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Published Thursday, August 18, 2005
By Mike Grogan
The Reporter
CHAMPIONSGATE -- Land as close to next door and as far
away as Alaska was auctioned off parcel by parcel at a
first of its kind land sale held Saturday at the Omni Resort
Hotel.
"This is our first multistate land auction," said
Taylor Hall, assistant vice president of USALandsale,com,
the Orlandobased company that put on the auction, which
drew hundreds of potential buyers.
Hall said the company, which was founded in 1999 by David
Waronker, a Celebration resident and owner of the Florida
Seals professional ice hockey team, has been accumulating
land all over the United States over the past six years.
Until Saturday's event, most of its sales have been over
the Internet, which accounts for the name of the company.
Waronker had said in a press release prior to the auction
that he had started the company for the sole purpose to
make real estate ownership and investment simple, affordable
and more than just a dream for everybody. In all, 206 pieces
of land in 19 states were on the auction block and available
for bidding.
"They are all undeveloped properties," Hall
explained. "Some are as small as a quarter of an acre,
and they range up to several hundreds of acres."
Some 70 of the properties for sale were in Florida, one
of the hottest land markets in the country.
Thomas Guss, who owns a real estate firm in New York City
and is an active investor in property, made a special trip
to Florida to attend the auction.
"Well," he said smiling, "I
came for this and a bit of lounging around the pool."
Guss said the auction gave him a first-hand opportunity
to get an idea of land prices in Florida.
"The market is real hot here," he said. "And
I don't think prices are going to go down any time soon."
He added he was looking for bargains, land he could buy
at auction for less than he could through other sources.
But bidding on property without getting a chance to see
it does have its dangers.
"Oh yes," he said. "You
can end up with a parcel of land with no access to it
at all. You don't
really have time to do the research. But even if you buy
something that only increases in value 8 to 10 percent,
that is still a liquid investment."
Hall said pamphlets with a complete
listing of the properties up for auction were sent out
to perspective buyers weeks
before the event was held. That was done to give interested
investors a chance to research the land they were interested
in."
Ron Profetta, who is in the business of buying and selling
land, came from upstate New York looking specifically for
land values in Florida.
"This is the first auction like this I've ever been
too," he said. "They've got a lot of property
up for sale and I'm looking for some possible bargains."
But not everybody attending the auction was looking to
make a killing in the real estate market. Armando Rodrigues,
a truck driver from Kissimmee, was looking for a piece
of property he can build a home on.
"I heard about (the auction) on the radio," he
said. "I'm hoping to find someplace here close that
isn't too expensive so I can build a house."
While Florida properties were hot items, so too were parcels
in New Mexico, Arizona, Alaska and Texas.
"The nice thing about an auction is you have an opportunity
to get great deals," Hall said. "You can bid
what you can afford and, if the bidding goes higher, you
can wait and bid on something else."
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