Shvo and Bizzi’s 125 Greenwich to house 275 condos

Michael Shvo and a rendering of 125 Greenwich Street (Credit: ArX Solutions)

Michael Shvo and a rendering of 125 Greenwich Street (Credit: ArX Solutions)

Michael Shvo, Howard Lorber’s New Valley and Bizzi & Partners’ soaring condominium at 125 Greenwich Street will house 275 units – nearly 150 more than early renderings for the Financial District tower indicated.

The Rafael Vinoly-designed tower will rise 91 stories with 275 condos spread over 306,312 square feet, according to an offering plan filed with the Attorney General’s office and reviewed by The Real Deal. Prices were not disclosed, but units will range in size from a 403-square-foot studio to a three-bedroom pad measuring 3,625 square feet. The top two floors will have two units each.

Unit 87A

Unit 87A at 125 Greenwich Street

Projected operating expenses for the condo tower will top $4 million, according to the offering plan.

Early renderings circulated in the fall of 2014 indicated it would have 128 units, with 10 full-floor penthouses. A 10,600-square-foot duplex was to occupy the top floor. The developer said plans were subject to change.

Unit 87B

Unit 87B at 125 Greenwich Street

According to published reports, the building is expected to rise more than 1,000 feet, down from 1,356 feet as was initially reported. Plans filed with the Department of Buildings, however, describe an 876-foot tower.

Shvo partnered with a group of investors, including Bizzi and New Valley, to arrange $240 million of equity and debt for the acquisition and development of the site in 2014.

"D" line on floors 23-32

“D” line on floors 23-32 at 125 Greenwich Street

The developers paid $185 million for the site, where Fisher Brothers and the Witkoff Group had planned a 956-foot-tall rental tower. Shvo and Bizzi are currently looking to raise $175 million for the project through the EB-5 program, which gives foreign investors a U.S. green card in exchange for a $500,000 investment.

In addition to 125 Greenwich, Shvo and Bizzi, along with partner Halpern Real Estate Ventures, are also planning a Renzo Piano-designed, 242,000-square-foot condominium building at 100 Varick Street. The building will house 115 condo units.

Source: Shvo and Bizzi’s 125 Greenwich to house 275 condos

Developocalypse: 421a expires

Big asteroid crashing on the surface of an Earth-like planet. Digital illustration.

The 421a tax abatement program, which grants subsidies to developers who offer affordable units in new buildings, is officially done — for now. 

The program’s future depended on negotiations between the Real Estate Board of New York and the Building and Construction Trades Council of Greater New York – a union group – over wage requirements for construction workers at 421a sites. Those talks did not lead to an agreement, Politico first reported, and the program is now set to expire at midnight.

John Banks, president of REBNY, bemoaned the breakdown of the talks.

“New York is a city of renters and one that continues to grow,” Banks said in a statement. “Without a program like 421-a, one can’t build multi-family rental housing with a significant below-market, or affordable, component on a scale necessary to address the City’s needs.  We are committed to working with stakeholders to fashion a program that will produce the affordable housing throughout New York City that is so desperately needed, ensures construction workers are treated fairly and creates job opportunities for City residents.”

Jolie Milstein of the New York State Association for Affordable Housing, which represents affordable housing developers, said in a statement that the death of the program meant that “there is an even more urgent need for all stakeholders to work together and create a program to produce affordable rental housing for New York City.”

“There is no time to wait,” Milstein added.

While 421a is expiring for now, it is still possible that the two sides reach an agreement at a later date and the program gets extended after all. 421a briefly expired in June after lawmakers in Albany failed to reach an agreement over an extension, only to be renewed nine days later until Jan. 15, 2016.

“We remain ready to engage with all stakeholders in the weeks and months ahead to achieve our goals of creating needed affordable housing and middle class jobs for New Yorkers,” Gary LaBarbera, president of the Building and Construction Trades Council of Greater New York, said in a statement

The 421a program offers tax abatements to residential developers who set aside a portion of a building’s units as affordable. Its expiration is a major blow to residential developers, particularly in the outer boroughs. A recent report by NYU’s Furman Center found that in parts of Brooklyn and Queens where apartment rents are comparatively low, rental development would not be profitable without the tax abatement even if land prices were zero. In pricier parts of Brooklyn and Manhattan, the expiration could lead more developers to switch from rental to condo development, although it could also have the beneficial impact of pushing down land prices.

The expiration is also a blow to Mayor Bill de Blasio, whose pledge to create or preserve 200,000 affordable housing units depends in no small part on the 421a program. Many of the changes to the program that were passed — such as an expansion of the affordability component and the exclusion of condo projects from the program — were championed by City Hall.

Under the old program, first introduced in the 1970s, condo projects could qualify for the abatement. Extell Development’s luxury tower One57 famously benefitted from the program, costing the city $65.6 million in lost tax revenue. Some rental developments, such as Tishman Speyer’s latest Long Island City project on Jackson Avenue, could qualify for the program without setting aside any units as affordable.

New York’s state legislature approved a 421a extension in June 2015 with significant changes to the program, but Gov. Andrew Cuomo added a provision that REBNY and labor groups first reach an agreement over whether developers should be required to use union contractors to qualify for the abatement. These talks have collapsed — at least for now.

“If we all agree that we need to expand the supply of rental housing and that the over-assessment of rental housing creates economics that are simply not feasible, then I would hope we can count on Albany to support economic development,” said David Kramer, principal at development firm Hudson Companies. “Our company survived two exhausting, stressful nail biters to start foundations on two separate rental projects by June 15 and Dec. 31 respectively of this year, and it would be highly appreciated if Albany could provide a regulatory environment that offers some certainty and stability.”

 

Source: Developocalypse: 421a expires

Murdoch nixes move to Silverstein’s 2 WTC

From left: Rupert Murdoch, 2 World Trade Center (credit: BIG) and Larry Silverstein

From left: Rupert Murdoch, 2 World Trade Center (credit: BIG) and Larry Silverstein

Rupert Murdoch’s 21st Century Fox and News Corp. will not move their New York headquarters to Silverstein Properties’ planned 2 World Trade Center Downtown, raising questions about the future of the Bjarke Ingels-designed office tower that the companies were supposed to anchor.

The media giants “have decided to maintain” their Midtown headquarters at 1211 and 1185 Sixth Avenue, 21st Century Fox and News Corp. confirmed in a joint statement, citing “extension options that could continue or occupancy on Sixth Avenue through 2025. The companies’ current leases run through 2020.

Despite signing a non-binding letter of intent in June to take 1.3 million square feet of office and studio space at 2 World Trade Center and anchor the 2.8 million-square-foot property, top executives at both Fox and News Corp. decided the move “would be a huge distraction for the companies’ global operations,” sources told the New York Post.

A copy of the internal memo sent out to News Corp's employees

A copy of the internal memo sent out to News Corp’s employees

While acknowledging that he was “disappointed” by the decision in a statement, Silverstein Properties chair Larry Silverstein noted his belief that “it won’t be long before we find a great company to anchor 2 World Trade Center.”

But the decision will undoubtedly be a blow for Silverstein Properties, which successfully lobbied for sizable rent subsidies for the Murdoch companies from the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey and talked up 2 World Trade Center as representing a “new downtown” geared toward creative and media businesses.

Sources told the Post that Fox and News Corp’s 1211 Sixth Avenue landlord Callahan Capital Properties made a “compelling” offer for the companies to remain in their space, including promising building modernization and public space improvements. The tenants are not understood to be negotiating a new lease beyond their five-year extension option, however. [NYP] ­– Rey Mashayekhi

Source: Murdoch nixes move to Silverstein’s 2 WTC

City’s eminent domain play in Coney Island moving ahead

Coney Island de Blasio

Coney Island (inset: Bill de Blasio)

New York City will seize 75,000 square feet of beachfront property in Coney Island as part of an effort to spur long-delayed economic development in the area.

The eminent domain seizure would include a 60,000-square-foot property that once housed the original “Thunderbolt” wooden roller coaster, which was demolished in 2000. The move is expected to enable the city to make infrastructure improvements that would help bring new attractions the world-famous beachfront neighborhood.

It would also help the de Blasio administration move forward with thousands of units of affordable and market-rate housing that was approved through a 2009 area rezoning of the area, according to the New York Post. The city could obtain the properties within a year, given there are no legal challenges to the move by opponents.

But there has been little opposition to the plan, given that most of the property seized is owned by absentee landlords who have allowed their sites to fall into dereliction. [NYP] – Rey Mashayekhi

Source: City’s eminent domain play in Coney Island moving ahead

Meet the exec behind construction giant Lend Lease

Melissa Burch (Photo: Max Dworkin)

Melissa Burch (Photo: Max Dworkin)

From the January issue: It’s hard to miss Melissa Burch.

For starters, as a top executive at construction giant Lend Lease, she’s a woman operating in what’s commonly seen as a man’s world. Second, at six feet tall — without heels — the statuesque brunette stands out before even uttering a word.

“I still do a double-take sometimes when I see pictures of myself with other people,” she joked. “I forget how tall I am.” [more]

Source: Meet the exec behind construction giant Lend Lease

To go, please: Bobby Flay renting out Chelsea Mercantile pad

Bobby Flay and his duplex apartment at the Chelsea Mechantilile building

Bobby Flay and his duplex apartment at the Chelsea Mercantile at 252 Seventh Avenue

Bobby Flay’s Chelsea duplex apparently didn’t sell fast enough for his taste.

Now, the restaurateur and TV star is looking to rent his 3,200-square-foot unit at Rockrose Development’s Chelsea Mercantile at 252 Seventh Avenue, asking $22,500 a month.

Flay put the three-bedroom duplex three-bedroom, which features an impressive chef’s kitchen, as one might expect, up for sale back in October, when the asking price was $8 million.

The chef lived there with his ex-wife Stephanie March, with whom he recently divorced, possibly explaining his eagerness to leave the unit.

Meris and Kenny Blumstein of the Corcoran Group are marketing both the rental and sales listings, the latter along with their daughter Sydney, the New York Post reported. [NYP] – Ariel Stulberg

Source: To go, please: Bobby Flay renting out Chelsea Mercantile pad

Here is all the money leaving China right now

(credit: Credit Suisse)

(credit: Credit Suisse)

China is letting the renminbi devalue. The economy is slowing. Their debt is growing ($28 trillion!). And that means the Chinese are having more difficulty paying their US dollar-denominated debts as time goes by.

So how much money, exactly, is fleeing from China right now?

Credit Suisse analyst Helen Haworth and her team produced these two slightly terrifying charts showing the scale of capital flight out of China right now.

The left chart shows China’s reserves in decline, as banks there use their foreign currency holdings to buy all the renminbi everyone is selling. Note that the scales on the graph are in billions of US dollars.

The right chart shows capital leaving China as a percentage of GDP. Note that it is accelerating over time. We haven’t seen those dips since the 2008 crisis.

Christopher Wood and his Greed & Fear gang at CLSA have a similar chart that shows a little more detail. China’s foreign currency reserves have declined by what looks like roughly $600 billion from their peak and capital is fleeing at a rate of $100 billion a month, in some months:

screen shot 2016-01-15 at 12.09.50

Bear in mind, the FX reserve can go negative, as it was for much the early 2000s. It’s just that when that happens, the renminbi is relatively worthless. Analysts disagree about how much capital is exiting China. (It’s not the most transparent place, after all.) RBS, for instance, believes the situation is even worse, and that $170 billion in capital left China in December.

Source: Here is all the money leaving China right now

Cuomo backpedals: CUNY, Medicaid “won’t cost NYC a penny”

bill-de-blasio-and-andrew-cuomo

Bill de Blasio and Andrew Cuomo

Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s new budget plan included provisions that could have shifted as much as $800 million in costs related to CUNY and the city’s Medicaid program from the state to the city. But now the governor seems to be backing off in the face of protest from Mayor Bill de Blasio and others.

Cuomo’s $145 billion budget, presented with his State of the State address Wednesday, would have had New York City shoulder 30 percent of the cost of CUNY’s budget. Right now, the city pays virtually nothing to support CUNY.

The plan would have also required the city to cover the increases in the cost of the city’s Medicaid program, the New York Daily News reported. Put together, the CUNY

De Blasio pushed back fiercely against the proposals, calling the moves “harmful” and “debilitating. He vowed to sink the plan and cited civil rights leader Malcolm X:

“There’s a phrase from American history, ‘By any means necessary.’ I would invoke that phrase,” the mayor told the Daily News. “We’ll do whatever will work.

But by Thursday, Cuomo was already backtracking.

“This is the beginning of the budget process. The budget process goes on for months. This is really the beginning of the discussion,” the governor told NY1.

“At the end of the day, what you’ll see is it won’t cost New York City a penny,” Cuomo told the channel. “We have to reduce the cost of the bureaucracy at CUNY. We have to reduce the cost of administration for Medicaid.”

The battle is the latest in a string of face-off’s between the two politicians. [NYDN] – Ariel Stulberg

Source: Cuomo backpedals: CUNY, Medicaid “won’t cost NYC a penny”

Diddy will settle for less — just get him paid

Sean Combs Park Imperial

The Park Imperial at 230 West 56th Street in Midtown (inset: Sean Combs)

He is a man of many names — the rap impresario who ushered in the “shiny suit era” of hip-hop with tales of glamorous lifestyles filled with luxury. But Sean Combs is having a hard time getting anyone to buy his Park Imperial apartment.

The 2,300-square-foot unit, located on the 66th floor of the celeb-heavy Midtown condo tower at 230 West 56th Street, is back on the market for just under $7 million.

The new asking price is down a cool million-and-a-half from the apartment’s original 2012 ask of $8.5 million. It’s not the first time Puffy has lowered his expectations on the unit, having dropped the asking price to $7.9 million in 2014.

The two-bedroom, two-and-a-half-bathroom condo features floor-to-ceiling windows, an eat-in chef’s kitchen and expansive views of Central Park, according to the New York Post.

Even at the new, reduced asking price, Combs is due a profit on the $3.82 million he spent to buy the apartment in 2005. Lisa Maysonet of Sotheby’s International Realty is the listing broker. [NYP]Rey Mashayekhi

Source: Diddy will settle for less — just get him paid

The Donald sells Trump Park Avenue condo for $14M

The 27th-floor condo at the Trump Park Avenue on the Upper East Side (inset: Donald Trump)

The 27th-floor condo at the Trump Park Avenue on the Upper East Side (credit: Trump International Realty) (inset: Donald Trump)

Maybe Donald Trump is trying to distance himself from New York in the run-up to the Iowa caucuses. Maybe he thinks the market has peaked — or the apartment is a loser.

Either way, the developer and Republican presidential candidate is selling another one of his units at the Trump Park Avenue on the Upper East Side.

Trump parted with his 4,200-square-foot sponsor unit, the 27th-floor of the former Delmonico Hotel at Park Avenue and 59th Street, collecting $14 million, the Wall Street Journal reported.

Trump never lived at the unit, renting it out instead, Michelle Griffith of Trump International Realty, who represented both sides in the deal, told the Journal.

He originally listed it in early December at $16.8 million.

The sale wasn’t about raising funds for his presidential campaign, Ivanka Trump of the Trump Organization told the Journal. The apartments’ buyer is unknown.

“We sell units when the market is conducive to selling,” she told the paper.

Trump bought the 32-story, 119-unit building in 2011 for $115 million, and performed a condominium conversion there. He sold another unit there, the penthouse, last year for $21 million. [WSJ]Ariel Stulberg

 

Source: The Donald sells Trump Park Avenue condo for M

NYC’s Finance Department to lease 175K sf at former Verizon Building

NYC Department of Finance Commissioner Jacques Jiha and a rendering of 375 Pearl Street

NYC Department of Finance Commissioner Jacques Jiha and a rendering of 375 Pearl Street

The city’s Department of Finance is planning to lease 175,000 square feet of office space at Sabey Data Centers’ repositioning of the former Verizon Building at 375 Pearl Street in the Financial District.

The DOF, led by Commissioner Jacques Jiha, is seeking final approval to occupy the 26th through 30th floors at the 1.1 million-square-foot tower Dave Sabey’s Seattle-based firm bought a controlling interest in along with Young Woo and Associates in 2011 for $120 million.

A CBRE leasing team led by Gerry Miovski, Gregg Rothkin and Zakery Snider referred questions to a Sabey spokesperson, who confirmed the deal and said the building’s façade renovation should be completed later this year. Asking rents in the building range from $45 to $51 per square foot.

Rising 32 stories at the base of the Brooklyn Bridge, 375 Pearl is often derided as one of the most aesthetically offensive buildings in the city, with a near monolithic limestone exterior interrupted only by small strips of black windows that, for a long time, were boarded up from the inside.

Sabey and his team are in the middle of a renovation that will remove portions of the building’s exterior and replace them with a curtain-wall structure.

As a result of its former life as a telephone switching center, 375 Pearl is one of the best-connected buildings in the city, and is engineered to withstand a nuclear blast.

Last year, the NYPD leased 18,000 square feet on the building’s 22nd floor.

Source: NYC’s Finance Department to lease 175K sf at former Verizon Building

Anbau offers $130M for massive Brooklyn Heights site

(credit: Brownstoner)

An aerial view of Pineapple Walk in Brooklyn Heights (credit: Brownstoner)

Another huge tower may soon rise in Brooklyn Heights.

Anbau Enterprises, a NoMad-based development firm, is offering $130 million for a giant 387,000-square-foot development site on Pineapple walk between Henry Street and Cadman Plaza West in Brooklyn Heights. The site, currently home to a row of one-story retail shops, is owned by a co-op, called the Whitman Owner Corp. The group’s shareholders will vote on Friday whether or not to further investigate the offer, the Brooklyn Eagle reported.

Anbau, led by Stephen Glascock and his wife Barbara Van Beuren, hopes to build a 40-story luxury residential tower with ground-floor retail there.

The developer’s offer is a sharp increase from its opening bid of $75 million made late last year.

The project would be the latest in a string of new Brooklyn Heights luxury residential developments. David Kramer’s the Hudson Companies plan for a 36-story condo tower at 280 Cadman Plaza, formerly the site of a Brooklyn Heights library branch, was approved by the City Council in December. [Brooklyn Eagle]Ariel Stulberg

Source: Anbau offers 0M for massive Brooklyn Heights site

50 NYC office buildings are now in the $100 psf club

From left: The GM Building, 11 Madison Avenue and 51 Astor Place

From left: The GM Building at 767 Fifth Avenue, 11 Madison Avenue and 51 Astor Place

Triple-digit rents used to be reserved for just a handful of New York City’s spiffiest office buildings, but a new report sheds light on the dramatic price hikes in the office market. Fifty properties in the city are now renting space at more than $100 per square foot.

That number was up from just 33 buildings in 2014, according to JLL, which authored the report. Properties that joined the club last year include 11 Madison Avenue, 860 Washington Street, 51 Astor Place, and others.

The GM Building, which is owned by a partnership between Boston Properties, Soho China and the Safra family, saw three leases cross the $200-per-square-foot threshold, a new record for the city, the New York Post reported. Investment firm Belfer Management will pay starting rents of $220 per square foot there. But the record isn’t likely to last long, given hedge fund Citadel Management’s commitment to cough up about $300 per square foot for the top floor of L&L Holding’s 425 Park Avenue.

A total of 138 office deals with starting rents over $100 per square foot were done in 2015, according to the Post, a 42 percent year-over-year jump from 97 in 2014. More than half were new lease signings.

A full 25 percent of deals over $100-per-square-foot were at buildings owned by Vornado Realty Trust, according to the newspaper.

The Real Deal chronicled the city’s most lucrative office lease deals in 2015 last month. [NYP]Ariel Stulberg

Source: 50 NYC office buildings are now in the 0 psf club

MHP pays $460M for 850 Third Avenue

From left: 850 Third Avenue and MHP's Norman Sturner

From left: 850 Third Avenue and MHP’s Norman Sturner

MHP Real Estate Services is the new owner of 850 Third Avenue, a 614,000-square-foot Midtown East office building for which it paid $460 million.

The seller, Shorenstein Properties, paid $300 million for the 21-story building in 2008. The property, once part of the Equity Office portfolio and briefly owned by Harry Macklowe, hit the market in early 2015.

MHP, formerly known as Murray Hill Properties, acquired it in an off-market deal for just over $718 per square foot. The property, located between 51st and 52nd streets, comes with a cap rate of between 3 and 4 percent, a source told TRD. A JLL team was marketing the building.

Tenants include the media companies Discovery Communications and Radio One and the city of New York.

The building was once part of the Equity Office portfolio that investor Harry Macklowe bought for $7 billion in 2007 and then famously defaulted on after the market crashed. The portfolio included the Park Avenue Tower at 65 East 55th Street and was a key part of “The Liar’s Ball,” Vicky Ward’s book on the GM Building. [NYO]Konrad Putzier

 

Source: MHP pays 0M for 850 Third Avenue

Compass calls itself the little guy, seeks dismissal of Hamptons restraining order

RobertReffkinMegSalemAndrewSaunders

From left: Robert Reffkin, Meg Salem and Andrew Saunders

Compass just wants to be left alone.

The startup brokerage – which was sued last month by Hamptons firm Saunders & Associates after a former agent allegedly stole listings and handed them off to Compass – has asked a federal judge to dismiss complaints against it.

In a motion filed in the U.S. District Court’s Eastern District, Compass said it returned the listings data to Saunders and fired the agent in question.

“There is nothing left for Compass to do,” the firm stated in court documents dated Jan. 7. “Saunders is using its suit against Compass in a transparent attempt to stifle legitimate competition from Compass in the Hamptons real estate market… At this point, Compass should be allowed to resume its real estate business without disruption.”

Saunders slammed Compass and former agent Meg Salem with a lawsuit on Dec. 7, alleging that Salem stole more than 11,000 listings from Saunders and turned the data over to Compass. After a judge issued a temporary restraining order, Compass fired Salem, saying that it “holds its agents to the very highest standards and has very clear company rules.”

In the new motion, Compass denied knowing that Salem copied listings from Saunders’ internal database, and said it only learned about the allegations when Saunders filed its lawsuit. Compass said it subsequently returned Saunders’ information.

Saunders, however, alleges that Compass turned over just 220 documents – a fraction of the “thousands of pages of documents” obtained by Salem’s team.

“These listings are the lifeblood of our business and I want them back,” said Andrew Saunders, CEO of Saunders & Associates. “I want to know what happened to them.”

Saunders cited a sworn declaration by former Salem teammate Jess Spooner, who said he saw Salem turn over at least 1,000 sheets of paper to Compass, each one containing multiple listings.

 “There was an outright theft from my company, and mounting evidence that [Compass] not only knew about it, but embraced it and took the information,” Saunders added. “It’s not an innocuous thing.”

 In an amusing footnote in the case, Compass’ motion describes the firm as a “small real estate start-up that launched in 2013.”

But that assertion is somewhat dubious. In September, the firm raised $50 million in a Series C financing round, bringing the total investment to $123 million. Sources have valued the firm, which now has close to 300 agents, at $800 million.

By comparison, Vector Group Ltd. paid $60 million in 2013 for a 20.59 percent stake in Douglas Elliman, New York City’s largest residential brokerage. That deal would seem to value Elliman at just over $291 million.

Compass is using a good chunk of its venture funding to expand into new markets, including several in the Los Angeles area and the Hamptons.

Source: Compass calls itself the little guy, seeks dismissal of Hamptons restraining order

JDS, Chetrit file plans for DoBro resi supertall

340 Flatbush Avenue Extension

Rendering of 340 Flatbush Avenue Extension in Downtown Brooklyn (credit: SHoP) (inset, from left: Michael Stern and Joseph Chetrit) (Chetrit photo credit: Patrick McMullan)

It looks like Michael Stern and Joseph Chetrit really are going big in Brooklyn.

JDS Development Group’s latest round of permit applications for 340 Flatbush Avenue Extension in Downtown Brooklyn indicate the planned residential tower on the site will top out at more than 1,000 feet.

The 73-story structure – which will hit 1,066 feet in height, to be exact – will span more than 556,000 square feet in total, according to New York YIMBY. The development is now set to house 417 apartments spread out over more than 463,000 square feet of residential space.

The building’s first four floors will feature both retail and office space, while the fifth floor will hold a residential lounge with an outdoor terrace. Apartments start on the seventh floor, which will house 12 units, while the unit count will gradually decrease as the floors climb – with only two units on each of the 69th and 70th stories.

The SHoP Architects-designed project’s commercial portion, while scaled down from previous plans, will still span nearly 93,000 square feet at the base of the tower. The Tribeca-based architectural firm is also behind JDS’s skinny, supertall residential tower at 111 West 57th Street in Midtown.

JDS and partner Chetrit Group’s initial plans for the Downtown Brooklyn site, which they acquired for $43.5 million in 2014, called for a 775-foot-tall building. But the firms’ subsequent acquisition of the adjacent Dime Savings Bank for $90 million brought it an additional 300,000 square feet of air rights that pushed it above the 1,000-foot mark.

The city’s Department of Buildings has yet to approve the project’s permits, though the development is tentatively set for a 2019 completion date. [NY YIMBY]Rey Mashayekhi

Source: JDS, Chetrit file plans for DoBro resi supertall

Photog Albert Watson lists Tribeca penthouse for $21.5M

Celebrity photographer Albert Watson is listing his picture-perfect 101 Warren Street penthouse.

Watson, known for shooting the likes of Alfred Hitchcock and Tupac Shackur, is marketing his 3,800-square-foot condominium unit, the building’s second largest.

The shutterbug and his wife Elizabeth renovated the duplex pad, replacing the floors with gray granite and adding a staircase made of glass and steel connecting the floors, Curbed reported. It also features a 1,600-square-foot wrap around terrace.

He bought the apartment from the sponsor, Minskoff Equities, in 2008 for $13.2 million.

The unit is the second major listing at the 35-story Tribeca tower in recent days. “Taxi King” Simon Garber listed his 6,400-square-foot penthouse there last week. [Curbed]Ariel Stulberg

Source: Photog Albert Watson lists Tribeca penthouse for .5M

Equinox takes 44K sf at Columbia’s 315 Park Avenue South

315 Park Avenue Equinox

From left: 315 Park Avenue in Flatiron and the Equinox gym at 100 10th Avenue in Chelsea

Flatiron residents will soon get another place to exhaust themselves for the sake of their health.

Fitness center firm Equinox signed a 20-year retail lease at Columbia Property Trust’s 315 Park Avenue South, taking 44,000 square feet.

The gym will occupy part of the space occupied by financial firm Credit Suisse Group. Over the next two years, Credit Suisse, which pays a below-market-rate rent, will vacate about 175,000 square feet at the building as its leases expire, the Wall Street Journal reported.

Columbia, a real estate investment trust, bought the 20-story, 356,000-square-foot building last year, paying $375 million to Spear Street Capital.

Fullscreen, a Youtube channel aggregator, took 17,000 square feet there in September. [WSJ]Ariel Stulberg

Source: Equinox takes 44K sf at Columbia’s 315 Park Avenue South

Welcome to real estate’s tech graveyard

(Illustration by Chris Manfre)

(Illustration by Chris Manfre)

From the January issue: The failure rate for startups is high — anywhere from 75 percent to 90 percent, according to industry estimates.

And if that weren’t enough, here’s another discouraging fact: Unsuccessful companies typically shutter within 20 months of being funded, according to venture capital database CB Insights.

So despite the enormous amount of capital being deployed to unleash a real estate tech revolution, the chances are strong that the real estate startups currently pushing themselves as the next big game changer will flop. [more]

Source: Welcome to real estate’s tech graveyard

These were the top home sales in BK, Queens in December

From left:

From left: 69-45 Ingram Street in Forest Hills and 165 Columbia Heights in Brooklyn Heights

Three years of “meticulous” renovations seems to have paid off at this 19th Century Brooklyn Heights home.

The three-story carriage house at 165 Columbia Heights sold for $9.8 million in December, making it the most expensive sale of the month, according to data provided by Property Shark. The $5 million renovation included a third-story addition that added a master bedroom and roof terrace, both of which are hidden from street view to maintain the townhouse’s restored historic brick facade. The sale is considerably higher than November’s biggest price tag in the borough, which was a Park Slope home for $6.2 million.

The top sale in Queens was slightly less expensive than November’s most priciest home. A Long Island City condo in the View Condominiums on Center Boulevard sold for $2.3 million. A two-story home in Astoria topped November’s list when it sold for $2.6 million.

Here were December’s priciest sales:

BROOKLYN
1. 165 Columbia Heights
Neighborhood: Brooklyn Heights
Price: $9.8 million
Size: 5,072 square feet
Stories: Three
Built: 1800s
Agents: Gabriele Devlin and Lee Summers of Sotheby’s International Realty

2. 145 President Street
Neighborhood: Carroll Gardens
Price: $9 million
Size: 1,785 square feet
Stories: Three
Built: 1899
Agents: Not available

3. 1 Pierrepont Street #8A
Neighborhood: Brooklyn Heights
Price: $6.5 million
Size: Not available
Stories: One
Built: 1924
Agents: Not available

4. 812 Avenue R
Neighborhood: Homecrest
Price: $6.2 million
Size: 6,050 square feet
Stories: Two
Built: 2006
Agents: Melanie Kishk of MK Realty

28 Garden Place in

28 Garden Place in Brooklyn Place

5. 28 Garden Place
Neighborhood: Brooklyn Heights
Price: $5.2 million
Size: 3,160 square feet
Stories: Three
Built: 1901
Agents: Yolanda Johnson Vogelzang and Vanessa van Der Linde-Brown of Corcoran

QUEENS

46-30 Center Boulevard #1504 in Long Island City

46-30 Center Boulevard #1504 in Long Island City

1. 46-30 Center Boulevard #1504
Neighborhood: Long Island City
Price: $2.3 milllion
Size: 1,153 square feet
Stories: One
Built: 2008
Agents: Not Available

2. 50-09 Second Street #1114
Neighborhood: Hunters Point
Price: $2 million
Size: 1,495 square feet
Stories: One
Built: 2008
Agents: Not available

3. 69-45 Ingram Street
Neighborhood: Forest Hills
Price: $1.8 million
Size: 1,992 square feet
Stories: Two
Built: 1940
Agents: Robert Hof of Terrace Sotheby’s Realty

71-41 Juno Street in

71-41 Juno Street in Forest Hills

4. 71-41 Juno Street
Neighborhood: Forest Hills
Price: $1.6 million
Size: 2,569 square feet
Stories: Two
Built: 1920
Agents: Robert Hof of Terrace Sotheby’s Realty

5. 322 Soundview Lane
Neighborhood: College Point
Price: $1.6 million
Size: 3,397 square feet
Stories: Two
Built: 2007
Agents: Not available

Source: These were the top home sales in BK, Queens in December

Activist Macy’s investor ups pressure to cash in on real estate

Macy's shopping bag

Macy’s store in Herald Square

Hedge fund Starboard Value is ramping up pressure on Macy’s, suggesting a scheme by which the firm could purportedly create $10 billion in shareholder value by reorganizing its real estate holdings.

Starboard, which announced its stake in the department store in July, suggested that Macy’s separate its big-city flagship stores from its mall properties, creating joint venture entities for each, in a presentation sent to the retailer.

“Macy’s real estate portfolio is extremely valuable,” Jeffrey C. Smith, Starboard’s CEO, wrote in a letter. “A JV, or series of JVs, can crystallize the value of Macy’s real estate while bringing in a partner with substantial capital and real estate expertise.”

Macy’s, which in November rejected Starboard’s prior calls to reorganize real estate assets into a real estate investment trust, has struggled in recent months with declines in traffic at its stores. The company’s shares lost 47 percent of their value in 2015, Bloomberg reported.

Last week, the firm announced it had hired Eastdil Secured to market its flagship stores, including its Herald Square store, to potential joint venture partners.

Earlier this week, Isaac Chera’s Crown Acquisitions signed a 99-year ground lease at 136-50 Roosevelt Avenue in Flushing, which is home to a Macy’s store. [Bloomberg]Ariel Stulberg

Source: Activist Macy’s investor ups pressure to cash in on real estate

DOB reclassifies rental building as hotel because of Airbnb sublet: lawsuit

357 West 54th Street in Midtown

357 West 54th Street in Midtown

Landlords beware. Not only can a tenant’s illegal Airbnb sublet draw fines from the city, it can lead to your rental building being re-classed as a hotel, with all the attendant requirements.

That’s what happened at 357 West 54th Street in Midtown, according to a new lawsuit filed by landlords Ben and Herman Schulman against one of their tenants, Natalya Bogatyuk.

In May, a Department of Buildings inspector found that tenants at the five-story, 21-unit building, including Bogatyuk, were illegally renting their apartments through Airbnb and similar services. A court issued a series of fines to the landlords, totaling $45,000, according to the complaint.

But the inspector also concluded that the units were being occupied on a “transient” basis, thus converting the building from a Class A permanent residential property to a Class B property, essentially a hotel.

That status brings with it additional requirements for landlords, such as maintaining a more comprehensive fire alarm system and providing a second means of egress. Finding these requirements unmet, the court imposed an additional $16,250 in fines, according to the suit.

The Schulman’s are seeking damages of $250,000, plus another $50,000 to cover court costs.

Several other tenants were renting their units as well, according to the suit. The landlords filed suit against another tenant, Madalina Iacob, last month, seeking the same amount of money.

The Department of Buildings didn’t immediately return a request for comment.

Airbnb is fighting a package of new City Council bills seeking to regulate its service, including one that would significantly raise the fine for illegal rentals.

The firm is also reportedly in talks with three major national landlords – Equity Residential, AvalonBay Communities and Camden Property Trust – over a possible revenue sharing arrangement for tenants’ rentals.

Source: DOB reclassifies rental building as hotel because of Airbnb sublet: lawsuit

Scaffolding company puts huge LIC yard on the market

Jakub Nowak and Jonathan Eshaghian with 38-42 12th Street in Long Island City

Jakub Nowak and Jonathan Eshaghian with 38-42 12th Street in Long Island City

United Hoisting and Scaffolding Company, one of the city’s biggest scaffold-and-sidewalk-shed suppliers, is looking to sell its large, 1.5-acre yard in Long Island City as a development site that could fetch upwards of $35 million.

“This site is primed for conversion into office, creative or industrial uses, particularly given its proximity to Manhattan and the Cornell Technion Campus on Roosevelt Island,” said Marcus and Millichap’s Jakub Nowak, who along with colleague Jonathan Eshaghian has the listing for United’s site a few blocks north of the Queensbridge F Train station.

The property is made up of two different parcels across the street from each other: the larger one at 38-42 12 Street that holds slightly more than 319,000 buildable square feet, and smaller yard across the way at 38-26 11th Street, which has shy of 49,000 buildable square feet.

United, which is owned by the Halloran family, bought the site back in 1979 when the company relocated from New Jersey.

In recent years the neighborhood, part of one of the city’s Industrial Business Zones (IBZ), has been popular with hotel developers, with 10 new or proposed hotels in an area encompassing about a dozen blocks. But two months ago Mayor Bill de Blasio and the City Council announced they had reached an agreement as part of an effort to preserve manufacturing jobs that would require hotel developers to receive a special permit in order to build in an IBZ.

The IBZ agreement didn’t impact office development, which is still allowed as of right. And Nowak, who last year sold a development site nearby on 11th Street to a hotel developer for $100 per buildable square foot, said that with LIC office rents ranging from $25 to $30 per square foot, the site could very well go to an office developer.

Source: Scaffolding company puts huge LIC yard on the market

Blackstone bought nearly $10B worth of NY real estate in 2015

JonGrayBlackstoneMainArt

Jonathan Gray

The tab is in for Blackstone’s massive 2015 buying spree: $9.6 billion.

That total – which included the purchase of Stuyvesant Town and a partnership stake in a six-building office portfolio – made the private equity giant the city’s most aggressive buyer last year.

The firm also sold $4.2 billion in property, Bloomberg reported, citing data from Real Capital Analytics.

The firm bought Stuy Town along with Ivanhoe Cambridge, from a group led by CWCapital Assessment management, closing in December. The partners paid $5.3 billion (or was it $5.46 billion?)

Earlier this year, Blackstone went into contract to buy a 50 percent stake in a portfolio of six office buildings – including 620 Sixth Avenue, 1330 Sixth Avenue, 340 Madison Avenue and the Starrett-Lehigh Building at 601 West 26th Street – from Scott Rechler’s RXR Realty. The deal valued the portfolio at $4 billion.

Back in August, The Real Deal profiled the firm’s real estate division and its head Jonathan Gray, investigating whether its dramatic growth could continue. [Bloomberg]Ariel Stulberg

Source: Blackstone bought nearly B worth of NY real estate in 2015

15 contracts signed at $4M and above: Olshan

TrumpParkAvenue

Clockwise from top left: Trump Park Avenue, 152 Elizabeth Street, 36 Bleecker Street and 45 East 22nd Street

Manhattan buyers signed 15 contracts on properties $4 million and up last week, according to Olshan Realty’s weekly luxury market report. But on average, the pricey pads spent nearly a year – 347 days, to be exact – on the market.

The week’s total asking price sales volume was $125.6 million, with an average asking price of $8.4 million. The average discount was nine percent.

The No. 1 contract was a penthouse at Trump Park Avenue at 502 Park Avenue, asking $16.8 million. Measuring nearly 4,200 square feet, the condo has four bedrooms, six bathrooms and a 69-foot library facing Park Avenue. The prior owner paid $7.7 million in 2010.

Coming in at No. 2 was Unit 5 at the Tadao Ando-designed condominium at 152 Elizabeth Street. The 4,094-square-foot unit, which was asking $15.2 million, is one of seven units in the glass-and-concrete development. [Olshan Realty]E.B. Solomont

Source: 15 contracts signed at M and above: Olshan

Real estate’s tech arms race

RE-AppsFrom the January issue: Anyone who has banked online, shopped on Amazon or shared digital photos recently can understand why real estate firms are clamoring for new technology.

It’s been a decade since the listings portal StreetEasy debuted, making data accessible to New Yorkers. But there have been few game-changing startups in its wake.

To fill the void, a burst of activity on the real estate tech front over the past two years has challenged the sector’s reputation as slow moving and resistant to change. [more]

Source: Real estate’s tech arms race

Endless Brooke

Brooke-shields

Brooke Shields

From Luxury Listings NYC: An artifact from another era, her skin-tight Calvin Klein jeans are now on display at the Fashion Institute of Technology. A pair was previously shown at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Her oft-controversial childhood portraits have been exhibited in the Whitney, the Guggenheim and the Tate — where the photographs were removed after a warning from the London police. But Brooke Shields, 50, is far from being a museum piece. [mpre]

Source: Endless Brooke

Well-heeled ex-pats are buying up historic homes in Beijing

hutong

From Luxury Listings NYC: Historic hutong homes — traditional courtyard property lining narrow alleyways — are the hot (old) new thing in the Chinese real estate market. They provide a much-needed sanctuary in the middle of the bustling city of Beijing. Those seeking a more traditional living experience seem to prefer street-level homes to luxury high rises, so these properties tend to be particularly coveted by ex-pats or newcomers to the city. [more]

Source: Well-heeled ex-pats are buying up historic homes in Beijing

Taxi King’s Tribeca penthouse is back, asking $25M

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Simon Garber, the Taxi King, and his apartment (Photo by Colin Archer)

Simon Garber, aka the Taxi King, has slapped his showy Tribeca penthouse back on the market, this time for $25 million. Here is a look inside.

Garber, who owns Yellow Cab SLS Jet Management Corp. and operates roughly 275 taxis in the city, combined two units on the 32nd floor of the building at 101 Warren Street into one penthouse. Garber is also the founder of the polo club of Colts Neck, N.J., and owns roughly 850 taxi medallions in Chicago.

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Garber has previously offered the apartment as a $100,000-a-month rental and listed it for $30 million, then $27 million. The 6,400-square-foot penthouse has now seen another $2 million discount, according to Curbed.

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Designer Richard Mishaan gave the apartment its lime green kitchen, mosaic tile motifs and all its other generally over-the-top finishes. Selling this one might require finding a very special buyer.

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[Curbed]Christopher Cameron

Source: Taxi King’s Tribeca penthouse is back, asking M

San Francisco office rents now the priciest in the nation

San Francisco

San Francisco (Credit photoeverywhere in Category North America)

Residential rents in San Francisco have been outpacing NYC’s for some time. But now, San Fran is beating out New York on another front: office rents.

Office rents in San Francisco are in fact the most expensive in the country, with landlords asking up to $72.26 a square foot in the fourth quarter of last year, according to a new report from CBRE Group cited by the New York Times. Manhattan office rents were $71.85 a square foot during the same period.

Moreover, prices in San Francisco rose 14 percent last year, compared with 7 percent in Manhattan.

And of course, the price surge can be blamed on…you guessed it: tech firms. An interesting side note: San Francisco office rents haven’t surpassed Manhattan’s since the dot-com bubble a decade and a half ago. [NYT]Christopher Cameron

Source: San Francisco office rents now the priciest in the nation

Carlos Slim’s $80M UES townhouse is now off the market

Screen-Shot-2015-10-03-at-9.39

1009 Fifth Avenue

In May, Mexican billionaire Carlos Slim, formerly the world’s richest man, listed his Upper East Side mansion at 1009 Fifth Avenue for $80 million — $36 million more than he paid for it just five years ago. But as of today, the property has been taken off the market.

Carlos-Slim-230The Real Deal reached out to listing broker Serena Boardman of Sotheby’s International Realty for comment and to ask if it will be coming on the market with a different price or broker, but she has not replied.

The property has been on the market for roughly eight months, which is not typical period for an exclusive listing.

Built in 1901, the eight-story mansion is one of the few remaining beaux-arts homes remaining on Fifth Avenue.

The facade extends 27 feet along Fifth Avenue and features a terrace that looks out onto the iconic Metropolitan Museum. Inside the property features high ceilings, hard-carved wood paneling, trompe l’oeil accents and an ornate, curved staircase that stretches for five stories.

Source: Carlos Slim’s M UES townhouse is now off the market

We visited the worst place in NYC to see if it deserves to be torn down: VIDEO

penn1

Penn Station has a reputation for being one of the worst places in all of New York City. It’s dark, crowded, confusing, and dingy. But does it deserver to be demolished?

It is also the busiest train station in the United States, with roughly 650,000 people and 1,200 trains passing through each day.

New York Governor Andrew Cuomo recently announced a complete overhaul and renovation of the station. The project will take three years to complete and will cost upwards of $3 billion dollars.

We decided to visit Penn Station to see if it really is as bad as everyone says.

Story and video editing by Stephen Parkhurst

Source: We visited the worst place in NYC to see if it deserves to be torn down: VIDEO

The January/February issue of LLNYC is live!

LLNYC_IssuePost

Brooke Shields, now entering her fifth decade of acting, is very clear on one thing: She will never stop acting.

“You are going to have to drag me away. You are going to have the hearse waiting. I’ll say my last words and you can put me in the box,” Shields says in this month’s issue of Luxury Listings NYC.

Shields, who first modeled at age 11 months for Ivory and went on to controversial roles as a child in “Pretty Baby,” “Endless Love” and “Blue Lagoon,” has had a robust and surprisingly diverse career. In recent years, she branched out into comedy, defying those who saw her as just a pretty face.

In her latest role, Shields plays a Manhattan-lawyer-turned florist with a penchant for solving crimes in the “Flower Shop Mysteries,” premiering this month on the Hallmark Channel. “It is sort of like ‘Murder She Wrote,’” she says.

We also went into the home of entrepreneur and TV personality Barbara Corcoran to talk about success, insecurity and sex.

In Luxe Life, we present 10 luxury wellness products that you can use to get a jumpstart on your New Years resolution. Speaking of the new year, LLNYC looked back at 2015’s record auction sales, including the world’s most expensive handbag and Queen Victoria’s knickers.

Finally, don’t forget to check out our round up of the season’s best party pics and our neighborhood stories, which this issue features: a trip to the city’s first upscale meditation studio; an inside look at Christie’s luxury handbag auction; a review of Lululemon’s new flagship store and an interview with designer Halston’s former lover about his wild night with Andy Warhol at a famed Upper East Side townhouse.

To subscribe email: subs@llnyc.com

Enjoy!

Source: The January/February issue of LLNYC is live!

Crowdfunding pioneer iFunding sued for fraud

William Skelley

William Skelley

IFunding, one of the early pioneers of real estate crowdfunding, is being sued for fraud. The complaint by a former business partner, filed in New York Supreme Court late last month, highlights concerns that the young and lightly-regulated crowdfunding industry could be prone to misconduct.

The plaintiff, boutique investment bank CapStack Partners, is suing over two real estate financing deals the firms partnered on with iFunding last year.

The suit alleges that iFunding failed to raise the agreed-upon sum through its platform, and then repeatedly lied about its performance in a series of intentional delays and brinkmanship, causing CapStack “injury and detriment.”

CapStack is also suing iFunding for breach of contract, breach of fiduciary duty, fraudulent inducement, fraudulent concealment and deceptive business practices, and seeks damages of at least $585,000.

New York-based iFunding, which raises funds for real estate projects through an online platform, rubbished the accusations. “We believe the lawsuit is completely without merit and intend to contest it vigorously,” the firm’s founder and CEO William Skelley told The Real Deal.

In August, CapStack and iFunding signed separate deals to crowdfund two real estate developments, one in Missouri and one in Ohio. IFunding would raise the funds through its website, CapStack would act as an intermediary between the platform and the developers, and the two would split the brokerage fees 50/50. According to the suit, iFunding agreed to raise $2 million for the first project and $3.2 million for the second, but soon fell short.

It ended up raising only $1 million and $1.25 million, respectively, from investors, CapStack claims. The suit alleges iFunding repeatedly lied to Capstack about how much money it had raised and about supposed commitments from individual investors. It also claims that iFunding lied to its own investors about how much money it had raised for the projects, inflating numbers on its website.

On Oct. 9, three days before the Ohio deal was scheduled to close, iFunding’s CEO William Skelley allegedly told CapStack that he would only release the $1.25 million raised if CapStack agreed to “double the money” – i.e. double the share of the fees iFunding would get.

“Acting in extreme bad faith, (iFunding’s counsel Robin Sosnow) and Skelley made clear that if iFunding refused to immediately sign the revised agreement, iFunding would not deliver the investors’ funds and the entire transaction would collapse,” the suit alleges. Put under the gun, CapStack agreed to the revised terms, it alleges, meaning it didn’t get its share of the fees.

“IFunding’s and Skelley’s conduct was wanton, willful and malicious and warrants the imposition of punitive damages,” the complaint reads.

Skelley called the accusations “completely unfounded.”

“We are very proud to have raised over $4 million dollars in a matter of ten days for two projects that CapStack brought to us late last year,” he said.

Founded in 2012, IFunding was a trailblazer in the real estate crowdfunding space. In April, TRD reported on a falling-out the company had with former New York governor David Patterson, who briefly served on the startup’s board.

Source: Crowdfunding pioneer iFunding sued for fraud

Delshah raises $82M on Israeli bond market

55 Gansevoort Street

55 Gansevoort Street in the Meatpacking District (inset: Michael Shah)

Michael Shah’s Delshah Capital secured nearly $82 million through the first phase of the firm’s bond issuance on the Tel Aviv Stock Exchange this week.

Shah becomes the first non-Jewish developer to tap Israel’s corporate bond market, which has become an increasingly popular source of capital for New York-based real estate firms, according to sources with knowledge of the issuance.

Delshah raised around 320 million shekel, or roughly $81.5 million, through the institutional tender phase of the debt offering, which was open to Israeli banks, pension funds and financial institutions.

A portfolio of 13 properties with a combined appraised value of $495 million backed the deal. The properties include more than 1,100 federally subsidized, affordable housing units in Staten Island, as well as four commercial and six mixed-use rental properties in Manhattan.

The company’s issuance noted that around $38 million of the proceeds will be used to repay senior debt on four of Delshah’s Manhattan properties, with the balance going toward acquisitions and potentially buying out joint venture partners.

The deal was “incredibly well-received,” Shah told The Real Deal, adding that the proceeds of the issuance leaves Delshah “well-poised for future acquisitions.”

Israeli credit ratings agency Midroog noted that Delshah’s portfolio features assets in areas “characterized by stability and financial strength” that are “enjoying growth in recent years,” such as Soho and the Meatpacking District.

The East Village-based firm issued two series of bonds – one series of unsecured bonds issued at an interest rate of 6.9 percent, and a second series of secured bonds closed at an interest rate of 4.6 percent.

The unsecured series will mature in September 2021, while the secured series bonds will mature in September 2023, sources said.

Israeli financial giant Clal Finance Underwriting is the distributor on the bond offering, with Delshah advised by Israeli financial consultants InFin, led by Yehonatan Cohen and Yossi Levi.

The offering was characterized by robust demand from Israeli institutional investors, sources said, to the tune of about $127 million.

Delshah’s issuance is now set for a public tender next week open to a wider array of investors, with the potential to raise another $18 million once the issuance is sealed.

Source: Delshah raises M on Israeli bond market

Number of agents, brokers jumps in Brooklyn and Queens

Susan Little Jason Haber

Susan Little Jason Haber

For the second year in a row, the number of brokers and agents in Brooklyn and Queens rose faster than in Manhattan, an indication that brokers are following buyers and sellers into neighborhoods with rising inventory and increased prices.

“Brokers understand where the deals are getting done and there’s a lot of that in the outer boroughs,” said Jason Haber, a broker at Warburg Realty. “More people are living in these areas… and you need brokers to service those people.”

Overall, the rise in the number of licensed real estate professionals in the city as a whole increased at a slower pace than a year ago — 4 percent in 2015, compared to a 5.5 percent jump in 2014.

But less so in Queens and Brooklyn, where the city’s biggest firms are bulking up their sales efforts. In November, Douglas Elliman tripled its space in Park Slope, a month after Citi Habitats bought Brooklyn-based brokerage firm Aptsandlofts.com.

Citi Habitats’ acquisition “speaks volumes” about the outer borough market, according to Charles Doolan, the co-founder and president of Manhattan-based Kian Realty. “Citi Habitats did whatever they had to do to increase their presence in Brooklyn, they wanted to do it quickly rather than grow organically.”

In Brooklyn, where the number of brokers and salespersons rose by 6.5 percent to 10,663 in 2015, buyers are willing to leave established neighborhoods if they can trade up to a townhouse with outdoor space from an apartment, said Gabriele Sewtz, a Park Slope-based broker with Compass.

Even in neighborhoods like Bay Ridge, the big name brokers are starting to enter the fray, according to Susan Little, a broker at Corcoran. Little and colleague Clare Saliba used to largely compete against mom-and-pop brokerage shops, but that’s no longer the case, she said.

Agent growth has also been accelerating in Queens, where, according to the New York Department of State, the total number of agents jumped by 6.0 percent to 11,702, partially on the back of the need to sell in areas surrounding large megadevelopments like Hunter’s Point South in Long Island City.

It’s not yet the same story in the Bronx, where the number of salespeople increased just 0.6 percent to 2,512.

“In the Bronx, there’s not a lot of inventory,” said David Maundrell III, an executive vice president of new development at Citi Habitats. That soon will be changing as developments like the Chetrit Group and Somerset Partners’ South Bronx rise.

Source: Number of agents, brokers jumps in Brooklyn and Queens

December DOB Report: Planned apartments, hotel rooms sank in 2015

Source: TRD analysis of DOB permit applications of at least 15,000 square feet

Source: TRD analysis of DOB permit applications of at least 15,000 square feet

The median price for a Manhattan apartment just hit $1.15 million for the first time, and a big drop in projects added to the city pipeline won’t do anything to bring that number down.

During 2015, some 28,836 new residential units were proposed for construction or conversion in projects of at least 15,000 square feet, according to a TRD analysis of permit applications from the Department of Buildings for all of New York City. But that number is significantly lower than the more than 43,000 such units that TRD could count for 2014, meaning a 33 percent plunge in planned apartments across the five boroughs will also mark what the New York Times called “The Year of the Condo.”

Untitled

Source: TRD analysis of DOB permit applications of at least 15,000 square feet.

The most active month for residential filings in 2015 was March, when 3,674 qualifying units were submitted. Compare that to September of 2014, a jam-packed month that saw over 9,000 proposed units, a figure bolstered by Two Trees’ Domino Sugar building at 325 Kent Avenue in Williamsburg (522 units), Red Apple Group’s 86 Fleet Place in Downtown Brooklyn (440 units), and Clipper Equities’ and Chetrit Group’s 77, 85 and 87 Commercial Street in Greenpoint (720 units).

Developers applied to build far fewer of these megaprojects in 2015, and as such, the average monthly unit count was about 2,400, with the lightest month being April, when the unit count dipped below 1,000. As TRD previously reported, the number of residential buildings came down in 2015 as well, with developers planning significantly fewer buildings over 200 feet tall or with more than 200 units.

“I think the price of land increased so much over the last year that developers are pushing back because they cannot make sense of the numbers or get construction financing,” said Robin Schneiderman, director of business development at Halstead Property Development Marketing. “This is a healthy sign for the market as sellers need to come back down to reality,” he said.

Steve Kliegerman, president of HPDM, said 2015’s sliding numbers “are not all that surprising.” He echoed the sentiment on the high price of development sites while adding that he was seeing renewed activity in that market­––though the problem remains that there are very few such sites left.

“I do not think we will see the same level of permit applications we did in 2014 simply due to the available supply of large sites and the demand that was created due to the lack of construction from 2009 to 2013,” he said.

UntitledRelated: See the top 10 permits filed in Manhattan during 2015

In hotel filings, the year-over-year unit drop was even more significant. For 2014, TRD counted 11,630 proposed units in known hotel projects of at least 15,000 square feet. In 2015, that number fell to 5,237. The dearth of hotel units added to the pipeline will not surprise anyone who has been following the New York hotel industry–in spring of last year, hotel research firm STR predicted that supply would peak in 2015 and then begin dropping in 2016 and beyond. With far fewer units sent to the Department of Buildings during 2015 than in the year prior, a decline in hotel pipeline and eventual supply now seems inevitable.

Queens accounted for close to half of all hotel units applied for all of New York City during 2015. Qualifying Manhattan hotel units tumbled the most, from over 7,000 in 2014 down to around 2,000 the next year.

Despite the drop from the year prior, December was a strong month for hotel applications, with 954 proposed hotel units and 426,000 square feet sent to the DOB from the Bronx, Brooklyn and Queens. The largest hotel filing came from Chartwell Hospitality in Jamaica, Queens where Gene Kaufman Architects will design two 11-story towers containing a total of 362 rooms.

Source: TRD analysis of DOB permit applications of at least 15,000 square feet

Source: TRD analysis of DOB permit applications of at least 15,000 square feet

In residential filings, builder aspirations were capped at 300,000 square feet, with the largest application also coming from Jamaica, Queens, where Artimus Constuction plans to build a 26-story tower with 380 apartments. The most active borough for residential plans in December was Brooklyn, where 18 filings totaled 707 units and more than 600,000 square feet. Queens contributed the second most apartments, 618, and 530,000 square feet. Manhattan resi plans were mostly small, but the Salvation Army came in with a late Christmas present on Dec. 30 when it filed to build an 11-story affordable housing tower for seniors at 2306 Third Avenue, with 232 units. Only one Bronx project — two affordable buildings in Longwood — was large enough to make our count and, as usual, nothing filed in Staten Island measured more than 10,000 square feet.

As for commercial filings, Ziel Feldman’s HFZ Capital Group is planning a 243,000-square-foot office and retail building at 76 11th Avenue in Chelsea, where it will also submit plans for 300 condo units in a separate tower. Woods Bagot is listed as the filing architect, although previous reporting had indicated that Bjarke Ingels was designing. In Brooklyn, Steiner Studios will add another building to its ever-growing collection of studio spaces with a 179,00-square-foot structure for six soundstages. And in the Bronx, a 100,000-square-foot warehouse will replace vacant lots and an auto-shop at 2325 Hollers Avenue in Eastchester.

Source: December DOB Report: Planned apartments, hotel rooms sank in 2015

Mann Realty to pay $877K, prorate rent for overcharging tenant

Lane Altschuler 478 Central Park West Maurice Mann

From left: Lane Altschuler, 478 Central Park West on the Upper West Side and Maurice Mann

Maurice Mann’s Mann Realty was ordered to pay hefty compensation to one of its Upper West Side tenants after a judge ruled they’d overcharged him for years.

Lane Altschuler, a resident of 478 Central Park West, will receive a $877,000 refund and have his $3,750-a-month rent reduced to below $800 a month.

The construction supervisor argued that his apartment was illegally removed from rent stabilization. His decision to sue was prompted by a 2009 state appeals court ruling that found landlords can’t remove apartments from rent regulation at buildings receiving tax subsidies, the New York Post reported.

Mann received $310,000 in J-51 tax benefits when it created 26 new condo units at the building, beginning in 2012.

The damages were equal to three times the amount Mann was found to have overcharged.

The extreme penalties that the appellate court has now upheld, without any trial, are “unprecedented,” Magda Cruz, Mann’s lawyer, told the Post.

“The owner in this case is like thousands of other owners throughout New York City who had rented their vacated apartments in reliance upon the interpretation of the luxury deregulation law prior to Roberts,” she added, referring to the 2009 ruling. [NYP]Ariel Stulberg

Source: Mann Realty to pay 7K, prorate rent for overcharging tenant

At the Desk of: Donna Olshan

Donna Olshan

Donna Olshan (credit: Tobias Truvillion)

From the January issue: Donna Olshan is purging all the paper in her office, from condo prospectuses to typewritten listing sheets. She says real estate needs to digitize. All this paper on the chopping block stems from work at Olshan Realty over the past 35 years. Olshan graduated from George Washington University in 1976 as a journalism and political science major and worked as a sports reporter at Newsday for a few years. In 1979, her father, Marvin Olshan, a prominent NYC lawyer, suggested that she get licensed as a salesperson and try to sell a studio in her building. She sold it in three days. The next year she founded her eponymous company and, as she tells it, went on to become the first in NYC to do corporate relocation. [more]

Source: At the Desk of: Donna Olshan

UN’s North Lawn Building to be demolished

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The North Law Building at the United Nations headquarters on the Upper East Side (credit: UN Photos/Paulo Filgueiras)

The North Lawn Building, which housed critical United Nations operations during the complex’s $2.2 billion renovation, is set to be demolished.

The nearly-windowless steel and concrete structure, located along 46th and 47th streets on the Far East Side of Manhattan, will be taken down over the next few months, after just six year in existence.

The UN limited the demolition contract to just under $17 million, with the aim of attracting contractors that would recycle the building’s materials. Wantaugh, NY-based Gramercy Group was the winning bidder, the New York Times reported.

It cost $140 million to build. The renovation as a whole cost $2.2 billion.

The site will return to being an open space. A piece of the Berlin Wall given to the complex in 2002 will return, as will Antun Augustincic’s equestrian “Peace” sculpture. – [NYT]Ariel Stulberg

Source: UN’s North Lawn Building to be demolished

Flush with funding, VTS strikes deal with data firm S&P Capital

VTS co-founders Nick Romito, Ryan Masiello and Karl Baum

VTS co-founders Nick Romito, Ryan Masiello and Karl Baum

Cloud-based leasing and portfolio management startup VTS is partnering with data company S&P Capital IQ to buff up its research capabilities for both landlords and brokers, the tech startup announced Thursday.

Under a new partnership, VTS’ landlord and broker customers will have access to 4.85 million public and private company records compiled by S&P Capital. The move will enable landlords to vet tenants by looking at their revenue, income, debt, competitors and other data.

“Just because a tenant signed a lease in the building, doesn’t mean they can pay rent for 15 years,” said Ryan Masiello, VTS’ chief revenue officer, who said the deal’s been in the works for several months.

“The idea behind it is we wanted to bring a new data set to the platform,” he said. “We’re providing information about companies that people just can’t get.”

In addition to S&P’s company-specific data, VTS is introducing a marketing intelligence tool that brokers can use to identify prospective tenants. Landlords and brokers will also be able to analyze which industry groups and submarkets are most active, and what office size is most popular among certain types of tenants. “By understanding which tenants are in the market, you may understand what drives future leasing velocity and position spaces to cater to those tenants,” Romito said.

In July, VTS raised $21 million in a Series B round, bringing the total investment in VTS to $34 million. OpenView Venture Partners led the most recent round. Most of the funds are being used to develop new products and enhance the company’s customer service.

VTS declined to disclose financial terms of its partnership with S&P, which is part of McGraw Hill Financial and competes with Bloomberg and Thompson Reuters.

Romito said the five-year-old startup plans to announce a number of new partnerships throughout the rest of the year.

Source: Flush with funding, VTS strikes deal with data firm S&P Capital

Progenics Pharmaceuticals takes 26.5K sf at 1WTC

Mark Baker Douglas Durst One World Trade

One World Trade Center (inset from left: Mark Baker of Progenics and Douglas Durst)

A biotech firm specializing in cancer and HIV medications is the latest new tenant at One World Trade Center.

Progenics Pharmaceuticals took 26,500 square feet of space on the 47th floor, signing a 14-year lease with a five-year renewal option.

The building’s owners – the Durst Organization and the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey – asked $78 per square foot in rent, according the lease documents, which Progenics published in a regulatory filing.

Eric Engelhardt of Durst and Tara Stacom, Justin Royce, Barry Zeller, Connor Daugstrup and Peter Trivelas of Cushman & Wakefield represented the landlords. Patricia Ardigo and Joel Wechsler of CBRE represented Progenics.

The New York Post first reported the news.

The landlords announced two weeks ago that 2 million of the tower’s 3 million square feet of space had already been leased.

Developer SHVO took 12,000 square feet at the building last month, with plans to open a showroom for its 360,000-square-foot 125 Greenwich Street condo tower. – Ariel Stulberg

Source: Progenics Pharmaceuticals takes 26.5K sf at 1WTC

Madison, Pizzarotti scale up 45 Broad Street resi tower

45 Broad Street

From left: Robert Gladstone and rendering of 45 Broad Street

Madison Equities and Pizzarotti Group’s plans for their $86 million development site in the Financial District just got significantly bigger.

Madison, led by Robert Gladstone, and Italy-based Pizzarotti have upsized their planned residential tower at 45 Broad Street, with the building now set to rise 86 stories and top out at around 1,100 feet – giving it a place among the supertall structures that promise to reshape the city’s skyline.

CetraRuddy, the architectural firm behind One Madison and Walker Tower, is designing the project, and the developers expect to break ground in late October or November of this year with a targeted completion date in 2018, according to Curbed.

The 245-unit building will cater to “entry- and mid-level buyers,” Pizzarotti CEO Rance McFarland told Curbed, with amenities including a swimming pool, gym, and lounge. Five floors at the property will be earmarked for commercial or retail use.

Madison and Pizzarotti entered contract on the vacant lot at 45 Broad Street last summer, as The Real Deal reported. The developers closed on the site in October for $86 million and originally planned a 65-story condo tower spanning up to 290,000 square feet on the property.

But the project is now expected to rise a further 21 stories than initially expected, with the additional height meaning 45 Broad Street is expected to tower over Financial District neighbors 40 Wall Street and One Wall Street. [Curbed]Rey Mashayekhi

Source: Madison, Pizzarotti scale up 45 Broad Street resi tower

Blackstone, Ivanhoe launch own property management firm to run Stuy Town

Rick Hayduk and Stuyvesant Town

Rick Hayduk and Stuyvesant Town

The Blackstone Group and Ivanhoe Cambridge opted not to hire an outside firm to manage Stuyvesant Town-Peter Cooper Village. Instead, they will launch their own property management firm.

Rick Hayduk, who until recently managed the Boca Raton Resort & Club in Florida, took over as general manager of the 11,200-unit complex on Jan. 1, two weeks after closing on the acquisition for $5.3 billion.

Town & Village first reported the news.

“We’ve listened extensively to the tenants and community and have taken their feedback into account as we build a new property management company under Rick’s leadership,” Blackstone’s co-head of U.S. acquisitions Nadeem Meghji said in a statement. “Rick has worked with Blackstone properties for almost a decade and is someone we know well and trust.”

According to the statement, Hayduk will live in the complex. “My wife Carol, our two daughters and I are excited to join the PCVST community and we look forward to getting to know our neighbors,” he said.

Hayduk is taking over from CompassRock, the property management arm of special servicer CWCapital, which had been managing the property since 2012.

 

Source: Blackstone, Ivanhoe launch own property management firm to run Stuy Town

The Real Deal is Hudson Yards bound

450 West 31st Street and Amir Korangy

450 West 31st Street in Hudson Yards and Amir Korangy

The Real Deal was born in Amir Korangy’s Prospect Heights walk-up in 2003, and then moved to a renovated townhouse in Crown Heights (long before the neighborhood’s yuppie transformation). The publication’s first real office was a former psychic’s digs on 23rd Street just off of Madison Square Park. We quickly outgrew that space and moved to our current West 29th Street location. And now, 13 years after it all began, it’s time for another big change.

New York City’s first and most popular real estate news magazine is moving to Hudson Yards, the New York Post reported Wednesday.

TRD paid $8.5 million, or $739 per square foot, for an 11,500-square-foot commercial co-op at 450 West 31st Street. Korangy will shell out another $1 million on renovations being overseen by MESH Architectures.

“Nothing says you believe in New York City real estate more than buying New York City real estate,” Korangy told the Post. “Being the worst building on the best block is usually a good real estate play,” he added. The property is a former chocolate factory that sits between a new hotel and 360 Tenth Avenue, a $3 billion mixed-use project being developed by former Los Angeles Dodgers owner Frank McCourt.

EVO Real Estate Group’s Todd Korren and Christopher Hagerup represented TRD, while the landlord was represented by Redwood Realty’s Jeff Berman.

Korangy said he plans to hire another 11 employees by the time the company moves to its new spot in the spring. TRD has been active in Miami since 2008, and our Los Angeles operation is scheduled to go live on Jan. 18. [NYP] — Hiten Samtani

Source: The Real Deal is Hudson Yards bound

SHVO expanding 100 Varick Street project

100 Varick Street

Michael Shvo and rendering of 100 Varick Street in Soho (credit: Itzhaki)

Michael Shvo picked up another Hudson Square parcel, which he plans to add to the site of his planned 25-story condo project next door, known as 100 Varick Street.The developer bought a piece of 555 Broome Street – the building’s two-story annex – paying $9 million to the Door, a youth nonprofit which owns 83 percent of the building.

SHVO is planning a Renzo Piano-designed, 242,000-square-foot condominium building at the site, along with partners Bizzi & Partners Development and Halpern Real Estate Ventures. That building will stand 25 stories and house 115 condo units.

The plans also call for 17,000 square feet of commercial space and 750 square feet for a community facility.

Including this purchase, the partners paid $145 million for the land for the project, the New York Observer reported. That included the main site – also known as 565 Broome Street – along with four residential buildings at 58-64 Watts Street and 94,000 square feet in air rights from 555 Broome Street.

Late last month, SVHO leased 12,000 square feet at One World Trade Center, with plans to use it as a sales office for the firm’s planned condo building at 125 Greenwich Street. [NYO]Ariel Stulberg

Source: SHVO expanding 100 Varick Street project

Crown pays $30M for two DoBro commercial buildings

522 Fulton Street in Brooklyn (inset: Haim)

522 Fulton Street in Brooklyn (inset: Haim Chera)

Haim Chera’s Crown Acquisitions snapped up two commercial buildings in Downtown Brooklyn for $30 million, according to property records filed with the city Wednesday.

The two adjacent retail-and-office buildings, located at 522 and 526 Fulton Street, include 142,480 square feet of buildable space between Hanover Place and Flatbush Avenue.

Lloyd Goldman’s Midtown-based BLDG Management owned the four-story properties since 2010. Burger King recently 3,500 square feet at 522 Fulton.

The buildings are located near another Crown-owned property, at 490 Fulton Street. In May, the firm inked a lease with Forever 21 for a 40,000-square-foot space in the building. Records also show that Crown owns 452 Fulton Street, an eight-story, mixed-use building. In May, Crown and Oxford Properties Group bought the remaining 50 percent of the Olympic Tower for $652 million.

A representative for Crown could not immediately be reached for comment.

Source: Crown pays M for two DoBro commercial buildings

Clarion in exclusive buyout talks with Legg Mason: report

Joe Sullivan 86 Trinity Place Stephen Furnary

Legg Mason’s Joe Sullivan, 86 Trinity Place in the Financial District and Stephen Furnary

Global investment manager Legg Mason is in exclusive negotiations to buy an 80 percent stake in Midtown-based real estate investor Clarion Partners.

The deal would value Clarion at $850 million, a premium, according to Bloomberg, which cited sources familiar with the talks.

Baltimore-based Legg Mason, founded in 1899, had $696 billion under management as of July 31, 2015.

Clarion, founded in 1982 by Stephen Furnary and John Weisz, has about $38 billion in assets under management, and owns properties in several major U.S. markets including Boston and Palm Beach.

In New York, the firm owns the Printhouse Lofts at 139 North 10th Street in Williamsburg, the 70,000-square-foot office building at 636 Sixth Avenue, and others.

Last month, it bought a 70 percent stake in the 120,000-square-foot 86 Trinity Place in the Financial District, with plans to create 174 hotel rooms there.

In September, the firm paid $99 million along with partners Alchemy Properties and ABR Partners for the leasehold at the 25-story office building at 221 East 43rd Street in Midtown. [Bloomberg]Ariel Stulberg

Source: Clarion in exclusive buyout talks with Legg Mason: report

Do brokerage alliances matter?

(Credit: TK)

(Credit: Jean Porter)

TRD Special Report: When the heiress Bunny Mellon died in 2014 at age 103, Sotheby’s sold her art collection – with pieces from Georges Braque and Mark Rothko – for a whopping $158.7 million. Her jewelry and furniture fetched another $59.3 million.

But when it came time to market the crown jewel of her real estate portfolio – a 2,000-acre, $70 million compound in Virginia – the executor of her estate tapped Washington Fine Properties, a Georgetown-based boutique firm and onetime Sotheby’s affiliate that cut ties with the auction house more than a decade ago.

The Mellon estate decision cast a shadow on the much-ballyhooed relationship between the auction house and real estate brokerages around the country that pay a pretty penny to license its name.

Both Sotheby’s and its main rival, Christie’s, have real estate ties – Christie’s via affiliated firms like Brown Harris Stevens in New York, and Sotheby’s through wholly-owned offices as well as affiliated brokerages. These affiliations are touted by property brokerage chiefs as an elite referral network that can generate buyer and seller leads and result in lucrative property sales.

“The same people who buy important art buy important real estate,” Hall Willkie, president of BHS, said in a promotional video on Christie’s website.

With political and economic instability on the rise worldwide, New York City’s relative stability is attracting growing investor interest. Prices in the city’s luxury residential market jumped 18.8 percent in 2014, the largest gain among so-called “world cities,” according to Knight Frank data. A growing pool of foreign money played a significant part in this appreciation, and local brokerages, anxious to increase their visibility with foreign buyers, are looking to strike partnerships across the country and abroad.

Howard-Lorber-Dottie-Herman-Lord-Andrew-Hay

From left: Elliman’s Howard Lorber and Dottie Herman and Knight Frank’s Lord Andrew Hay

In September 2014, Douglas Elliman announced a so-called “strategic alliance” with Knight Frank Residential, a global property search consultancy headquartered in London. Three months later, the Corcoran Group followed suit, announcing a similar alliance with Monaco-based John Taylor. In early 2015, Town Residential inked a partnership with Miami-based Fortune International Group. And in November, townhouse brokerage Leslie J. Garfield & Co. said it was mulling a merger with London-based Beauchamp Estates.

“Relationships are resources,” said Wendy Maitland, Town’s president of sales.

It’s still unclear, however, if these relationships translate into what matters — commissions. Some critics go a step further, saying touting such alliances can be misleading to consumers, who may believe a brokerage’s global network or auction-house affiliation will help their properties sell faster, or for a higher price.

“Having been at Brown Harris Stevens for almost five years, I can say personally my business was not impacted by that in any way,” said a top broker who requested anonymity when speaking about her former firm’s ties with Christie’s. “It was nice to talk about; it’s certainly prestigious.”

Stuart Siegel, a former president of Sotheby’s International Realty in New York and now head of Engel & Völkers NYC, said though the 216-year-old Sotheby’s brand is “undeniably powerful globally, its influence over the real estate business is minimal.”

“It’s two separate businesses,” he added.

I. A package deal: The auction house model

The two big auction houses structure their alliances differently.

Sotheby’s founded Sotheby’s International Realty in 1976 as a service for clients, but sold the real estate division for $100 million in 2004 to Realogy Holdings, the parent company of firms such as the Corcoran Group and Citi Habitats.

In addition to acquiring the brokerage operation, Realogy entered a 100-year licensing agreement with Sotheby’s to open real estate franchises using the auction house name. Realogy pays Sotheby’s 9.5 percent of the net royalties it receives from franchisees – or a minimum of $2 million a year, according to Realogy’s most recent annual report. Today, Realogy owns 43 Sotheby’s offices, including one in New York City, and it franchises more than 780. The two segments sold $70 billion worth of real estate in 2014.

While the Sotheby’s brand is “powerful globally, its influence over the real estate business is minimal. It’s two separate businesses.” — Engel & Völkers’ Stuart Siegel

That licensing deal earned Sotheby’s $7.2 million in fees in 2014, according to the company’s most recent proxy statement, up from $6 million in 2013 and $5 million in 2012. But Kathryn Korte, president and CEO of Sotheby’s International Realty, reckons the deal makes sense. Under Realogy’s ownership over the past decade, the brokerage more than doubled its sales volume to $15 billion in 2014, she said.

Client referrals from the auction house put agents “face-to-face with a qualified audience,” she said, “because so many ultra-high net worth individuals have a personal passion for art.”

Many others, including BlackRock’s CEO Larry Fink, believe that art and real estate are where all the big money goes to play.

But does purchasing fine art through your preferred auction house make you more likely to turn to it for property advice? That’s a tricky question.

KathyKorte

Kathryn Korte (credit: Tobias Truvillon)

Korte declined to disclose the number of listings referred by the Sotheby’s auction house, but said there were “many,” including properties priced up to $95 million. She mentioned three successful referral deals, which led to sales of a $39.5 million Greenwich waterfront home, an $8 million Manhattan townhouse, and a $17 million estate in Sands Point, Long Island.

Anthony Paolone, an analyst at JPMorgan, believes the deal added up for Realogy.

“Realogy has done more with the Sotheby’s brand, in terms of building out a global real estate business, than Sotheby’s would have done on their own,” he said. “Real estate is Realogy’s core business and they’re very, very good at it.”

Unlike with Sotheby’s, Christie’s International Real Estate is a brokerage network that’s wholly-owned by the auction house. Local brokerages such as Brown Harris Stevens, which is the Christie’s affiliate in New York City, the Hamptons and Palm Beach pay a fee to be the exclusive affiliate in a specific market. The 138-firm network has combined annual sales between $100 billion and $125 billion.

“If I were going to sell you a diamond necklace, if I pull it out of my pocket or if I take you to Harry Winston and it’s in a velvet box, it commands a higher price. There is provenance.” — BHS’ Hall Willkie

Brokerages sign one- to three-year contracts with Christie’s to use its name but also to tap into a “true referral and marketing network,” BHS’ Willkie told The Real Deal. His firm can advertise in Christie’s brochures and even in its lobby at Rockefeller Center, which showcases properties being sold by Christie’s affiliates.

“It’s a marketing venue for us, and it’s a great one,” Willkie said. BHS can also earn money — a standard 35 percent of commission — by referring clients to another Christie’s affiliate.

These privileges come with a slew of fees, however.

Sources said BHS pays millions of dollars each year to tap into the Christie’s network, on top of listing-specific advertising costs.

“It’s worth it,” Willkie said. “It’s hard to always pinpoint, but it brings specific business.” He emphasized that Christie’s seal of approval can boost a property’s value, explaining it thus: “If I were going to sell you a diamond necklace, if I pull it out of my pocket or if I take you to Harry Winston and it’s in a velvet box, it commands a higher price. There is provenance.”

But it’s this attitude that critics of the auction house model say has the potential to hurt consumers.

“Marketing is saying it a nice way. It’s taking advantage of unsophisticated sellers,” said Compass CEO Robert Reffkin. “Their pitch book tells you, an unsophisticated seller, that more buyers will come through this network to buy your home.”

“Marketing is saying it a nice way. It’s taking advantage of unsophisticated sellers.” — Compass’ Robert Reffkin

Reffkin said that getting actual business through an auction house or international brokerage partner was extremely rare.

“If Wall Street was selling a product to owners of an asset,” he asked, “saying that the product would get more demand from buyers, and less than 1 percent of the time it was actually true, what do you think the SEC and Consumer Financial Protection Bureau would do?”

Realogy licenses out the Sotheby’s name to more than 700 brokerages across the country. But not all its affiliates embody the luxury lifestyle. A Sotheby’s-affiliated brokerage in New Hampshire, for example, is selling trailer homes. Licensing Sotheby’s name so widely “did alter the exclusivity of the brand,” Willkie said.

“Sotheby’s provides meaningful brand visibility,” said Engel & Volkers’ Siegel, “but it doesn’t translate into meaningful or definable percentage of sales.”

II. Friends of ours: Strategic alliances

Even those firms avoiding the auction house route are looking at partnerships that will help them court foreign buyers. That’s especially true in the luxury and super-luxury markets, where demand may be falling short of supply.

“If you’re selling a $20 million to $50 million property, you cannot just market to the domestic high-net worth market,” said David Friedman, president of Wealth-X, which tracks ultra-high-net-worth individuals. “To win business, brokerages have to show they won’t be constrained in marketing to the U.S., but will look at a global investment platform.”

This need for global attention on domestic listings was a key reason for the Elliman-Knight Frank tie-up. The firms share marketing costs, jointly promote certain properties and may swap leads.

“The global real estate buyer is starting to look in multiple markets,” said Richard Jordan, Elliman’s senior vice president of global markets, who in the past 12 months logged 700,000 miles and visited 37 cities worldwide in order to build up the Elliman-Knight Frank network. “It’s important to realize that and realize that a lot of our client base has assets all over the world. Why would we not want to take care of our clients no matter what market they’re looking at?”

JedGarfield

Jed Garfield (credit: Erin Patrice O’Brien)

Even Jed Garfield, owner of Leslie J. Garfield & Co, who said 90 percent of his clients are still domestic, agreed that it’s important for a brokerage to be thought of as having global reach.

“Our clients on the sale side want to know that they’re reaching every possible potential purchaser,” he said. “Otherwise, it gives people a reason not to hire me.”

Garfield and Beauchamp will evenly split the commission on shared deals. As of November, Garfield was working on four New York deals with Beauchamp customers.

Siegel, however, challenged the notion that a strategic alliance or affiliation – let alone a partnership with Sotheby’s or Christie’s – makes a firm “international.”

“The optics are that you have access to the international market, and the companies use it to secure listings,” he said. “But their access to the market and their brand recognition and true referral business is diminished.”

Philip White, CEO of Sotheby’s International Realty Affiliates, disagreed. This year, Sotheby’s opened 14 franchises internationally, the most ever.

“We are very focused on creating a local brokerage business, but the real estate market has become very global,” White said. “For us to build the kind of business that we want to build, we have to be in the markets that are generating referrals across these international boundaries.” A proprietary system Sotheby’s rolled out in 2014, which includes translation tools, led to “thousands” of referrals, he added.

III: The bottom line

Standard fees for referral networks can range from 20 percent to 35 percent of the commission, sources told TRD.

But firms are tight-lipped about how much business they are getting. “It’s very nebulous,” said one brokerage head whose firm had a tryst with a European partner a decade ago.

Edgardo

From left: Town’s Wendy Maitland and Fortune’s Edgardo Defortuna

Maitland said the alliance between Town and Fortune – which includes shared marketing costs – resulted in more than $140 million in sales volume within the first six months. If the alliance contributes more than 5 percent to Town’s annual sales, she said she’d consider it “very successful.”

Diane Ramirez, CEO of Halstead Property, estimated that up to 15 percent of her firm’s business comes through its referral network, which includes U.K.-based Mayfair International Realty, Leading Real Estate Companies of the World, a membership-based network of around 500 brokerages worldwide, and Luxury Portfolio, the network’s luxury arm. She declined to disclose membership dues.

In the ultra-competitive residential market, agents are all too pleased to trumpet the relationships – whether or not they’ve actually paid off.

“We would not continue to be investing if it wasn’t working.” —Elliman’s Richard Jordan

At least a dozen agents who joined Elliman over the past year singled out the firm’s alliance with Knight Frank – or Elliman’s new global reach – as a decisive factor. In November, Roger Erickson joining Elliman from Sotheby’s would give him “the resources of the leading residential agency in New York and London… and a brokerage network which extends both domestically and internationally.”

Elliman’s Jordan declined to disclose the volume of deals that came through the Knight Frank alliance, other than to say it was “significant,” with properties ranging from $500,000 to $25 million.

“Of course it’s a revenue model,” he said. “We would not continue to be investing if it wasn’t working.”

Like BHS and Christie’s, Stribling & Associates pays a fee to be an affiliate of global real estate firm Savills. (The two formed a partnership in 2010.)

“It’s not inexpensive, but it’s worth it,” said Kirk Henckels, a vice chairman at Stribling, who declined to disclose the actual amount. (Along with Stribling, Savills is affiliated with San Francisco-based residential brokerage McGuire Real Estate and The Agency in Los Angeles.)

From left: Nikki Field and "Tranquility"

From left: Nikki Field and the Lake Tahoe estate

Sotheby’s Nikki Field said she tapped the brokerage’s network when her client – former Tommy Hilfiger CEO Joel Horowitz — wanted to sell his 210-acre estate in Lake Tahoe. “I’m not licensed to sell in Nevada, so I couldn’t sell it,” she said of the property, which was first listed for $100 million in 2006. (It sold for $48 million in 2013.) “I brought the client to Sotheby’s locally. We found a buyer from Texas.”

Field said 48 percent of her business last year came from referrals outside New York, via the auction house or brokerage network.

“It’s a very lucrative additional income opportunity for residential real estate brokers if they have this connection to international sales,” she said. “It’s the reason I stay at Sotheby’s,” she added.

But even if the revenue stream for brokerage alliances seems ill-defined, agents and real estate executives said the relationships provide powerful branding.

“They are marvelous marketing tools,” said Kathy Braddock, co-managing director of William Raveis NYC and a former executive at Elliman. At the same time, she added, if the relationships made that much of a difference, firms with auction house business or a global alliance would have every listing.

“It’s important that everyone has international and national connections because the world is very small. But in the end, real estate is local,” said Braddock. “I will go to my grave saying that.”

 

Source: Do brokerage alliances matter?