Nemont
Well-known member
Would you believe $280,000 per acre? I didn't even know the BLM could auction off land. Has anyone heard about these auctions taking place?
[ 06-04-2004, 12:05: Message edited by: Nemont ]
June 3, 2004
Vegas-area land sells for $280,000 an acre
Associated Press
LAS VEGAS - Prices boomed to nearly $280,000 an acre at a Bureau of Land Management auction Wednesday, with 2,532 acres of formerly federal land purchased by developers in fast-growing Clark County.
The largest parcel - 1,940 acres in the Henderson hills that received no bids in November - sold for $557 million to the Focus Group, a southern Nevada developer that is earmarking it for a master-planned community.
"When you sell a piece of property for half a billion dollars, it's shocking," said Mark Morse, BLM Las Vegas manager. He attributed the spike in land prices - from an average of $173,245 per acre in November to $279,298 per acre Wednesday - to a continuing building boom in the Las Vegas area. Las Vegas is in Clark County.
In all, bidders pledged to pay the BLM more than $707 million for 71 parcels that had been appraised at almost $310 million. Most parcels were in developing areas northwest and southwest of Las Vegas.
BLM officials said 454 bidders posted deposits ranging from $10,000 for smaller 11/4-acre parcels to $50 million for the Henderson hills parcel.
The first-ever requirement for deposits came after bidders at previous auctions failed to complete purchases, requiring the agency to offer parcels for sale again.
In one day, the auction total exceeded the more than $700 million BLM has taken in selling 5,655 acres during 16 previous auctions authorized by the Southern Nevada Public Land Management Act of 1998.
The program has been praised by Interior Secretary Gale Norton as a model that could be used to dispose of federal land and protect sensitive areas. It remains unique to Clark County, where the federal government owns 80 percent of the land.
The act sets aside 5 percent of auction receipts for schools, 10 percent for water infrastructure and most of the remaining 85 percent for environmentally sensitive lands in Clark County and elsewhere in the state.
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[ 06-04-2004, 12:05: Message edited by: Nemont ]