A prominent west Pasco farm will sprout homes after an
unnamed developer bought the land at a recent auction.
The 45-acre Harris Farm sold for $5 million at a Nov. 14
auction conducted by Musser Bros. Auctions.
The property at 11530 W. Court St. was sold in four
parcels to two separate buyers.
A private buyer bought the pair of houses occupying about
two acres that front almost 400 feet of Columbia River shoreline. A developer
purchased the larger parcels, said Scott Musser, who conducted the auction.
The buyers won’t be identified until the deal closes. The
deadline is Jan. 10.
The farm’s future as a residential neighborhood was all
but guaranteed when the Harris family opted to sell the land they’ve owned
since World War II.
Musser called the farm one of the most exciting properties
he’d ever auctioned, thanks to strong interest from developers straining to
keep up with demand for homes.
Pasco issued permits for 541 single-family homes in the
first 11 months of 2019, 21 percent more than the same period in 2018. By
comparison, Kennewick and Richland posted 8 percent and 16 percent increases,
respectively, over the same period, according to the Home Builders Association
of Tri-Cities.
The Harris family took over the former Wexler Ranch when
the government requisitioned their original property on Paso’s east side to
support the World War II effort. Today, Big Pasco Industrial Park sits on the
former Diversity Dairy site.
Fred and Lura Harris moved their dairy, their livestock
and even their house down Court Street to what was then a remote corner
of Pasco. Family legend holds that breakfast was on the table – unspilled –
when the house arrived at its new location.
Fred and Lura eventually passed the farm to their son
Wallace and his wife Lucille. Today, it is controlled by a trust that benefits
their seven children and extended family, which includes grandchildren and
great-grandchildren.
As the family grew, the farm dwindled from the original
115 acres to the current 45.
The family decided to sell after receiving a private offer
last year. That deal fell through but the heirs decided it was time to sell and
simplify an estate that was getting more complicated with each successive
generation.
The property has long been a target for developers
responding to demand for homes. It is in unincorporated Franklin County, but is
encircled by the city of Pasco and is ripe for annexation into city limits.
The property already is served by city utilities, key
infrastructure as Pasco and Franklin County add new residents.
The Washington Office of Financial Management projects
Franklin County will grow to nearly 140,000 residents by 2050, a gain of more
than 50,000.
That demand is reflected in the price the farm drew at
auction. Musser said the $115,000-per-acre price is likely a local record for
residential land.
Nearly two dozen bidders registered for the hour-long
auction.
“It was an exciting day,” he said.
A private buyer purchased the smaller home sites, which
are upriver from the Interstate 182 bridge, on the Franklin County side of the
river. Richland’s Columbia Point flanks the opposite shore.
Harris Farm could support nearly 700 homes at 15 per acre.
The final count will likely be much lower.
Fans of the popular Harris Farm stand won’t lose access to
the hard-to-find peppers and other vegetables the family cultivates.
Lurene Harris Fleshman, the youngest of Wallace and
Lucille’s children, will reopen the farm stand at her new home north of Pasco.