Endeavour Launches Galveston Marina to Land Larger Boats
Houston Business Journal, February 8, 2008,
by Jennifer Dawson
Well-heeled Houston mariners are buying bigger yachts,
but finding safe harbor close to home is a problem. Large boat
slips are in short supply.
Robin Parsley is floating a project to change all that.
The president of Endeavour Holdings Inc. plans to develop a
Galveston marina capable of accommodating the biggest yachts,
possibly as large as 250 feet long.
"We're building a marina that will be one of the
first destinations for mega-yachts in Texas," says Parsley.
Plans for the $110 million project also include retail space
and condo units.
In boating circles, a "yacht" is typically
longer than 50 feet, and a mega-yacht stretches beyond 100 feet.
Then there are the monster yachts -- almost as long as a football
field -- that do not come to Galveston.
"It's because they have no place to go,"
says Parsley.
He has a personal interest in the yacht-sized problem as owner
of the 72-foot "Rock N Robin."
Parsley docks at the Lakewood Yacht Club, one of few in the
area equipped to handle larger boats.
The Clear Lake club has about 10 slips for larger yachts,
maybe in the 140-foot range. The ability to accommodate 250-foot
yachts would make Endeavour's isle marina unique.
Gary Hare, manager of Texas Sportfishing Yacht Sales, says rising
sales of larger yachts pose bigger challenges for local buyers.
"A lot of people don't keep them in this area,"
says Hare. "One reason is the larger slips are hard to
come by."
Many Houston owners of mega-yachts ranging from $20 million
and $60 million berth their seagoing swankiendas in Florida.
Hare, who works at a brokerage house near South Shore Harbor,
says he sold an 86-footer last summer for $5 million. The yacht
hasn't been to Texas yet because the new owner can't find a
place with large enough dock space.
He says most marinas in Galveston and the Clear Lake area were
not built to handle large yachts due to a lack of demand for
larger boats.
But the tide seems to be turning.
"Bigger boats are selling pretty good right now,"
Hare says. "We have the money in the Houston area, and
people can afford to buy the larger boats."
He thinks the Endeavour project might entice locals
to purchase larger yachts and keep them nearby. He also points
out that the Gulf of Mexico is only 15 to 20 minutes by boat
from Endeavour's Offatts Bayou site, compared to about an hour
from Clear Lake.
Says Hare: "I think the response would be great. It would
definitely be a good thing."
Details before setting sail
Galveston is new anchorage for Endeavour, which recently
opened the first high-rise condo tower ever built on Clear Lake.
Endeavour's island project is a mixed-used development that
will include 176 condominiums, 30,000 square feet of retail
space and the marina with 240 boat slips.
The marina will cover about 12 acres of water with an average
depth of 17 feet, according to Parsley.
The 8.3-acre land development tract is on Offatts Bayou, just
across the causeway.
The Endeavour site has 1,000 feet of frontage on Interstate
45, and 1,000 feet of waterfront property.
The $110 million project could break ground as early as third-quarter
2008, and take one year to complete.
The first phase will include 80 boat slips, 54 condos and half
the retail space. The balance of the development is planned
for phase two.
Endeavour and an unnamed equity partner pieced together
the project site by acquiring separate tracts of land during
the past few weeks.
Parsley has had three properties on Broadway Boulevard
under contract for almost two years. He has closed on two and
anticipates closing the final deal within days.
Some boat storage barns, a bait shop and a vacant church converted
from an old restaurant are expected to be demolished on the
site within the next three months.
The project won't fully set sail until Endeavour pre-sells a
certain number of the midrise condos and pre-leases a certain
amount of the retail space, which will likely be leased to marina-related
businesses.
A permit for the first 80 boat slips has been approved by the
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Parsley says.
Endeavour had a preliminary meeting with the City of
Galveston about the condominiums, but has not yet applied for
a building permit. The developer has a schematic design by Morris
Architects, but until the building design is completed, it cannot
apply for a permit.
Initial plans include condos that range in size from
800 square feet to 3,000 square feet. Units are expected to
cost $400 to $500 per square foot.
Says Parsley: "We're not a beach property, but we're still
going to be very resort-oriented."