Ben Morgan visits a historic W.Va. property
Ben Morgan visits a historic W.Va. property

Fayetteville insurer specializing in historic W.Va. properties

Share
Morgan says insuring historic structures requires a specialized approach, for which there is an increasing demand in W.Va.

Developers in West Virginia are turning more often to preservation projects as investments, according to an insurer who’s specializing in the insurance of historic properties in the Mountain State.

Interest in historic properties is growing across the state, according to Ben Morgan of Morgan Insurance, due in part to a new 35-percent state tax credit for registered historic properties, which can be matched with a 25-percent federal credit.

“West Virginia is now competitive with surrounding states when it comes to government support for the rehabilitation of historic buildings,” Morgan said.

“This is very good news in communities that are savvy about attracting business, and it’s good news for investors eyeing properties here, which are reasonably affordable on the national scale.”

Morgan, who counts the historic Old Sweet Springs hotel among his clients, says that insuring historic properties is as nuanced as their appraisal and development, but this should not deter investors.

“Some new investors might look into insurance and come away thinking the task is prohibitive, but billions of dollars worth of historic property are being affordably insured in the U.S. this very minute.”

In all cases, Morgan is referring to properties listed on the National Register of Historic Places, which may therefore be eligible for grants and low-interest loans as well as tax credits but which also may be controlled by local, state, and federal ordinances.

In determining the value of registered properties, traditional methods such as market and acquisition value and replace­ment costs based on units, assembly, or square footage usually don’t work, he said; the most reliable approaches use esti­mates from specialty contractors.

“Cost estimates in these cases are driven by adding historic-building components to regulatory requirements to arrive at true replacement costs,” he said.

“The process requires far more specialization than an ordinary property, but we enjoy working with the extraordinary, and West Virginia has plenty of that.”

For more information on insurance for historic properties, visit Morgan Insurance online at AgentinWV.com or call 304-574-1117.

Sign up for our newsletter

Sign up to receive a FREE copy of West Virginia Explorer Magazine in your email weekly.

Sign me up!
David Sibray
Meet the Author

David Sibray

David Sibray is a West Virginia journalist, publisher, and historian who has spent more than four decades promoting the culture, communities and natural landscapes of Appalachia. He is the founder, publisher and editor-in-chief of West Virginia Explorer, a news and travel magazine devoted to the state’s history, tourism, outdoor recreation and economic development. Born in Wheeling and raised in Beckley, he attended West Virginia University and Wheeling Jesuit University. Since beginning his journalism career in the late 1980s, he has worked in publishing, public relations and destination marketing, including leadership roles with Theatre West Virginia and the Southern West Virginia Convention & Visitors Bureau. For more information, he may be reached at 304-575-7390 or at editor@wvexplorer.com

Leave a Comment