When a developer encounters a landowner unwilling—or unable—to convey fee title, the project doesn’t have to stop. In Texas and other jurisdictions following the Uniform Condominium Act, the leasehold condominium provides a practical and financeable alternative for structuring mixed-use, residential, or public-private developments on long-term ground leases.
Why Developers Are Turning to Leasehold Condominiums
Public institutions and private landowners often face legal or strategic reasons for retaining ownership. State universities may be required by statute to hold title, and family trusts may prohibit conveyance of legacy land. A properly drafted ground lease coupled with a condominium declaration can unlock the value of that land while preserving ownership and enabling project financing.
This approach has gained traction as mixed-use and vertical communities have become mainstream and financeable. The structure allows each use—hospitality, retail, residential, or institutional—to be separately owned, operated, and financed, even when all sit atop leased land.
Legacy Leases vs. Ideal Leases
In practice, developers encounter two very different lease scenarios when pursuing a leasehold condominium structure:
- The “Ideal Lease” is one drafted from the start with the condominium in mind. The ground lease anticipates submission to a condominium declaration, includes long-term stability (typically 50–99 years), and allocates obligations—such as rent, insurance, and maintenance—in a way that can be fractionalized among future unit owners. It provides a smooth path for recordation and financing and fits comfortably within the Texas Uniform Condominium Act (TUCA).
- The “Legacy Lease,” by contrast, is already in place—often negotiated for a single ground lessee long before any condominium concept existed. The developer, already holding the ground lease, later decides to impose a condominium structure to create diversity of ownership within the leasehold estate. This is common when a ground lessee wants to sell or finance discrete components (e.g., residential, retail, or office units) without transferring fee ownership.
Legacy leases present challenges:
- Their provisions were not written with multiple owners or a condominium association in mind.
- Obligations like insurance, maintenance, and rent are unitary—intended for one tenant—and must be carefully fractionalized or reassigned.
- Many legacy leases require lessor consent to submission under a condominium declaration and may contain terms that conflict with TUCA’s disclosure, insurance, or termination provisions.
- Reconciling these conflicts requires careful drafting and negotiation to satisfy lenders, insurers, and title companies while preserving the lessor’s core protections.
Developers using a legacy lease must undertake significant legal and structural coordination—often referred to as “harmonizing” the lease and the declaration—to ensure that the condominium is both compliant and marketable.
Key Drafting and Business Considerations
Developers must align two complex instruments—the ground lease and the condominium declaration—with the Texas Uniform Condominium Act.
- Term alignment: The condominium’s life ends when the ground lease expires, so a 50- to 99-year lease term is typical to ensure financeability and market acceptance.
- Rent allocation: Ground rent can be apportioned among condominium units as assessments collected by the association or as direct payment obligations of each unit owner.
- Insurance and casualty: TUCA’s mandatory insurance requirements must be synchronized with the lease to avoid conflicts between the association’s and lessor’s obligations.
- Unit-level enforcement: TUCA limits a lessor’s remedies—protecting compliant unit owners even if another owner defaults—thereby converting a binary landlord-tenant relationship into a multi-owner regime under one lease.
Balancing Developer and Landowner Interests
Section 82.056 of the Texas Uniform Condominium Act provides market protection: once the condominium is recorded, the lessor cannot terminate a compliant unit owner’s leasehold interest for another party’s default. This statutory safeguard, together with careful drafting, makes leasehold condominiums a viable tool for projects requiring long-term stability and lender confidence.
The Bottom Line
For developers working with landowners who cannot or will not convey fee title, a leasehold condominium can transform a ground lease into a marketable, financeable, and saleable real estate product. The key is harmonizing the ground lease and condominium declaration to allocate rights and obligations among multiple parties—turning what begins as a constraint into a flexible ownership platform that benefits both developer and landowner.