Guest Mike261 Posted August 28, 2016 Report Posted August 28, 2016 I am trying to buy a hangar. Typical dried up airport that many of us fly out of. Not a horrible place, but not vibrant either. There are plenty available right now, but the prices seem high. Im looking to get a gauge on pricing at airports that are 20 or so miles outside of metro areas. thanks, mike Quote
gsengle Posted August 28, 2016 Report Posted August 28, 2016 Depends a lot on the metro area/region Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Quote
Guest Mike261 Posted August 28, 2016 Report Posted August 28, 2016 20 miles from Boston, but it seems that most small GA airports that don't directly service a metro area would be comparable. mike Quote
larryb Posted August 28, 2016 Report Posted August 28, 2016 A few years ago I talked to a guy with a hanger at e16. That is about 20 miles south of San Jose CA. He wanted $40k for a t hanger. I didn't buy it due to it being too far away. I currently rent from the county at KRHV. Quote
Guest Mike261 Posted August 28, 2016 Report Posted August 28, 2016 that seems to be the asking price...for a building on leased land to boot. mike Quote
Doggtyred Posted August 28, 2016 Report Posted August 28, 2016 Whats the lease terms for the land? This a MassPort affair? Quote
Jerry 5TJ Posted August 28, 2016 Report Posted August 28, 2016 Typical T hangar lease terms are month-to-month. I've owned several and all were month-to-month. In theory the airport can give you 30 days notice to get your tin off their property. Rarely happens. In my observation: Values on the smallest T hangars (40' and under) are declining in many places. Higher quality and larger hangers big enough for corporate planes (King Air, Pilatus) are holding value or appreciating (wish I'd bought a large hangar at TEB in 1987) Some places offer longer lease terms but usually for corporate size structures. The ground rent under your hangar is per square foot and at approximately same rate as a tie-down spot of the same size. Frequently the lease requires you to pay tax on land upon which your hangar rests. ("Net-Net") I'm in negotiation now to build a box hangar at a public use airport owned by municipality. Probably will turn out that they will get to approve the design, I'll get to pay everything associated with the construction; in exchange the airport will give me a 20 year ground rent lease. At end of lease period they take ownership of hangar. Quote
Ron McBride Posted August 28, 2016 Report Posted August 28, 2016 I own a hanger at a small airport in CA. My rent is per square foot, equal to the outside tie down rate. I have a ten year lease, that renews with some changes every ten years. the County can have me move the hanger to another location, at there expense, or by me out, under conditions. I don't see either happening with my location, some others could be at risk though, but since the airport is doing very little growing, doubt it. I paid $20,0000 for a 42' wide, 36' deep box hanger about 9+ years ago. Maintenance is lubricating the doors occasionally and I will replace the white sun roof panels this year, they are probably 30 years old. Ground lease is currently $63.90 and may go up yearly. Property taxes are about $220.00 a year. Current rent for county hangers is about $185.00 a month for a T hanger, plus property taxes. Ron Quote
DaV8or Posted August 28, 2016 Report Posted August 28, 2016 Rusty, leaky T "Port-a-Port" hangars sell for about $20,000 out where I am. But Ryron, C83 is over 50 miles from San Francisco, or San Jose. I thought about buying one as the idea of "owning" my own hangar appeals to me, but it just makes no sense. Same deal as described above. Month to month, I pay all the taxes. I rent a very nice hangar from the county that is far superior for $262 a month. Hangars aren't that hard to come by here. Wait a few months and one will open up, so prices stay lower. Quote
BDPetersen Posted August 28, 2016 Report Posted August 28, 2016 Pretty nice older T in north central Ohio sold for $12k. Newer ones $20. But be careful if you ever downgrade to Cirrus. 40' hangar doors are a tight squeeze. The older hangar was bigger. Quote
Danb Posted August 28, 2016 Report Posted August 28, 2016 At Kilg, Wilmington De, our ground leases are either 10 or 20 years, we had ours changed from 10 to 20 about 4 yrs ago. The airport authority estimates the FMV of the ground rent every 10 years though. The newer hangers go for $30,000 to $50,000. The older t hangers without electric doors go for about $20,000,' Our monthly lease per hanger is around $75.00. 1 Quote
Piloto Posted August 28, 2016 Report Posted August 28, 2016 Something to consider is buying a home at an airpark. Most of them have a hangar and nice grounds. Like Spruce Creek http://sprucecreekhangars.org/home.html There are a bunch of airparks in FL with good neighbors. I am sure you can find some at your location. José 2 Quote
laytonl Posted August 29, 2016 Report Posted August 29, 2016 Jose is correct about moving to an air park. I'm building 50x50 hanger now at my house at 5ga2 near Atlanta Ga. Lee 10 Quote
Danb Posted August 29, 2016 Report Posted August 29, 2016 10 hours ago, laytonl said: Jose is correct about moving to an air park. I'm building 50x50 hanger now at my house at 5ga2 near Atlanta Ga. Lee Sweet! Quote
Piloto Posted August 29, 2016 Report Posted August 29, 2016 (edited) Woow!!! I can live in that hangar and have no need for a house. Well done. José Edited August 29, 2016 by Piloto 3 Quote
mooniac15u Posted August 29, 2016 Report Posted August 29, 2016 16 hours ago, laytonl said: Jose is correct about moving to an air park. I'm building 50x50 hanger now at my house at 5ga2 near Atlanta Ga. Lee That retaining wall looks like an unfortunate necessity. I would probably hit a wingtip on something like that while trying to turn the plane around. Quote
salty Posted August 29, 2016 Report Posted August 29, 2016 I recently bought this 50x50. The home came with it. 7 Quote
carusoam Posted August 29, 2016 Report Posted August 29, 2016 Gents... Are you building a collection of aircraft to fit inside? with such a nice amount of free space, something is going to want to fill the void. Nature abhors a vacuum - Aristotle Today was the first day I ever heard a positive note from my financial administrator regarding the purchase of a hangar with an attached house. I've got six more years before the kids are out of college. I've got time... Thanks for sharing... Best regards, -a- 1 Quote
Piloto Posted August 29, 2016 Report Posted August 29, 2016 Now you need to upgrade to an Acclaim. José 1 Quote
Piloto Posted August 29, 2016 Report Posted August 29, 2016 (edited) Since these are not T-Hangar you can taxi in your plane into the hangar. If the hangar ramp has a down incline you can taxi back the plane while you steer from the inside. Once out close the hangar door with your remote control. A rear view camera will help with the steering. Who needs a tow bar with this arrangement or even having sciatica. José Edited August 29, 2016 by Piloto 1 Quote
BradB Posted August 29, 2016 Report Posted August 29, 2016 54 minutes ago, Hyett6420 said: Or even better have one's staff bring the aircraft out for you, turned facing the correct way with one's bags packed correctly in the hold. That is definitely the way to go. At my place the FBO staff brings the planes in and out and has them out front ready to go. And when you taxi in, your car is already on and waiting beside where you are marshaled into. But you do pay for it. Monthly rent is a little over $400. They do a great job taking care of the planes. And an Acclaim is a heavy beast to push around by yourself. Brad 1 Quote
ArtVandelay Posted August 30, 2016 Report Posted August 30, 2016 54 minutes ago, Hyett6420 said: Or even better have one's staff bring the aircraft out for you, turned facing the correct way with one's bags packed correctly in the hold. That is definitely the way to go. At my place the FBO staff brings the planes in and out and has them out front ready to go. And when you taxi in, your car is already on and waiting beside where you are marshaled into. But you do pay for it. Monthly rent is a little over $400. They do a great job taking care of the planes. And an Acclaim is a heavy beast to push around by yourself. Brad Not convenient if you want to leave after hours. Quote
Danb Posted August 30, 2016 Report Posted August 30, 2016 $400 monthly rent at Kilg is a real bargain, county T-hangers are up to $500, which is why we started a condo t- hanger, we have 4 rows of condos, best deal,at Wilmington 1 Quote
Hank Posted August 30, 2016 Report Posted August 30, 2016 (edited) I used to share a 50 x 50. The owner kept his Champ, bass boat and a motorcycle or two inside. And his old side-by-side refrigerator, wheelbarrow, a couple of bikes and some cabinets. Lots of space to fill up if you've only got one plane. (Biplane anyone? They're pretty small, short wings, etc. ) (me! me! if only . . . ) Edited August 30, 2016 by Hank 1 Quote
Guest Posted August 30, 2016 Report Posted August 30, 2016 A few years ago we built 6 2000' bays in 2 buildings. We fit the 400, Turbo twin and RV 4 and have room for another lift for the Mite when it's done. Building higher is cheaper than adding area. Clarence Quote
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