What It Costs to Build a 72-Unit Apartment in a Rural Town
An inside look at our latest apartment development in North Dakota — hard costs, soft costs, and how we make the numbers work for us
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“What does it cost to build a 72-unit apartment building?”
It’s the question I get asked the most when I post about our apartment developments.
So in today’s issue, I’m going to show you.
We’re currently building two 36-unit apartment buildings (72 units total) in Grafton, North Dakota, a rural town that hasn’t seen new multifamily construction in over 30 years.
This isn’t a hypothetical case study. It’s a real project that’s already under construction.
I’ll break down:
What we paid (or didn’t pay) for land
How we budgeted hard and soft costs
What each line item means in the real world
And how we turn a construction-heavy deal into long-term income and ownership
Let’s get into it.
The Land: Why We Paid $0 for Dirt
We’re in a rural market.
In small towns like this, housing demand is high, but supply is decades behind. And local governments know that.
To get projects like this built, cities will often donate land to qualified developers.
That’s exactly what happened here.
We secured the site, appraised at around $350,000, at no cost, as part of a state-subsidized effort to bring housing back to the region.
That’s one of the big advantages of building in the Midwest.
In big cities, land costs kill deals. In smaller towns, land is leverage.
Check out this breakdown on YouTube if you prefer video.
Soft Costs: What Most Builders Forget to Budget
These are the line items that sneak up on first-time developers.
They’re not sexy.
They don’t show up on site.
But they’ll break your project if you don’t plan for them.
Here’s how we underwrote our soft costs:
Architects & Engineers – $110,000
Plans, site layout, structural calcs — this is your pre-construction brain trust. We keep this tight but don’t cut corners.
Developer Fee – $880,000
As the developer, we earn a fee for putting the deal together — but most of that gets reinvested as equity. It aligns us with our LPs and builds long-term wealth.
Legal & Accounting – $15,000
Entity docs, partnership agreements, deal structure. This is where your structure lives or dies. Keep it clean, especially with multiple partners or LPs involved.
Reserves – $200,000
We underwrite 4–6 months of expenses (including debt service) into a reserve account. You don’t want to be scrambling for cash during lease-up.
Signage & Monument – $15,000
Small line item, big visual impact. Tenants want to live somewhere that looks and feels professional.
Builder’s Risk Insurance – $38,000
Covers damage during construction — from weather, vandalism, even fire. If the building blows over before lease-up, this policy saves the project.
FF&E – $50,000
Rugs, lobby furniture, hallway fixtures. These aren’t just aesthetics — they set the tone for the tenant experience.
Lease-Up Carry – $420,000
Construction takes 12–14 months. Then we give ourselves another 10–12 months to lease it up. That’s 2 years of interest carry to budget before stabilization.
Contingency – $258,000 (3%)
Every project needs margin for the unknown. We used 2% on construction, 1% on soft costs. Simple project, but we don’t skip this.
Total Soft Costs: ~$2 million
Hard Costs: Where the Real Money Goes
This is where construction experience matters.
Too many people underestimate what it takes to build 72 units from the ground up, especially in a place like North Dakota, where winter doesn't care about your project timeline.
Let’s break down what our $12.9 million construction budget actually buys:
General Conditions – $1.06M
Think: dumpsters, porta potties, jobsite trailers, project management staff. It’s the overhead that keeps a site running. It’s invisible until it’s missing — and then everything breaks.
Concrete – $1.4M
We self-perform most of our concrete work. On this project, we had to heat slabs to 60°F during a -20°F winter. That costs money. But concrete is foundational — literally.
Framing, Wood, Plastics – $2.25M
This was the single largest line item on the job. Framing three stories of multifamily doesn’t come cheap, especially with market volatility in lumber.
Thermal & Moisture Protection – $1.2M
Tyvek, insulation, vapor barriers — everything that keeps the building dry, warm, and energy-efficient.
Finishes – $1.0M
Drywall, flooring, cabinets, and doors. This is what tenants see and touch. We don’t overbuild, but we make it clean and livable.
MEP (Mechanical, Electrical, Plumbing) – $2.8M
HVAC: $950K
Electrical: $1.04M
Plumbing: $884K
These numbers are always close in a well-run project. If one is wildly off, dig deeper.
Sitework & Excavation – $890K
Utilities, sewers, grading, concrete flatwork, landscaping — it all goes here. Often overlooked, always expensive.
Permits, Insurance, Fees – $160K
You can't build without approvals. And approvals aren’t free.
Contractor Profit – $500K
As the General Contractor, we need a reasonable profit to keep our crews moving and projects staffed. This isn’t a 20% margin shop — it’s lean, efficient, and fair.
Projected Returns
So what does all this produce?
Let’s talk income.
📈 Gross Revenue: $1.1 million / year
💸 Operating Expenses: $400,000
🏢 NOI: $700,000
🏦 Debt Service: ~$500–550K
✅ Cash Flow: $150–200K / year (once stabilized)
By reinvesting our developer fee as equity, we secure long-term cash flow and upside.
Which is always the goal.
Final Thoughts
I started in concrete. I grew up pouring slabs with my dad.
Today, I run a vertically integrated development company — MAK Construction, MAK Capital, and Mega MAK Storage — and we’ve built everything from apartments to luxury storage across the Midwest.
But I didn’t get here by staying in the construction lane. I made the leap as a developer, owner, and operator.
And I love sharing the inside looks into our projects at MAK to inspire others to explore wealth-building skills in construction, development, and investing.
That’s all for today. See you next week.
Marc Kuhn
P.S. If you’re a developer, investor, or construction entrepreneur who wants to partner with us on future deals, reach out in a DM on LinkedIn. We’re growing our development business across the U.S. and are open to partnerships.
Hi Marc. Loved this piece. Very easy to follow and very concrete. If I may, I like to feature this article in my newsletter. We feature founders and operators transforming companies and real estate. This article would be very well received by our community.