Guest MINDSETTER™ Miller: Fane Tower Could Prove Disastrous for RI's Housing Market

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Guest MINDSETTER™ Miller: Fane Tower Could Prove Disastrous for RI's Housing Market

Fane Tower
Monday, October 22 will see a public hearing on the construction of the Fane Tower.

While most arguments about the building have drawn from its height, location, and design, as well as Senate Majority Leader Ruggerio’s attempts to circumvent city officials in pushing approval through, my concerns with the development lie in the economic effects the building will have on the region's housing costs.

Major developments should be welcome in Rhode Island with open arms, however, this project puts Rhode Islanders at too high a risk when one considers how the building will withstand future economic recessions.

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Major cities are seeing a similar trend of luxury construction. In New York and Boston, new luxury apartments are often sold to anonymous buyers whom seldom patron the properties they purchased. Much of this investment comes from outside the United States, backed by buyers from Asia who are looking to place their money in tangible assets in case of future economic or political uncertainty.

My concern in the construction of this building is that the majority of buyers Mr. Fane is coaxing are investors that will never live in it. This property will do nothing to ease the housing crunch Rhode Island is experiencing, and worse yet, will most likely stand dark as a security deposit box-in-the-sky.

Economic headwinds of the future signal, at one point or another, we will experience another contraction. I fear this building will damage Providence’s housing stability by flooding the market with useless units, depressing values throughout the metropolitan area. While relief in rent and housing prices may be appreciated now, they are dangerous during economic crises and could possibly subject Rhode Islanders to underwater mortgages in the future.

The worst of a housing collapse would be felt in Providence from this very building. Even if every unit is sold, it is unrealistic to believe the building would be even partially occupied. This monolith would serve only as a barrier for the neighborhood to connect to the river.

If Fane’s tower is to be built at all, there needs to be legislative protections in place to shield Rhode Islanders from grossly outsized and dangerous property speculation. The City Council should consider inquiring Fane about the types of tenants he would like to secure, and how he would shield Providence and the State from any type of speculative investment that this property would attract.

Otherwise, Providence may begin to face much larger consequences already looming on the horizon of many larger cities.

Greg Miller is a native Rhode Islander, Johnson & Wales University Alum, and Digital Editor at CTM Media.


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