Australia鈥檚 largest student housing group Scape Australia is poised to expand into 鈥渦rban city living鈥 to also cater to postgraduates.
While the concept has yet to be market-tested, Scape is already fielding enquiries in Australia from global investors to commit up to $1bn (鈧612m) to develop what is becoming known as 鈥渂lended housing鈥, encompassing city living and student housing.
Scape Australia currently manages and owns A$5bn worth of purpose-built student housing in Australia鈥檚 gateway cities, and has plans to develop 500 city living units, mostly in Melbourne.
Craig Carracher, chairman and co-founder of Scape Australia, told 91传媒在线 that the urban city living apartments would initially co-locate in Scape鈥檚 student housing projects.
Scape is running a pilot programme of 31 apartments on the top floors of a student housing block in Swanston Street, in Melbourne鈥檚 central business district.
鈥淲e have not even started marketing, but 80% of these apartments have already been taken,鈥 Carracher said.
Scape Australia is currently building the world鈥檚 tallest student housing tower, in Melbourne, and this would include 125 city living apartments, along with some 12,000sqm of co-working space, when completed in early 2021.
Scape鈥檚 next project, also in Melbourne, would have 250 city living apartments, to be developed on the airspace of a large commuter train station in central Melbourne. It will be part of a mixed-use precinct and will be completed in 2024.
Carracher stressed that the city living concept should not be confused with multi-family, which caters to couples and families, or with micro-living, which offers tiny rooms in a co-living environment.
Urban city living catered to individuals, young professionals in their 20s and to postgraduates who required rooms typically more than a third bigger than a standard purpose-built student accommodation room.
He added: 鈥淚t is important that where the blended living solution could co-locate with student housing they would have separate lift cores and entrance and a separate communal experience focused on the 20-something age group.
鈥淭he market for urban city living is mobile, and embraces urban living where there is a night economy, such as in Melbourne, he said, adding that Melbourne had the most established central business district 鈥榥ight economy鈥 in Australia.
Global investor backings
Scape Australia is well supported by global investors including Allianz Real Estate, APG, Bouwinvest and others, in part because it has the added advantage of being an established brand in student housing.
For such investors, Carracher said, urban city living was just a 鈥渟hort reach鈥 from student housing.
Insitutional investors had followed the shift in retail and, to a lesser extent, office, to 鈥渆xperiential鈥 attractions 鈥 and could see the same shift happening in the residential market, he said.
Scape Australia recently launched a A$4bn core fund to hold its student housing assets and is expected to launch its third development fund in coming months to finance the development of new projects. It raised A$615m and A$500m, respectively, in its first two development funds.
With approaches already received, Carracher believes the third development fund could raise up to A$1bn.
Nigel Taee, founder of Scape globally and now expanding the Scape portfolio in Boston, US, said: 鈥淥ur experience in the US and across Asia encourages us to expand our remit to offer our core urban living solutions to a wider market of young people in their 20s living in the cities in which they study and work.鈥