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S.C. State foundation to buy University
Village
University seeks to borrow $12.5M for
apartments
By LEE
HENDREN T&D Staff Writer Saturday, December 09,
2006
The South Carolina State University Real Estate
Foundation is lining up $12.5 million in financing to purchase the
six-acre, 288-bed University Village apartment complex on Chestnut
Street.
“It will be a wonderful new amenity to house our
students,” said Maurice Washington, the SCSU Board of Trustees’
chairman and its representative on the foundation trustee
board.
“It’s also an investment for our future,” he
continued. It will “support the enrollment goals of the university
as we move from where we are right now at 4,300 to 4,400 students to
about 8,000 students.”
“We can’t wait until we get there to
expand” the student housing capacity, Washington said. “We have to
be doing that right now.”
Separately, on-campus housing units
for 755 students are scheduled to go into service by the end of this
month. Those structures were financed with a nearly $40 million
federally guaranteed loan.
University Village is privately
owned. It was built in 2002 by Bostic Brothers Construction, one of
the nation’s largest builders of multifamily and student
housing.
“It would be a very attractive property for the
university,” said James Patterson, a part-owner of University
Village.
“There certainly have been discussions and those
discussions are continuing,” Patterson said in a phone
interview.
“It’s mostly their students who are there,”
Patterson said. “Many times universities will acquire properties
where their students live. It’s not unique.”
Although
university officials initially saw University Village as a
private-sector rival to campus housing, the university has become
the complex’s biggest customer, renting units there and at other
apartment complexes when demand for on-campus housing exceeds the
available supply.
“We’re paying an enormous amount of money
on a monthly basis to house over 200, sometimes 300, students at
that facility, somewhere in the ballpark of $90,000 a month,”
Washington said.
“If we’re going to pay that, we might as
well pay for ownership versus rentership,” Washington said. “The
wonderful thing about this debt is, it’s not (going to be) on the
university’s books.”
The real estate foundation is one of
several nonprofit entities affiliated with the university. Its
creation was authorized by the university trustee
board.
Washington said the University of South Carolina,
Clemson University and the College of Charleston are among the
institutions of higher education that have established real estate
foundations.
“We’re kind of late to the game, but better late
than never,” he said.
The foundation has its own governing
body, whose chair is the Rev. Sam Glover, a former member of the
SCSU trustee board. The foundation’s executive director is Dr. Kevin
Rolle, who is also the university’s vice president of student
affairs.
“The Real Estate Foundation exists primarily for the
purpose of acquiring land and physical structures for university
use,” Washington said.
“It is important as we look to the
future that we expand the physical footprint of the university, and
this gives us an ideal opportunity to do just that,” he
said.
“Whereas we may not be able to purchase” desired
properties “because of lack of funding and because we have stretched
our debt ratio out to its capacity, we may still be in need of
additional land or structures to carry out the mission and vision of
the university,” Washington said.
“The fact we can keep about
$12 million off our books in terms of debt plays well to the future
development needs of the university,” he said.
“We may want
to reserve our ability to incur debt for other purposes, going
forward, like our engineering building for example, and the
expansion of Hodge Hall, and (the replacement of) Turner Hall and
the library,” he said. “It’s always good to have that entity in
place to assist us in moving the agenda forward.”
The
foundation can obtain loans because “the collateral is the facility”
being purchased, Washington said. “That’s why we’re only paying
market value, appraised value.”
If the foundation defaults on
the payments, the bank can foreclose on the loan and repossess the
property, but that is unlikely, he added.
“Orangeburg County
has been discovered,” he said. “Developers are heading this way.
Property values will only escalate. Those who fail to get on the
front end of this wave will be very sorry five, 10 years out from
now. You either buy now and pay less, or buy later and pay
more.”
Orangeburg County Council held a public hearing Monday
on the proposed issuance of $12.5 million in South Carolina
Jobs-Economic Development Authority Student Housing Revenue
Bonds.
Proceeds of the bond will be loaned to South Carolina
State University Housing LLC, which was described as a “South
Carolina manager-managed limited liability company” whose sole
member is the SCSU Real Estate Foundation.
The SCSU Board of
Trustees discussed the matter behind closed doors at its quarterly
meeting Thursday.
Upon returning to public session, the
trustees voted to approve a management agreement between the
university and SCSU Housing LLC.
The agreement specifies that
the university will maintain the facilities “in good repair and
condition and at a minimum as required by university policy for
student housing facilities.”
It also says campus police will
provide law enforcement and the university “shall adhere to any
applicable federal, state or local ... laws and regulations
pertaining to health or the environment.”
Washington said the
university is prepared to install a security gate, additional
lighting and other safety enhancements at University
Village.
“Things appear to be moving along very smoothly,”
Washington said. “We have been approved by JEDA. Bank of America has
approved the loan as well.
“We need Budget & Control
Board approval and that matter will come before them on Tuesday
(Dec. 12),” he said. “The closing date is somewhere in
February.”
Earlier in the year, Washington said, “We believe
in smart growth. We realize, to grow this institution, we can’t be
afraid of incurring debt, but it has to be done very deliberately
and carefully thought out.
“We just have to be very
intelligent about how we approach this, and at the end of the day,
if the numbers all fit, and we can handle the new debt without
partially sinking the ship, then we’re going to try to make it
happen.”
T&D Staff Writer Lee Hendren can be
reached by e-mail at lhendren@timesanddemocrat.com
or by phone at 803-533-5552. Discuss this and other stories online
at TheTandD.com.
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