In Aberdeen, it appears, real estate hasn't kept up with other segments of the local economy.
Loosening The Reins On New Development
A popular spot for morning coffee is the Airport Cafe out east on Highway 12, just south of Industrial Park.
Allen Wellman is semi-retired and in the process of turning his construction business over to his sons. They do prep work, laying gravel and digging basements. Wellman says the construction business is certainly not booming.
"It's very slow, and it's highly competitive right now," he says. "Some of the jobs you just can't even break even on them that they're bidding for."
Carter Carlson — president of the Aberdeen Board of Realtors — thinks a cautious approach to new development has kept the real estate economy steady.
"Some communities in the middle part of the last decade — 2005, 2006, when things were great in America — possibly overbuilt a little bit, and the contractors and developers got a little too aggressive," he says.
"Aberdeen is a fairly conservative town — we're ag-based, we don't boom, we don't bust. We stay pretty stable."
Carlson says for now things are tight, but developers are planning to build more housing in the next year or two.
"We will be prepared, not if this comes but when it comes," he says.
Employers seeking new workers might argue that "it" is already here. And without substantial new housing now, the Hub City might just be spinning its wheels.