Forest subdivision stopped in its tracks

Forest subdivision stopped in its tracks

Chet White/The News & Advance

Anthony Inturrisi stands at the site of his subdivision, Jason Anthony Manor, off Cottontown Road in Forest on Monday.

Advertisement

Text size: small | medium | large

By Bryan Gentry

Published: June 3, 2008

Anthony Inturrisi stands in his stopped-in-its tracks subdivision in Forest and sees what might have been — more than two dozen expansive homes on lovely lots, all on streets named for his grandkids.

But a slowed housing market has left the Bedford County builder short of that dream.

He nearly lost the subdivision to foreclosure after his bank froze his credit line. His company filed for bankruptcy last week, canceling a foreclosure auction so he can get his financial house in order and try moving the project forward.

“It was always his dream to do something like this,” his wife Mary Ann said Monday, sitting on the front porch steps of the only completed home in Jason Anthony Manor off Cottontown Road.

“I always knew he could do it. He could do anything he put his mind to.”

Inturrisi is lowering the prices on his high-end houses and on the land so he can sell them to pay back the bank and subcontractors.

He is one of several builders in the region struggling to survive the dip in the market. Others have filed for bankruptcy, too.

Inturrisi started building homes nearly 40 years ago. In 1993 he came to Bedford County from New Jersey to build a home for his sister. His family decided to stay.

“It was good for my kids,” said Mary Ann Inturrisi.

The county was also good for the construction industry. Inturrisi’s company, Custom Homes by Anthony, built and sold one home after another, court deeds show.

“We never had any (house) sitting more than three months,” he said.

Inturrisi lost count of how many homes he built in the area, but it’s at least 50, he said.

In 2004, Inturrisi started looking at land on Cottontown Road owned by Harry McDaniel.

Eventually Inturrisi offered to buy about 36 acres behind McDaniel’s house to create a subdivision.

When he told his wife about the idea, she said, “Go for it.”

Custom Homes by Anthony bought the land, divided it into 32 lots, installed utilities and had the road paved.

Inturrisi named the subdivision after his grandson, Jason, and the roads for his granddaughters, Maddie and Toni.

But in the summer of 2007, foreclosures began to rise nationwide, and home sales and prices fell.

Home values have remained steadier in the Lynchburg area, but homes have sat on the market longer than before. Also, there has been a decline in demand for high-end homes.

In September, Inturrisi was nearly done with two spacious homes priced at more than $400,000. He started two more.

With the housing market decline continuing, Christiansburg-based First National Bank froze Inturrisi’s credit line.

“They came in and said, we’re not going to release any more funds until one of the first two homes sold,” he said.

“It’s like going into a ball game and pulling a pitcher in the fifth inning,” he said. With much of his cash tied up in the project, “I kind of ran out of money.”

None of the houses have sold.

Beginning in January, the bank started planning a foreclosure auction. Local subcontractors filed liens for thousands of dollars of work or materials they supplied for the subdivision.

Inturrisi said he worried that if the property were auctioned, it would not yield enough money to pay the bank and subcontractors.

In late May he told his concerns to Stephen Dunn, a lawyer who had represented Inturrisi in real estate transactions.

“His goal was to make sure everybody gets paid every dime,” Dunn said. He suggested a bankruptcy reorganization to buy time.

Custom Homes by Anthony filed for bankruptcy on May 28. That allows the company to come up with a plan for paying off its debts.

“The initial plan on this is we’re going to reduce the prices on these houses by $30,000 to $40,000 apiece so we can start getting the bank paid off, and getting the mechanics liens taken care of,” Dunn said.

Inturrisi said he’s cutting the price of empty lots by about 30 percent and reducing some of the home size requirements.

They already have contracts on two empty lots, Dunn said.

Other small developers in Bedford County are having trouble during the slow market as well. Several have filed for bankruptcy, including Bedford Builders, another client of Dunn’s.

The 3,800-square-foot house on the corner of Cottontown Road and Maddie Lane was first priced at $479,000, but Inturrisi now is asking $429,000.

Showing off the home’s hardwood floors, granite countertops and screened-in porch, Inturrisi talks of his vision as though people are already living there.

Entering the master suite on the top floor, he points out a view of the mountains that’s hard to see from the street. He can also see the road named for his granddaughter stretching downhill to empty land.

“Down on the street the trees are in the way, but once you get off the ground,” he said, “you’ve got a view.”

Reader Reactions

Posted by ( Lburgguy ) on June 04, 2008 at 7:12 am

The guy names the streets after his grandchildren - that there says it all!

Report Inappropriate Comment

Posted by ( gee ) on June 03, 2008 at 12:49 pm

So if the man has built over 50 homes in the Forest area - someone tell me why one lot didn’t sell originally and why hasn’t the completed homes sold, especially if he’s considered a prominent builder by T. Polinek of Counts Realty.  Not to mention his own personal mcmansion he has for sale in Serene Creek Run for $900,000.  That house looks like a library.  As far a Farmington goes - those homes are very nice attractive homes.  I’d rather live there.

Report Inappropriate Comment

Posted by ( Mark Twain ) on June 03, 2008 at 11:16 am

Jim, what do you have against Farmington?  You are the garbage guy, are you?  I can tell you as a resident of Farmington that OUR children will go to the schools that will be paid for by OUR taxes with the money we earn from OUR jobs. 

Why is it that people want the benefits of growth but don’t want to welcome those who help the growth occur?

Report Inappropriate Comment

Posted by ( Puffin ) on June 03, 2008 at 10:58 am

jimofforest hit it on the head.  And I agree with him completely.  The market is overloaded with expensive homes and way way too many townhomes.  WHERE are these people coming from—and even better, where are they working?  L’burg gets excited when another Walmart creates minimum wage jobs…and that’s about all we see.
  The tax-payers get stuck with higher tax rates, higher water bills, etc. while the developers laugh all the way to the bank.

Report Inappropriate Comment

Posted by ( gee ) on June 03, 2008 at 9:20 am

He is not someone I would buy a home from.  There is a lot more to the story than what is listed above.  Like someone else posted previously he is looking to line his pockets and nothing else.  There are too many homes for sale in Forest and a lot nicer than Jason Anthony Manor!

Report Inappropriate Comment

Posted by ( jimofforest ) on June 03, 2008 at 7:22 am

Anthony is a good builder. He went too far when he decided to become a developer. I would like to see more developments go down, however, especially Farmington II, as these developments are just ruining our County. Builders should go back to just building contract homes, not spec housing in big developments. Forest and farm lands, once destroyed by development, never come back. And, where will the water come from if we build all these developments? Where will the kids go to school? Where will the money come from for schools, roads and other infrastructure? Geez, we need to slow down.

Report Inappropriate Comment

Post a Comment

The commenting period has ended or commenting has been deactivated for this article.


Tags relating to this article:

Can't find what you're looking for? Try our quick search:



Email This Print This AddThis Social Bookmark Button RSS Feed Add to My Yahoo!

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement