April 2011: New York City Office, Retail and Industrial Market Report
With the economy starting to grow and employment picking up, large and medium size businesses are finally signing long-term office leases, in record numbers…..
New York City Market Overview:
| Manhattan's office leasing market is on pace for its best year, after February's 3 million square feet of deals. That's well above the monthly average of 1.9 million square feet of office leases. This follows a busy January, when 2.6 million square feet of Manhattan office lease transactions were completed.
Manhattan townhouses see 2010 sales uptick Both the single-family and multi-family Manhattan townhouse markets showed signs of improvement last year, according to the Corcoran Group, which released its first annual Townhouse Report today. In the single-family market, the number of sales climbed 68 percent year-over-year to 96, while the median sales price inched up 6 percent during the same time period, reaching $5.83 million. Multi-family townhouses, which Corcoran defines as housing two to four families, saw a more tepid level of activity. Office rents decrease to $59 psf on Park Ave. rents for office space on Park Avenue declined to $59 a square foot in the fourth quarter of 2010, compared to $118 a square foot in the first quarter of 2008,. The $59 decrease in Park Avenue rents was the greatest of any submarket in Midtown. On Sixth Avenue, for example, average rents fell only $35,. "It just happened to be that a lot of the industry that was most impacted by the recession was financial services, and financial services in Midtown had big chunks of space on Park Avenue". The vacancy rate in Midtown Manhattan rose in February for the second month in a row, marking the first time since the middle of 2009 that the rate increased in back-to-back months,. The uptick to 12.3 percent was fueled in February by several large blocks of space coming on the market, including floors to be given up by accounting firm Deloitte at Paramount Group's 1633 Broadway when the company moves to 30 Rockefeller Center. The uptick broke from the general pattern seen over the past year, in which vacancy rates have steadily fallen as the economy improved. |
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Major Trends
Bruce Ratner wants to construct the world's tallest prefabricated structure at the Atlantic Yards site in Brooklyn, according to the New York Times. The 34-story proposed tower would include 400 affordable apartment units, fulfilling a promise Ratner made when he took over the site.The annual rate of building permits issued for new privately-owned U.S. housing units fell by another 8.2 percent in February to a record-low 517,000, according to the latest data from the Commerce Department, backing up analysts' predictions that a sustained recovery in the housing market is still elusive. The permitting rate, which is indicative of future construction activity in the housing sector, was 20.5 percent below its level in February 2010, the figures show. Meanwhile, housing starts were at an annual rate of just 479,000, down 22.5 percent from January and 20.8 percent from the rate last year at this time.
Sale prices for Manhattan development sites rebounded in 2010 to their levels from the height of the real estate boom. Transaction volume was up modestly over the course of the year, but the average price per buildable square foot, and the average transaction size, soared to unexpected highs, the brokerage said. Land sale prices, which had plummeted to below $200 per square foot at the end of 2009, rose sharply during 2010 to an average of $330 per square foot. The previous high was seen during the first quarter of 2008, when prices were at $321 per buildable square foot.
Tourism is back, and lenders are eyeing hotels more favorably as a result. In 2010, a record 48.7 million visitors traveled to New York City. These visitors spent approximately $31 billion during their visits to the Big Apple, according to estimates by NYC & Company, the city's official marketing and tourism organization. To catch some of those tourist dollars, more than 36 hotels opened in New York last year. In addition, there are at least 26 new hotels in line for construction. Concurrently, financing for the hospitality asset class -- which was in the doghouse with lenders just a few years ago, ranking as their least favored sector -- has improved for both hotel owners and developers.
NYC construction permits 22 percent below peak levels
The number of new building permits issued in the city last year was far below peak levels, according to the New York City Department of Buildings, leading some to worry that new building construction is far from rebounding. The DOB issued just 1,517 permits in 2010, down slightly from 1,635 in 2009, which was already considered below normal. That number is also down 22 percent from 2005, when nearly 2,000 permits were issued across the five boroughs.
Developer William Rudin's four-year-long effort to build a Greenwich Village condo complex is finally nearing fruition -- and experts say the timing couldn't be better. The 300-condo unit development, which will also include five townhouses, will be built on St. Vincent Catholic Medical Centers' East Campus, with construction set to start sometime next year. The project had been stalled for some time due to St. Vincent's bankruptcy, but multi-million contributions from the Rudins and healthcare provider North Shore-Long Island Jewish Health System put the medical center back in business.
Admiral's Row at the Brooklyn Navy YardThe non-profit Brooklyn Navy Yard Development removed PA Associates as a designated developer on its high-profile Admiral's Row project a day after one of the firm's founders was charged in a $1 million federal bribery investigation. The quasi-governmental entity today "terminated the designation of PA Admirals Row LLC as the developer of the Admiral's Row site," the corporation said. PA Admirals Row LLC is an affiliate of Midtown-based PA Associates, which was approved as the developer to partner with grocery chain ShopRite on the $60 million project to build a grocery store. Yesterday federal prosecutors charged Aaron Malinsky, a principal and founder of PA Associates, of funneling $472,500 in bribes to State Senator Carl Kruger.
New York State Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver A planned 63 percent spike in ground rents in Battery Park City has been averted, after New York State Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver helped broker a deal to reduce that increase. Ground rents, which are paid by residents to the Battery Park City Authority, vary among the 2,400 condominium unit owners in Battery Park City's 11 buildings. The tentative agreement, reached Wednesday, will raise ground rents by 33 percent next year and could save residents of the Lower Manhattan neighborhood $279 million over the next three decades.
New York City lost fewer jobs than previously estimated as it emerged from the recession, shedding 141,300 jobs between April 2008 and September 2009, instead of the 179,000 previously reported, according to the January 2011 employment report from Eastern Consolidated. Since that September 2009 low, the city has experienced a net gain of 50,700 jobs -- 18,000 of which were added in January 2011 -- putting city employment levels at 2.4 percent below the April 2008 peak. The city's real estate industry gained 600 jobs in January, putting employment in the sector at 5.4 percent, or 6,600 jobs, below peak levels from April 2008.
City axes proposal to oust Brooklyn autism program with charter school move The city canceled a plan last night that would have moved a Brooklyn charter school into Carroll Gardens' P.S. 32, effectively ousting the public school's program for autistic students, according to the Daily News. The plan would have temporarily relocated the Brooklyn Prospect Charter School into 14 classrooms at the 290-student Hoyt Street elementary school, which enrolls 46 autistic students who currently take advantage of the extra classrooms for intensive therapy sessions in addition to their integrated classroom lessons.
In a move intended to raise funds for investments abroad, William Mack's Area Property Partners has sold a 35 percent, non-controlling stake in the company to National Australia Bank. is looking to expand its real estate portfolio and plans to spend upwards of $1 billion in equity this year, with $500 million of that going to Europe and India and the rest being invested domestically.
Howard Michaels has saved the day at 1180 Sixth Avenue, bringing in an anonymous Chinese investor to bail out the owners before a planned foreclosure auction by mezzanine debt holder Shorenstein Properties. Norman Sturner's Murray Hill Properties and the Carlyle Group had defaulted on their mortgage payments in January after buying the 23-story property, between 46th and 47th streets, for $300 million at the height of the market. Shorenstein filed to foreclose late last month.
Upwards of 50 of protesters gathered outside Columbia University's employment center yesterday evening, alleging that the university hasn't lived up to its promise to create jobs as part of its $6.3 billion Manhattanville expansion, according to DNAinfo. The Coalition to Preserve Community claims that it's been repeatedly rebuffed in its efforts to obtain employment statistics from the employment center, which opened five years ago near the expansion site.
City plans $8.8B public works investment next year, but funding likely to dwindle after New York City infrastructure construction spending is set to remain "above historic standards" during fiscal year 2012 but taper off considerably over the next decade, according to a New York Building Congress report released today. The city has proposed spending roughly $8.8 billion on infrastructure construction projects, such as roads, bridges and schools, during fiscal year 2012 and around $8.1 billion the following year. But while the city has planned an aggressive infrastructure spending strategy for the near-term, it's proposed spending just $47 billion total between 2012 and 2021, a near-halving of current capital investment in public works.
Law firm Morrison Foerster has signed a letter of intent to become the anchor tenant at Boston Properties' new 250 West 55th Street tower. The firm is said to be taking upwards of 200,000 of the 843,564 square feet at the building, in a move that one source said finally renders it "a viable project." Construction on the 40-story, Skidmore Owings & Merrill-designed property stalled in 2009 when the economy sank, causing it to lose prospective tenants like Proskauer Rose, which had been in negotiations to lease 400,000 square feet there before opting instead for 11 Times Square.
Developer Victor Homes is set to build an 80- to 90-unit condominium in Chelsea, after buying a 12,500-square-foot lot at 524-532 West 29th Street for $12 million. The lot, which currently contains two art galleries, was previously owned by Walter Seelig of High Ridge Enterprises, according to Korolik, whose recent projects include the Gramercy Starck condo at 340 East 23rd Street..
Negative equity is increasingly plaguing the American homeowner, rendering many people unable to sell their properties. The number of underwater borrowers rose to 23.1 percent, or 11.1 million households nationwide, in the fourth quarter of 2010, according to a new report from CoreLogic. That's up 0.6 percent from the third quarter, and follows three straight quarters of declines -- though the declines had been due, in large part, to homeowners with negative equity succumbing to foreclosure. Underwater homeowners typically make up around 5 percent of households in a healthy market, the report says.
Minskoff Equities abandoned plans to build a 635-room dormitory in a rapidly-changing section of Long Island City in order to concentrate on larger projects in Manhattan, the company's president said. Edward Minskoff, president of the commercial firm, had sought to build the 19-story tower on the property at 30-30 Northern Boulevard in Queens Plaza. He sold it to Long Island City-based Alma Realty, which paid $21.5 million for the 238,000-square-foot building and the 103,000-square-foot parcel under it on Jan. 27, city property records published last Friday show. The sale went into contract in September 2010.
Law firm WilmerHale is in talks to snap up more than 200,000 square feet at Silverstein Properties' 7 World Trade Center. WilmerHale, which has a roster of over 1,000 attorneys in offices across the world, including Beijing, London and Frankfurt, would relocate from its current New York City office at 399 Park Avenue if the deal goes through.
P.S. 32 in Carroll Gardens The city's plan to move a Sunset Park charter school into Carroll Gardens' P.S. 32 will steal space away from a widely regarded program for autistic students, the Brooklyn Paper reported. The 300-seat Brooklyn Prospect Charter School is slated to get 12 classrooms at the 46-classroom P.S. 32 building, which is also currently shared with the New Horizons Middle School. P.S. 32 has 500 students, 40 of whom participate in the Nest program, which integrates autistic students into classrooms but also pulls them out into separate groups to work on socialization and behavioral exercises. There won't be space for those separate groups once the charter school moves in.
Long Island City's 5Pointz, the iconic, graffiti-covered factory along Jackson Avenue, may be torn down and replaced with two apartment high rises. Wolkoff recently met with officials from the Department of City Planning to discuss the possibility of 1,300 rental apartments at the site and a revitalization of the entire surrounding block, which was rezoned in 2001 to allow for large-scale development. The $300 million project would include shops, restaurants, a supermarket, open-air concourse and artists' studio space, and would likely require a zoning variance for the taller residential tower, which would rise to 40 stories.
New York University is set to present a landscaping proposal for its Silver Towers-adjacent lot to Community Board 2. It's a move that some have characterized as an olive branch to community activists who oppose its sweeping expansion plan, which aims to add 6 million square feet of school facilities by 2031. NYU had planned to build a controversial tower on the lot, before withdrawing the plan last November amid community outrage.
There's reason to be optimistic about the city's residential real estate market after recent data highlighted a trio of positive indicators. According to a new report chief economist, the city added private-sector jobs in 2010, after posting a net loss in that area the previous year. The gains were led by the education, health and hospitality fields, even as government employment fell by more than 17,000. Meanwhile, Wall Street firms had their second-highest profit total ever in 2010, with $27.6 billion.
Downtown Brooklyn is showing no signs of ceding its title as the city's fastest-growing neighborhood, even though shopping and public services have yet to catch up with residential development. According to new data from the Downtown Brooklyn Partnership, there are now 12,000 residents of DoBro's 16-block core, including the Fulton Mall, MetroTech complex and the Jay and Willoughby street corridors, up 50 percent from just one year ago. And the neighborhood is barely recognizable as its decade-ago self, when it had a mere 400 residents and a streetscape peppered with 99-cent stores.
A new program to aid struggling homeowners with their property taxes and water and sewer bills is also expected to generate additional revenue for the city. The Lien Sale Reform and Authorization Act, approved by the City Council this week, allows the city to sell liens on two- and three-family homes with up to $2,000 in unpaid bills. The city has been making around $40 million per year off of lien sales since it began selling liens to investors in the 1990s, but until now, it has only been able to sell liens on debts of up to $1,000, and only on single-family homes.
Condominium and residential rental markets have begun to stabilize in Northern Manhattan, according to a 2010 report. The number of condo unit transactions in Northern Manhattan climbed to 437 in 2010, a 44 percent jump from 2009, when 303 properties traded hands, while the average price per square foot slid 6.6 percent to $537. The residential rental market remained stable, with average free markets holding steady at $26 per square foot and rent regulated units -- which make up a large percentage of the market -- remaining relatively flat at $17 per square foot.
Speaker Sheldon Silver New York State's rent-regulation law, which governs the rents for more than one million stabilized apartments in New York City, expires June 15, but Democrats are already speaking out against it in its original form. State Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver believes that rent regulation must be renewed and strengthened in favor of tenants. If it isn't, he will not support the renewal of a tax incentive that expired in December and was embraced by apartment developers. "We shouldn't be extending a tax break for residential developers without making sure we are strengthening protections for the tenants who live in their buildings," Silver said in a statement last month.
A proposal to rezone a 130-block swath of Queens' Sunnyside and Woodside neighborhoods -- what would be the first rezoning of the area since 1974 -- has entered its public review period, City Planning Commissioner Amanda Burden announced today. The proposed zoning changes would target Queens Boulevard's main corridor for "moderate new development" by setting height limits on other, mostly-residential blocks and would provide incentives for affordable housing through the city's Inclusionary Housing Program. In Sunnyside, the rezoning would allow for small sidewalk cafes on Queens Boulevard in order to liven up the neighborhood.
Public Advocate Bill de Blasio The City Council is set to approve legislation tomorrow that would give stricter penalties to landlords who violate city heat laws. The legislation was sponsored by Public Advocate Bill de Blasio and Mayor Michael Bloomberg plans to sign the bill into law, an aide confirmed. "For too long, bad landlords have profited by withholding heat from tenants every winter,". "Passing the Heat Act will toughen penalties on those repeat offenders and make them think twice before leaving tenants in the cold."
Joseph Moinian is barely hanging onto several of his existing properties, but the Iranian-born developer is still gearing up to build in New York., Moinian has filed plans with the Department of Buildings to tear down the vacant, five-story building at 237 West 54th Street and put a 34-story Gene Kaufman-designed hotel in its place -- right next door to a 67-story Marriott Hotel planned by Harry Gross' Broadway Granite Development. Moinian's demolition application has already been approved, though the DOB is still reviewing the hotel plans. A representative for Moinian said the site is in "very preliminary" stages, and that the only work being done there so far is cleanup.
The capitalization rate of Manhattan office buildings continued to decline in the first quarter of 2011 and now sits at a nation-wide low 6 percent. The next lowest cities were Washington (6.48 percent), San Francisco (7.39 percent) and Los Angeles (7.44 percent). Manhattan's capitalization rate in the fourth quarter of 2010 was 6.02 percent, and it was 6.65 percent during the first quarter of last year.
RREEF, Deutsche Bank's real estate investment management division, predicted that nation-wide commercial rents will re-attain their peak, pre-recession levels by 2015. Office rents fell 4.9 percent last year, but are expected to pick up steam and grow 5.1 percent in 2013, 7.7 percent in 2014, and 8 percent in 2015. "Net operating income is still moving downward, but when rent growth starts, it really takes off. Apartment rents, already increasing as foreclosed homeowners find new residencies, will grow 4 percent this year, and 5 percent in 2012 and 2013. But retail lags behind apartment and office rents, and won't surpass apartment rent growth until 2014.
In order to continue construction on the new World Trade Center, Larry Silverstein and the Port Authority will be forced to dip into the pricey municipal bond market. Silverstein's company, Silverstein Properties, and the Port Authority intended to sell $1.37 billion of tax-exempt bonds in December to raise construction funds, but hesitated due to the high interest rates the municipal market commanded.
Toll Brothers will launch sales at its two latest New York City condominiums this fall, with occupancy slated for the summer of 2012,. Yearley said he expects the first project, a 67-unit, Greenberg Farrow-designed building at 205 Water Street in Dumbo, to average $800 per square foot, or between $500,000 for studios and $2 million for penthouses. The second, a boutique condo at 132 East 65th Street called Tourraine, is the developer's first on Manhattan's Upper East Side and will ask $2,000 per square foot for its 22 units, he said.
The New York State of Appeals ruled today that the regulatory agency responsible for overseeing rent-stabilized units will be allowed to impose extra rent increases on long-term tenants paying less than $1,000 a month. Under the new rule, landlords will be able to hand down greater proportional increases on residents paying less than $1,000 who have been in the same rent-stabilized apartment for longer than six years.
Laurence Gluck's Stellar Management purchased the stalled Williamsburg condominium project at 111 Kent Avenue for $24.6 million and plans to revive the property as a 62-unit rental. Stellar partnered with Largo Investments in the acquisition from Garrison Investment Group, which paid $43 million to take it off the original developers hands. The developers had defaulted on their $1.3 million loan two years ago after listing the condo units for between $575,000 and $1.1 million apiece.
A group of condominium owners at Toll Brothers' Northside Piers complex on the Williamsburg waterfront have come forward with charges of "shoddy" construction, including leaky windows, moldy walls and defective plumbing systems. Prices at the 450-unit complex, which consists of two towers on Kent Avenue overlooking the Manhattan skyline, range from $512,000 for studios to $2.8 million for the penthouses.
Lehman Brothers Holdings wants approval from the judge handling its bankruptcy case to restart Kent Swig's stalled condominium conversion project at 25 Broad Street and turn the building into rental apartments. The bank said in a court filing that it plans to foreclose on both the conversion and on an adjacent development parcel at 45 Broad Street, and wants to invest $25 million to finish the job. Lehman has already poured $39.9 million into 25 Broad Street since Swig defaulted in 2009. As part of completing the 281-unit project, the bank would demolish the building's south wing and transfer its 64,000 square feet of development rights to 45 Broad in order to attract potential buyers for the latter parcel.
Jamestown Properties presented its plan to add 300,000 square feet on top of the Chelsea Market at a community board meting last night. The scheme includes a nearly 250,000-square-foot office space addition on 10th Avenue side above the High Line and a 90,000-square-foot hotel on the Ninth Avenue side. As part of the deal, Jamestown will have to contribute more than $16 million into the High Line Improvement fund and would build public restrooms and an event space for the popular attraction.
Facing a $100 million budget gap, the Metropolitan Transportation Authority is thinking about selling or leasing a portion of its 3 million-square-foot New York City office portfolio in order to avoid additional service cuts and fare hikes. The agency issued a request for proposals last month hoping to find ways to raise cash from its real estate. The MTA currently spends almost $89 million per year in rent, taxes and operating costs for its offices, but much of that space is going unused in the wake of steep staff cuts.
FAO Schwarz exercised its option to extend the lease on its iconic 767 Fifth Avenue location for "fair market value" just three years after preparing to leave. Boston Properties, which bought the GM Building for a record $2.8 billion in 2008, was so sure FAO Schwarz would vacate its three-flour, 66,465-square-foot retail space when the lease expired in 2012, that the property owner began marketing the property for a new tenant. Now the two parties have entered arbitration over the rent.
Less than two weeks after being fired from the Brooklyn Navy Yard project, Aaron Malinsky was removed from the City Point project in Downtown Brooklyn that was to include the construction of the tallest building in Brooklyn. Malinsky allegedly directed nearly $500,000 in bribes to Brooklyn State Senator Carl Kruger in exchange for his official help with real estate ventures throughout the borough. Yesterday. Malinsky said he would "vigorously contest" the allegations.
The city's School Construction Authority has proposed a $9.3 billion budget that would slash the number of new schools it planned to build by 2014 from 56 to 26.. The budget, which is expected to pass the Panel for Education Policy tomorrow and will then move onto the City Council for final approval, would mean only 14,000 new spots for students, as opposed to the roughly 28,000 that had been approved by the City Council last year.
Soho's Children's Museum of the Arts is set to begin construction on its new location at 103 Charlton Street between Hudson and Greenwich streets having raised nearly $6.4 million needed to complete the project. The new 10,000-square-foot facility is triple the size of the museum's current location at 182 Lafayette Street between Broome and Grand streets. The museum, which displays art crafted by children and professional artists, expects its attendance to double after the move..
The owners of valuable Manhattan properties, including 399 Park Avenue, the Standard Hotel and the Time Warner Center got huge breaks in their property-tax assessments. In 2009 and 2010, Boston Properties, which owns 399 Park Avenue, home to Citigroup, lowered the building's assessment by $94 million and earned a $4.7 million tax break. Meanwhile, the Standard Hotel on Washington Street cut $12.5 million off its assessment value and the Time Warner Center's assessment declined by $40.2 million.
The plan to build a grocery store and retail complex at the six-acre site in the Brooklyn Navy Yard, known as Admirals Row, was dealt a blow earlier this month after a principal for the designated developer was charged in a federal bribery scandal, and the developer was subsequently removed from the project Brooklyn Navy Yard Development, which oversees the larger 300-acre industrial site on the waterfront north of Downtown Brooklyn, removed PA Developers two weeks ago after its principal, Aaron Malinksy, was accused by federal prosecutors of funneling about $472,500 to Brooklyn State Senator Carl Kruger.
The landmark Hotel Chelsea could go the condominium-hotel route under the ownership of a new front-runner in the closely watched bidding process for the 127-year-old property. David Edelstein, president of New York-based Tristar Capital and developer of the W Hotels in South Beach and London, is seen as a top contender for the 250-room hotel, which is said to be asking close to $100 million and has drawn interest from the likes of Andre Balazs and Ian Schrager.
Manhattan's two largest landlords are teaming up for the first time in a bid to take over 280 Park Avenue, the struggling Plaza District office property that's seeking a capital infusion amid dwindling interest reserves. SL Green Realty and Vornado Realty Trust have combined their interests in the property's two adjacent towers into a 50/50 joint venture that holds a total of $400 million in debt. The news comes one week after it was reported that owner Broadway Partners, which bought 280 Park Avenue with Investcorp for $1.2 billion at the height of the real estate boom, had hired Edgerock Realty Advisors to find new investors for the 1.2 million-square-foot property.
New York Buildings sold
Host Hotels & Resorts closed on the $313.5 million sale of the New York Helmsley Hotel, which will be reflagged under the Westin Hotels & Resorts brand in mid-2012 after an extensive renovation. Host Hotels, will renovate the hotel, at 212 East 42nd Street, with a complete overhaul of its 775 guest rooms as well as a meeting space upgrade.Dune Real Estate Partners has agreed to pay $190 million for Anglo Irish Bank's mortgage loan on the embattled Mark Hotel on the Upper East Side. The note, which had a face value of around $300 million, had several interested bidders, including Starwood Capital, in an offering that had been ongoing for months. Dune now plans to work with Alexico Group, the developer of the landmark, 84-year-old hotel, whose renovation and partial co-op conversion had landed the property in financial straits.
Savanna purchased the debt on 100 Wall Street from Prudential Real Estate Investors, with intent to take over the tower if Lehman Brothers, the current owner, defaults. Lehman Brothers took the property from Broadway Partners in 2009 when the firm couldn't pay its debts on the building; however the property is not profitable enough to overcome the debt services attached to it. Savanna has been extremely active on the New York market of late. The firm picked up four Manhattan buildings in the last 12 months, and announced its intentions to add up to six more in 2011
Russian composer Igor Krutoy closed on the 6,000-square-foot Plaza Hotel condominium, he paid $48 million for the 12th-floor pad. That's the priciest single condo ever sold in New York -- As the Wall Street Journal reported when the contract was signed, Krutoy and his wife, Olga, had been making offers on all the big-ticket condos in the city -- including the $55 million, two-unit combo at 15 Central Park West and equally stunning listings at the Time Warner Center -- before settling on the Plaza spread, which has views of Central Park but wasn't officially on the market.
Madison Avenue retail condo commands meaty price per square foot
A small, multi-level retail condominium on Madison Avenue has just sold for $4,471 per square foot, which, according to Prudential Douglas Elliman brokers Faith Hope Consolo and Joseph Aquino, is one of the highest prices ever for an Upper East Side retail condo. The space, at 1086 Madison Avenue, between 81st and 82nd streets, contains 400 square feet on the ground level, a 100-square-foot mezzanine and a 700-square-foot basement. Buyer Stanley Lobel, who owns Lobel's Fine Meats, paid $1.75 million for the store and plans to use it as an investment property that will house a fashion tenant.
Zara to pay $324M for 666 Fifth retail condo
In one of the city's largest-ever retail condominium deals, Spain's Inditex Group has agreed to pay $324 million to purchase 32,000 square feet at 666 Fifth Avenue for a new flagship Zara store, the company announced today. The space, formerly an NBA store, is roughly one-third of the 90,000 square feet purchased by Stanley Chera's Crown Acquisitions, the Carlyle Group and Kushner Companies for $525 million in 2008, according to the Wall Street Journal, which originally broke the news of the deal. The rest, which is currently leased by Uniqlo and Hollister, is also on the market. The purchase price for the Zara space includes the buyout of the remaining time on the NBA's lease, which sources said had less than three years before its expiration. Uniqlo's lease at 666 Fifth last year, in which it agreed to pay $300 million over 15 years, was among the city's most expensive retail leases ever.
Stock exchange sells two buildings for $65M
The New York Stock Exchange has sold two buildings, 123 Greenwich Street and 78-86 Trinity Place in the Financial District for a combined $65 million, according to Real Estate Weekly. The buildings, which the American Stock Exchange used for decades as office space and a trading floor (before the latter was moved to 11 Wall Street), were sold to two LLCs represented by Steinhardt Management. Cushman & Wakefield began marketing the buildings, which have a total of 336,000 square feet of office space, in 2008. The properties were up for landmark designation in 2008 but have not been landmarked yet.
NYC Buildings For Sale
$90M UES townhouse belonging to Lucille Roberts' estate poised to crush city records An Upper East Side townhouse originally commissioned by Frank Woolworth is about to shatter New York City records when it hits the market for $90 million, likely the highest-ever official asking price for a single-family home in Manhattan. 4 East 80th Street, the 17,676-square-foot mansion currently owned by the estate of fitness mogul Lucille Roberts, who died in 2003. Industry sources said its $90 million asking price will by far eclipse any other for a townhouse in New York City history; Aby Rosen's 22 East 71st Street and the mansion near Mayor Michael Bloomberg's, at 1016 Madison Avenue, were each, in 2008, asking $75 million. Neither property sold, and both have since slashed their asking prices.The Riese Organization is selling its landmarked I. Miller Shoe Building at 1552 Broadway, which contains 15,000 square feet, some air rights, and the foot traffic guarantee that comes with a location on Times Square's bow tie. The building, on the northeast corner of 46th Street and near Seventh Avenue, is currently home to a TGI Friday's and has two billboards that can be upgraded to LED signs, plus approval for a third sign. For entertainment history buffs, there are statues of actresses Ethel Barrymore, Marilyn Monroe, Mary Pickford and Rosa Ponsella on the second floor.
Brand new Williamsburg charter school facility hits the market for $30MThe developer of the brand new Williamsburg Charter High School facility at 198 Varet Street in East Williamsburg has put the 115,000-square-foot building on the market for $30 million. The eight-story property, which was completed in the fall of 2010 by private developer Paul Grossman, was custom-built for the school, a member of the Believe High School Network, and contains a fitnes center, two-story rock climbing wall and auditorium in addition to 58 classrooms and laboratories.
20 KFC franchises in the city head to auction
At least 20 Kentucky Fried Chicken franchises in New York City are going up for auction after the former owners filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection last year. The eateries -- 10 in Queens, eight in Brooklyn and two in Harlem -- average 2,000 square feet each, have around 15 years left on their leases and may go in groups or individually.
Hines Interests is looking to sell its 600,000-square-foot tower at 750 Seventh Avenue. The real estate investment firm purchased the 32-story building, half of which is occupied by Morgan Stanley, for $150 million in 2000 through a partnership with General Motors. That works out to $260 per square foot. It's unclear what Hines will be hoping to fetch for the 48th Street property, which is also home to Ernst & Young and Mendes and Mount.
Development site up for grabs near the U.N.
Four loans with an unpaid balance totaling $18.75 million are up for grabs at a stalled development site near the United Nations that has the potential to become a new hotel or consulate, are secured by the retail, residential and commercial properties at 844 Second Avenue, 302 East 45th Street, 303 East 44th Street and 304 East 44th Street. Plans for a high-end hotel or consulate there never got off the ground because of the tight construction market, but the current owners did consider moving air rights from the Second Avenue and 45th Street properties to the two on 44th Street to create nearly 75,000 square feet of development rights.
Kenmare Square retail condo asks $17M
The 11,400-square-foot duplex retail condominium at One Kenmare Square has hit the market for $17.25 million. The ground and lower floors of the glassy Soho building, developed by Andre Balazs and Cape Advisors at 211 Lafayette Street, are currently home to furniture retailer Mitchell Gold, and will be through March 2017, when its lease expires. The space contains 7,400 square feet on the ground floor and 4,000 in the basement, connected by a stairwell and elevator.
The French owners of Midtown's Hotel Novotel is for sale in a "strategic, targeted marketing process,". The 480-room hotel, at 226 West 52nd Street, is owned and operated by Accor SA, which also runs the Sofitel Luxury Hotels and Motel 6 chains. While New York hotel values haven't fully recovered from the real estate crash -- they're still 10 to 15 percent off their 2007 peak, according to HVS Global Hospitality Services -- Accor is looking to unload real estate assets and shift its focus to branding and management as part of a long-term strategy. As such, the Novotel's buyer will be required to retain Accor as hotel's manager.
Lehman Brothers Holdings is soliciting development partners for 75 real estate projects in 19 states.. Among the potential partners Lehman has its eye on: PulteGroup, Toll Brothers, Standard Pacific, DMB Associates, FivePoint Communities and Newland Communities. The company has some $2 billion in residential and master-planned communities in its portfolio, and all of the partners its bankruptcy restructuring firm has reached out to have experience developing those types of projects.
New York Office Leases:
- Total Manhattan Office Class A vacancies stayed at 22.91 million RSF.
- Total Manhattan Office Market vacancies decreased from 35.93 million RSF to 35.77 million RSF.
- Total Midtown Office vacancy decreased from 20.94 million RSF to 20.60 million RSF.
- Total Midtown South Office vacancy decreased from 6.20 million RSF to 5.95 million RSF.
- Total Downtown Office vacancy increased from 8.79 million RSF to 9.22 million RSF.
- Total vacant Office Direct Space For Rent in Midtown Manhattan decreased from 18.89 million RSF to 18.46 million RSF.
- Total vacant Office Sublease Space For Lease in Midtown Manhattan increased from 2.05 million RSF to 2.14 million RSF.
- Total vacant Office Direct Space in Midtown South Manhattan decreased from 5.69 million RSF to 5.48 million RSF.
- Midtown South Manhattan Sublease vacancies decreased from 0.52 million RSF to 0.47 million RSF.
- Total Downtown Manhattan Office Direct Lease Space increased from 7.86 million RSF to 8.39 million RSF.
- Total Downtown Manhattan Office Sublease Vacancies decreased from 0.94 million RSF to 0.84 million RSF.
NYC Retail Leases:
- Total Available Manhattan Retail Space increased from 0.81 million RSF to 0.84 million RSF.
- Midtown Manhattan Retail vacancy increased from 0.22 million RSF to 0.24 million RSF.
- Midtown South Retail space vacancies stayed at 0.49 million RSF.
- In Downtown Manhattan, Retail vacancy increased from 0.10 million RSF to 0.12 million RSF.
New York Industrial Leases:
- Total Manhattan Industrial Vacant Space decreased from 0.16 million RSF to 0.11 million RSF.
- Midtown vacancy decreased from 0.05 million RSF to 0.03 million RSF.
- Midtown South Industrial space vacancies decreased from 0.11 million RSF to 0.09 million RSF.
Manhattan Office Rentals:
- Li & Fung leases 482,399 sf at 350 Fifth Ave (Empire State Building) The Hong Kong-based apparel company signed an expansion lease for the partial third and entire ninth floors.
- Deloitte leases 430,000 sf at 30 Rockefeller Plaza The accounting firm signed an 18-year lease for 12 floors.
- Bloomberg LP leases 400,000 sf at 120 Park Ave The media company signed a lease for 16 floors. It plans to move into the new office later this year. The company also has nearly 900,000 square feet at its headquarters at 731 Lexington Avenue.
- Greater New York Hospital Association leases 109,000 sf at 555 West 57th St The health care trade association signed a 15-year lease extension and expansion on parts of the 11th and 12th floors and the entire 15th floor.
- BBVA leases 84,000 sf at 1345 Sixth Ave The Spanish bank signed a lease renewal and expanded its office space.
- Sandler O'Neill + Partners leases 70,000 sf at 1251 Sixth Ave The investment banking firm signed a lease.
- Tory Burch leases 52,000 sf at 11 West 19th St The fashion designer signed a lease renewal and expanded in the building.
- Capco leases 48,706 sf at 77 Water St The business technology consulting firm subleased space on the 10th and 11th floors. The tenant is relocating from a smaller, 23,000-square-foot space at 120 Broadway.
- Fortress Investment Group leases 40,563 sf at 1345 Sixth Ave The global investment management firm signed a six-month extension.
- Mizuho Capital Markets leases 39,000 sf at 1440 Broadway The financial firm signed a 15-year lease renewal for the building's top two floors.
- Vera Wang leases 39,000 sf at 15 East 26th St The fashion designer signed a 12-year lease for two floors.
- We Work leases 35,000 sf at 1-5 Little West 12th St The temporary office space provider signed a 15-year lease on the second through sixth floors. The reported asking rent was $55 per square foot.
- Wells Fargo Trade Capital leases 34,044 sf at 100 Park Ave The asset-based lending subsidiary of Wells Fargo signed an expansion lease on the entire 14th floor.
- Outerstuff Ltd. leases 34,000 sf at 1412 Broadway The apparel manufacturer and marketer signed a long-term lease for two full floors.
- American Express Travel Related Services leases 27,000 sf at 250 Hudson St The travel products and services company signed a lease for the entire sixth floor. The building is now 100 percent occupied.
- M Booth and Associates Inc. leases 26,974 sf at 300 Park Ave South The communications agency signed a lease renewal and expansion.
- Buchanan Ingersoll & Rooney leases 26,122 sf at 1290 Sixth Ave The law firm signed an eight-year sublease. The reported asking rent was $64 per square foot.
- Sentry Centers leases 23,400 sf at 810 Seventh Ave The conference center operator signed a 10-year lease on the 22nd and 23rd floors.
- Novartis leases 22,050 sf at 230 Park Ave The Switzerland-based global pharmaceutical company signed a 15-year lease for the entire 21st floor. The tenant is relocating its New York corporate offices from 608 Fifth Avenue.
- Communication Partners Group leases 21,891 sf at 360 Madison Ave The medical communication programs developer signed an eight-year sublease.
- Ralph Appelbaum Associates leases 21,650 sf at 88 Pine St The museum exhibition design and production firm signed an early lease renewal on the 29th floor that will run for 12 years and seven months. The reported asking rent was $43 per square foot.
- Carolina Herrera leases 16,166 sf at 501 Seventh Ave The fashion company signed a lease renewal.
- Janklow & Nesbit Associates leases 15,675 sf at 445 Park Ave The literary agency signed a lease extension through 2017 for the entire 13th floor.
- Camp Dresser & McKee Inc. leases 15,600 sf at 14 Wall St The consulting and engineering firm signed a five-year lease on the 17th floor. The reported asking rent was $37 per square foot.
- The Switzer Group leases 14,500 sf at 3 East 54th St The design firm signed a 10-year lease. The reported asking rent was in the low $50s per square foot.
- Dragados leases 14,355 sf at 500 Fifth Ave The U.S. division of the European construction firm signed a seven-year expansion lease for the entire 37th floor.
- Ropers Majeski Kohn & Bentley leases 11,800 sf at 750 Third Ave The law firm signed a 10-year lease for the entire 25th floor. The tenant is relocating from 17 State Street.
- Senator Investment Group leases 11,500 sf at 510 Madison Ave The investment firm signed an 11-year lease.
- FAF Inc. leases 11,000 sf at 411 Fifth Ave The fashion accessories distributor signed a 10-year lease. The reported asking rent was $39 per square foot.
- Fir Tree leases 10,856 sf at 505 Fifth Ave The hedge fund signed a sublease on the 21st floor. Paul Glickman, at the time with Cushman & Wakefield, represented the building owner, Kipp-Stawski, in the deal. Glickman has since moved to Jones Lang LaSalle.
- SAI International Inc. leases 10,670 sf at 231 West 39th St The textile company signed a three-year lease on the fifth floor.
- Wathne USA LLC leases 8,218 sf at 42 West 39th St The accessories distributor signed a lease. The reported asking rent was $32 per square foot.
- Industrial Technology & Assistance Corporation leases 7,986 sf at 39 Broadway The technology business consultant signed a long-term lease for the 11th floor.
- Schneider Electric USA leases 7,598 sf at 112 West 34th St The engineering firm signed a new lease.
- Merkury Innovations leases 7,300 sf at 39 Broadway The consumer electronics company signed an eight-year lease. The reported asking rent was $30 per square foot.
- SA&E International Bags & Accessories leases 7,264 sf at 10 West 33rd St The manufacturer of backpacks and luggage signed a seven-year lease. The reported asking rent was $36 per square foot.
- The Alberleen Group leases 7,163 sf at 350 Fifth Ave (Empire State Building) The financial services firm signed a new lease.
- Accessory Zone LLC leases 7,058 sf at 10 West 33rd St The importer of women's accessories signed an eight-year lease. The reported asking rent was $36 per square foot.
- FreeWheel Media leases 7,000 sf at 235 Park Ave South The online digital advertising firm signed a lease on the top floor. The reported asking rent was $38 per square foot.
- NY/NJ Minority Suppliers Development Council Inc. leases 7,000 sf at 485 Seventh Ave The nonprofit signed a five-year lease. The reported asking rent was $38 per square foot.
- Energy Investors Fund Management Inc. leases 6,523 sf at One Penn Plaza The private equity fund manager signed a seven-year lease.
- Napoli Bern Ripka leases 6,439 sf at 350 Fifth Ave (Empire State Building) The law firm signed an expansion lease.
- Brightroll leases 6,267 sf at 295 Madison Ave The online video advertising services provider signed an expansion lease. The reported asking rent was $48 per square foot.
- Gonzalez, Saggio and Harlan LLP leases 6,035 sf at 292 Madison Ave The Milwaukee-based law firm signed a five-year lease for the entire 19th floor.
- Lucas Associates leases 6,001 sf at 500 Fifth Ave The tenant signed a five-year lease on the 11th floor.
- Maverik Lacrosse leases 6,000 sf at 535 West 24th St The manufacturer of lacrosse equipment signed a lease for five years and three months on the fifth floor.
- ICAP Securities USA leases 5,909 sf at 500 Fifth Ave The voice and electronic interdealer broker signed a 10-year, three-month lease on the eighth floor.
- Turkish Airlines Inc. leases 5,863 sf at 350 Fifth Ave (Empire State Building) The airline company signed a new lease.
- Ryan Labs leases 5,653 sf at 500 Fifth Ave The asset management firm signed a seven-year lease on the 25th floor.
- Professional Testing Corporation leases 5,569 sf at 1350 Broadway The business services firm signed a lease renewal.
- Paradoxal leases 5,500 sf at 540 Broadway The film production company signed a five-year lease. The tenant is relocating from 164 West 25th Street.
- Marketers International Group leases 5,400 sf at 250 Hudson St The marketing firm signed a lease.
- Beattie McGuinness Bungay leases 5,364 sf at 597 Broadway The advertising and public relations firm signed a two-year lease with a two-year option on the second floor. The reported asking rent was $40 a square foot.
- RMC Research Corporation leases 5,302 sf at One Grand Central Place The business services firm signed an expansion lease.
- Daily Mail/Associated Newspapers leases 5,200 sf at 42-44 Greene St The newspaper publisher signed a four-year lease for the entire fourth floor.
- Earsnova leases 5,000 sf at 3 East 28th St The high-fidelity audio showroom signed a four-year lease. The reported asking rent was $26 per square foot.
New York Retail Leases:
- Scope Art Fair Inc. leases 60,000 sf at 532-582 Washington St The global art fair organizer signed a short-term lease for a pop-up trade show.
- Laurice Washington Ltd. leases 46,176 sf at 430 West 14th St The fragrance company signed a 10-year retail lease.
- Garage Management Company leases 20,000 sf at 2 Fifth Ave The indoor car garage operator signed a 10-year lease renewal.
- Eastern Mountain Sports leases 12,893 sf at 2150 Broadway The sporting gear retailer signed a lease for multilevel space. The reported asking rent for the 4,100 square feet on the ground floor was $350 per square foot, and the 8,700 square feet on the second floor had an asking rent of $125 per square foot.
- Mulberry leases 10,700 sf at 134 Spring St The British accessories retailer signed a long-term lease for its third Manhattan location.
- Duane Reade leases 6,528 sf at 4 West 4th St The drugstore chain signed a lease for another location.
- Duane Reade leases 5,993 sf at 196 Third Ave The drugstore chain signed a lease extension.
- Duane Reade leases 5,800 sf at 1052 First Ave The drugstore chain signed a lease extension.
- Tomasella USA leases 5,520 sf at 32-34 Greene St The Italian furniture retailer signed a five-year lease for its first Manhattan location. The reported asking rent was $150 per square foot.
- Michael Kors leases 4,500 sf at 610 Fifth Ave The fashion retailer signed a 10-year lease. The space was previously occupied by Kenneth Cole.
- Haven's Kitchen leases 4,400 sf at 109 West 17th St The cooking school signed a 10-year lease for 2,200 square feet on the ground floor and 2,200 square feet on the second level. The reported asking rent for the ground floor was about $90 per square foot.
- Denim Habit leases 4,050 sf at 344 West 14th St The denim retailer signed a lease for 2,250 square feet at ground level and 1,800 square feet of usable space in the basement. The reported asking rent was $225 per square foot.
- Bakehouse leases 3,500 sf at 113 Horatio St The baked goods shop signed a 10-year lease on the ground floor.
- Machina Cycles leases 3,000 sf at 200 Ninth Ave The motorcycle storage and repair shop signed a five-year lease with a five-year option to renew.
- O'Donoghue's Restaurant and Pub leases 2,850 sf at 156 West 44th St The restaurant signed a lease.
- Gap 1969 leases 2,800 sf at 513 Broadway The apparel company signed a long-term lease for a concept store.
- Intermix leases 2,725 sf at 812 Washington St The apparel and accessories retailer signed a long-term lease. The space includes 1,885 square feet on the ground floor, 240 square feet in the mezzanine and 600 square feet in the basement.
- Sharon Gioe Inc. leases 2,404 sf at 12 East 52nd St The fashion accessories retailer signed a lease.
- Rose leases 2,400 sf at 337 West Broadway The restaurant signed a 15-year lease for 700 square feet on the ground floor and 1,700 square feet on the second floor. The reported asking rent on the ground floor was $100 per square foot.
- Cleo Spa leases 2,350 sf at 39 Gramercy Park North The spa signed a 10-year lease.
- Nail Spa and Beyond leases 2,300 sf at 393 Eighth Ave The salon and spa signed a five-year lease for 1,500 square feet on the ground floor and 800 square feet of storage space in the basement. The reported asking rent on the ground floor was $40 per square foot.
- Republic Clothing Corporation leases 2,000 sf at 1412 Broadway The clothing retailer signed a short-term lease. The reported asking rent was $200 per square foot.
- The New York Yankees leases 2,000 sf at 1501 Broadway The baseball franchise signed a 15-year lease for a team store.
- Crop to Cup leases 2,000 sf at 541 Third Ave The cafe signed a three-year lease.
- Il Villaggio Beauty Inc. leases 1,900 sf at 502 LaGuardia Pl The spa signed a 10-year lease for 1,400 square feet on the ground floor and 500 square feet of storage space in the basement. The reported asking rent on the ground floor was about $81 per square foot.
- Tisane Pharmacy leases 1,800 sf at 340 East 86th St The pharmacy signed a 12-year lease with a three-year option.
- Swissmaker leases 1,700 sf at 732 Seventh Ave The European pretzel maker signed a 10-year retail lease. The reported asking rent was $177 per square foot.
- Qdoba Mexican Grill leases 1,500 sf at 120 University Pl The fast-food restaurant chain signed a lease for another location.
- BonChon Chicken leases 1,500 sf at 957 Second Ave The restaurant signed a lease for another location.
- New York Picture leases 1,382 sf at 310 East 23rd St The retailer signed a lease.
- n/a leases 1,350 sf at 639 Fourth Ave (Brooklyn) A deli signed a 10-year lease with two five-year options.
- Blue Dog leases 1,300 sf at 825 Eighth Ave The cafe signed a lease.
- Toby's Public House II leases 1,200 sf at 86 Kenmare St The restaurant signed a 10-year lease for its second location.
- Palma Restaurant leases 1,200 sf at 104 Charlton St The restaurant signed a six-month lease with renewal options for six months and 10 years. The reported asking rent was $60 per square foot.
- Lacoste leases 1,029 sf at 608 Fifth Ave The apparel retailer signed an expansion lease, adding to its existing 8,926-square-foot space, and executed a new build-out for its flagship store.
- Hummus Kitchen leases 1,000 sf at 444 Third Ave The restaurant signed a lease.
- The Meatball Shop leases 1,000 sf at 64 Greenwich St The restaurant signed a lease.
- The London Candy Company leases 1,000 sf at 1422 Lexington Ave The candy retailer signed a lease.
New York City Buildings Sold:
- 569 Lexington Ave, 755-room hotel was sold to RLJ Development for $335.0M The Doubletree Metropolitan Hotel sold for $335 million. The property last traded for $110.5 million in 2003.
- 49-55 Amsterdam Ave, Development site was sold to Glenwood Management for $125.0M The vacant site sold for $125 million. The acquisition included 313,429 square feet of development rights.
- 20 West 47th St, 14-story office bldg was sold to Extell Development for $73.0M The building sold at a judicial sale for $73 million. Extell Development beat out multiple bidders, including Parkway Realty and Bluestone Group. Extell was a 75 percent owner of the building, so it only needed to pay $18.25 million. F.M. Ring Associates owned the remaining 25 percent.
- 1414 Sixth Ave, 19-story 132000 sf office bldg was sold to Starwood Hotels & Resorts Worldwide for $72.0M The former hotel sold for $72 million.
- 15 Union Square West, 4 retail units 14494 sf total was sold to State Teachers Retirement System of Ohio for $57.88M The retail portion of the residential building sold for $57.88 million. Three of the four units are leased: one to HSBC Bank, one to Lululemon Athletica and another to Sketchers.
- 30 Flatbush Ave (Brooklyn), 241633 sf office bldg was sold to Angelo Power; Capstone Equities for $57.0M The property sold for $57 million, or $236 per square foot.
- 607-09 Hudson St, 7-story nursing home/development site was sold to FLAnk for $33.25M The 56,800-square-foot assisted-living facility sold for $33.25 million. The buyer plans to convert the property to condos.
- 15 East 26th St, 150000 sf office space was sold to Angelo Gordon & Co.; Belvedere Capital; Metropolitan Realty Associates; David Berley Walter & Samuels for $33.0M The office portion of the condo conversion sold for $33 million.
- 25-21 31st Ave, 31-49 29th St 29-07 31st St 30-95 29th St (Queens) 4 apt. bldgs 220 units total was sold to n/a for $30.1M The portfolio of residential buildings sold for $30.1 million. The apartments consist of 62 studios, 114 one-bedrooms, 41 two-bedrooms and three super's units.
- 34-36 East 51st St, 10-story 38000 sf comm. bldg was sold to Pref 34 East 51st Street LLC for $30.0M The property sold for $30 million. The building last traded for $11.9 million in 1993.
- 211-219 Columbus Ave, 1-story 60000 sf retail bldg was sold to n/a for $30.0M The property sold to an unidentified Asian buyer for $30 million. The site has a total of 42,511 square feet of development rights.
- 140 West 86th St, 15-story 67000 sf apt. bldg 44 units total was sold to Dylan NY Corp. for $28.0M The elevator building sold for $28 million, or $420 per square foot.
- 431 and 441 Third Ave, 2 mixed-use bldgs 50000 sf total was sold to Parkoff Organization for $22.0M The adjacent buildings sold for $22 million, or $400 per square foot. The price represents a gross rent multiple of 13. The corner property at 431 Third Avenue has 52 apartments and six stores, and the walk-up at 441 Third Avenue contains seven apartments, one store and a carriage house. The properties include 55,000 square feet of air rights for future development.
- 250 East 77th St, 7-story apt. bldg 29 units total was sold to n/a for $13.25M The elevator building sold for $13.25 million.
- 327, 329 331 and 335 East 9th St Four 5-story apt. bldgs 30 units total and vacant lot was sold to n/a for $13.1M The walk-up buildings and a vacant lot sold for $13.1 million.
- 321-27 First Ave and 356-58 East 19th St, Five 4-story apt. bldgs 19645 sf total was sold to n/a for $11.2M The contiguous buildings sold for $11.2 million, or $570 per square foot. The price represents a capitalization rate of about 6.1 percent and a gross rent multiple of about 12.1. The properties contain 30 apartments and six stores.
- 25-74 33rd St (Queens), 6-story 46584 sf apt. bldg 60 units total was sold to 2533 LLC for $8.88M The property sold for $8.88 million.
- 115 Mercer St, Retail condo was sold to Javeri Capital for $7.8M The retail condo sold for $7.8 million. The price represents a capitalization rate of about 7 percent.
- 347-349 Bowery, Development site was sold to Louzon Group for $7.6M The vacant site sold for $7.6 million. The Paris-based buyer plans to develop a hotel and restaurant on the corner property.
- 331 Harbor Rd, 25 Slaight St and 70 Kimberly Ln (Staten Island) 3 apt. bldgs 180 units total was sold to n/a for $7.5M The package of multifamily buildings sold for $7.5 million. The price represents a capitalization rate of 10.2 percent.
- 2307 Flatbush Ave (Brooklyn), Retail bldg on 14695 sf lot was sold to n/a for $7.0M The site of a triple net-leased Walgreens sold for $7 million. The price represents a capitalization rate of 5.4 percent.
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RSF - rentable square feetSF - square feet



