Jamestown to buy 49% stake in 63 Madison, 200 Madison

63 Madison Avenue and 200 Madison Avenue (inset: Jamestown's Matt Bronfman)

200 Madison Avenue and 63 Madison Avenue in Midtown South (inset: Jamestown’s Matt Bronfman)

Jamestown LP is in talks with George Comfort & Sons and Loeb Partners Realty to buy a 49 percent stake in two major Midtown South office properties that would value the pair at $1.15 billion.

The properties are the 870,000-square-foot 63 Madison Avenue and the 750,000-square-foot 200 Madison Avenue.

The deal is expected to close within days, the Wall Street Journal reported.

Jamestown is a major national real estate investor, and owns various New York assets including the Chelsea Market, the Falchi Building, 1250 Broadway and One Times Square, along with a stake in Industry City.

The Atlanta-based firm is looking to pay $710 per square foot on both properties, another sign that Midtown South’s office market continues to soar in value. According to Newmark Knight Grubb Frank data, the vacancy rate in January was 7.9 percent, down from 8.5 percent in the same period in 2015. Office rents are up to $69.84 in Midtown South, NKGF said.

Real estate experts told the Journal that 63 Madison has little ground-floor retail space and has redevelopment potential.

Eastdil Secured’s Doug Harmon and Adam Spies are marketing the properties.

The deal would be one of the first major commercial investment sales of the year.

George Comfort & Sons, partnering with ASB Capital Management, paid $43.75 million for 7 West 18th Street in the Flatiron District late last year.  [WSJ] – Ariel Stulberg

Source: Jamestown to buy 49% stake in 63 Madison, 200 Madison

A photographer got an exclusive look at Elizabeth Taylor’s home just before she died — here are her stunning photos

The Blue Room inside Elizabeth Taylor's home ©Catherine Opie, Courtesy of Regen Projects, Los Angeles and Lehmann Maupin, New York & Hong Kong

The Blue Room inside Elizabeth Taylor’s home ©Catherine Opie, Courtesy of Regen Projects, Los Angeles and Lehmann Maupin, New York & Hong Kong

When social documentary photographer Catherine Opie embarked on the project of documenting the home of actress Elizabeth Taylor in November of 2010, no one could have anticipated just how timely her visit was.

Midway through the project, Taylor died after a long struggle with congestive heart failure. Her passing brought a heavier weight to Opie’s work, and it became a race against the clock to finish up before Taylor’s possessions were sold.

Opie’s goal was to create a portrait of Taylor through her personal belongings — the decor of her home, the carefully laid out Chanel shoes, and of course, her prized jewelry collection.

Although the two never met, Opie felt a connection with Taylor from the start.

“Elizabeth was an incredibly talented actor, and an even more impressive businesswoman who was important in starting amfAR and bringing awareness to AIDS as an activist,” Opie told Business Insider.

The entire series, comprised of 129 images, can be found in the book “700 Nimes Road“.

Opie gained access to 700 Nimes Road — Taylor’s residential address in the Holmby Hills neighborhood of Los Angeles — through her accountant, who also happened to be Taylor’s.

taylors

Living Room North View ©Catherine Opie, Courtesy of Regen Projects, Los Angeles and Lehmann Maupin, New York & Hong Kong

Taylor’s delicate, feminine belongings, and her eye for pastel colors, created a “quiet and soft” atmosphere, according to Opie.

-opie

The Shoe Closet ©Catherine Opie, Courtesy of Regen Projects, Los Angeles and Lehmann Maupin, New York & Hong Kong

“I heard of [Taylor’s] death the day that she passed … it was hard even though I didn’t have a personal relationship with her,” Opie said. “I became very emotionally involved with the people who were with her on a daily basis in her life.”

The Blue Room ©Catherine Opie, Courtesy of Regen Projects, Los Angeles and Lehmann Maupin, New York & Hong Kong

Once Taylor died, the house “wasn’t such a quiet little sanctuary for me anymore,” Opie said. “It was really about trying to finish the body of work as the house was getting ready to be sold as well as the objects.” Luckily, Opie didn’t run into many other roadblocks while finishing up her work. “The trustees and people involved in Elizabeth’s life and her family gave me such incredible permission to make this body of work, and it was a huge gift for me in my life,” she said.

Opie noted that a deeper “sense of nostalgia” began to seep into the items as she finished up the project, and her experience with the work continued even after she was done shooting — editing down her 3,000 images to just 129 for the final product, her book “700 Nimes Road”.

luckily-opie-didnt-run-into-many

Kitchen Table ©Catherine Opie, Courtesy of Regen Projects, Los Angeles and Lehmann Maupin, New York & Hong Kong

Source: A photographer got an exclusive look at Elizabeth Taylor’s home just before she died — here are her stunning photos

A look at the most diverse neighborhoods in NYC: MAP

Jackson Heights, Queens

Jackson Heights, Queens

They don’t call NYC a melting pot for nothing. According to a 2010-2014 American Community Survey, 37 percent of New York City residents come from another country. Now, the NYU Furman Center has released a map visualizing where those foreign-born New Yorkers live throughout the five boroughs.

Each dot in the map represents 500 residents born in the respective country by Census tract, according to Untapped Cities.

NYU-Furman-Center-Foreign-Born-NYC-Map

From the map, it is clear that the Dominican Republic makes up 13 percent of foreign-born residents, while the Chinese population comes in at 12 percent of the foreign-born population.

And of course, where all the real action is happening is in Queens, the most diverse part of NYC. Queens’ foreign-born populations include New Yorkers from Jamaica, Guyana, Ecuador, India, Bangladesh and virtually everywhere else on the planet. In 2011, 47.8 percent of Queens residents where foreign born, according to the report from the Furman Center. [Untapped Cities] – Christopher Cameron

Source: A look at the most diverse neighborhoods in NYC: MAP

Plans for mile-high skyscraper unveiled in Japan

A rendering of Next Tokyo

A rendering of Next Tokyo (credit: Kohn Pedersen Fox)

We’re living in the age of the super tower. Around the world, buildings are reaching record heights. But the next generation of super-tall buildings is preparing do something that seems like science fiction: break the mile-high barrier.

For one, architects at Kohn Pedersen Fox and structural engineering firm Leslie E. Robertson Associates are planning to build a mile-high building in Tokyo Bay in Japan, according to the New York Post.

Dubbed “Next Tokyo,” the development is in fact a mini city designed around a massive skyscraper. Its goal is to combat climate change and rising tides.

Next Tokyo is a chain of man-made, hexagon-shaped islands that form a barrier to protect Japan’s capital from flooding. It would also provide housing for roughly 500,000 people – the main mile-high tower would hold roughly a 10th of those people.

untitled-13

The main structure would be a 5,577-foot skyscraper (called Sky Mile Tower) that is slated for completion in 2045. To put that into perspective, the tallest building in the world, Dubai’s Burj Khalifa, is 2,716.5 feet.

The building’s hi-tech facade will collect, filter and store water from the atmosphere, providing water to the apartments. And naturally, the elevators will be cable-free and able to move both vertically and horizontally.

(credit: Kohn Pedersen Fox)

Next Tokyo (credit: Kohn Pedersen Fox)

[NYP] – Christopher Cameron

Source: Plans for mile-high skyscraper unveiled in Japan

A Moinian soirée at Hotel Hugo: PHOTOS

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Rainy skies on Wednesday cleared just in time for drinks and nibbles at the Hotel Hugo, where Fortuna Realty Group president Morris Moinian entertained a small gathering of friends and associates, including architect Ismael Leyva and the Moinian Group’s Joseph Moinian.

Moinian, who partnered with his nephew Matthew Moinian to build the property, treated guests to an intimate soiree at the hotel’s Bar Hugo. Check out the above slideshow to see photos from the event.

(Photos by Alistair Gardiner for The Real Deal)

Source: A Moinian soirée at Hotel Hugo: PHOTOS

Beninati’s Bauhouse seeks $80M mezz loan for 3 Sutton Place

Sutton-Place-777x381-copy

A rendering of 3 Sutton Place on the Upper East Side (inset: Joseph Beninati)

Joseph Beninati’s Bauhouse Group is seeking an $80 million mezzanine loan to fund his troubled residential skyscraper project at 3 Sutton Place, according to investor documents reviewed by The Real Deal.

The upcoming tower at 426-432 East 58th Street, which is facing fierce resistance from area residents, is now slated to be 68 stories tall — down from 80 stories in August. The total project size is slated to be 286,000 square feet, with condos slated to be priced between $5 million and $6 million. That’s according to a letter sent to potential lenders by the Carlton Group, which is trying to arrange financing for Bauhouse.

Sources said that Beninati has approached developers such as Michael Stern of JDS Development Group to partner up with him on the project. A source familiar with JDS said that though Stern had a preliminary discussion about the project, talks did not progress past that point. Reached for comment Friday, a JDS spokesperson said the firm was “definitively not involved” with the project. Douglas Elliman chair Howard Lorber is acting as a consultant on the project, according to the letter. A spokesperson for Lorber couldn’t be immediately reached for comment, and a spokesperson for Elliman declined to comment.

Bauhouse assembled the site and the necessary air rights for about $70 million, city records show. According to the letter, the project’s total pre-development costs will be $231 million, which includes a $71 million first mortgage, the $80 million mezzanine loan, and $80 million of equity. Total construction costs are slated to be $526 million, which includes $120 million in EB-5 funds.

Foster + Partners is slated to design the tower, according to previous news reports, but there was no mention of Foster in the letter. Representatives for Bauhouse declined to comment, as did representatives for Carlton.

Bauhouse has struggled to secure financing for the tower. In August, he told the New York Times that he had been searching for a joint-venture partner for months, and if one “doesn’t show up, I’ll have no choice but to sell.” Adding to his woes are area residents, who have formed an alliance against the project and accused Beninati of misleading them about the project’s size.

The Real Deal reported Thursday that local lenders are becoming far more wary of financing high-end condo projects, given what they see as a double-whammy of oversupply and a slowdown in luxury sales.

There are a limited number of providers for high-end projects, “especially if the ask is a high loan balance of more than $100 million,” said David Eyzenberg, a principal in the capital markets group at Avison Young. “Structured capital in the form of mezzanine debt and preferred equity will continue to plug the capital gap,” but new sources of funding, including EB-5 and private operating companies, will join the established sources of capital in the space, he said.

Source: Beninati’s Bauhouse seeks M mezz loan for 3 Sutton Place

Preet Bharara hits Glenwood with wheelchair accessibility suit

10 Liberty Street NYC

From left: Preet Bharara, 10 Liberty Street in the Financial District (credit: Manhattan Scout) and Leonard Litwin

Leonard Litwin’s Glenwood Management is once again in the crosshairs of Manhattan’s U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara – this time over wheelchair accessibility at one of the Long Island-based landlord’s apartment buildings.

In a complaint filed Wednesday in U.S. District Court in Manhattan, Bharara’s office claims Glenwood’s Liberty Plaza luxury rental building at 10 Liberty Street in the Financial District “was designed and constructed with scores of inaccessible features” for those with disabilities.

The features in question include thresholds and mailboxes that are out of reach for people in wheelchairs, according to the New York Daily News, with the lawsuit going on to detail “numerous inaccessible conditions” that violate the Fair Housing Act.

In addition, the complaint claims Glenwood has a “pattern and/or practice” of failing to comply with the federal law in its design and construction of multifamily dwellings – citing several other apartment buildings built by the company, such as the Brittany on the Upper East Side and the Paramount Tower on East 39th Street, as examples.

Glenwood played a sizable role last year in the corruption trials of former Albany politicians Sheldon Silver and Dean Skelos, which were spearheaded by Bharara’s office.

The Skelos case featured allegations that the former state Senate majority leader had pressured Glenwood into giving his son, Adam, a job, while Silver’s case detailed how the former Assembly speaker directed Glenwood to real estate tax law firm Goldberg & Iryami – only for the law firm to quietly direct $700,000 in referral fees to Silver. [NYDN] – Rey Mashayekhi

Source: Preet Bharara hits Glenwood with wheelchair accessibility suit

Border war: Park Slope resident claims Hidrock’s theater conversion encroaches on property

Pavilion Theater NYC

494 14th Street in Park Slope, next to the Pavilion Theater (inset: Abraham Hidary)

Hidrock Realty’s planned condo conversion of the Pavilion Theater in Park Slope continues to face new hurdles, with a neighboring resident claiming the project encroaches on her backyard.

Park Slope resident Janet Scherer filed a notice of pendency against Hidrock in November in response to the firm’s Pavilion Theater redevelopment plans, which would see Hidrock build into the adjacent property presently occupied by Scherer’s townhouse at 494 14th Street.

While Scherer has owned and lived in building since 1978, her complaint notes the townhouse’s original proprietors were also the original owners of the Pavilion, which was constructed in 1928.

As such, Scherer’s property is bound by a concrete wall that actually encroaches 4 feet into the Pavilion’s allotted property – with the theater’s original construction seeing it “set back and erected approximately 48 inches” off the east side of its property line, according to the complaint.

Hidrock’s conversion plans, which were approved by the Landmarks Preservation Commission in October, indicate that the developer intends to take back its property line, the suit claims. But Scherer is claiming “adverse possession” of the property in question by virtue of having utilized it as her own for more than 37 years — including well beyond “the statutory period of 10 years.”

An attorney for Scherer declined to comment on the matter, other than noting that his client “is exercising her legal rights as set forth in the complaint.” Representatives for Hidrock could not immediately be reached for comment.

Hidrock’s Morris Adjmi-designed plans for the Pavilion, located at 188 Prospect Park West, would convert the three-story theater into a six-story building holding 24 condominium units across 46,000 square feet of residential space.

The Herald Square-based developer announced its plans for the property in April 2015, as The Real Deal reported, having acquired the Pavilion for $16 million in 2006.

But Hidrock was forced to revise its proposal for the theater’s conversion after widespread criticism from neighborhood residents and preservationists, who likened the initial design to a “penitentiary.”

Source: Border war: Park Slope resident claims Hidrock’s theater conversion encroaches on property

Born, Drukier buy Midtown Hotel Elysee for $55M

Hotel Elysee Richard Born

The Hotel Elysee at 60 East 54th Street in Midtown (inset: Richard Born)

The operators of the 1920’s-era Hotel Elysee — home of the Monkey Bar – bought the building from its long-time family owners.

Hoteliers Richard Born, Ira Drukier and Henry Kallan are the new owners of the 15-story, 103-key hotel at 60 East 54th Street. They paid $55 million, the New York Post reported.

“At the end of the day, we were the logical buyers,” Born told the Post. “We love the asset.”

ABS Partners’ Alan Jacobs marketed the building.

The neo-Renaissance hotel, built in 1927, is known for its iconic piano bar, the Monkey Bar, that was featured in “Mad Men” and “Sex and the City.” The bar is operated separately from the hotel.

Hatcheck concession magnate Meyer Quain bought the hotel in 1937 after the original owners went bankrupt. Quain’s children redesigned the place, making each room unique and giving them names such as the “Sayonara” suite.

Playwright Tennessee Williams lived there for fifteen years before dying, poetically, in the “Sunset” suite. [NYP] – Ariel Stulberg

Source: Born, Drukier buy Midtown Hotel Elysee for M

HFZ seeks $250M from EB-5 investors for High Line condos

Ziel Feldman and a rendering of 518 West 18th Street on the High Line

Ziel Feldman’s HFZ Capital Group is looking to raise around $250 million in EB-5 funds for its latest High Line condo development at 518 West 18th Street.

The U.S. Immigration Fund, an EB-5 regional center, is handling the fundraising in two phases of more than $120 million each, and is currently raising cash under the first phase, CEO Nicholas Mastroianni told The Real Deal.

HFZ closed on the 36,000-square-foot site for $870 million – or about $1,100 per buildable square foot – in May. The firm funded the acquisition with a $830 million loan from a group including JPMorgan, BlackRock and SL Green Realty, and would need about $1 billion more to fund construction. Howard Michaels’ Carlton Group brokered the acquisition loan and is advising on the construction financing (which HFZ is not yet in the market for), according to sources.

The company plans to build two Bjarke Ingels-designed condominium towers rising 28 and 38 stories tall and totaling 850,000 square feet.

HFZ joins a growing line of developers who have tapped into the EB-5 visa program as a cheap source of funds for luxury condo projects. Silverstein Properties raised EB-5 funds for 30 Park Place, as did Fisher Brothers and Steve Witkoff for 111 Murray Street and Michael Shvo, Bizzi & Partners and Howard Lorber for 125 Greenwich Street. EB-5 investors have also contributed around $600 million in funds for Related Companies and Oxford Property Group’s Hudson Yards mixed-use development.

Congress recently renewed the controversial program, which gives foreign nationals green cards in return for investing in authorized projects, for another year.

With a total cost of around $2 billion, 518 West 18th Street is one of the largest and most expensive condo projects in the city. In comparison, Vornado Realty Trust’s 220 Central Park South and Macklowe Properties and CIM Group’s 432 Park Avenue reportedly cost $1.5 billion and $1.3 billion to build (including land), respectively – although 518 West 18th Street is far cheaper than its Midtown peers on a per-square-foot basis.

HFZ declined to comment for this article. Whether it can secure financing beyond EB-5 funds for this project will be an important indication of lenders’ sentiment on the luxury condo market.

As sales velocity and prices fall, several banks have become reluctant to lend on new construction. On the surface, then, getting lenders to finance hundreds of new condos seems like a hard sell.

But Feldman argued last year that the market he is looking to tap into on West 18th Street – smaller apartments averaging between $4 and $8 million – is not nearly as saturated as the very high end. He is also banking on the continued appeal of the neighborhood around the High Line. “Show me comps anywhere in the area that are over 140 feet [high] and don’t achieve anything with a big three in front of it,” he told The Real Deal in May.

And while some developers are having a hard time raising funds for condo developments, sources said that developers with a long track record — and Feldman would fall into that group — are still attractive to lenders. “Developers with top reputations and enormous financial strength will continue to find lending windows open for projects that are underwritten appropriately for the realities of current supply-demand metrics,” said Scott Singer, president of capital markets brokerage Singer & Bassuk Organization.

Source: HFZ seeks 0M from EB-5 investors for High Line condos

Israeli-Russian billionaire adds to Fifth Avenue assemblage with $59M buy

boris-kuzinez-post

Boris Kuzinez and 260-264 Fifth Avenue

Israeli-Russian billionaire Boris Kuzinez purchased a 12-story commercial building at 260 Fifth Avenue for $59 million, his third buy on the block within the last year, city records show.

Renaissance Properties was the seller. The founder of the Moscow-based Rose Group (formerly RGI), Kuzinez acquired the trio of adjacent properties, which in addition to 260 Fifth Avenue includes a mixed-use building at 264 Fifth Avenue and commercial building at 262 Fifth Avenue, for a combined $101.8 million in what appears to be a major assemblage play. In December, the Department of Buildings approved Kuzinez’s application to demolish 262 Fifth Avenue, but no other development plans have been filed. The three Fifth Avenue properties together hold nearly 100,000 buildable square feet.

Kuzinez’s real estate career has been a checkered one. The investor, who is credited as the principal luxury developer behind the “Golden Mile” — think of it as Moscow’s version of Billionaires’ Row — was sued in a British court five years ago by an investor with a 22 percent stake in Rose Group. The minority owner, Peter Shura, alleged that Kuzinez engaged in nepotism, bribery and used Rose Group, a publicly-traded company, as his “personal bank,” according to U.K. paper the Telegraph. Kuzinez as CEO of the firm in 2011, and according to Russian paper Kommersant, sold his shares for $136.6 million in 2013. He currently operates an Israeli education products company called the Kidum Group.

In 2011, the Israeli publication Globes reported that Kuzinez was demolishing the seaside home that he had purchased for about $21 million just two years prior, so that he could build “Israel’s most luxurious house.” According to his bio on the Rose Group website, Kuzinez immigrated to Israel from Latvia in 1971, and later moved to Moscow in the 1990s, where he founded the real estate development firm.

Other projects in the neighborhood of 260 Fifth include 212 Fifth Avenue, a 48-unit condominium project being developed by Madison Equities and Building and Land Technologies.

Source: Israeli-Russian billionaire adds to Fifth Avenue assemblage with M buy

De Blasio announces Far Rockaway, Governors Island overhauls, but is mum on fate of affordable housing

Mayor Bill de Blasio

Mayor Bill de Blasio

Mayor Bill de Blasio teased future revitalization projects in Far Rockaway and Governors Island during his second State of the City address Thursday night, announcing only a few details on the major developments.

The mayor said $91 million will be dedicated to Hurricane Sandy-battered Downtown Far Rockaway, an investment that will allow for a new library, new mixed-income housing and repairs to a recreation center. He also said that “millions of new square feet” will be added to Governors Island for “commerce, culture and research” and that buildings in the Historic District will be “revived.” The city plans to issue an RFP  to develop 33 acres on two development sites on the southern end of the island. The changes will include year-round access to the island, he said.

“Today, we pledge to make Governors Island a place where economic opportunity comes together with innovation, education and creativity,” he said in front of an audience at Lehman College in the Bronx.

The mayor also proposed building a streetcar that would run from Astoria to Sunset Park, dubbed the Brooklyn-Queens Connector or BQX. The New York Times reported earlier on Thursday that the project will cost an estimated $2.5 billion, and the mayor said in his address that the 16-mile route will help address the “explosive growth on the waterfront” in the two boroughs and would generate $25 billion for the city over the next 30 years.

The speech covered a lot of ground but didn’t really touch on the fate of what de Blasio has pegged as the hallmark of his administration: new affordable housing.

He touted the city’s plan as being the “most ambitious municipal affordable housing plan in the history of the nation,” citing that New York is ahead of its goal to creating 10,000 affordable apartments for seniors.

Though he called 2015 “one of the best years ever for affordable housing,” he omitted that the beginning of 2016 put the future of affordable housing in peril. Negotiations over the 421a tax break fell apart in January, leaving the program’s fate up in the air and many developers forecasting a bleak future for the construction of new rental housing.

The speech itself remained uninterrupted, as protestors were corralled outside the college’s entrances. This was apparently by design: the Wall Street Journal reported that the mayor was careful to keep unfriendly faces outside the invitation-only event.

Representatives with the Mason Tenders’ Council of Greater New York and Long Island handed out fliers against the mayor’s proposed mandatory inclusionary housing plan — which the City Planning Commission approves on Wednesday — arguing that it doesn’t include enough protections for construction workers.

In a statement, Kathryn Wylde, president of the business advocacy group the Partnership for New York City, said the mayor’s plans would “contribute to the city’s vitality and stimulate private investment.”

“These are priorities that the business community shares,” Wylde added.

Source: De Blasio announces Far Rockaway, Governors Island overhauls, but is mum on fate of affordable housing

Al Jazeera to pay $45M to terminate 250 West 55th lease

Al Jazeera America CEO Al Anstey (Credit: Mohamed Nanabhay on Flickr), a rendering of 250 West 55th Street and Owen Thomas

Al Jazeera America CEO Al Anstey (Credit: Mohamed Nanabhay on Flickr), a rendering of 250 West 55th Street and Owen Thomas

Boston Properties and Al Jazeera have agreed to terminate the broadcast news network’s 85,000-square-foot lease at 250 West 55th Street in Midtown, with Al Jazeera paying $45 million to leave its space after announcing it would shut down its Al Jazeera America channel this spring.

In its year-end earnings release Wednesday, the Boston-based real estate investment trust said it had “entered into a lease termination agreement with a tenant” at the 38-story, 1 million-square-foot office tower.

While Boston Properties did not name the tenant in question, industry analysts confirmed it is the Qatari media giant, which announced plans to shut down the struggling Al Jazeera America at the end of April.

Al Jazeera agreed to take roughly 85,000 square feet at the Midtown office building in 2014, as The Real Deal reported, including around 50,000 square feet on the second floor – an expansive space with double-height ceilings ideal for a broadcast studio.

But Al Jazeera never moved into the space, and analysts estimate the network paid Boston Properties more than five years worth of rent to break the lease, which was scheduled to run through February 2035. The one-time lease termination payment is worth approximately $45 million, the REIT confirmed in its earnings release.

Al Jazeera’s space at 250 West 55th Street also included a ground-floor retail space with full frontage on Eighth Avenue, as well as a full-floor space on the building’s upper floors.

Source: Al Jazeera to pay M to terminate 250 West 55th lease

Dash or credit: AmEx’s Hudson Sq. digs marketed for sublease

American Express NYC

From left: 250 Hudson Street in Hudson Square, American Express CEO Kenneth Chenault and Serve debit cards

As American Express shuts down its hobbled enterprise growth division, Jack Resnick & Sons has begun marketing for sublease the 27,000-square-foot Hudson Square office that housed the initiative targeting a less wealthy customer base.

The Financial District-based credit card giant launched the division in 2010, developing a new line of reloadable prepaid debit cards. Enough people left home without the cards that the company announced it would slash 170 enterprise growth jobs in New York and Florida, and canceled a product launch in Mexico.

As a result, the division’s employees occupying the sixth floor of Jack Resnick & Sons’ 250 Hudson Street will soon vacate, less than halfway into the 10-year lease. American Express inked a deal in 2011, which at the time brought the 16-story, 400,000-square-foot office property to full occupancy. The company has occupied the space for about four-and-a-half years to date.

A spokesperson for American Express confirmed the full space is being marketed for sublease. Jack Resnick & Sons’ Brett Greenberg and Dennis Brady, who declined to comment, are handling the marketing. CBRE’s Michael Liss and Bruce Surry, who also declined to comment, are repping American Express.

The landlord, which owns and manages over 5 million square feet of space in Manhattan, acquired the former printing trades building in 1968 and completed a $40 million, full-building renovation in 2008. Other tenants at 250 Hudson Street include public relations firm Edelman and advertising agency Interpublic Group of Companies, which expanded to more than 50,000 square feet there last year.

Asking rents at the Class A building range from the low-$40s to low-$70s per square foot.

American Express is currently headquartered at Brookfield Place’s 200 Vesey Street, occupying about 1.3 million square feet, according to CoStar. The company is set to vacate 299,000 square feet sometime this year, Colliers International data show. The company owns the portion of the property it occupies; Brookfield Property Partners owns the rest.

Although the enterprise growth division is closing, the company will continue to offer the prepaid debit cards, a hallmark of the unit, Bloomberg Businessweek reported. Dan Schulman was CEO of the enterprise growth division from 2010 to 2014, when he left to become CEO at PayPal.

Source: Dash or credit: AmEx’s Hudson Sq. digs marketed for sublease

Stella! De Blasio jumps onboard with Brooklyn-Queens streetcar

streetcar-bill-de-blasio

Rendering of Brooklyn-Queens streetcar line (credit: Friends of the Brooklyn Queens Connector) (inset: Bill de Blasio)

Mayor Bill de Blasio is throwing his support behind plans for a San Francisco-style streetcar line directly connecting Brooklyn and Queens, which would touch parts of the boroughs that have undergone rapid development in recent years.

At an expected cost of $2.5 billion, the 16-mile streetcar route would follow the East River in Brooklyn and Queens. De Blasio will unveil the plan in his State of the City speech on Thursday.

The aboveground line — think San Francisco’s trolleys — will snake along the East River, and would increase transportation to areas that have seen rapid growth, such as the Brooklyn Navy Yard and Long Island City, the New York Times reported. It would connect from Sunset Park to Astoria.

While the neighborhood review process will likely be arduous, the mayor already has support from some major developers, such as Two Trees Management’s Ted Walentas. Walentas and de Blasio’s relationship had experienced ups and downs, but the developer has championed the plan and paid for a study on its feasibility and costs. Walentas’ residential conversion of the Domino Sugar refinery along the Williamsburg waterfront is close to completion.

The streetcar, which would hit top speeds of 12 miles an hour, should cut down on travel times. For example, a trip from Greenpoint to Dumbo would take 27 minutes.

The idea of a streetcar connecting the two boroughs has been bandied about before. The Brooklyn and Queens waterfronts are expected to see significantly more residential and office development in the coming years. Nonprofit Friends of the Brooklyn Queens Connector recently commissioned a study that expected an estimated 15.8 million passengers would use the streetcar line annually by 2035.

The project is not expected to need state approval, meaning de Blasio and Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s contentious relationship will not factor into the equation. [NYT] — Dusica Sue Malesevic

Source: Stella! De Blasio jumps onboard with Brooklyn-Queens streetcar

Fashionable digs: Clothier’s UES mansion asks $42M

128E73

From left: 128 East 73rd Street and Josephine Chaus

A 30-foot-wide townhouse that was home to Bernard and Josephine Chaus, founders of a women’s fashion line, has hit the market for $42 million.

Asking $4,640 per square foot, the four-story house at 128 East 73rd Street is notable for its grand scale. Measuring 9,050 square feet, the home is 30 feet wide and has a 35-foot deep garden. Paula Del Nunzio and Brown Harris Stevens and Serena Boardman at Sotheby’s International Realty have the listing.

The home, with seven bedrooms, two kitchens and a library, belonged to the late Bernard and Josephine Chaus, co-founders of the fashion firm Bernard Chaus, who purchased the home for an unknown sum in 1987, according to public records. Bernard Chaus died in 1991, leaving Josephine to become one of the first female CEOs of a public company. Josephine died this past November.

Manhattan’s townhouse market broke a 10-year price record in 2015, according to a report released today by Douglas Elliman and appraisal firm Miller Samuel. The median sales price jumped to $5.3 million in 2015, a 28 percent jump from 2014 and 94.4 percent higher than 2006’s median price of $2.7 million.

While 128 East 73rd is not the priciest townhouse on the market – that distinction belongs to the Safra family’s three townhomes at 12-16 East 82nd Street, which are being marketed for a combined $120 million – it’s certainly up there.

The second-priciest townhouse in Manhattan, at 24 East 81st Street, is asking $50 million, a discount from the original asking price of $63 million.

The priciest townhouse ever sold? The Harkness Mansion at 4 East 75th Street, which sold for $53 million in 2006. [Observer] – E.B. Solomont

foyer

Dressing area

bedroom

Source: Fashionable digs: Clothier’s UES mansion asks M

Residential comps are becoming a waste of time

Mark Jovanovic, Noah Rosenblatt and Eydie Saleh

Compass’ Mark Jovanovic, UrbanDigs’ Noah Rosenblatt and Mirador Real Estate’s Eydie Saleh

From the February issue: Pricing residential real estate has always been part art and part science. But amid uncertainty over the state of the market, agents say coming up with accurate comps is increasingly difficult — and in some cases, futile.

For properties priced at $3 million and under, tight inventory has boosted the pace of sales. But in the upper end of the market, the pent-up demand from the financial crisis that resulted in a buying frenzy in 2013 and 2014 largely faded late last year. While those two sectors of the market are behaving differently from each other, the new dynamics have created pricing challenges in both. [more]

Source: Residential comps are becoming a waste of time

CBRE, JLL looking to move into Saudi Arabia

Middle East Robert Sulentic Colin Dyer

A map of the Middle East (inset: CBRE’s Robert Sulentic and JLL’s Colin Dyer)

Major commercial property firms including CBRE, JLL are looking to build up their presence in Saudi Arabia as low oil prices force a shift in the country’s economy away from its traditional focus on energy exports.

CBRE has gotten preliminary approval to do consulting work in the Gulf nation, and is in talks with a prospective partner on the ground, looking to set up brokerage, valuation and property management services, the Wall Street Journal reported.

JLL has an “aggressive expansion plan” for the kingdom, having doubled its headcount in the country over the last two years, Jamil Ghaznawi, who heads the firm’s Saudi office, told the Journal.

One major reason for the companies’ push is persistently low oil prices, which have prompted Saudi Arabian officials to propose sweeping changes in the country’s economy.

“The oil prices shock is almost forcing a rebirth and creating a whole new economy, which is attracting the interest of global businesses,” Faisal Durrani, head researcher at Cluttons, a London-based property consultation, told the Journal.

Revenues from oil exports make up about 55 percent of Saudi Arabia’s GDP, and as much as 90 percent of its federal budget. With crude oil prices hovering around $30 a barrel, the Saudi government is pushing the economy’s privatization and diversification, including into real estate.

“Some of the reforms that are being proposed will bring a level of modernization to Saudi Arabia, especially the real-estate sector,” CBRE’s Nicholas Maclean, “We feel the opportunity is bigger than ever now.” [WSJ] – Ariel Stulberg

Source: CBRE, JLL looking to move into Saudi Arabia

What’s really driving the Fed’s latest LLC rules?

(Illustration: Chris Manfre)

(Illustration: Chris Manfre)

From the February issue: For years, wealthy buyers of Manhattan real estate have gone to great lengths to remain anonymous. But last month, the U.S. Treasury Department sent a chill through the New York luxury real estate world when it announced that it would require hidden buyers of high-priced properties to reveal themselves.

The new rule — which will be piloted in Manhattan and Miami-Dade County between March and August — is aimed squarely at uncovering money laundering in two markets that have been propped up by foreign investors. [more]

Source: What’s really driving the Fed’s latest LLC rules?

Zillow to acquire Naked Apartments for $13M

SpencerRascoffJoeCharat

From left: Spencer Rascoff and Naked Apartments’ Joe Charat and Jay Signorello

In a move that will boost its presence in New York City, Seattle-based Zillow Group said today that it agreed to buy the rental platform Naked Apartments for $13 million in cash.

The deal, which is expected to close in the next few weeks, gives Zillow a second brand in New York City along with StreetEasy, which the real estate giant acquired for $50 million in 2013.

With Naked Apartments, a platform that connects nestseekers with brokers and landlords, Zillow is gaining a hyper-local rental database to complement StreetEasy’s sales focus. The deal is “natural strategic fit” for both StreetEasy and Zillow, Susan Daimler, StreetEasy’s general manager and vice president of Zillow Group New York, said in a statement. She said Zillow would continue to grow both brands “under one roof.”

Naked Apartments, which calls itself the city’s largest rental-only platform, lists available apartments along with subway information, market data and agent reviews. In 2013, Naked Apartments launched “Showings on Demand,” a feature that allows renters schedule an apartment viewing with the tap of a button.

Co-founded by CEO Joe Charat and CTO Jay Signorello, Naked Apartments launched in 2010 with 13,000 listings. Following the acquisition, Charat will lead the company as general manager and Signorello will remain CTO.

The acquisition by Zillow “will give us the resources to innovate faster, to grow and expand our business,” Charat said in a statement.

Zillow has made at least nine acquisitions over its 10 years in business, including HotPads ($16 million in 2012), StreetEasy ($50 million in 2013) and Trulia ($2.5 billion in 2015).

Zillow has made big financial gains in recent years. The company’s revenue jumped 13 percent year over year to $176.8 million during the third quarter, the most recent reporting period. In fiscal 2014, revenue increased a whopping 65 percent to $325.9 million.

 

 

Source: Zillow to acquire Naked Apartments for M

City gets a head start on Mandatory Inclusionary Housing

Paul Travis and a rendering of 4650 Broadway (credit: Sherman Acadia Ave LLC/DCP)

Paul Travis and a rendering of 4650 Broadway (credit: Sherman Acadia Ave LLC/DCP)

The fate of Mayor Bill de Blasio’s contentious Mandatory Inclusionary Housing proposal is yet to be decided, but the city is already asking developers to submit their rezoning plans under the program’s guidelines.

The City Planning Commission is set vote today on the mayor’s MIH proposal, which requires developers seeking residential rezonings to put aside 25 or 30 percent of a project for affordable housing. If approved, the plan will go on to the City Council, which would vote sometime in late March or early April.

The mayor’s proposal is by no means a fait accompli. Members of the council are split on the proposal, and the vast majority of the city’s community boards and all five borough presidents stand in opposition of the plan.

But the Department of City Planning expects the plan to get the green light, and even began asking developers to submit applications soon after de Blasio announced his proposal in September.

“In anticipation of the adoption of Mandatory Inclusionary Housing, they asked us to submit it as part of the application,” said land-use attorney Howard S. Weiss, whose firm Davidoff Hutcher & Citron submitted a rezoning application for a site in Red Hook in October.

Weiss’ client is looking to rezone a manufacturing site in order to construct a nursing home at 141 Conover Street, and while the owner wouldn’t be required to build any affordable housing, the city is including it in the MIH program in the event the site is later sold off to a residential developer, he explained.

The city already has a growing list of MIH projects in the pipeline.

In Inwood, Washington Square Partners and Acadia Realty Trust filed an application last month to rezone the site of a U-Haul lot at 4650 Broadwayd. The developers are planning a 23-story, mixed-use building that will set aside 30 percent of its 355 units as affordable apartments.

Late last month the owners of a Crown Heights site filed an application to rezone a full block front along Classon Avenue between Pacific and Dean Streets under the plan. The applicants, listed in property records as Joshua Einhorn and Martin Daskal, plan to build a 103-unit residential building on a portion of the site.

And in December, the city’s department of Housing Preservation and Development filed an application in Flushing for a 208-unit affordable and senior home that Brooklyn-based Monandock Development is developing on a city-owned site.

It’s not quite clear what will happen with the proposals if the MIH plan fails to receive the council’s final approval.

“I don’t know, honestly,” Washington Partners’ CEO Paul Travis said. “Obviously the goal is to provide affordable housing, so we’d have to talk to the city about how that would happen. There’s no 421a either. I think everyone’s proceeding with the assumption that the [elected officials] will work something out.”

Source: City gets a head start on Mandatory Inclusionary Housing

Fifth Avenue retail condo valued at $277M after GGP deal

Sandeep Mathrani and a rendering of 522 Fifth Avenue

Sandeep Mathrani and a rendering of 522 Fifth Avenue

General Growth Properties sold its minority stake in the retail condo at 522 Fifth Avenue in a deal that values the property at nearly $277 million.

The national mall REIT sold a 10 percent interest in the condo it purchased for $165 million with partners Ashkenazy Acquisitions and the German financial institution DekaBank back in 2014, GGP CEO Sandeep Mathrani announced on the company’s quarterly earnings call Tuesday.

While Mathrani disclosed neither the buyer nor the purchase price, filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission reveal the 10-percent stake fetched $27.67 million.

“The IRR on this investment is almost 50 percent,” Mathrani said on the call.

GGP and its partners purchased the property at the corner of 44th Street from Morgan Stanley with plans to expand the retail space.

The company also teamed up in 2014 with Joe Sitt’s Thor Equities to buy the office/retail property at 685 Fifth Avenue, where the partners recently leased 23,400 square foot space to Coach for a global flagship store.

“We will deliver the space to Coach by May of this year and we’ll evaluate how we should handle the transaction going forward,” he said. “Whether we hold or sell, it is our job to allocate capital. It’s also our job to make sure that we prune assets and we recycle capital. So we’ll evaluate that later in the year.”

Rumors have also swirled of late that Toronto-based Brookfield Asset Management is considering an entity-level acquisition of GGP.

Source: Fifth Avenue retail condo valued at 7M after GGP deal

Bronx police station gets Bjarke Ingels treatment

bjarke ingels bronx station house

Rendering for Bronx police station, inset: Bjarke Ingels


Will the new South Bronx police station have cantilevers and terraces too? It doesn’t look that way, but architectural wunderkind Bjarke Ingels — whose designs include 2 World Trade Center and the tetrahedron in Midtown — has hatched a modern, angular design for a new police station in Melrose.

At an estimated cost of $50 million, the new digs for the 40th Precinct resembles a series of stacked boxes, which are meant to evoke bricks in a nod to police stations’ early roots, Architect’s Newspaper reported.

The new silver design, at 43,500-square-foot, also includes a green roof and a community room — a first for a NYPD station house.

Currently, the 40th precinct, which covers Port Morris, Mott Haven and Melrose, is at 275 Alexander Avenue. It’s unclear if the new station will be located at the same address, but it is slated for completion sometime in 2020.

Ingels would appear to have more spare time of late given the troubles at his most notable project, 2 World Trade Center. The project is currently in limbo after Rupert Murdoch’s media companies backed out of an agreement to anchor the space. [Architect’s Newspaper] — Dusica Sue Malesevic

Source: Bronx police station gets Bjarke Ingels treatment

Extell zeroes in on another Duell property, 530 Sixth Ave: report

530 Sixth Avenue in Greenwich Village (inset: Gary Barnett)

530 Sixth Avenue in Greenwich Village (inset: Gary Barnett)

Extell Development is in talks to buy a Greenwich Village commercial property with substantial development rights from the Duell family, the latest of several deals between the two.

Gary Barnett’s firm is looking to acquire 530 Sixth Avenue on the corner of West 14th Street in Greenwich Village, Crain’s reported, citing a source familiar with the deal.

The site is currently home to a 17,000-square-foot commercial building housing a Moscot Eyewear store, but public records show it has nearly 127,000 square feet of residential air rights.

Extell and the Duells have struck a number of deals in the past two months. In December, Barnett’s company bought two apartment buildings at 116 Seventh Avenue and 204 West 17th Street in Chelsea from the Duells, paying $11 million. He also bought 502 Third Avenue, a rental and retail building in Murray Hill, from the family for $11 million around the same time.

Barnett also seems to be the buyer in the $20 million purchase of a rental building at 27 Washington Square North in the Greenwich Village last month, according to Crain’s. At the time of the purchase, the buyer wasn’t known. [Crain’s] – Ariel Stulberg

Source: Extell zeroes in on another Duell property, 530 Sixth Ave: report

Buyers from oil-rich nations pivoting to CRE

Sheikh Khalifa bin Zayed Al Nahyan Karsten Kallevig

Sheikh Khalifa bin Zayed Al Nahyan, ruler of Abu Dhabi, the price of Brent Crude (credit: FRED), and Norges’ Karsten Kallevig

Deep-pocketed investors hit by the plummeting price of oil are increasingly focusing on commercial property investments as they pull back from trophy residential acquisitions, brokers say.

Oil has fallen to the low-$30s a barrel from about $115 a barrel in 2014, causing major financial heartburn for oil-dependent economies including the Middle East, Kazakhstan, Norway and Russia. Real estate experts say investors from oil-reliant countries have become much more conservative about making splashy residential buys and are more likely to cast their sights on income-producing properties.

“Russia, Kazakhstan, Azerbaijan, and countries that were selling oil at $100 a barrel up to a year ago, all of a sudden lost all their revenues,” said real estate attorney Edward Mermelstein. Investors from those nations, who have been responsible for some of Manhattan’s biggest apartment deals, are already retreating from Manhattan’s high-end residential market, he said, and since cash flows are now a priority, “shifting to commercial investment as an alternative.”

Many of these investors are now focused on multifamily buildings, office condominiums and mixed-use buildings as long-term investments, Mermelstein said, though they remain partial to the Central Park corridor.

Since January 2013, of all the Manhattan commercial sales that foreign buyers were involved in, about 39 percent were office properties and 15 percent were hotels, according to CoStar Group data. Although the data doesn’t account for every transaction that uses international money because deals are often made through a domestic entity, Joseph Sollazzo, an economist at CoStar who compiled the data, said the trends are generally representative of “what property types foreign buyers have focused on.”

The overall office vacancy rate in Manhattan dropped to 8.5 percent in 2015, data from Cushman & Wakefield show, the lowest it’s been since the end of 2008.

Stratos Costalas of Oxford Property Group, who counts wealthy Saudi Arabians among his clients, said that splashy residential buys are off the table for cash-strapped investors.

“The vanity plays are nice,” he said, “but when times are tough, you have to be conservative.” Buyers of high-end condos, unlike those of commercial properties or more moderately-priced apartments, often struggle to recoup their investment through rental income — the market for $50,000 a month rentals, not unlike the market for $5,000 per square foot condos, is quite restricted.

Some of his clients are instead looking to buy properties such as hotels and mixed-use buildings, he said. Gennady Perepada, a broker who focuses on high-end foreign buyers, especially from Russia, said his clients are now looking at office condos on the Upper East Side going for between $17 million and $27 million. Perepada described these properties as a “safer investment.”

Overall, foreign buyers spent more than $87 billion on U.S. properties last year, from less than $5 billion in 2009, according to Real Capital Analytics. That number is expected to grow in 2016, according to the Association of Foreign Investors in Real Estate, with New York remaining the top target in the face of political and economic uncertainty in Asia and Europe. Just expect to hear a little less about oligarchs buying perches above Central Park.

Source: Buyers from oil-rich nations pivoting to CRE

Crescent Heights withdraws $337.5M UES condo plan

SonnyKahnHanley

From left: Sonny Kahn and 165 East 66th Street

Miami-based developer Crescent Heights withdrew plans for a $337.5 million condominium conversion on the Upper East Side, a neighborhood that’s experiencing a residential construction boom of late.

The firm, which bought the 20-story luxury rental building at 165 East 66th Street in 2013, originally sought to convert the 150 apartments into condos in February 2014, according to filings submitted to the state Attorney General’s office.

But the plans were never approved by the AG, and Crescent withdrew the offering plan in December, according to filings recently reviewed by The Real Deal.

Crescent — one of the most prolific in Miami Beach — paid $230 million for the 241,334-square-foot property from a partnership between the California Public Employees’ Retirement System, the largest private pension fund in the U.S., and investment management company GID.

Rising 20 stories, the building has a mix of units ranging from studios to four bedrooms. Currently, there is a one-bedroom for rent asking $4,000 a month as well as a four-bedroom asking $22,500 a month.

Representatives of Crescent, which was co-founded by Sonny Kahn, Russell Galbut and Bruce Menin, did not immediately return a call seeking comment.

But the offering plan is one of the priciest to be withdrawn in recent memory. Last year, Extell Development withdrew the offering plan for its Central Park Tower amidst talks to bring on a capital partner, as TRD reported. Sources speculated that developer Gary Barnett and the forthcoming partner would refile the offering plan under a new sponsor name.

On the Upper East Side, Crescent would be competing with hundreds of new units being planned thanks to the impending opening of the Second Avenue Subway. Some 900 units are being developed across 19 projects on the Upper East Side between 59th and 96th Streets, according to Halstead Property Development Marketing. Those projects include Related Companies’ 231-unit 205 East 92nd Street and Anbau’s 84-unit “Citizen360” at 360 East 89th Street.

Source: Crescent Heights withdraws 7.5M UES condo plan

Sean Ludwick parts ways with lawyer Brafman

Benjamin Brafman Sean Ludwick

From left: Benjamin Brafman and Sean Ludwick

BlackHouse Development founder Sean Ludwick, jailed after attempting to skip bail in his vehicular homicide case, is breaking with his attorney Benjamin Brafman.

The two are parting ways over differences in legal strategy, as well as Ludwick’s erratic behavior.

Brafman — who has represented clients such as Michael Jackson, Sean “Puffy” Combs and former IMF head Dominique Strauss-Kahn – only named practical concerns.

“In view of the fact that Mr. Ludwick is now remanded in Riverhead, it makes much more sense for him to be represented by local counsel,” the high-powered lawyer told the New York Post.

A judge revoked Ludwick’s $1 million bail after the developer was arrested in Puerto Rico last month, allegedly having attempted to flee the country before trial. The Long Island judge said there’s no possibility Ludwick will be bonded out before the trial.

Ludwick is charged with vehicular homicide, vehicular manslaughter and fleeing the scene of a fatal accident in connection with the August death of Douglas Elliman broker Paul Hansen in Sag Harbor. The developer allegedly struck a utility pole near Hansen’s house, pushed his lifeless body out of the car and drove off. He faces up to three decades in prison if convicted on the 13 criminal charges. [NYP] – Ariel Stulberg

Source: Sean Ludwick parts ways with lawyer Brafman

Developers, DOB love night construction, but residents not so much

220 Central Park South and a construction site on the High Line

220 Central Park South and a construction site on the High Line

If you were awoken last night at 2 a.m. by the banging and buzzing of construction crews, you probably weren’t the only one.

The city has been strongly bullish on late night construction over the past year, approving 99 percent of all applications for overnight work in 2015.

In 2014, the total number of approved variances stood at just over 48,000. The increase this year is equal to roughly 24 percent, the New York Post reported. The city made $25.3 million on night construction applications last year, a 20 percent increase over the prior fiscal term.

Work at Vornado Realty Trust’s 220 Central Park South, for example, has proceeded near-continuously for the past two years.

Now some residents are pushing back, along with their representatives in government.

“The system is out of whack because the permits are so routinely granted,” said City Councilman Daniel Garodnick. “It has become more like an entitlement for builders.”

A total of 3,773 noise complaints were lodged with DOB in 2015, though the agency issued only 54 violations. [NYP] – Ariel Stulberg

Source: Developers, DOB love night construction, but residents not so much

Trying to make a fat profit from a luxe condo flip? Your time may be running out

From left: 181 West 87th Street on the Upper West Side and One Madison in the Flatiron District

From left: 101 West 87th Street on the Upper West Side and One Madison in the Flatiron District

As the supply of new luxury condos booms, returns on fast resales are falling from astronomic to merely pretty good.

Returns on new Manhattan condominium flips has steadily fallen over the past year, to an average of about 15 percent, down from as much as 30 percent in recent years, Crain’s reported.

The fall is part of the overall slowdown in sales at the top end of the luxury residential market, brought on by a glut of new supply, as well as by macroeconomic shifts both in the U.S. and in the countries from which many high-end buyers hail.

Fast resales of new developments are risky, but often highly profitable. The highest returns are usually made by buyers who purchase very early in the development process, before a project has seen 15 percent of its units go into contract, the threshold at which the Attorney General’s Office declares offering plans effective.

“Early on, the [developer] and the broker are [often] offering low-hanging fruit,” Nancy Packes, a real estate consultant, told Crain’s.

Back in July, The Real Deal chronicled the top apartment resales over the past year. The largest profit made in that period was $2.2 million, on a penthouse at Bazbaz Development’s 101 West 87th Street on the Upper West Side. That apartment sold for $10 million in November 2014, just 127 days after it sold for $7.8 million, a nearly 30 percent profit.

The four next most profitable flips were all at Related Companies and HFZ Capital Group’s One Madison at 23 East 22nd Street in the Flatiron District.

Flipper will still reap rewards. A 15 percent profit over a relatively short period isn’t bad, but the past year’s sky high returns may not be coming back for a while.

“Developers will probably still prime the pump,” said Jonathan Miller of Miller Samuel. “But the market might not be able to support two, three or four price increases—meaning the initial investor won’t get the same instant equity.” [Crain’s] – Ariel Stulberg

Source: Trying to make a fat profit from a luxe condo flip? Your time may be running out

Mixed-use marinas are a growing global trend

Pricey waterfront real estate is nothing new, but a rise in boat ownership is now driving developers to create mixed-use marinas.

In China, the number of mixed-use marina projects planned has increased significantly, as have home prices. Coastal areas in Malaysia, the Middle East and Spain are also seeing the same trend, according to the New York Times.

“Sailing is becoming more popular, and boat owners need places that offer facilities for maintenance,” James Price, an agent on the international development team of the London-based property firm Knight Frank, told the Times. “But they also want somewhere with increased lifestyle experiences, like an accessible location, good infrastructure, residential options and quality on-site leisure services, restaurants and retail.”

Not only has boat ownership risen sharply over the last decade, but orders for yachts longer than 250 feet have increased by 25 percent over the previous year. There was also a record number of orders for boats in excess of 328 feet.

“There is a shortage of, and high demand for, space in which marina and residential are combined,” Eamonn Feeney, managing director of marina planning specialist, MDL Consultancy, said. [NYT] – Christopher Cameron

Source: Mixed-use marinas are a growing global trend

Are public bathrooms NYC’s next big infrastructure project?

Ladies-Room-vintage

With 20,000 to 30,000 citations for public urination issued each year by the NYPD, it’s becoming clear that NYC has an infrastructure problem.

Most of the city’s public lavatories are in subway stations and parks. But they are poorly kept and often locked. There are only three public pay toilets spread across the five boroughs.

“Public toilets are as essential a part of street infrastructure as streetlights,” Carol McCreary of PHLUSH (Public Hygiene Lets Us Stay Human) told Atlas Obscura. “They need to be part of the same package, and the fact that they’re not makes no sense.”

Other groups like Safe2Pee are also lobbying for change.

Unlike many other world cities, like London and Berlin, NYC never put any real money behind building and keeping up public restrooms. Critics counter that public restrooms attract crime, but of course, the real issue is money, both for real estate and upkeep. Essentially, public restrooms are money pits.

The city’s most recent answer has been to move toward downgrading public urination from a misdemeanor to a lesser violation. But activist groups hope for a more humanitarian answer. [Atlas Obscura] —Christopher Cameron

Source: Are public bathrooms NYC’s next big infrastructure project?

From the archives: How it feels to lease a landmark

Second Avenue Deli

Second Avenue Deli

From the archives: Many still mourn the loss of the Second Avenue Deli to a Chase bank branch, including this writer, who counts it as a childhood favorite.

I had just stopped short of laying it on thick and telling Andrew Mandell, a broker with Ripco Real Estate, about how my father used to give me half of his matzo ball every time we went to the East Village staple, when Mandell gently interrupted. [more]

Source: From the archives: How it feels to lease a landmark

Westchester firm acquires Greenpoint’s Lofts 305 for $31M

Lofts 305 Greenpoint

305 McGuinness Boulevard in Greenpoint

Westchester-based real estate investment firm GDC Properties acquired a 38-unit Greenpoint rental building for $31 million, according to property records filed with the city Friday.

GDC closed on its purchase of 305 McGuinness Boulevard, known as Lofts 305, on Jan. 20. The Hawthorne, N.Y.-based firm acquired the five-story, 41,000-square-foot building from Union City, N.J.-based owner Ronel Ben-Dov and financed the deal with a $16.4 million mortgage from Wells Fargo Bank, per property records.

Ben-Dov bought the Karl Fischer-designed apartment building from developer Bronfman Fisher Real Estate Holdings for $13.4 million in 2010. The landlord listed the property last summer at an asking price of $32.5 million, as The Real Deal reported, after previously asking $25 million for the building in 2012.

Neither GDC nor Brendan Maddigan of Cushman & Wakefield, whose team marketed the property, returned requests for comment. Ben-Dov could not be reached for comment.

Cushman & Wakefield shopped the building as a possible condo conversion, which would bring the property full circle; Bronfman Fisher had previously converted the property from condos to rentals, after the condo market tanked during the last recession.

In the priciest sale of a residential building in the history of Greenpoint, World Wide Group paid $103 million for a 130-unit rental property at 110 Green Street, The Real Deal reported this week.

Source: Westchester firm acquires Greenpoint’s Lofts 305 for M

Julien Studley’s ex-assistant sues wife over alleged $140K inheritance

Jane and Julien Studley

Jane and Julien Studley

It’s real estate’s answer to an episode of Law & Order.

Julien Studley’s former personal assistant is suing the late Studley founder’s wife Jane for allegedly cutting her out of his will and subjecting her to wrongful imprisonment and assault and battery while she worked for the real estate executive.

The disgruntled former employee, Marion Rios, says she was Studley’s personal assistant for 35 years and was guaranteed an inheritance of $140,000 in his will before Jane conspired to shut her out. For her part, Jane denied the allegations and said that Rios had a history of mooching off her husband.

Studley is alleged to have promised the inheritance to Rios following the sale of his shares in his namesake company Studley (now Savills Studley) in the early 2000s, which resulted in Rios losing benefits such as her 401K account and her life insurance policy. They originally agreed upon $100,000, she says, but later upped the amount to $140,000.

But Rios, who was responsible for Studley’s schedule and banking, says she clashed with Jane, who tried to undermine her longtime relationship with Studley and frequently accused her of stealing from the family and shutting her out the couple’s bank accounts, the lawsuit alleges.

The tension hit a boiling point in October 2014, when Jane allegedly confronted Rios about missing funds from a family bank account and cornered her in her office, preventing her from leaving the apartment. Studley’s attorney, Gary Kreinik, called to advise Rios to leave the apartment or risk being punched by Jane, she says.

Rios was dismissed from her job following the incident and, when Julien Studley died of brain cancer in October, she found that his will had been amended to remove her $140,000.

“Jane interfered with Marion’s employment contract and with Marion’s agreement with Julien to be taken care of in his will,” Rios said in the complaint, filed Friday in State Supreme Court. “Jane unduly influenced Julien at a time when his mental faculties were diminished due to brain cancer.”

When contacted by The Real Deal, Jane denied the allegations, saying of Rios: ‘She knows why she was fired.”

She continued: “My husband was a very, very nice man. She [Rios] was the kind of person who always felt like she wasn’t getting enough from him. So many people used to ask him why he kept her.”

Jane, a Shanghai native, was Studley’s second wife following his short-lived marriage to a junior employee at the brokerage.

“After we got divorced, I decided, I’m not going to look for a wife; I’m going to look for someone to take care of me,” Studley told TRD in a 2008 interview. “Ultimately, I married Jane.”

 

 

Source: Julien Studley’s ex-assistant sues wife over alleged 0K inheritance

Could Billionaires’ Row be set for another skinny tower?

106 West 56th Street Christopher Schlank

From left: 106 West 56th Street and Christopher Schlank

Could another slender skyscraper soon be coming to Billionaires’ Row?

Savanna plans to demolish a nine-story, 36,000-square-foot building at 106 West 56th Street, an area with one of the highest floor-to-area ratios in the city.

The private equity and asset management firm filed permits with the Department of Buildings for the site demolition on Wednesday.

Since the 5,000-square-foot lot lies in an area with a FAR of 15, Savanna can build an 80,000 square foot tower as of right, according to 6sqft, which first spotted the permits. (The C6-6 zoning that covers the site allows for a floor-to-area ratio of 15 for a commercial building and 10 for residential, with bonuses available for a public plaza and through inclusionary housing.)

Savanna has been busy of late developing a nine-story, Morris Adjmi-designed commercial building at 540 West 26th Street and a mixed-use tower at 141 Willoughby Street in Downtown Brooklyn, where it’s been pushing for a rezoning.

Savanna, which landed number five on TRD‘s April 2015 ranking of top deal-making private equity firms, sold Twitter’s Chelsea headquarters to New York REIT for $335 million. Savanna head Chris Schlank sat down with The Real Deal for a Closing interview in 2014.  [6sqft]Dusica Sue Malesevic

Source: Could Billionaires’ Row be set for another skinny tower?

Sunset Park medical condo building seeks $76M sellout

5515 Eighth Avenue

Rendering of 5521 Eighth Avenue in Sunset Park (credit: Raymond Chan via New York YIMBY)

A group of Flushing investors building a medical condo development in Sunset Park are seeking a total sellout of nearly $76.3 million for the property in what would be the most expensive condo offering of any kind to date in the Brooklyn neighborhood, according to a TRData analysis.

The Winley Plaza Condominium, at 5521 Eighth Avenue in Brooklyn, will stand six stories and hold 41 commercial condo units across roughly 42,500 square feet of space, according to permit applications filed with the city’s Department of Buildings.

Flushing developer Andy Wong is building the project, located in the heart of Sunset Park’s Chinatown, alongside nine other partners in Wong’s Golden Eighth Avenue Realty Corp., according to a condo offering plan filed Tuesday with the state attorney general’s office.

Wong’s entity has owned the property – located two miles south of Jamestown’s massive Industry City office redevelopment near the South Brooklyn Marine Terminal – since 1989, according to city property records.

The Winley Plaza Condominium is projected to cost approximately $33 million and benefitted from around $8 million in EB-5 funding, New York YIMBY reported in 2014.

In addition to medical offices on its upper floors and 13,000 square feet of retail space on its ground floor and mezzanine level, the building will also house an automated parking facility capable of holding around 150 vehicles.

Flushing architect Raymond Chan, who is designing the Winley Plaza, confirmed the building’s plans and said the project is already under construction. Wong declined to comment on the development.

Will Parker contributed to this report

Source: Sunset Park medical condo building seeks M sellout

Take a look at Ironstate’s new North Shore rental development

Rendering of 7 & 8 Navy Pier Court in Stapleton

Rendering of 7 & 8 Navy Pier Court in Stapleton (credit: Ironstate)

New Jersey-based Ironstate Development has launched a teaser website for its new Staten Island rental project, releasing a few more details on the waterfront development.

The project — located at 7 & 8 Navy Pier Court in Stapleton — has 900 units across two five-story buildings. The project, known as URBY Staten Island, also features 35,000 square feet of retail space, an on-site farm, a communal kitchen with a resident chef and a waterfront esplanade, Curbed reported. URBY — formerly known as URL Staten Island, similar to the developer’s Jersey City project URL (Urban Ready Life) Jersey City — is expected to start leasing in the spring.

Dutch architectural firm, Concrete, designed the project. [Curbed] — Kathryn Brenzel

Source: Take a look at Ironstate’s new North Shore rental development

Developers scurried to start projects before 421a expired

Call it the 421a expiration hustle: developers and architects raced to obtain permits and begin construction in December before the tax abatement program expired this month.

Permits for 7,781 residential housing units in 299 projects were granted  in December— four times more than the number issued in November, according to new census figures.

This was the third-highest monthly total in at least seven years, the Wall Street Journal reported. May and June saw even bigger surges, when 421a, which grants subsidies to developers who offer affordable units in new buildings, also faced an expiration deadline.

The program was renewed temporarily in June, but with a catch: that negotiations between the Real Estate Board of New York and the Building and Construction Trades Council of Greater New York — a union group — would work out a deal over wage requirements for construction workers at 421a sites. A deal wasn’t reached and the program expired Jan. 15.

Developers received $1.26 billion in exemptions through 421a in the current city fiscal year, according to the Journal. This has been attributed to strong housing recovery, but also the push by developers to get all possible projects underway to quality for breaks, the Journal reported.

In 2015, 56,248 permits were issued in New York City, the most since 1962, according to Census Bureau figures. That number blows away the most recent peak, which was 33,911 permits issued in 2008, though dozens of those projects were delayed for years after the financial crisis. [WSJ]Dusica Sue Malesevic

 

Source: Developers scurried to start projects before 421a expired

The biggest weakness in the Treasury’s new LLC order? Wire transfers

WireTransfer

The Treasury Department’s new initiative to track all-cash LLC buyers has been slammed by industry insiders as unnecessary, unconstitutional and a “witch-hunt.” But the most damning criticism? The initiative, which aims to crack down on money laundering and ill-gotten gains, may not even work.

The order, which requires title insurers to disclose the true buyers of homes over $3 million acquired in-all cash deals through shell companies, only focuses on sales completed with paper checks and dollar bills, and excludes wire transfers, which experts say are commonly used on so-called “cash deals.”

“We don’t have people coming to closings with suitcases full of cash,” said Stuart Saft, who heads Holland & Knight’s real estate practice. Monitoring payments made with currency will have no effect, Saft said, because those payments simply don’t exist at the $3 million-and-up level.

At the luxury price point, the true all-cash deal — which conjures up cartoonish images of men in dark sunglasses slapping down bands of bills after tense negotiations — is close to fiction, said real estate attorney Adam Leitman Bailey.

Paying with cashier’s checks or certified checks, however, is much more common, and is covered by the Treasury’s new reporting requirements. Title insurers typically know more about buyers than any party in a deal, according to real estate attorney Petro Zinkovetsky, and are likely to have collected information that a bank issuing a cashier’s check may not have.

“The bank doesn’t need the information of every single owner of the LLC to issue a check,” Zinkovetsky said. The Treasury Department’s order will likely allow the government to identify LLC members that it could not through its normal monitoring of the banking system.

But by excluding wire transfers, the initiative has no teeth, attorneys said.

“It’s foolish,” said Aaron Shmulewitz, an attorney at Belkin, Burden, Wenig & Goldman. “Funds are going to be wired to the title company [directly] in advance of the closing, and the title company is going to hold on to it.” Since title companies will not be asked to disclose LLC members on wire-transfer transactions, the Feds will have to rely on the banking system’s limited ability to track the names behind LLCs.

A spokesperson for FinCEN, the Treasury Dept.’s financial crimes unit, told The Real Deal the government was looking to track “a narrow subset of transactions that are generally not scrutinized under existing AML [Anti Money Laundering] controls, while also minimizing burden by conforming to existing rules that the covered businesses are already familiar with.”

“To the extent that we see a shift to all-wire transactions,” the spokesperson added, “we adapt in the future accordingly.”

But Shmulewitz said the wire transfer loophole was “large enough you can drive a fleet of trucks through.”

“Who initiated the wire transfer? Some bank, some investor in some country abroad?” he said, casting doubt on the government’s ability to reliably identify LLC members.

A source familiar with the workings of the Treasury Department told TRD the government may already feel confident in its ability to track wire transfers. Payments by money order, the source said, are messier because the records are often on paper and are more tedious to track down. In such cases, going directly to the title insurer for information is a better bet.

FinCEN has brought the hammer down hard on banks that have failed to do due diligence on foreign wire transfers.  In 2012, it hit HSBC with a $500 million civil penalty for its failure to adequately review trillions of dollars in annual transfers. And in 2015, the German Commerzbank AG agreed to pay a penalty of $258.7 million for, among other things, violating U.S. sanctions by processing 959 wire transfers and other transactions involving Iranian financial institutions.

Another source put forward a more bureaucratic reason: the Treasury form used to enact the order, FinCEN Form 8300, which is used to report transactions over $10,000, does not cover wire transfers, and the form would have to be formally changed for it to do so.

“We’re asking the title insurers to use an existing form with existing definitions,” a FinCEN spokesperson said. “A covered transaction is triggered only when ‘such purchase is made, at least in part, using currency or a cashier’s check, a certified check, a traveler’s check, or a money order in any form.’  This generally conforms to existing Form 8300 requirements (which are not triggered by wire transfers), which reduces burden on covered businesses because they are already familiar with the Form 8300 filing requirements and have filed Form 8300’s in the past.”

The temporary “geographic targeting order” on Manhattan real estate begins on March 1 and ends on Aug. 27, at which point many believe the government will assess what it has learned and move to implement something that is both more comprehensive and more permanent.

“They’re going to need to start from scratch,” Bailey said.

Source: The biggest weakness in the Treasury’s new LLC order? Wire transfers

B+B Capital sheds Chelsea development site for $23M

251 West 14th Street; Top: Ilan Bracha, co-founder of B+B Capital; Bottom: Rance MacFarland, CEO of Pa

Rendering of 251 West 14th Street; Top: Ilan Bracha, co-founder of B+B Capital; Bottom: Rance MacFarland, CEO of Pizzarotti

An Italy-based construction services company has purchased a development site in Chelsea from B+B Capital for $23 million in a deal that won’t disrupt plans for an 11-story condominium building on the property, which features about 24,000 buildable square feet.

Pizzarotti IBC expects to go ahead with B+B Capital’s plans to build a condo tower on the site, located at 251 West 14th Street between Seventh and Eighth avenues.

The building, initially designed by ODA Architecture, is expected to have 11 full-floor units ranging from 1,700 square feet to 2,500 square feet, the New York Observer reported. It’s not clear if ODA will get to keep the job: Nest Seeker International’s Thomas Stein, who procured the buyer, said Pizzarotti is mulling who will be the project’s architect.

Howard Raber, Shimon Shkury, Jesse Deutch, Randy Modell and Victor Sozio of Ariel Property Advisors represented the sellers in the deal.

Representatives for B+B, headed by Ilan Bracha, wouldn’t say why the company decided to sell the property, which it acquired for $7.5 million in 2014. Pizzarotti paid $958 per buildable square foot, which Raber said is roughly $200 dollars higher than the neighborhood average.

This will be Pizzarotti’s second project in New York City. The company is working with Madison Equities to build a 65-story condominium at 45 Broad Street in the Financial District.  [NYO] — Kathryn Brenzel

Source: B+B Capital sheds Chelsea development site for M

Oops: City mistakenly gave away $10M in condo, co-op tax breaks

1040 tax form (credit: Free Stock Photos)

1040 tax form (credit: Free Stock Photos)

Wait a second, you’re not a residential co-op or condo — is probably what city officials said when it was discovered that more than $10 million in tax breaks mistakenly went to parking garages, storage spaces and other improper recipients.

Over the last four years, the city’s Finance Department gave out more than $10 million to indoor parking garages, gardens, storage spaces, three office buildings and two retail shops through a tax-rebate program intended for residential owners of co-ops and condos, according to an audit by city Comptroller Scott Stringer.

The audit shows that the Finance Department failed to properly review records, causing more than 1,000 corporate-owned condos and co-ops to improperly receive the tax benefits, the New York Post reported. The tax breaks ranged from 17.5 percent to 28.1 percent of the total tax bills each year, the newspaper reported.

“The city handed out millions in tax abatements to corporate-owned condos, parking spots and cabanas because no one bothered to review basic tax records,” Stringer said. “The Department of Finance needs to significantly step up its game and collect all the taxes the city is owed.”

The Finance Department is installing internal software to help catch this kind of mistake in the tax seasons ahead. [NYP] — Kathryn Brenzel

Source: Oops: City mistakenly gave away M in condo, co-op tax breaks

What slowdown? Average sales price reaches 11-year high in the Hamptons

 Left and top right : South of the Highway Southampton; Bottom right: 6 Northwest Road East Hampton

Left and top right : South of the Highway Southampton; Bottom right: 6 Northwest Road East Hampton

The luxury market may be going soft in Manhattan, but high-end property sales in the Hamptons hit an 11-year high at the end of 2015.

The average sales price of homes in the Hamptons reached $2.3 million in the final quarter of 2015, a 15.6 percent year-over-year increase, according to a sales report released by Douglas Elliman on Thursday.

The record runs counter to the narrative playing out in Manhattan, where experts have warned of a potential winding down in the demand for uber luxury properties.

“With all the discussion about the top of the market in the city softening or slowing or cooling, the Hamptons this quarter turned out to be contrarian,” said Jonathan Miller, president of Miller Samuel and author of the Elliman report.

The fourth quarter saw the most $5 million-plus sales in a decade and the highest median sales price for luxury properties at $8.3 million, Miller said. The median sales price for the fourth quarter is more modest, rising to $997,000 — a 4.9 percent increase from the last quarter and a 2.3 percent year-over-year increase, according to the report.

The rise in average sales is at least partially attributable to a post-recession pattern in the Hamptons. Miller said that since the housing crisis, there’s been a rush of high-end sales in the fourth quarter of each year. Unfortunately, he said, it’s not really clear why.

“One thing that we’ve seen since the financial crisis, is that at the high end of the market, meaning north of $5 million, we’re seeing a growing shift to more of these high end sales in the last quarter of the year,” he said. “If we look prior to the financial crisis, that pattern doesn’t exist.”

The volume of sales at the end of 2015, however, did fall 16.5 percent to 613 from the same time last year. It increased 20.9 percent from the third quarter. The year-over-year drop, Miller said, is simply a product of unusually high sales activity at the end of 2014 and a drop in inventory.

Source: What slowdown? Average sales price reaches 11-year high in the Hamptons

There were more than 1,300 Manhattan apartments purchased anonymously last year

The Treasury Dept. said it will begin tracking high-end anonymous buyers. But what will that mean for the market? (NYC shot credit Sergey Semenov)

(Photo: Sergey Semenov)

UPDATED: Jan. 28, 9:05 a.m.: The U.S. Treasury’s decision to track all-cash property purchases made through shell companies sent a shiver through the spine of the real estate industry earlier this month.

But just how many anonymous corporations are buying New York City real estate?

Anecdotal evidence suggests plenty, according to brokers and lawyers who say their clients value privacy and the legal protection afforded by purchasing property anonymously through a corporation.

As for hard numbers, there were 1,380 residential purchases at all price points in Manhattan made by LLC buyers in 2015, according to data compiled by StreetEasy for The Real Deal. That’s more than 50 percent of all residential LLC buyers across all five boroughs last year.

In 2010, there were just 861 LLC buyers in Manhattan, StreetEasy data shows. Even five years ago, that accounted for nearly half of the 1,729 LLC deals.

Overall, Manhattan residential sales accounted for 37 percent of the 35,725 recorded sales last year.

Based on that volume, LLC purchases represented a small slice of the deal flow at 7.7 percent, slightly higher than 2010’s 4.9 percent.

But federal authorities still have high hopes for the new rule, a measure partly aimed at reining in the flow of foreign capital. “We are concerned about the possibility that dirty money is being put into luxury real estate,” Jennifer Shasky Calvery, a top Treasury official, said Jan. 13.

Under the new rule, title insurance companies will be required to disclose the identity of buyers who purchase Manhattan real estate priced at $3 million or more in cash through a shell company.

Sources told TRD, however, that buyers who want to remain anonymous will be able to do so by jumping through one of several financial loopholes to the provision, such as utilizing a straw buyer or setting up a trust. The new rule takes effect in March.

Correction: The headline on a previous version of this story incorrectly characterized the buyers purchasing through LLCs.

Source: There were more than 1,300 Manhattan apartments purchased anonymously last year

Citigroup will buy back Tribeca HQ from SL Green for $2B

Citigroup CEO Michael Corbat, 388-390 Greenwich Street and Marc Holliday

From left: Citigroup CEO Michael Corbat, 388-390 Greenwich Street and Marc Holliday

Citigroup is exercising its option to purchase its Tribeca headquarters at 388-390 Greenwich Street from SL Green Realty for $2 billion, the real estate investment trust announced Wednesday.

The banking giant will buy back the 2.7 million-square-foot office complex it sold to a partnership between SL Green and Ivanhoe Cambridge for nearly $1.6 billion in 2007. The bank signed a $1 billion lease renewal for its 2.7 million square feet at the properties in 2013 – a deal that came with the $2 billion buyback option.

SL Green bought out Ivanhoe Cambridge for $783 million in 2014 to take full control of the property, which is undergoing a major renovation project featuring a curtain-walled makeover.

In conjunction with the its year-end earnings release for 2015, the city’s largest office landlord also announced a number of leasing transactions – most significantly a 23-year, 43,000-square-foot deal with Nordstrom to anchor three retail levels at 3 Columbus Circle, which SL Green owns in partnership with the Moinian Group.

The new store “will serve as an expansion” of the department store’s upcoming flagship location on West 57th Street, the landlords said, describing the deal as a “complex transaction” involving “a series of lease modifications and relocations.”

SL Green also announced that advertising and communications conglomerate Omnicom signed a 15-year lease renewal for 167,000 square feet at the 37-story, 1.2 million-square-foot News Building at 220 East 42nd Street, between Second and Third avenues. Omnicom’s space covers the building’s 11th through 15th floors.

In addition, the REIT said music content provider Music Choice had renewed its nearly 53,000-square-foot lease at the Olivia – a 36-story, 493,000-square-foot mixed-use building at 328 West 34th Street between Eighth and Ninth avenues.

Source: Citigroup will buy back Tribeca HQ from SL Green for B