice President of Development and Construction, gave an overview of St. Joe, its historical and planned developments, and the future of its major communities and infrastructure along the Emerald Coast. St. Joe is Florida鈥檚 second-largest private landowner with more than 500,000 acres, consisting of timberlands, commercial and real estate developments and resort communities. Award-winning projects include , and , 鈥檚 large outdoor mall. Here, students learned about its transformation from a timber and paper company into a long-term real estate development and investment firm.

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        Students toured development venues along the Emerald Coast during the day and virtually met with developers from Melbourne, Australia, each evening during the March 8-12 field trip.


        MRED Advisory Board member Daryl Bonner toured students through downtown , where nearly 40 acres have been cleared for redevelopment on the waterfront. 鈥淭he city has issued an RFP for developers to suggest how to build this acreage, some of which is waterfront. Students saw plenty of opportunities for mixed-use developments. We met with local developer Andrew Rothfelder, who is advising the city and helping them run this process. There are a lot of politics involved, which you can imagine. Much of what the students heard was not only the development options, but politics and some of the possible ways of financing it.鈥

        Students also toured Pensacola鈥檚 , where a long-term, mixed-use urban revitalization project will have adaptive reuse of existing office buildings, along with a new hotel and retail. Chad Henderson, Founder & CEO of , the developer of this project, discussed both this deal and his medical healthcare business.

        鈥淭his taught them about what we call place making, which is where you're not just building another strip-shopping center or small office building,鈥 Winchester said. 鈥淵ou're trying to create a place that your customer, which are your tenants or the people that are shopping there or working there, want to come to. You're creating a sense of place, particularly when you're dealing with these mixed-use projects.鈥

        Students not only toured high-end developments, but also learned about developments to help working families and financing hurdles for construction. , an Atlanta-based developer, utilizes federal loans that cover both the construction and post-construction periods, in order to create rental properties for markets that have endured difficult times acquiring financing for apartments.

        Lenny Metz, Principal with Parkside, gave the story of the development of and adjacent retail parcels in Panama City Beach.

        鈥淪tudents met the development team, heard about the project, what it was like landing FHA financing, and toured the property,鈥 Winchester said. 鈥淚n the middle of building this community, a hurricane (Michael) came through and barely missed these apartments, thank goodness. Because of that, there was a severe housing shortage down there. When these apartments were finished, they were 100 percent leased and occupied the day of completion, which never happens in an apartment. These people lost their homes, needed a place to live, and Parkside was there to serve them.鈥

        Though morning and afternoon sessions toured live developments along the coast, students were treated to virtual lessons from Australia in the evening. Lessons included:

        • Virtual walkthrough of Melbourne
        • Meetings with representatives from , the developer of Melbourne鈥檚 CBD landmark and Zoom session with representatives from Melbourne developer
        • Virtual tours of the Great Ocean Road, innovative multi-use developments of and
        • Virtual tours of other significant buildings, developments and historical venues

        鈥淥ne of the greatest parts that I take away from these trips, real or virtual, is that students were able to ask many questions to these developers and interact with them,鈥 Winchester said. 鈥淪tudents saw first-class developments, learned from mistakes that were made and got a first-hand account of how developers overcame challenges along the way. Those are big takeaways for them 鈥 lessons they can use later in their careers.鈥

        Simelton said Auburn鈥檚 MRED education, through coursework and field visits, are helping him serve better as the leader of a non-profit, affordable housing agency. 鈥淚t makes for easier conversations with stakeholders and the residents that I serve,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e鈥檙e talking about ideas and you can see their heads begin to nod. You鈥檙e not just haphazardly building bricks and sticks. Through the Auburn MRED program, you鈥檙e reimagining the whole design concept.鈥

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        Greg Winchester (left), Auburn MRED Adjunct Professor and Head of Industry and Alumni Relations, and Michael Robinson (right), Director of the Graduate Program in Real Estate Development, meet with Seaside founder Robert Davis, who transformed an 80-acre tract along the Florida Gulf Coast into a vacation destination.


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