Commercial Real Estate Appraisal Cost Approach
Posted: Tuesday, March 15, 2011
by Patrick Oconnor
Oconnor & Associates
The cost approach was historically prepared as a part of most commercial real estate appraisals. However, the compunction to include the cost approach (when it was not relevant) has dissipated over the last 20 years.
The principle of substitution is the technical basis for employing the cost approach. According to the principal of substitution, a prudent buyer would not pay more than the cost to build a like property. In other words one would not spend $2,000,000 to purchase a new apartment complex if they could build it for 1,500,000.
External obsolescence occurs when circumstances outside the subject property's boundaries negatively impact its value. For example, an office building in New York would suffer from external obsolescence if Manhattan office occupancy fell from 93% to 75%. A mansion built next to a slaughter-house is another example of external obsolescence.
Entrepreneurial profit is the amount of compensation necessary to induce someone to organize the site, investors, debt, architecture, construction and leasing necessary to plan and build a property. The appropriate amount of entrepreneurial profit depends on factors such as competition, the difficulty of the project, market conditions and the wisdom of the developers plan. In some cases external or functional obsolescence prohibit entrepreneurial profit.
Following is a summary of the cost approach:
Market Value of Land
+ Replacement cost new of improvements
- All forms of depreciation
+ Entrepreneurial Profit
= Market Value via the Cost Approach
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The appraisal division of O’Connor & Associates is a national provider of commercial real estate appraisal services including financial modeling, commercial real estate appraisal, cost segregation studies, due diligence, insurance valuations, feasibility studies, gift tax valuations, highest and best use analyses, casualty loss valuations and HUD map market studies.
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