News: Northern New England

Beech Hill Mobile Home Park homeowners purchase 25-unit park

Shown (from left) are; Beech Tree president Deanna Morrison, treasurer Debra Parker,
vice president William McCracken, and operations manager David Lariviere.

Exeter, NH Homeowners in Beech Hill Mobile Home Park purchased their 25-unit manufactured-home park, making it the state’s 137th resident-owned community (ROC).

Using training and technical assistance from the New Hampshire Community Loan Fund’s ROC-NH team, homeowners organized and formed Beech Tree Cooperative, Inc. in May. The cooperative then negotiated with the park’s owner, John Holcombe, reached a $1 million purchase price and finalized the deal on Aug. 25 with a mortgage from the Community Loan Fund. The cooperative’s volunteer board members were grateful and relieved to have the opportunity to buy the park.

Co-op president Deanna Morrison said the purchase was the right decision because it gave the residents “a sense of security, affordability, and the comfort in knowing we are in control of our future where we all have a voice. We don’t have to worry about (their community) being absorbed by someone with big pockets wanting to develop the property into huge condos and leaving us without affordable homes, which are non-existent in these times,” she said.

The co-op’s interim vice president, William McCracken, said the purchase was particularly important because the over-55 community includes many elderly residents on fixed incomes. Those homeowners can now be sure that the land under their homes won’t be sold in the escalating real estate market and will have a say in how their rent money is used to benefit the community, he said.

Beech Tree cooperative is Strafford County’s 24th ROC. Those communities contain 1,483 affordable homes. Cooperative ownership means Beech Tree’s homeowners are now eligible for products and services, including real mortgages, that haven’t been available to them.

Studies show that when the land is secure, the availability of home financing improves the home’s value, the owner’s ability to make improvements, and overall housing affordability. The more-than-8,300 homeowners in New Hampshire’s ROCs, spread across every county, also have access to management guidance, technical assistance, and leadership training in which they earn college credit through ROC-NH and its national network, ROC USA. For 38 years, the Community Loan Fund has worked across N.H. to connect people, families, and business owners with the loans, training, and advice that allow them to have affordable homes, secure jobs, and quality child care, and become more economically stable.

Photo courtesy NH Community Loan Fund.

READ ON THE GO
DIGITAL EDITIONS
Subscribe
READ ON THE GO
DIGITAL EDITIONS
Subscribe
STAY INFORMED FOR $9.99/Mo.
NEREJ PRINT EDITION
Stay Informed
STAY CONNECTED
SIGN-UP FOR NEREJ EMAILS
Newsletter
Columns and Thought Leadership
Shawmut Design and Construction breaks ground on the 195 District Park Pavilion in Providence, RI

Shawmut Design and Construction breaks ground on the 195 District Park Pavilion in Providence, RI

Providence, RI Shawmut Design and Construction celebrated the ceremonial groundbreaking for the 195 District Park Pavilion, marking the start of construction on a facility that will feature year-round dining and support space for park operations. In addition to the 3,500 s/f building, the project will include infrastructure upgrades
The New England Real Estate Journal presents<br> the First Annual Project of the Year Award! Vote today!

The New England Real Estate Journal presents
the First Annual Project of the Year Award! Vote today!

The New England Real Estate proud to showcase the remarkable projects that have graced the cover and center spread of NEREJ this year, all made possible by the collaboration of outstanding project teams. Now, it's time to recognize the top project of 2024, and we need your vote!
Investing in a falling rate environment - by Harrison Klein

Investing in a falling rate environment - by Harrison Klein

Long-term interest rates have fallen by 100 basis points, and the market is normalizing. In December of 2022 I wrote an article about investing in a high interest rate, high inflation market. Since then, inflation has cooled off, and the Fed has begun lowering their funds rate.
The 2024 CRE markets: “The Ups” (industrial) and “The Downs” (Boston class B/C office) - by Webster Collins

The 2024 CRE markets: “The Ups” (industrial) and “The Downs” (Boston class B/C office) - by Webster Collins

The industrial markets have never been stronger. What has happened is that the build out of Devens with new high-tech biotech manufacturing with housing to service these buildings serves as the connector required to really make the I-495 West market sizzle. Worcester has been the beneficiary