Woodland Park - The Benefits
The benefits of living in Woodland Park, CO set it apart from almost anywhere else in the country!
Scenic - Pikes Peak - "America's Mountain" - is literally right outside your Woodland Park window! Out your other windows you'll find forest and meadow views as well as views of the Front Range to the north of Woodland Park.
Family-Oriented - Woodland Park is THE place to connect with your family! You have great schools , family events every season, a walkable downtown, unbelievable Parks and Recreation programming for all ages and many interests. Not only will your immediate family enjoy living here, your extended family will be here often - your Woodland Park home may become the reunion gathering spot!
Rustic - Walk out your back door or drive only 5 minutes and you are surrounded by nothing but nature in its purest form! Hike on well laid out trails or forge into the wilderness of Pike National forest to camp, backpack, fish, and photograph for an afternoon or a month! Not so rustic? Take the trail bikes out for a spin or the dirt bikes and ATVs for an exhilarating experience.
Refined - Woodland Park is NOT city living but cultural amenities are readily available: monthly "Art Walk" events through galleries in Woodland Park sponsored by the Arts Alliance ; regular performances at the Ute Pass Cultural Center by artists of every genre including music - jazz, rock, bluegrass, Celtic, and dance - jazz, ballet, folk, and theater including musicals, as well as art shows of local and regional artists. Need more? Colorado Springs and Denver are short drives away!
Healthy Lifestyle - Enjoy all a community has to offer for a healthy lifestyle: a thriving small town , abundant opportunities to enjoy the outdoors, community events of all kinds, forward-thinking school system, regular health fairs, volunteer options in many areas, public transportation, cultural events, and more!
Vibrant Business Community - Woodland Park's Economic Development office is always busy! Here are a few bits of current news:
| From 1999 to 2009, the proportion of Teller County households earning more than $100,000 increased by 87% and those earning more than $150,000 more than doubled, up 120%. There were declines, too, in the numbers of households which earned less than $50,000.
| Average household median income for Woodland Park is $60,400, and the average is $69,300 (state demographer current estimate)
| Regarding the fiscal trade area for the Woodland Park region, it is estimated to be $860 million and the growth potential for retail is $95 million.
| 60% of every dollar spent in Woodland Park is estimated to come from regional residents and visitors, while 40% comes from city residents - this points to the growth of the regional and visitor trade, and means businesses do not have to rely only on the small town population.
| While the City has taken measures to budget conservatively, the sales tax collections for 2009 were down 3.9%, far less than the double-digit sales tax losses in other cities and the state.
| Woodland Park sales per square foot for general merchandise and grocery is $350, higher than the average western neighborhood shopping center sales per foot for that category ($344; all numbers based on 2008 data).
| According to Trulia Real Estate, the median price of homes in Woodland Park is now $212,000 (March 2010), up 11.8 % over last year and home sales increased 2.9% over same period last year.
| National retail vacancy rate average is now 9.5%. Woodland Park's retail vacancy rate was estimated to be 11.3% in 2009. The overall commercial vacancy rate (office, retail, other) in Woodland Park is now estimated to be 13%. National office vacancy rate average is 13.5% (CoStar).
Generally, the numbers point to positive underlying trends for Woodland Park's economy. That is not to say that the economic struggles of some businesses and families are over. Unemployment in Teller county is now 9% (March, Colorado Department of Labor) just under the national average of 9.7%. Certainly, with five commercial buildings in foreclosure along Highway 24, there is tangible evidence that the poor economy has had impacts. Two Woodland Park banks' economists predict more shakeout in commercial real estate, nationally. The indications are that Woodland Park, however, may be better positioned than other communities to re-gain lost ground.
You can see, Woodland Park Colorado real estate is as close to a sure bet as you can get!
Call me TODAY to discuss how this information may affect YOU!
Office: 719-687-1715 Cell: 719-963-6971
Woodland Park begins to shake off economic chill
May 02, 2010 11:20 PM DEBBIE KELLEY , Special to The Gazette
WOODLAND PARK • Long, cold winters are nothing new to residents of this mountain town. But after years of endless summer for the business community, the recent economic deep-freeze has been hard to take.
Woodland Park hasn’t been immune to the effects of the nationwide recession. Like other cities, it has suffered spikes in foreclosures, unemployment and commercial vacancies. Numerous businesses closed, from gas stations and restaurants to a jewelry store and a tattoo shop. A local bank has found itself struggling.
Today, while neighbors like Colorado Springs are growing optimistic after months of improvement in sales tax receipts, home sales and building permits, local officials are only starting to see inklings of hope: a new microbrewery, a Bible college and a possible residential development.
Community leaders here hope they are seeing the big thaw, but they predict it will take up to three years for the local economy to recover.
Stuck on hold
Construction, always a key economic driver, has gone from boom to bust. Developer and commercial broker Allen Brown points to five vacant parcels on Wal-Mart Supercenter property as an indication of the state of commercial development. The lots were considered prime real estate for corporate development when the big-box retailer opened in August 2007.
“There’s no question we’re in shock,” Brown said. “We were expecting those pad sites to sell quickly. Prices on the land was high, and they’ve reduced it a couple of times. That shows you the big boys need a certain amount of population or traffic, and we just don’t have that.”
Also stalled is Woodland Station, the city’s nearly decade-old plan to revitalize downtown with a major hotel, new restaurants, shops and entertainment venues on 10 acres. Two developers remain committed to the project, said Beth Kosley, Woodland Park’s economic development director and executive director of the Downtown Development Authority.
Home sales remain slow, although the market for lower-priced homes has improved, said Sharon Roshek of Coldwell Banker 1st Choice Realty. A seven-month inventory is reported for houses priced less than $225,000, she said, while a mounting inventory continues to make the mid- and upper-price ranges “a buyer’s market.”
Housing prices won’t improve and new home construction won’t resume until the glut of foreclosed properties is reduced, said Brad Spivey, chief investment officer and vice president of loans for Park State Bank & Trust in Woodland Park.
“Until we see a plateau in foreclosure filings, it’s hard to get confident that the housing problem is starting to be resolved,” Spivey said. “We still have a large supply yet to come, which will keep housing prices constrained.”
Digging out
As an official of a community bank that primarily serves Teller County businesses, Spivey knows what he’s talking about. Park State Bank & Trust has been hit hard by the recession. Last July, it began operating under a consent decree issued by the FDIC and the state banking division, as a result of high loan delinquencies and defaults.
“When the community suffers, we suffer,” Spivey said. “But we raised capital and are working with borrowers to manage the process. We’re still in a survival mode, as a community, and the biggest challenge now is to prevent further deterioration.”
That’s also the city’s goal. One priority is to help the businesses that have survived to stay in business, said City Manager David Buttery.
A revised sign ordinance is “more business-friendly,” he said, giving shops more opportunities to advertise.
A new pedestrian-activated crosswalk is designed to attract foot traffic to stores and make it safer to cross U.S. Highway 24, which bisects the downtown.
Last year’s Mainstreet Makeover — an exterior sprucing of some downtown businesses using state and federal funding — will enter its second phase this summer, with interior energy improvements on eight properties, Kosley said.
And several projects are on the table, Buttery said:
• A Habitat for Humanity house is expected to be under construction soon.
• Construction of several homes in an upscale development, Paradise of Colorado, featuring cobblestone-like streets, large bronze statues of mountain wildlife and a man-made waterfall, is expected to begin this year.
• The Woodland Park Church of the Nazarene is planning to expand its sanctuary.
• Shining Mountain Golf Course, which reopened in May 2007 after foreclosure, is building an events center, which is expected to open this summer.
• Andrew Wommack Ministries, a worldwide evangelistic television and radio ministry headquartered in Colorado Springs, purchased more than 100 acres from Woodland Park-based Sturman Industries last September for $4 million and plans to move its Charis Bible College to the property. The city is working with the ministry to help fulfill its plans to accommodate up to 1,000 students, Buttery said.
• BierWerks, a microbrewery, has cleared licensing hurdles and plans to open in a former tire store around Memorial Day.
Encouraging signs
Strong growth is reported by Pikes Peak Regional Hospital, the county’s full-service, 15-bed hospital, which opened in October 2007.
“We’re very busy and have added new specialists in the adjacent medical office building,” said hospital CEO Dolores Horvath.
The hospital’s net annual revenue has climbed from $12 million in 2008 to $16 million in 2009, Horvath said. Inpatient counts have jumped from an average three a day to seven a day, she said.
Even more encouraging, Spivey said he’s starting to see interest in commercial and residential land purchases for the first time in two years.
“We’ve had an increase in the last 30 to 60 days for loan demand,” Spivey said, “which is a sign that people’s entrepreneurial spirits are starting to recover and that we will have new jobs in the future.”
Spivey said he’s been encouraged by how business owners and government leaders have pulled together, to help the community rise above the situation.
“We were fat, lazy and happy, thinking that what happened in California, Nevada and Florida wouldn’t happen here,” he said. “But it did. And it’s required extraordinary team effort to come up with a local solution to a national problem. We’re on the way to doing that.”
Kosley said a community branding and marketing task force is working on sharpening the image of what the city has to offer and will roll out a marketing plan in May.
And with tourism season just around the corner, which traditionally bodes well for local retailers, optimism is in the air.
“It’s a year of caution — with a glimmer of hope on the horizon,” Buttery said.
IN A DEEP HOLE
Woodland Park and Teller County are suffering. 
Consider:
1 out of 51
The number of households countywide that went into foreclosure in 2009, the third-highest rate in the state and nearly double the statewide average.
71
The number of new filings during the first quarter of 2010 — which matches the number during the first quarter of 2009, says Pam Cronce, county deputy public trustee.
9 percent
The rate of unemployment in Teller County in March, up from 7 percent in October 2009, according to state figures released April 16.
20 percent
Approximate percentage of the town’s commercial buildings that are vacant, according to developer and commercial broker Allen Brown. Commercial lease rates have dropped from about $20 a square foot to about $12 to retain tenants.
