Caerus buys Midtown office building from Brause for $52M

10 East 34th Street

10 East 34th Street in Midtown (inset, from left: Leo Tsimmer and David Brause)

UPDATED, 8:45 p.m., Feb. 29: Leo Tsimmer’s Caerus Group acquired a 10-story Midtown office building from Brause Realty for $51.7 million, or about $940 per square foot, according to property records filed with the city Monday.

Caerus, a Midtown-based firm real estate investment firm, closed on its purchase of the 55,000-square foot property at 10 East 34th Street, between Fifth and Madison avenues, on Feb. 16.

Caerus confirmed the deal, saying in a statement that it “intends to reposition the asset as a boutique 60,000-square-foot office building.” The company noted the property’s “high-ceiling, floor-through office lofts” as features that make it “particularly appealing to media, technology and showroom tenants.”

Brause tapped a Cushman & Wakefield team led by Bob Knakal last June to market the office property, where about 60 percent of the leases were due to expire at the start of this year.

In the marketing materials, the looming vacancies at 10 East 34th Street were depicted as a positive — allowing prospective landlords an opportunity to capitalize on rising Manhattan office rents and offering the potential of a residential or hotel conversion.

Neither Brause nor Cushman & Wakefield returned requests for comment.

Caerus previously entered contract to acquire a nearby office building at 4 East 34th Street, which formerly served as the Zionist Organization of America’s headquarters. Tsimmer’s firm also partnered with Samson Klugman’s Quality Capital to acquire a pair of mixed-use East Village buildings for $60 million in August.

Brause, a Midtown-based, family-run firm, recently secured a $105 million construction loan for its new 270-unit apartment building in Long Island City. The company is co-developing the project with the Gotham Organization.

Source: Caerus buys Midtown office building from Brause for M

Peebles countersues former 346 Broadway “partner”

Daniel Hoeg, Don Peebles and 346 Broadway

Daniel Hoeg, Don Peebles and 346 Broadway in Tribeca

Peebles Corporation is again hitting back against a former collaborator who sued the developer in September.

In a countersuit filed earlier this month, Peebles alleged Daniel Hoeg’s 2012 resume was “substantially falsified and/or inaccurate,” and accused him of breaching confidentiality in his lawsuit, the New York Observer reported.

In September, Hoeg accused the developer of reneging on a joint venture agreement the two parties allegedly made in 2012 to pursue city projects, ultimately including 370 Jay Street in Downtown Brooklyn, 346 Broadway in Tribeca and others.

Hoeg claimed he was entitled to 25 percent of profits from the 346 Broadway redevelopment. Peebles bought the property for $160 million in late 2013, with plans to convert it to Condos along with the Elad Group.

Peebles’ lawyers called the claim “frivolous” at the time, and filed a motion to dismiss the suit at the time, claiming the agreement between the parties was for consulting services, not a joint venture.

Another former Peebles collaborator, Daniel Newhouse, sued Peebles over the project as well, saying he was entitled to a five percent ownership stake, but has since dropped the case. [NYO] – Ariel Stulberg

Source: Peebles countersues former 346 Broadway “partner”

Bauhouse LLC files for bankruptcy at 3 Sutton Place site

from left: Bauhouse’s Joseph Beninati and Gamma’s Richard Kalikow

from left: Bauhouse’s Joseph Beninati and Gamma’s Richard Kalikow

Joseph Beninati’s Bauhouse Group filed Friday for Chapter 11 bankruptcy for the LLC entity that owns the development site at 3 Sutton Place in Midtown.

It is unclear how the bankruptcy filing will affect Gamma’s planned foreclosure auction for Monday. Gamma holds more than $180 million in debt on the property at 426-432 East 58th Street, Crain’s reported.

Bauhouse defaulted on nearly $129 million in loans last month that it had received from Gamma, led by Richard Kalikow, for its planned 68-story, Norman Foster-designed condo tower, known as 3 Sutton Place.

Last week, a Manhattan judge denied Bauhouse’s request for an injunction against Gamma Real Estate and its planned foreclosure action. The restraining order would have given Bauhouse 45 more days to arrange a sale of the site or finance it and pay off Gamma, Crain’s reported.

Beninati told Crain’s after losing the injunction that he stood to lose millions he invested in the development site.

The bankruptcy filings list both Beninati and Herman Carlinsky — whose role was not immediately clear — as the executives of the company that owns the East 58th Street property.

Commercial brokerage giant JLL filed a lawsuit last week against Bauhouse, demanding $1.9 million in allegedly unpaid commission. [Crain’s] — Dusica Sue Malesevic

 

Source: Bauhouse LLC files for bankruptcy at 3 Sutton Place site

Madison Equities, PMG to split PH at 10 Sullivan Street into two

Renderings of 10 Sullivan Street and the penthouse

Renderings of 10 Sullivan Street in Soho and its planned penthouse

It seems like Madison Equities and Property Markets Group’s much-hyped $45 million triplex penthouse at 10 Sullivan Street was never meant to be.

The developer will chop up the 8,400-square-foot Soho condominium building into two units — a 3,000-square-foot apartment spanning the 15th floor, with an asking price of $11 million, and a 5,400-square-foot duplex asking $29.5 million, Bloomberg reported.

“We thought it was too expensive for the market and where the market was,” PMG’s Kevin Maloney told the news service. “The air is very thin up there in that buyer pool.”

The cut is yet another sign that demand at the top end of the luxury residential market may be flagging.

The Cary Tamarkin-designed penthouse was originally conceived as a six-bedroom, seven-bathroom unit with a private elevator, two wraparound balconies and 23-foot-high ceilings. Back in March, the developers swapped in Douglas Elliman to market units at the 16-story, 81,500-square-foot building, replacing the Corcoran Group. Sales launched in 2014. [Bloomberg] – Ariel Stulberg

 

Source: Madison Equities, PMG to split PH at 10 Sullivan Street into two

Vanke, Adam America and Slate pay $116M for LES dev site

45 Rivington Street Wang Shi

45 Rivington Street on the Lower East Side (inset: China Vanke’s Wang Shi)

China Vanke, the largest residential developer in China, just made another big bet on New York.

The property giant, along with Adam America Real Estate and the Slate Property Group, bought the vacant 150,000-square-foot building at 45 Rivington Street on the Lower East Side, paying $116 million to the Allure Group, a nursing-care provider.

The developers hope to convert the building, constructed in 1898, into about 100 luxury condominium units, the Wall Street Journal reported.

Vanke has made a habit of working with local firms when it invests abroad, and it’s buys in New York have been no exception.

“We will continue to commit to the U.S. We will continue to seek out good opportunities and good partners,” Vanke’s Kai-Yan Lee told the Journal.

The joint venture is the latest in a series between the partners. They’re working together on another condo conversion at 251 First Street in Park Slope, which has a planned sellout of $86 million.

They also bought 10 Nevins Street in Downtown Brooklyn together for $48 million late last year.

“We value the regional players that are very solid in their ability to execute and have the track record to prove it,” Lee told the Journal.

Vanke is also partnering with Aby Rosen’s RFR Holdings on 610 Lexington Avenue in Midtown, next to the Seagram Building. [WSJ] – Ariel Stulberg

Source: Vanke, Adam America and Slate pay 6M for LES dev site

A first look at the $25k-a-night villa at Marlon Brando’s Polynesian resort

Presidential Villa in Tetiaroa on Marlon Brando’s resort, The Brando.

Presidential Villa in Tetiaroa on Marlon Brando’s resort, The Brando.

From Luxury Listings NYC: Remember the brave architects who are turning Hustler Hollywood into a cursing-free fancy-pants club for Gwyneth? Well they’re back! And designing a $25,000-a-night Presidential Villa in Tetiaroa on Marlon Brando’s resort, the Brando. The firm, Gensler, says they are “designed to be simple, yet sophisticated shelters that dissolve the boundary between interior spaces and the natural beauty of the island.” Sounds good to us! [more]

Source: A first look at the k-a-night villa at Marlon Brando’s Polynesian resort

China bans “weird” buildings

The CCTV building in Beijing

The CCTV building in Beijing

Some of the most exciting architecture in the world comes out of Asia. But futuristic buildings with cutting-edge designs may be a thing of the past in China.

A statement from China’s State Council last Sunday established new guidelines on urban planning that would forbid the construction of “bizarre” and “odd-shaped” buildings, according to CNN. The rules are particularly aimed at buildings that are said to lack character or cultural heritage.

The guidelines say that new buildings should be “economic, green and beautiful.”

China’s building boom over the past several decades has birthed some truly eye-catching buildings, such as the CCTV headquarters by the Office for Metropolitan Architecture, co-founded by Dutch architect Rem Koolhaas.

The document went on to say that “bizarre architecture” that isn’t “economical, functional, aesthetically pleasing or environmentally friendly” would be banned. However, this isn’t all about aesthetics. Some feel that buildings in China are designed primarily to be standouts without enough attention given to function.

“I don’t feel shocked by this news,” architect Hao Dong, founder of Beijing-based architecture firm Crossboundaries, told CNN. “The guidelines pretty much point to a positive direction, particularly in China, where there are so many buildings completed to stand out, without considering their function.” [CNN] –Christopher Cameron

Source: China bans “weird” buildings

What if “Fuller House” was set in the real San Francisco?

Screen-Shot-2016-02-27-at-11.37

 

The successful 1990s family sitcom “Full House” ran for eight seasons. But apparently that wasn’t enough.

Preying on millennials’ obsession with all things ’90s, Netflix has revived the series, reuniting the original cast to create “Fuller House.” But what would it actually be like to raise a large family in pricey San Francisco today?

In response to the question, AJ+ made a snarky video wherein “Full House” becomes “Unaffordable House,” where rising home prices are the star and where gentrification is a supporting cast member. Give it a watch below:

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Fuller House in the Real San Francisco

Full House is back! Have mercy! Here's what the show would look like if they got San Francisco living right.

Posted by AJ+ on Friday, 26 February 2016

[AJ+] –Christopher Cameron

Source: What if “Fuller House” was set in the real San Francisco?

Downtown Broadway retail boomed in Q4: CBRE

443 Broadway

443 Broadway in Soho (credit: Vornado)

The Manhattan retail market in the fourth quarter was characterized by a notable uptick in demand and asking rents in the Downtown Broadway corridor, according to CBRE – with asking rents along the Broadway corridor jumping 55 percent from the previous quarter.

The Downtown Broadway corridor saw asking rents jump to $449 per square foot at the end of last year, from $290 per square foot in the third quarter, the commercial brokerage said in its Manhattan retail market report Friday.

CBRE noted that while Downtown neighborhoods were once mostly known for housing many of the the city’s financial services office tenants, the emergence of TAMI-sector tenants has helped drive demand for increased retail options “as a rising number of retailers seek a presence in the area.”

The 55 percent jump in Downtown Broadway retail asking rents was the greatest quarter-on-quarter increase of any of the 16 corridors tracked by the brokerage, CBRE said, with the priciest availabilities there asking up to $600 per square foot. Asking rents also jumped on nearly 51 percent on a year-over-year basis in the fourth quarter.

Soho’s Broadway corridor, on the other hand, experienced softening — a trend noted by market observers in recent months as demand has shifted to the neighborhood’s side streets. Asking retail rents there dropped 5.4 percent in the fourth quarter, to $796 per square foot from $840 per square foot, in “the largest quarter-over-quarter decrease” of the corridors tracked.

“As a result, landlords in the [Soho Broadway] area are negotiating leases below asking prices to renew activity in this sought-after corridor,” CBRE noted, citing how a drop in tourist spending due to the strong dollar has meant retailers’ sales volumes have fallen behind landlords’ “high-rent expectations.”

Across Manhattan at large, average asking rents within seven of the 11 corridors “long tracked” by CBRE hit all-time highs last year, “surpassing even their pre-recession peak in 2007,” according to the report. Those corridors included two areas of the Meatpacking District, which saw rent growth ranging from 11 percent to nearly 13 percent, as well as Fifth Avenue between 49th and 59th streets.

Asking rents within that Upper Fifth Avenue corridor jumped 5.6 percent from the third quarter, to $3,826 per square foot from $3,623 per square foot previously. CBRE noted “increasing confidence” among landlords, driven in part by Bulgari’s new lease at the Crown Building at 730 Fifth Avenue – which broke the city record with rents in excess of $5,000 per square foot, as The Real Deal first reported.

The brokerage also found that at the end of the year, there was an “unprecedented” 2.4 million square feet of retail construction in the pipeline for Manhattan, largely due to mixed-use developments like Hudson Yards and Essex Crossing.

Source: Downtown Broadway retail boomed in Q4: CBRE

CIM Group, AG settle on illegal hotel operation

Richard Ressler 47 East 34th Street

From left: Richard Ressler and 47 East 34th Street in Murray Hill

A year after shuttering the illegal hotel operating at 47 East 34th Street, the New York state Attorney General’s office and CIM Group reached a settlement.

The 36-story, 106,000-square-foot Murray Hill tower was supposed to be a condominium and was receiving 421a tax breaks. In exchange for affordable apartments, a building owner pays no property tax under the program. Hotels are not eligible for the abatement.

CIM Group bought the 110-unit building for $54 million in October 2011 in a foreclosure auction. CIM then leased the property for two years to BridgeStreet, a temporary housing provider, in March 2012, receiving $4.9 million.

Attorney General Eric Schneiderman investigated the building in the summer of 2014, the New York Observer reported. The building was being operated as a hotel, charging $239 a night for a studio. CIM agreed to pay $4.4 million — the value of the tax breaks — to a city fund geared toward affordable housing. It will also pay $275,000 for the cost of the state’s investigation.

“I am pleased that this company has agreed to do the right thing by paying the city back taxes and offering more than 100 rent-stabilized leases to New Yorkers,” Schneiderman said in a statement. “My office will continue to crack down on illegal development that exacerbates the city’s severe affordable housing shortage.”

The hotel was closed in March last year and turned into rent-regulated apartments. CIM terminated its lease with BridgeStreet in December 2014, which was effective March last year.

CIM is suing BridgeStreet for $5 million. [NYO] — Dusica Sue Malesevic

Source: CIM Group, AG settle on illegal hotel operation

What’s hot in luxury today: Oscar’s menu, inflatable pool toys and tea sommeliers

Big-Mouth

A giant inflatable swan (credit: Big Mouth)

1) Everyone will be walking away with an Oscar on Sunday night (at least a food one).

2) Luxury pool toys are selling like crazy because everyone wants to be a member of the #squad.

3) This tea sommelier at Tetley’s has insured his tastebuds for $1.5 million.

Source: What’s hot in luxury today: Oscar’s menu, inflatable pool toys and tea sommeliers

Attorney General’s office looking for new NYC digs

AG NYC

From left: Eric Schneiderman (credit: AG’s office), 120 Broadway in the Financial District and CBRE’s Scott Gottlieb

The New York state Attorney General’s office is on the hunt for a new home in the Financial District, as the expiration of its lease at Silverstein Properties’ 120 Broadway looms.

Late last year, the agency tapped CBRE to help secure a new 15-year lease for as much as 250,000 square feet holding more than 900 employees, according to a document from the state Office of General Services.

So far, the state has checked out space at 28 Liberty Street and 180 Maiden Lane, two office towers also in the Financial District, according to sources familiar with negotiations. Asking rents at both buildings start in the low $50s per square foot. But 28 Liberty has a higher price point – $80s per square foot – for higher floors than 180 Maiden Lane, where rents reach as much as $70 per square foot.

The agency wants a lease that begins in late 2017 or early 2018, preferably at a building south of Canal Street, the state document shows. The space requirements include 130,000 square feet designated for physical office space. Of the 130,000 square feet, 60 percent would be for enclosed private offices and 40 percent for an open plan layout with modular workstations.

Since 1986, the Attorney General’s office has housed its New York City operations at the landmarked 40-story, 1.9 million-square-foot Equitable Building at 120 Broadway. Its lease, currently for nearly 390,000 square feet across eight floors, expires Dec. 31, 2018, according to CoStar data.

Average asking rent at 120 Broadway is $45 per square foot. Other tenants at the Class A office building include insurance firm Tower Group and the Parish of Trinity Church.

CBRE’s Scott Gottlieb and Bruce Surry are representing the state in the search. CBRE declined to comment, as did the AG’s office.

The agency’s main office, led by Attorney General Eric Schneiderman, is located in the New York State Capitol building in Albany.

Adam Pincus contributed reporting.

Source: Attorney General’s office looking for new NYC digs

Brooklyn Brewery denies reports it’s leaving Williamsburg

Brooklyn-Brewery

79 North 11th Street in Williamsburg (Credit: Overall Murals)

On Tuesday, it was reported that Brooklyn Brewery was considering moving one of its brewing operations from Williamsburg, and checking out Brooklyn Navy Yard and Industry City as possible new locations.

By Thursday, the brewery was denying it was leaving Williamsburg.

“You may have heard in the past couple days that we’re looking to leave Williamsburg. Let’s be clear: we’re not leaving,” the brewery said in a blog post titled “Reports of our Departure are Greatly Exaggerated.”

Eric Ottaway, the company’s chief operating officer and general manager, told Crain’s that the ability to renew their lease at their current location, at 79 North 11th Street, was “zero.” Owner Yoel Goldman put the 35,000-square-foot warehouse at 61-71 Wythe Avenue that houses the brewery and Brooklyn Bowl up for sale last year.

Ottaway told DNAinfo the company intends to renew its lease after it expires in nine years.

“We love Williamsburg. We’ve been here before Williamsburg was something anybody was even willing to come to,” Ottaway told DNAinfo. “Our intention is to stay here as long as we can.”

The post did acknowledge that the brewery is “location scouting.”

“When those projects are fully ready, we’ll unveil them, and you can bet we’ll be toasting them here in our Brooklyn home,” the post reads.

The brewery also has plans to relocate its current brewing upstate brewing plant in Utica to a $70 million, 200,000-square-foot facility on Staten Island, Crain’s reported. Staten Island Marine Development is developing the site on the island’s western shore. [DNAinfo] — Dusica Sue Malesevic

Source: Brooklyn Brewery denies reports it’s leaving Williamsburg

Naftali Group assembling East 72nd St. properties: report

Mikie Naftali 235 East 72nd

Miki Naftali, 235 East 72nd a map of the neighborhood (credit: NYCityMap)

Miki Naftali’s Naftali Group may be working to gather an assemblage of properties on the Upper East Side.

The Midtown-based developer picked up the four-story, 3,500-square-foot townhouse at 235 East 72nd Street, paying $10.1 million to Donna and Hayward Pressman, who bought the property back in 1996 for $745,0000.

Naftali is looking to acquire other properties on East 72nd Street, the New York Post reported, citing unnamed sources.

Toll Brothers, also seeking to build an assemblage in the area, reportedly bid on the property as well, according to the Post.

The Naftali Group has struggled with a water leak at its Landmark Park Slope luxury rental building, which has caused tens of thousands of dollars in damage. [NYP] – Ariel Stulberg

 

 

Source: Naftali Group assembling East 72nd St. properties: report

Developers really sweetening the pot to sell high-end condos

penthouseatelier

Penthouse at Atelier at 635 West 42 Street (Credit: River 2 River Realty)

Yachts, Rolls Royce Phantoms, private indoor soccer fields, oh my! With the luxury real estate market softening, the perk one-upmanship has reached a new level.

First up is the 10-bedroom, 10,000-square-foot, penthouse condominium at the Atelier tower at 635 West 42nd Street, which was developed by the Moinian Group. Thrown into the deal is a $1 million dollar yacht, two Rolls Royce Phantoms and $2 million in credits to renovate the unit. Amenities at the skinny skyscraper include an ice skating rink, large lap pool, golf-driving range and complimentary breakfast in the morning.

For $85 million, the penthouse, which takes up the 45th floor, is the currently the most expensive on the market, according to the Wall Street Journal.

No story about pricey pads would be complete without Extell Development’s One57. Last month, it was reported the developer spent at least $1 million to furnish a $20.1 million apartment at the glitzy 94-unit tower. Its sales include the $91.5 million deal last year a group led by hedge fund mogul William Ackman for a duplex on the 75th and 76th floors.

A four-bedroom, 6,240-square-foot unit has 360-degree views that include Central Park, the Hudson and the Statue of Liberty. Asking price is $58.5 million.

Manhattan’s high-end condo market has seen a glut of new luxury developments as lenders are beginning to retreat from the market. [WSJ] — Dusica Sue Malesevic

Source: Developers really sweetening the pot to sell high-end condos

Angry tenants can sue Atlas all they want: AG

225 West 23rd Street Eric Schneiderman

225 West 23rd Street in Chelsea and Eric Schneiderman

UPDATED: Feb. 26, 10:54 a.m.: Attorney General Eric Schneiderman shut down what he called Atlas Capital Group’s illegal effort to pressure tenants.

In July, Atlas attached a rider to lease renewal documents it handed out to tenants at 225 West 23rd, demanding they agree not sue the landlord if their property is damaged by construction activity.

“I was horrified. It was like somebody was choking me,” longtime resident Laura Shapiro said. “It was written in a way that they wouldn’t renew the lease if you didn’t sign it.”

The rider “runs afoul of numerous state and local tenant-protection laws,” according to a cease-and-desist letter sent to Atlas by the AG’s Office on Feb. 16, the New York Daily News reported.

An Atlas executive defended the company.

“We look forward to making significant upgrades and improvements to the lobbies and common areas for our tenants,” Atlas Jackie Renton said in a statement, The residents who rent our apartments are important to us, so we chose to be fully transparent about the impending work. We listened carefully to our tenants, and after meeting with them, decided to withdraw the rider going forward.”

Atlas bought 225 West 23rd Street – a pair of buildings totaling 245 apartments in 128,000 square feet of residential space – in August of last year, paying $72.9 million to real estate investor Bernard Kayden. [NYDN] – Ariel Stulberg

A statement from Atlas was appended.

Source: Angry tenants can sue Atlas all they want: AG

Greenland Forest City scopes out at another Barclays Center site for office tower

pacific-park-site-map-pc-richard-site

From left: a map of Barclays Center (Credit: Pacific Park) and 590 Atlantic Avenue in Downtown Brooklyn (inset: MaryAnne Gilmartin)

Greenland Forest City is now looking at another possible site for an office tower near its Pacific Park development near the Barclays Center in Downtown Brooklyn.

Earlier this month, the developer — a partnership between Forest City Ratner Companies and Chinese real estate investment firm Greenland USA — was looking into securing the approvals needed to transfer up to 1.1 million square feet of development rights to 590 Atlantic Avenue. If the transfer takes place, a roughly 1.5 million-square-foot office tower could rise at the site, located close to Brooklyn’s largest transit hub at Atlantic Avenue.

Another possibility is a lot at the southwest corner of Atlantic and Sixth avenues directly behind the arena known as B4, DNAinfo reported. Right now, the site is for residential and some retail, according Forest City Ratner spokeswoman Ashley Cotton. But if the state government allows commercial rights from another Pacific Park building — 461 Dean Street on Flatbush Avenue — to be shifted to the site, a large office building could be built, DNAinfo reported.

Cotton told residents at a community board meeting that the changes would not add extra square footage to the complex or impact 2,250 units of affordable housing to be built within Pacific Park. No timeline for the plan was given.

Both plans need state approvals. At 590 Atlantic Avenue, currently the site of Modell’s Sporting Goods store and a P.C. Richard & Sons electronics and appliances store, Greenland Forest City presently has rights to build a 440,000-square-foot office property.

P.C. Richard recently filed a lawsuit against Forest City Ratner over the eminent domain condemnation of its location, as The Real Deal reported last month. [DNAinfo] — Dusica Sue Malesevic

Source: Greenland Forest City scopes out at another Barclays Center site for office tower

Take a first look inside Durst’s Via 57 West

25 West 57th Street

625 West 57th Street (credit: Liz Lucking)

A lesser-known design feat of the Durst Organization’s new luxury pyramid is its wallpaper.

The vaguely geographic pattern, designed by the Bjarke Ingels Group, lines some hallways of 625 West 57th Street, leading to rooms with average rents of $2,770 to $16,500. The pattern is a swirl of beige and white, running alongside a gray carpet, accomplishing a look reminiscent of a hotel, or upscale college dorm.

The waterfront tetrahedron — Via57 West — will open its doors next month, according to Durst representatives. The Durst Organization led a media tour through part of the building on Wednesday, showing off six different model units and some of the complex’s amenities.

A large staircase at the center of the lobby is surrounded by bricks that mirror the herringbone pattern seen in the building’s terraces. Beyond the stairs, the building becomes labyrinth-like. At the south side of the building, between apartments, are a children’s play room, a game room, a screening room and a poker room. Then there’s a lap pool, a basketball court and a living room where tenants can step out on the “sun deck” and peer at the Hudson River.

There are 178 different floorplans across the building’s 709 units, which range from studios to four-bedrooms. Roughly 70 percent of the apartments are treated to views of the Hudson River and also, the West Side Highway. A third of the apartments overlook a 22,000-square-foot courtyard — some featuring direct access — while others on the north side of the pyramid stare down another Durst rental, Helena 57West. Some of these residents will have a surrogate river in the form of a sculpture by artist Stephen Glassman, which will span eight stories along the Helena.

Inside West 57th Street

Inside 625 West 57th Street

One of the studios on the tour, which will have a rent of $3,800 per month, overlooks the courtyard from one level up and features a series “alcoves” for the bedroom and living room. Three different firms designed the apartments: BIG, McCartan and Vacant.

There are 142 affordable housing units in the building, for which a lottery launched in October. Leasing begins March 1, residents can start moving in the second week.

625 West 57th Street

625 West 57th Street

Source: Take a first look inside Durst’s Via 57 West

Deepwater Wind eyeing South Brooklyn Marine Terminal for staging ground

South Brooklyn Marine Termina (credit: EDC)l (inset: Deepwater Wind's Jeffrey Grybowski)

South Brooklyn Marine Terminal (inset: Deepwater Wind’s Jeffrey Grybowski)

A wind energy company — currently building the country’s first offshore wind farm – is considering the South Brooklyn Marine Terminal in Sunset Park as an on-land staging ground for a future project off of Long Island.

Deepwater Wind’s project could ultimately generate clean power for New York City, Bloomberg reported, citing a source familiar with negotiations.

“We’ve got one of the best sources of offshore wind in the county, right off Long Island,” the Sierra Club’s Dan Sherrell told the news service. “It’s literally the Saudi Arabia of wind.”

Deepwater started construction of a 30-megawatt wind farm off the coast of Rhode Island, where the company is based, back in July. The company plans to build several more, including near Martha’s Vineyard in Massachusetts, and along the Jersey Shore.

The city recently launched efforts to revive the Terminal, which has been mostly vacant for a decade. In late 2014, the Economic Development Corporation proposed a $115 million redevelopment effort, but it stalled in the face of opposition from the City Council. [Bloomberg] – Ariel Stulberg

Source: Deepwater Wind eyeing South Brooklyn Marine Terminal for staging ground

City to develop two LIC sites totaling 1.2M sf

Long Island City (credit: jlwelsh/Flickr) (inset: Maria Torres-Springer)

The city is planning a big development push in Long Island City.

The Economic Development Corporation will put out requests for proposal Thursday morning for two waterfront sites near Gantry Plaza State Park, totaling 1.2 million square feet.

Officials are aiming at as much as 300,000 square feet of office space and up to 1,000 apartments, including many that will be affordable, plus a school and a small park, Politico reported.

The announcement comes amid the build-out of Cornell Tech’s campus on Roosevelt Island and an emerging office sector near the Queens waterfront. Commercial rents have been rising and startups have been quick to take advantage of cheaper office rents in Long Island City.

It’s the first time the city has planned to develop commercial space on the waterfront in 15 years, Politico reported.

The parcels — which currently house a restaurant and a one-story Department of Transportation building — would require a rezoning if offices were developed.

Maria Torres-Springer said the goal is to make Long Island City a “true live-work-play community,” where parents can live in an affordable apartment, walk their kids to school and then zip over to a good-paying job. “At the same time, we’re responding to the tremendous demand we’re seeing for new and flexible commercial space in neighborhoods outside of Manhattan,” she said.

The Real Deal last year reported that the retail sector lags far behind the office and residential markets in Long Island City. [Politico] – Ariel Stulberg

Source: City to develop two LIC sites totaling 1.2M sf

Construction workers exposed to chemical fumes at Hotel Riu site in Midtown

741 Eighth Avenue

741 Eighth Avenue in Midtown (credit: Google via NYDN)

Three construction workers were injured Wednesday at a Midtown job site after being exposed to chemical fumes, with one worker in critical condition.

The workers were working at 741 Eighth Avenue, between West 46th and West 47th streets, when they fell ill around 2 p.m., the New York City Fire Department said. The site, also known as 301 West 46th Street, will hold the 31-story Hotel Riu Plaza New York Times Square.

The worker in critical condition was rushed to Bellevue Hospital, according to the New York Post, while the other two were in stable condition. The FDNY’s HazMat team responded to the scene in an attempt to identify the chemical that sickened the workers as well as its source, a spokesperson said.

At the same construction site last year, a 25-year-old man fell to his death after riding an elevator powered by an “unsafe,” jerry-rigged electrical system, the New York Daily News reported last year.

The city subsequently issued two violations for the improper electrical system against the property’s owners, an affiliate of Spanish hotel chain Riu Hotels & Resorts, according to the Daily News. [NYP and NYDN] – Rey Mashayekhi

Source: Construction workers exposed to chemical fumes at Hotel Riu site in Midtown

Scorecard: Manhattan landlords are dropping rents, offering more concessions

rentl-drops
From the February issue: While prices in the Manhattan sales market are on the rise, the borough’s rental market appears to be headed in the opposite direction. Nearly 90,000 Manhattan rental listings saw a price drop in 2015, according to data from On- line Residential. That is a 24 percent increase over the number of rentals with discounts in 2014.

rental-drops-2
Additionally, a report from brokerage Citi Habitats found that 14 percent of Manhattan rental deals in December included a landlord concession — the highest percent in the last year. That is creating issues for landlords and brokers.

“The vacancy rate is higher than it’s been in years,” said Citi Habitats agent Nathaniel Faust. “It’s been a challenge to get the same rents that we got in the last year or so.”

The Brooklyn rental market outlook is a bit more bullish. A report from MNS found that average rental prices in the borough saw modest increases in December year over year. The biggest change was for the average rent of two-bedrooms, which was up 2.5 percent.

avarage-new-dev-rent-bk

Meanwhile, StreetEasy recently predicted that rents would rise 2.3 percent on average for Brooklyn this year, basically flat from the 2.4 percent rise seen in 2015.

streeteasyprediction

Not everyone agreed with that, though.

Citing a glut of new development rental inventory, NY Casa Group agent Angelo Rodriguez said he expects to see a softening in rental prices in Brooklyn through the first six months of the year

Source: Scorecard: Manhattan landlords are dropping rents, offering more concessions

Tenant groups call for shutdown of nonprofit lobbying for de Blasio housing plan

Mayor Bill de Blasio

A tenant and labor coalition blasted a recently set-up nonprofit that is to lobby on behalf of Mayor Bill de Blasio’s affordable housing plan before its City Council vote.

The 19 groups called for the shutdown of United for Affordable NYC.

“We call on you today to shut down United for Affordable NYC immediately, rather than continue to leverage dirty developer money to fight against the real affordable housing needs of low-income communities,” the coalition’s letter to de Blasio states.

Set up just weeks ago, the nonprofit started with seed money provided by developer-funded Campaign for One New York, another non-profit with close and controversial ties to de Blasio, Politico reported.

Groups such as Community Action for Safe Apartments, Community Voices Heard, Greater NY LECET, Painters District Council 9 and Tenants & Neighbors signed the letter.

Between March and June last year, Campaign for One New York received $597,000 from real estate interests, and since it started in early 2014, the nonprofit has taken in more than $1 million from real estate developers, many of whom have projects underway and needed the administration’s approval for their projects, Politico reported.

In the second half of 2015, Campaign for One New York took in four donations worth $485,000, the majority from billionaire George Soros, and the union Unite Here (previously run by de Blasio’s cousin). Developers DDG Partners and TF Cornerstone were the other two donors.

A Campaign for One New York spokesman wrote to politico that “the majority of its funds over the past six months from progressive groups and labor unions who represent the very families that would benefit from the mayor’s plan to require all developers to build affordable housing for the first time ever in every city rezoning.”

It is unclear how much United for Affordable NYC has in funds.

The Real Deal looked at de Blasio’s allies in the real estate community in the February issue of its magazine. [Politico] – Dusica Sue Malesevic

Source: Tenant groups call for shutdown of nonprofit lobbying for de Blasio housing plan

LPC rejects landmark status for 65 city properties

The Pepsi-Cola sign in Long Island City

The Pepsi-Cola sign in Long Island City, now “prioritized for designation” as a landmark.

The Landmarks Preservation Commission has ruled, denying landmark status to more than two-thirds of the properties it considered.

It rejected 65 buildings in all. Seven broadway theaters were denied because they were covered by other agreements with city and state governments. Many other were removed from the list because of previous modifications that limited the buildings’ historic import.

Only five were rejected outright. Petitioners are free to try again for landmark status with the other 60.

A total of 30 properties passed, and are now “prioritized for designation,” including the Pepsi-Cola sign in Gantry Plaza State Park in Long Island City, the Bergdorf Goodman building at 754 Fifth Avenue and the Harlem Branch of the YMCA on West 135th Street.

All of the proposed landmarks considered in this session had been on the commission’s docket for over five years. Last June, LPC chair Meenakshi Srinivasan suggested throwing all 95 proposals out as an efficiency measure, but the idea was loudly rejected by preservationists.

Yesterday, The Real Deal took a closer look at some of the properties under consideration. [WSJ] – Ariel Stulberg

Source: LPC rejects landmark status for 65 city properties

Jehovah’s Witnesses may only get $220M for Watchtower building

Jehovah's Witnesses Brooklyn

Rendering of 25-30 Columbia Heights in Brooklyn Heights (credit: Jehovah’s Witnesses)

The Jehovah’s Witnesses may have missed the ideal moment to sell their iconic Watchtower headquarters building in Brooklyn Heights.

The group may have to settle for a price as low as $220 million for the 733,000-square-foot property, located at 25-30 Columbia Heights, the New York Post reported, citing sources familiar with the bidding process.

A spokesperson for the Witnesses had previously forecast the building could go for as much as $500 million.

The Witnesses are moving to Warwick, New York, and are looking to sell their remaining Brooklyn properties. Along with the Watchtower building, the religious organization is marketing a 152,000-square-foot residential building at 124 Columbia heights, and a city-block-sized development site at 85 Jay Street.

Reported bidders for the properties include the city’s largest office developers: Vornado Realty Trust, Silverstein Properties, L&L Holding and Taconic Investment partners. [NYP] – Ariel Stulberg

Source: Jehovah’s Witnesses may only get 0M for Watchtower building

LPC considering 95 NYC properties for preservation today

The Pepsi-Cola sign in front of TF Cornerstone's project in Long Island City

The Pepsi-Cola sign in Long Island City

New York, a city packed with landmarks, might soon have a few more official sites to add to the list.

The city’s Landmarks Preservation Commission will meet today to decide the fate of 95 properties throughout the city that are being considered for preservation.

“When there are roughly 36,000 landmarks in the city, a fight over 95 may seem kind of frivolous,” The New York Times’ Matt Chaban told the paper.

“But this group has taken on huge significance because it’s seen as a bellwether for how seriously the de Blasio administration is considering issues of preservation versus development.”

Here is a selection of some of the historic houses, buildings, parks and churches under consideration:

Pepsi-Cola sign, Long Island City

The 120-foot long, 60-foot high neon sign bearing a classic Pepsi-Cola logo once sat atop the Pepsi bottling plant which occupied the northern section of what became Gantry Plaza State Park. Since 2009, the sign, constructed by Artkraft Strauss in 1936, has occupied its current location, near ground level within the park.

183-195 Broadway, Williamsburg

This 1880s-era, cast-iron-adorned building was built as a shoe factory for the James R. Sparrow Company. It also housed an appliance manufacturing facility run by Forman 4 Family, which eventually converted part of the 42,000-square-foot structure to apartments.

Union Square Park, Greenwich Village

Union Square, which marks the Village’s northern boundary, was marked out for the first time in 1815, and grew into something resembling its modern form in the first half of the 19th Century. Various distinctive features, such as the park’s fountain, were added over the years. The area’s name, somewhat mundanely, stems the fact that it marked the “union” of Manhattan’s then-two largest streets.

Prince’s Bay Light, Pleasant Plains

This 60-foot lighthouse, situated on the highest point on the southern shore of Staten Island, was built in 1864 with $30,000 in federal funding. The attached brownstone cottage, where the lighthouse keeper lived, was built in 1868. The beacon was deactivated in 1922. Back in 1999, New York State and the Trust for Public land bought the lighthouse from the Archdiocese of New York

Samuel D. Babcock House, North Riverdale

This 9,500-square-foot estate at 5525 Independance Avenue in the Bronx – also known as Hillside – was built in 1860, one of the first riverfront estates that gave Riverdale its name. It was once the home of the National Bureau of Economic Research. In 1954, the original estate was subdivided in 1954, and the house was absorbed by a private community.

– Ariel Stulberg

Source: LPC considering 95 NYC properties for preservation today

SoFla Market Report: Experts warn about a mild recession, $47 million sale in Key Biscayne sets a record … and

An estate in Key Biscayne sold for $47 million

An estate in Key Biscayne sold for $47 million

From the February issue: Despite high confidence among prominent Miami developers that the real estate market is not due for a significant downturn in 2016, some experts are cautioning that sales will continue to dip, which could possibly ignite a mild recession by the end of the year.

“We are going to see prices continue to appreciate through the first half of year, but at a much slower pace,” said Jack McCabe, founder and CEO of McCabe Research and Consulting. “In the last half of the year, we will see prices flatten, increases in inventory and slowing demand from buyers.” [more]

Source: SoFla Market Report: Experts warn about a mild recession, million sale in Key Biscayne sets a record … and

Empire State Realty Trust will continue to play it safe: Malkin

Tony Malkin

Tony Malkin (credit: Max Dworkin)

Empire State Realty Trust chair and CEO Tony Malkin reaffirmed his company’s strategy for “embedded, de-risked growth” on Tuesday, telling investors he envisioned “no development, no joint ventures, no bidding or buying at current cap rates and no lending” in the near future.

The New York City-focused real estate investment trust said it was “pleased” with its 2015 performance in its year-end earnings call, noting that it had executed 245 new and renewed leases representing more than 1.2 million square feet of office and retail space last year – a 54 percent jump from total leasing the year prior.

The fourth quarter of 2015 saw ESRT sign 39 leases spanning more than 198,000 rentable square feet across its total portfolio – “including several full-floor leases,” according to president and COO John Kessler. The company’s Manhattan office portfolio represented 23 of those deals for more than 111,000 square feet.

Kessler said the REIT is “pleased with the demand we’re seeing from prospective tenants” despite murmurs of a potential deceleration in New York City office leasing this year, and also talked up the positive performance of the observatory at ESRT’s flagship Empire State Building – which saw revenues rise slightly to more than $112 million last year “despite headwinds from international travel.”

Malkin also discussed competition for the Empire State Building’s observatory from that of One World Trade Center in the Financial District. While acknowledging that the observatory at the Western Hemisphere’s tallest building “is a known entity now,” Malkin said ESRT is bullish on “our competitive position versus One World Trade.”

“We like the fact that there has been a reaffirmation of the iconic nature of a visit to the Empire State Building – the connection with New York City and its history and being in the center of New York [in Midtown],” he said.

Empire State Realty Trust’s 7.5 million-square-foot Manhattan office portfolio saw a slight decline in occupancy in the fourth quarter – dropping to 84.9 percent occupancy at the end of December, down 0.5 percent from the previous quarter and down 2.6 percent from the end of 2014.

But the 2.8 million-square-foot Empire State Building saw increased occupancy thanks to several new leases, finishing 2015 at 86.7 percent occupied — up 3 percent from the end of the third quarter.

ESRT director of leasing Thomas Durels also played down concerns about signs of weakness in the real estate market, noting that the company is “not seeing any pushback on asking rents” from tenants.

And while echoing Malkin’s assertion on the REIT’s plans to continue finding growth within its portfolio — rather than through acquisitions – Kessler said ESRT will continue to look at “off-market” acquisition opportunities that would come from “relationship-oriented situations.”

“The market is cyclical,” Kessler said. “We’re going to be patient.”

Source: Empire State Realty Trust will continue to play it safe: Malkin

No fanfare for $4B WTC Transportation Hub’s opening in March

Rendering of the Oculus PATH Station (credit: Santiago Calatrava)

Rendering of the Oculus PATH Station (credit: Santiago Calatrava)

When the roughly $4 billion World Trade Center Transportation Hub finally opens next month — after major delays and huge cost overruns — it will do so without any fanfare from public officials.

The Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, the bistate agency that controls the Santiago Calatrava-designed, 365,000-square-foot train station, considered an event on Friday, but by Monday it was nixed.

“The thing is a symbol of excess,” Patrick Foye, the authority’s executive director, told Politico.

Designed by Spanish architect Calatrava, who famously said he’d been “treated like a dog,” the cavernous white train station with steel ribs jutting out has been a source of both vitriol and praise.

Regardless of the architectural preference, the Oculus cost about $4 billion in taxpayer money, and compared with the Port Authority Bus Terminal and Penn Station, it won’t serve that many commuters, Politico reported. It will connect to 11 different subway lines and PATH, and serve around 200,000 passengers and visitors.

Westfield Group will operate a $1.4 billion shopping center at the facility, with tenants to include Apple, Daniel Boulud, Eataly and others.

Retail spaces at the complex range from 800 to 8,000 square feet. The company says it expects to do $700 million to $1 billion in annual retail sales — between $2,000 to $3,000 per square foot. [Politico] — Dusica Sue Malesevic

Source: No fanfare for B WTC Transportation Hub’s opening in March

Spitzer accuser was evicted in July for allegedly running one-woman UES brothel

Svetlana Travis and Eliot Spitzer

Svetlana Travis (credit: szakharova25/Instagram) and Eliot Spitzer

Svetlana Travis, who accused Eliot Spitzer of assault earlier this month, was booted from her Upper East Side apartment in July amid neighbors’ complaints she was running an escort service.

Contor Associates – owner of 1125 Lexington Avenue at 78th Street – initiated eviction proceedings after property manager Sierra Residential found “men were entering and leaving the apartment at approximately one-hour intervals on most afternoons.”

Paul Nippes, a New Jersey businessman, was Travis’ co-signer at the apartment, DNAinfo reported. Nippes told the news website that he acted as guarantor on a lease for Travis back in 2014, because she had bad credit. He denied any involvement at 1125 Lexington Avenue, telling DNAinfo that Travis had forged his signature.

Travis was also evicted from another unit this fall, in Murray Hill, over $6,000 in unpaid rent. Nippes was listed as a co-signer on that property as well, but claims Travis forged those documents as well.

Travis accused Spitzer of having choked her in a suite at the Plaza Hotel earlier this month. Soon after, she retracted her accusation and ceased cooperating with police, before departing for Russia, her home country.

Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance moved to recuse himself from the assault investigation, which is currently in limbo. [DNAinfo] – Ariel Stulberg

Source: Spitzer accuser was evicted in July for allegedly running one-woman UES brothel

Regus leases 32K sf at Triangle Equities’ Lighthouse Point

Lighthouse Point Staten Island

Rendering of Lighthouse Point in Staten Island (credit: Cooper Carry)

Regus, one of the main shared office space providers, will anchor Triangle Equities’ Lighthouse Point  on Staten Island. The Luxembourg-based co-working firm will take about half of the 65,000-square-foot office and retail building on St. George’s waterfront.

The city’s Economic Development Corporation tapped Triangle to develop the three-acre property in 2006, but the project has faced a series of delays.

The development will include a 12-story, 120-unit residential tower, more than 60,000 square feet of retail space and a 175-room hotel. At least 20 of the residential units will be affordable.

Work began late last year on the first phase of the project, which is slated for completion in 2017. City officials hope the project, along with along with the New York Wheel and Empire Outlets, will revitalize the waterfront.

The project has both public and private money invested into it — $30 million in construction loans and equity credit from Goldman Sachs Urban Investment Group, and $29 million in construction loans from Citizens Bank, the Journal reported.

The state has proposed $16.5 million in subsidies for the project, but delayed a decision to approve that funding in December.

Regus recently leased a 23,000 square-foot-space at 112 West 20th Street in Chelsea. [WSJ] — Dusica Sue Malesevic

Source: Regus leases 32K sf at Triangle Equities’ Lighthouse Point

Priciest homes on the planet: Paris and London

Chateau Louis One Hyde Park

From left: Chateau Louis XIV in Louveciennes and One Hyde Park in London

From the February issue: This month, The Real Deal sifted through land registry records, public listings and news reports and also interviewed experts to find the priciest residential listings and most expensive recent sales on the planet. In the third and final web installment, we look at two European capitals, Paris and London.

Paris
Chateau Louis XIV in Louveciennes
$301 million (sale)

Let’s face it. You can’t get more luxurious than 17th-century Versailles.

In December, the Chateau Louis XIV sold for $301 million. That was the priciest residential sale in the world outside of Hong Kong. The 75,350-square-foot newly built mansion sits in a 56-acre park in Louveciennes, a Paris suburb. The home is meant to mirror the grandiose style of the Sun King himself, whose Palace of Versailles embodied the spirit of absolutist power.

The property was sold to an unknown Middle Eastern buyer, according to Bloomberg News.

Christie’s International, which helped broker the deal, declined to comment on the property and the sale.

But what is known is that the home has two master suites, several guest rooms and reception halls, a wine cellar, a movie theater and, most notably, an underground aquarium.

The mansion was built over three years, starting in 2008, by a company called Cogemad. According to the developer’s website, it’s 15 minutes from the tony Le Triangle d’Or shopping and residential district in Paris.

The $301 million sale, however, is a rarity that likely won’t be replicated anytime soon, sources say.

Marie-Hélène Lundgreen, director at Belles Demeures de France, the international department of the Christie’s affiliate Daniel FEAU, said that very few luxury sales in Paris exceed 10 million euros — or roughly $11 million. That’s because the most exclusive location, which overlooks the city center, does not welcome new development. In Paris, unlike New York City these days, the most luxurious properties aren’t modern glass fortresses but historic 18th- and 19th- century buildings, featuring minutely detailed moldings and fireplaces.

“It’s a scarcity market. We don’t build anymore in Paris,” she said. “It’s not a market for overpriced properties at the moment.”

London
One Hyde Park
$237 million (sale)

The city’s current record residential sale is at One Hyde Park in Knightsbridge. The duplex penthouse in the ultraluxury building made headlines in 2014 when it sold for $237 million. Consider it an oldie but goodie on TRD’s list.

The 86-unit building, which was developed by the Candy brothers, is regarded as one of London’s most exclusive — and secretive, since so few of the owners there are publicly known.

In New York, of course, some of the priciest condos, such as One57, the Plaza and the Time Warner Center, are known for having foreign buyers who don’t use their apartments as primary residences. The same is true in London — but to an even greater extent.

Indeed, there’s long been the perception that homes in some of London’s poshest neighborhoods — such as Knightsbridge, Notting Hill, Hyde Park, Kensington and Belgravia — are largely owned by people who don’t live there year-round.

“London is a passing-through city,” said Royce Pinkwater, of the Manhattan-based brokerage Pinkwater Select, which specializes in international luxury real estate. “Many people use it as a base.”

Pinkwater referred to London as the “initiator and dominator in turnkey properties” because as a secondary market, super high-end buyers don’t want to spend time renovating newly acquired property.

A September 2015 report by Savills noted that housing prices in prime London have been hit hard by higher property taxes that were imposed on home sales in December 2014. The changes have tempered price growth in the upper tiers of London’s market, according to the report. That has left the ultraluxury market, at least in the short-term, “fully taxed” and with buyers who are “slower to commit.”

In terms of record-asking prices, a mansion in Knightsbridge initially made headlines in 2012 when it hit the market for a record $453 million. Three years later, the owners of the 45-bedroom room property, 2-8a Rutland Gate, reportedly received a bid for $593 million, but rather than selling they ended up auctioning off the mansion’s contents — reportedly to make way for luxury apartments. The home was not officially on the market last month but is being watched by real estate insiders.

According to Knight Frank, $1 million buys 226 square feet in the city.

Source: Priciest homes on the planet: Paris and London

NYC spent $1M on Bronx police station design, scrapped it for Bjarke Ingels’

Rendering of the 40th precinct police station in the Bronx (inset: Bjarke Ingels)

Rendering of the 40th precinct police station in the Bronx (inset: Bjarke Ingels)

Before it settled on Bjarke Ingels’ cantilevered, metal-box-stack design for the 40th Precinct stationhouse in Mott Haven, the city dropped $1 million on another set of plans.

A more conservative set of plans produced by Karlsberger Architecture and Alexander Gorlin was approved by the city’s Public Arts Commission back in 2008, before the redevelopment at 275 Alexander Avenue was delayed by the effects of the global financial crisis, the New York Daily News reported.

Internal emails from 2014 show that NYPD officials favored the original design, and urged the Department of Design and Construction to focus on speedy development, and on staying on budget.

Design and Construction ultimately went ahead with a design competition, choosing Ingels’ ambitious 43,500-square-foot plan, which includes community space, as part of an initiative to improve relations between police and the communities they serve.

The new design bumped the project’s cost to $51 million from the $29 million originally set aside.

One of the original architects spoke out against the new approach.

“With what’s going on between the police and the community, they put forth something that looks like a bunker?” Alexander Gorlin told the Daily News. “I think it’s a waste of money and time from every angle.” [NYDN] – Ariel Stulberg

Source: NYC spent M on Bronx police station design, scrapped it for Bjarke Ingels’

WTC rebuilding costs come in at lower end of projections: Port Authority

One World Trade Center, the Oculus and Steve Plate

1 World Trade Center, the Oculus and Steve Plate

Contrary to skeptics’ warnings, the effort to rebuild the World Trade Center did not go massively over budget.

The total cost of the redevelopment, over a decade in the making, will come in at the low end of the $14.8 billion to $15.8 billion estimate made in 2012, Steve Plate, head of major capital projects at the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, said Friday.

The new WTC’s steel-winged, Santiago Calatrava-designed transit hub, called the Oculus – which will open the first week of March – will have a final cost between $3.7 billion and $3.99 billion, equal to the 2012 estimate, which was commissioned by the Authority’s board amid widespread criticism of cost overruns at the Downtown project, Bloomberg reported.

The 365,000-square-foot Oculus will connect 11 subway lines, the PATH train, several bus lines and ferries. It will serve about 200,000 passengers, about a third of the number served by Penn Station.

“We had an obligation to do something special,” Plate said, according to Bloomberg. “We did it very prudently and intentionally to give the best quality, the best product and the best structure that we could provide to the city of New York. And we’re very proud to report that we feel very strongly that that mission has been accomplished.” [Bloomberg] – Ariel Stulberg

Source: WTC rebuilding costs come in at lower end of projections: Port Authority

Emmitt Smith’s best deal

Emmitt Smith

Emmitt Smith

NFL Hall of Famer and Super Bowl MVP Emmitt Smith dove headlong into the real estate game back in 2004. Since then, he has started his own brokerage, a lending firm, a construction company and built a portfolio of office and multifamily assets. And in a recent interview, he talks deals and explains why he is the real deal.

“The best deal I ever made was through my partnership with ESmith Legacy — we built and sold about a thousand multifamily units up in the Baltimore area,” Smith told Bisnow.

Smith added: “I feel like one that we missed out on was one up in Harlem on 125th and Lennox. It was a pretty sizable deal, and when I say sizable I mean where the land itself was being valued north of $50M, and the property itself had the potential to be a $250M deal or more.”

Smith went on to explain that because of his previous career, people sometimes assume he is just a figurehead who doesn’t actually run the show.

“I had a guy come in earlier this week. He complimented me on my book, but he was like, ‘Is this the real deal?’ Yes, I am the real deal! I do come into the office! I do go on meetings! I do understand what’s going on within our platform, or what we’re developing and what we have developed. Yes, I do have multiple companies, but I spend a ton of time with every last one of my companies. I’m more than just a former athlete or a ‘Dancing With The Stars’ guy. The sky is not the limit for any athlete or any person, so why would I put any limits on myself?” [Bisnow] –Christopher Cameron

Source: Emmitt Smith’s best deal

Times Square’s Diamond Horseshoe to become private party venue

Diamond Horseshoe at the Paramount Hotel in Midtown

Diamond Horseshoe at the Paramount Hotel in Midtown

The storied Diamond Horseshoe at the Paramount Hotel in Midtown will soon re-launch as a private event space. The venue had been home to “the sensually interactive dinner theater spectacle” known as “The Queen of the Night.”

Back in 2013, landlord Aby Rosen commissioned “The Queen of the Night” to play for six weeks, but it ran for two years. Its last night was a black tie extravaganza on New Year’s Eve.

Diamond Horseshoe was a former Times Square vaudeville venue that closed in 1951. Rosen restored the 6,000-square-foot space and is now giving it a new identity. LDV Hospitality will transform the basement venue into a private event spot, according to the New York Post.

Last May, reports emerged that Rosen was looking to sell the hotel. Rosen’s firm RFR Holding
bought the property at 235 West 46th Street in 2011 for $275 million. [NYP] –Christopher Cameron

Source: Times Square’s Diamond Horseshoe to become private party venue

From the archives: Larry Silverstein’s right-hand man

Janno Lieber (left), president of Silverstein Properties, with company head Larry Silverstein

Janno Lieber (left), president of Silverstein Properties, with company head Larry Silverstein

Janno Lieber hangs up the phone. It hasn’t happened often in recent days, as talks between the owner and the lessee of the World Trade Center site have now reached an agreement after a four-month stalemate that capped more than four years of negotiations.

It seems that Lieber, as project director of the 16-acre World Trade Center site for Silverstein Properties — and developer Larry Silverstein’s right hand — will have a job for at least the next six years until the $7 billion Ground Zero build-out is achieved. Read the full story from the May 2006 issue. 

Source: From the archives: Larry Silverstein’s right-hand man

Kim and Kanye can’t stop renovating their house in L.A.

Kanye West and Kim Kardashian in Hidden Hills, California

Kanye West and Kim Kardashian in Hidden Hills, California

From Luxury Listings NYC: You know how Kanye went on Twitter over the weekend to ask Mark Zuckerberg to invest “1 billion dollars into Kanye West ideas”? noting that he is “53 million dollars in personal debt”?

Well you wouldn’t know it to look at the amount of money he and Kim are pouring into their Hidden Hills, California home. [more]

Source: Kim and Kanye can’t stop renovating their house in L.A.

James Goldstein donates “Big Lebowski” house to the LACM

Jackie Treehorns house from "The Big Lebowski"

Jackie Treehorns house from “The Big Lebowski”

From Luxury Listings NYC: When the Dude enters pornographer Jackie Treehorn’s house in the cult classic movie, “The Big Lebowski,” his first words are: “This is quite a pad you got here, man. Completely unspoiled.”

Thankfully, it looks like it will stay that way. The owner of the house, NBA “superfan” and real estate investor James Goldstein, announced yesterday that he is donating the home and all of its contents to the Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACM). [more]

Source: James Goldstein donates “Big Lebowski” house to the LACM

Goldman upgrades SL Green but maintains “cautious outlook”

Marc Holliday SL Green

Marc Holliday

Seven months after downgrading SL Green Realty to a “sell” rating on fears of a “maturing” commercial real estate cycle, investment banking giant Goldman Sachs upgraded the real estate investment trust back up to “neutral” on Friday.

Goldman said the “significant underperformance” of SL Green stock, which has fallen 31 percent since Dec. 1, insulates investors from risk moving forward – though it maintains “a cautious outlook on SLG’s long-term growth” and believes “possible negative catalysts” remain for the city’s largest office landlord.

The investment bank also cut its 12-month price target on the REIT’s stock to $95 per share, from $100 previously. SL Green stock opened at $84.76 per share on Friday, down from a 52-week high of $135.81.

Despite SL Green indicating that it will sell assets with a view to debt reduction, Goldman said it expects to see non-trophy asset sales become more challenging in a “softening market” and forecast “decelerating [New York City] office demand based on share prices of major NYC tenants.”

In the company’s year-end earnings call last month, SL Green CEO Marc Holliday forecast economic “headwinds” that could slow down job creation in New York City and potentially dampen the city’s office leasing market.

The bank also cast doubts on “a consistent upward trend” in SL Green’s average price per square foot within its debt and preferred equity portfolio — noting that “any ‘hiccup’/default in the performance of this portfolio could be a substantial negative.”

In addition, Goldman said investors would likely “react negatively” if SL Green were to proceed with the development of its One Vanderbilt office tower without identifying its intended joint venture partner on the project – pointing to the “magnitude” of the planned 1.6 million square-foot building.

SL Green’s stock performance over the past six months compared to rival commercial office REIT Boston Properties “is at its worst level since 2009,” the investment bank added.

But Goldman noted that SL Green’s recent struggles in the market “capture much of our negative view,” and that the upgrade to a “neutral” rating comes as the company’s struggles have offset “near-term downside” – with the REIT’s valuation “now more likely to offer support.”

In addition to Goldman’s “sell” rating of the company, last summer also saw SL Green downgraded by St. Louis-based financial services firm Stifel Nicolaus, which cited “stagnated” value creation by the company through the first half of last year.

In October, credit ratings agency Fitch affirmed SL Green’s default rating of BBB- and provided a “stable” outlook for the REIT, noting its “high-quality New York office portfolio.”

Source: Goldman upgrades SL Green but maintains “cautious outlook”

Landlord Dalan Management now in the (growing) lending game

Danny Wrublin (credit: Chance Yeh)

Daniel Wrublin (credit: Chance Yeh)

Count Dalan Management’s Wrublin brothers as the latest landlords to get in the lending game.

Daniel and Andrew Wrublin, whose 43-building portfolio in the city spans some 1,200 apartments and more than 100 commercial and retail units, recently launched a financing platform called SKW Funding.

“We had some experience buying [non-performing] bank loans back in 2008, 2009 and 2010,” Daniel told The Real Deal. “We see an opportunity for bridge lending on equity side.”

So far, the company’s issued about $50 million in preferred equity and mezzanine debt, with the goal of doubling that number in the next year.

SKW’s most recent deal took the form of a $12 million in preferred equity and mezz debt in Simon Baron Development’s purchase of a $24 million development site in Greenpoint. The developer is watching the market closely while considering either retail or office options.

Wrublin said one of SKW’s strengths is the ability to act quickly.

“We went from ‘hello’ to closing in probably two to three weeks,” he said. “That’s part of the value we can bring.”

While Dalan certainly isn’t done buying — the firm in December closed on the purchase of a $44-million Garment District office building on West 38th Street — Wrublin said that at this point in the cycle he sees more opportunities to think outside the box and put out higher interest money in a more aggressive manner.

“If you’re sitting on cash earning 1 percent in the bank, you can make a higher-adjusted return lending,” he said. “It feels like pretty good risk-adjusted investment in this environment.”

Others feel the same way. A number of developers and owners have recently launched mezzanine/preferred equity financing vehicles, filling a niche in the market that grew following the financial crisis as banks tightened lending restrictions, all while taking a safer position as the market gets frothier.

Hartz Mountain Industries scion Manny Stern, Atco Properties and Schwartz Properties have all launched lending platforms recently.

Meanwhile, sings are starting to appear that the kinds of bad loans Wrublin first started buying up are returning. The Durst Organization this week moved to send Ian Bruce Eichner’s East Harlem rental project into foreclosure. Durst recently bought the non-performing debt from Eichner’s lender, Garrison Investment Group.

Source: Landlord Dalan Management now in the (growing) lending game

Controversial Harlem church fends off foreclosure sale

Atlah Worldwide Church in Harlem

Atlah Worldwide Church at 36 West 123rd Street in Harlem

The controversial Atlah Worldwide Church in Harlem temporarily staved off foreclosure.

The church at 36 West 123rd Street, near Lenox Avenue, was slated to go up for public auction next week for owing $1 million to creditors, including unpaid water and sewage bills.

But New York State Supreme Court Judge Barbara Jaffe halted the scheduled public foreclosure auction with a temporary restraining order.

Atlah is known for its anti-gay and anti-Obama messages on its billboard. When the church went up for sale, LGBT groups such as River of Living Waters Ministries raised money to buy it, according to DNAinfo.

The church’s pastor James Manning posted a YouTube video exalting the order, DNAinfo reported. On the video, his lawyer, Stuart Shaw, said, “What that means in effect is that pending the fuller hearing on this matter on April 21 there will be no foreclosure action.”

“We’re a church and we’re tax exempt,” Manning, who supports Donald Trump, told the Daily News in January. “We are exempt from paying taxes, and that includes water and sewage bills.” [DNAinfo] — Dusica Sue Malesevic

Source: Controversial Harlem church fends off foreclosure sale

Papal encounter can’t trump Elie Hirschfeld’s belief that the Donald should be president

Elie Hirschfeld, Pope Francis and Donald Trump

Elie Hirschfeld, Pope Francis and Donald Trump

The Pope may be infallible, but that won’t stop developer Elie Hirschfeld – who met with the pontiff in Rome last month – from endorsing Donald Trump as the next president of the United States of America. 

Pope Francis recently drew the Donald’s ire when he said during a trip to Mexico that the GOP candidate’s plan to build a wall on the southern border is “not Christian.” Trump fired back, naturally, saying he envisioned ISIS descending on the Vatican in the near future, adding that the Pope would have “wished and prayed” that he were president if the day comes.

Hirschfeld, who considers both the real estate mogul and his Democratic rival Hilary Clinton personal friends, said Trump’s track record of building makes him perfect for the job of president.

“Simply, there’s no more rough-and tumble-game than making it in New York City real estate and the Donald is best equipped to make it happen,” Hirschfeld wrote announcing the endorsement. “Trump is a giant and I would invest with him anytime, and this country would be well-served by having this man as President of the United States.”

The real estate mogul, whose company was behind such buildings as the Hotel Pennsylvania and the Manhattan Mall, recently visited the Pope at the Vatican.

“I was a handshake away from him,” he said, describing a wordless interaction with the Pope, who he said exuded a sense of calm, warmth and graciousness.

Back in the 1980s, Hirschfeld was Trump’s business partner on his megadevelopment known as Penn Yards on the Upper West Side, now called Riverside Boulevard.

Meanwhile, the Clintons are known to vacation at Hirschfeld’s eight-bedroom mansion in East Hampton. They stayed there in 2011 and 2012, but reportedly changed their plans following a dispute over security.

Hirschfeld said he maintains a personal relationship with both Clinton and Trump, but in the end gives the Donald the nod for the big job.

Source: Papal encounter can’t trump Elie Hirschfeld’s belief that the Donald should be president

Frames knocks down new 10-year lease at PABT

Port-Authority-Bus-Terminal

The Port Authority bus terminal

Frames Bowling Lounge’s kingpin status at the Port Authority Bus Terminal is intact — the bowling alley renewed its lease for another 10 years for $16.3 million.

The bi-state agency approved the lease extension of Frames, which has made its home at the Midtown terminal since 2003.

The bowling alley will take 36,900 square feet at the bus depot between West 40th and West 42nd streets on Eighth Avenue.

Frames will occupy 34,500 square feet on the second floor of the terminal’s south wing, in addition to 1,900 square feet on the lower level and 500 square feet of storage space, the New York Observer reported.

In the new lease deal, it appears Frames will relinquish an unspecified space on the lower level to make room for a new retail tenant.

The Port Authority has been looking to upgrade its retail at the terminal and to re-tenant 150,000 square feet of retail at the property, and add another 13,000 square feet along Ninth Avenue. Cushman & Wakefield and JRT Realty Group handle retail leasing at the terminal.

A new food court is also in the works, with OHM Concession Group inking a 10-year lease for about 6,000 square feet over three spaces. That deal will bring in around $15.2 million for the authority.

The long-term future of the bus terminal remains in doubt, however, with ongoing discussions over a new West Side location that could see the current terminal replaced by a condo tower. [NYO] — Dusica Sue Malesevic

Source: Frames knocks down new 10-year lease at PABT

Spitzer’s accuser tried to extort money: report

Svetlana Travis and Eliot Spitzer

Svetlana Travis and Eliot Spitzer

Svetlana Travis may have made demanded money from Eliot Spitzer before she boarded her plane back to Russia.

Travis, who accused Spitzer over the weekend of choking her at the Plaza Hotel, also asked the former governor and head of Spitzer Enterprises to upgrade her plane ticket.

Spitzer apparently obliged, at least on the upgrade, the New York Post reported, citing an NYPD source.

The police seized Travis’s phone at JFK, just before she jetted to Moscow, and found deleted text messages containing the demands, the source told the Post.

Travis, who recanted her accusations and ceased cooperating with police before her departure, nonetheless remained a victim and not a suspect, an NYPD spokesperson told the paper.

Police also said that Travis abandoned three packed suitcases at the Plaza, according to the Post.

Earlier this week, Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus recused himself from the assault investigation, citing close personal and professional ties with Spitzer. [NYP] – Ariel Stulberg

Source: Spitzer’s accuser tried to extort money: report