Monday, July 31, 2006

Ritz at Bachelor going condo-hotel



 

Julie Dunn

The Ritz-Carlton, Bachelor Gulch is converting 120 of its 237 guest rooms into 50 wholly owned condominiums, making it the latest high-end mountain property to announce a condo-hotel conversion.

"The demand for new ownership opportunities in Bachelor Gulch is just immense, so we felt it was a great time to bring it to market," said Steven Holt, director of public relations at the property, which is at the Beaver Creek ski area.

The Ritz-Carlton Residential Suites will range in size from 430 square feet for a studio unit to 1,383 square feet for a two-bedroom model. The condos will go on sale July 27, with prices from $720,000 to $2.96 million. Slifer Smith & Frampton Real Estate is the listing broker.

Other similar projects are also in the works. Last month, Florida developer SunVest Communities USA announced plans to invest $20 million to turn the Club Med resort in Mount Crested Butte into a condo hotel.

In May, the Park Hyatt Beaver Creek announced it would undergo a $20 million renovation, including the conversion of 54 hotel rooms into 15 fractional-ownership units.

The 1/20-share condominiums range in price from $80,000 to $220,000.

"It's a good way to get some significant dollars out of an existing hotel," said John Montgomery, a hotel consultant with Horwath Horizon in Denver.

The Ritz-Carlton's two-phase conversion project began in April and is expected to be completed by July 2007.

Owners will have access to all of the hotel's amenities, including twice-daily housekeeping service and valet parking. They can place their units in a rental pool when they're not using them.

There is some risk to condo-hotel conversions, said Montgomery, because "some of the units will go into the rental pool, but some will sit empty, which is dead real estate for the community."

He said, "Resort areas like to see new bodies in their beds every night, because those are the people who are out skiing and shopping." Holt expects a majority of the condos to be put into the rental pool.

The AAA Five Diamond-rated Ritz-Carlton, Bachelor Gulch opened in November 2002 and cost $162 million to build. Miami-based Gencom Group bought majority ownership of the property from Vail Resorts Inc. in 2004.

Inman News - Real Estate News and Advice for Buyers, Sellers & Investors

Web-based marketing integral to real estate industry



MARILYN BOWDEN

These days, anyone in the market for a new home or a beachfront condo can get a better idea of what's available by browsing the Internet instead of the Sunday paper. According to the National Association of Realtors, there are now some half-million Web sites in cyberspace hawking dream homes.

The Internet has been an important selling tool for the real-estate industry for nearly a decade. But during the recent residential boom, some have taken it to a new level, using the Web as the primary marketing tool to snare buyers for preconstruction projects which exist only in the developer's imagination. For this class of sellers, the Web has replaced the sales center; the virtual tour has nosed out the model unit.

Consumers need to exercise caution before leaping into an investment in a property that, as the market softens and some projects inevitably fall by the wayside, might never be anything more than a computer-generated fantasy.

The rise of virtual marketing

"Historically, the sales office would open before there was a project," says Mark Zilbert of South Florida's Zilbert Realty Group, which specializes in Internet sales. "But with the emergence of the speculator market, which really drove preconstruction sales, we entered the era of the instant sellout. By the time the sales office was built, there was nothing left to sell."

While developers were once leery of Internet listings, Zilbert says, broader outreach at lower cost has converted many to the gospel of virtual marketing.

A well-designed Web site is now a must for large projects, says Liam Sullivan, spokesperson for real-estate marketing firm Cotton & Co. The company currently has more than 60 Web sites up and running for projects all over the United States and the Caribbean.

"It's a tool that people have come to expect," Sullivan says. "People want to shop from their living rooms. Eventually they might visit the project site, but some of them buy just off the Web."

Sullivan says virtual tours using sophisticated technology can convey a much better idea of what a project will look like than a visit to a construction site.

An integrated approach

All this doesn't mean that all developers are ready to forsake tried-and-true methods. Many prefer an integrated approach.

"While we use the Internet to expose our product, we rarely consummate a sale that way. So we're not doing away with bricks and mortar,'' says Pamela Liebman, CEO of The Corcoran Group, a New York City-based residential developer and marketer.

No matter how quickly a project "sells out," a sale isn't really a sale until the unit is delivered and the contract closed, says Edgardo Defortuna, president of Fortune International, a Miami-based real estate and development firm.

"Even if we are mostly sold out, we still build a sales office and models," he says. "There has to be something to keep the buyer excited during the two or three years the project may be under construction."

Another thing the Internet will never be able to replace, Defortuna says, is the relationship between seller and buyer. "There is no substitute for personal contact," he says.

The industry online

Industry statistics make it clear that the real-estate profession is not in danger of losing ground to Internet sales.

Citing a recent survey of 135,000 homebuyers by the National Association of Realtors, NAR spokesman Molony says that though 77 percent used the Internet to search for properties, 81 percent used an agent to consummate the sale.

"The Internet is the norm today," Molony says. "But people still want a Realtor to explain the contract and handle the paperwork."

Statisticians for The National Association of Realtors deal only with resale properties, which are documented on multiple listing services. Tracking the preconstruction market is more difficult because there hasn't been any coordinated catalog of what's available at what price - until recently. Dean Isenberg, a Florida Realtor and entrepreneur, has introduced sell-your-preconstruction.com, a nationwide listing service he hopes will become "the eBay of preconstruction properties."

Let the buyer beware

Seasoned brokers say anyone buying a product that doesn't yet exist needs to be careful.

"It's relatively easy to sell preconstruction over the Internet," says The Corcoran Group's Liebman. "People think they're getting a bargain, and getting it easily. But in exchange, they have to go by the word of the developer and the offering document, without actually seeing what they're getting."

Internet buyers, she says, "need to read those offering documents very carefully, and have an attorney read them as well."

Mortgage rates are headed into hibernation until the next Federal Reserve rate-setting meeting.

The benchmark 30-year fixed-rate mortgage fell 12 basis points to 6.77 percent, according to the Bankrate.com national survey of large lenders. A basis point is one-hundredth of 1 percentage point. The mortgages in this week's survey had an average total of 0.28 discount and origination points. One year ago, the mortgage index was 5.84 percent; four weeks ago, it was 6.93 percent.

The benchmark 15-year fixed-rate mortgage fell 10 basis points to 6.39 percent. The benchmark 5/1 adjustable-rate mortgage fell 8 basis points to 6.47 percent.

 

Inman Real Estate News - Real estate licensees can get a better deal on houses

Saturday, July 29, 2006

Condo craze continues with 41 per cent increase



 
TORONTO, July 19 /CNW/ - There were more new high-rise condominium suites
sold in the Greater Toronto Area in June than ever before as condo sales
smashed the all-time record for market share, Desi Auciello, president of the
Greater Toronto Home Builders' Association, said today.
    "With an all-time high 2,397 new high-rise condos sold in June, home
buyers were snapping up a new condo every four minutes the sales offices were
open," said Auciello.
    High-rise unit sales were up a whopping 41 per cent while total new home
sales were up just two per cent as a result of an offsetting 28 per cent
decline in low-rise (single-detached, semi-detached and townhome) sales.
    According to RealNet Canada Inc., the association's independent source of
new home market information, an astounding six out of every ten (60 per cent)
new homes sold in June were high-rise suites.
    "Frankly, we never thought we'd see the day when low-rise product would
represent the minority of our sales, particularly to this extent," Auciello
stated. The previous high-rise market share peak was 46 per cent while the
annual average (2005) is 42 per cent.
    Auciello attributed the continuing condo craze to affordability and
choice. "As house prices rise, home buyers seeking a toehold in the market are
obviously turning in increasing numbers to the condo market," said Auciello,
noting that the RealNet new home price index for high-rise condos ($314,370)
is $80,000 less than for low-rise homes ($393,398).

    <<
    -------------------------------------------------------------------------
                    Low Rise             High Rise               Total
               June   June    %      June   June    %      June   June    %
    Region     2005   2006 Change    2005   2006 Change    2005   2006 Change
    -------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Durham      542    240   -56%      31     81   161%     573    321   -44%
    Halton      222    344    55%      45      7   -84%     267    351    31%
    Peel        698    468   -33%     110    474   331%     808    942    17%
    Toronto     144     85   -41%   1,145  1,652    44%   1,289  1,737    35%
    York        636    486   -24%     375    183   -51%   1,011    669   -34%
    GTA       2,242  1,623   -28%   1,706  2,397    41%   3,948  4,020     2%
    -------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                   Source: RealNet Canada Inc
    -------------------------------------------------------------------------
    >>

    The index is essentially the average asking price of all the remaining
new homes and condos currently available for sale, as calculated by RealNet
Canada Inc.
    The new home price index is based on currently available new home
offerings, weighted by remaining inventory, for projects of 15 or more units,
excluding ultra-luxury product across the GTA.
    With the first six months of the year in the books, total new home sales
of 21,866 units are down five per cent compared with the first half of 2005.
High-rise sales are running two per cent ahead of last year while low-rise
sales have declined by 10 per cent.
    The top five municipalities in the GTA for June were Toronto, 1737;
Mississauga, 585; Brampton, 355; Markham, 262 and Vaughan, 213.

    With more than 1,400 members, the GTHBA is the voice of the residential
construction industry in the Greater Toronto Area. Established in 1921, the
association is comprised of land developers, home builders, professional
renovation contractors, sub-contractors, suppliers, service, professional and
financial firms. We are proudly affiliated with the Ontario and Canadian Home
Builders' Associations.


Friday, July 28, 2006

65-Unit Condo Project Planned for Milwaukee



 

A developer plans to build 65 condominiums overlooking the Milwaukee River on N. Commerce St., creating a new residential project on one of that street's few remaining riverfront sites.

Jim Metz said Monday that he hopes to begin construction by late fall or the spring of 2007 on his six-story development, which will take about a year to complete. It will replace two small industrial buildings, at 2056 and 2070 N. Commerce St., that Metz plans to demolish in September.

Most of the units will have two bedrooms, with around 1,600 to 1,700 square feet, and will be priced at around $290,000, Metz said. The development will include one-bedroom units with prices starting at around $175,000, he said.

The development also will have 10,000 square feet of commercial space, including a 5,000-square-foot restaurant with a patio overlooking the river, Metz said. He said he's close to signing a lease with a restaurant operator.

The project will include two levels of parking, with 160 spaces, Metz said. Development costs will total around $15 million, including $1.45 million that Metz recently paid for the parcels, which total just more than 56,500 square feet, according to assessment records. The parcels were sold by Robert Page of Tampa, Fla.

The riverfront location will allow Metz to include boat slips and a riverwalk. Aside from being along the river, the location has the advantage of being near N. Humboldt Ave., which serves as a connector to the shops, restaurants and night clubs on nearby E. Brady St., Metz said.

"It's a phenomenal site," Metz said.

His other projects include the nearby Kane Place, which has 14 condos just south of E. Kane Place between Humboldt Ave. and Pulaski St. The units are nearly complete, with 13 of them already in the process of being sold, Metz said.

Metz said Kane Place also will have a street-level pizzeria that will be operated by Marc Bianchini, whose family also operates Osteria del Mondo and Cubanitas restaurants.

Metz's latest development marks yet another project for Commerce St., where numerous condo buildings have sprouted in recent years.

The current projects include The Edge, a 133-unit project that Chicago-based Tandem Developers LLC plans to build on 2 acres at 1890 N. Commerce St., just upriver from the Holton St. bridge. Tandem has been marketing those units since spring.

Legacy Real Estate Development LLC's 72-unit Union Point, which is bordered by Commerce St., Riverboat Road and Humboldt Ave., is nearing completion.

Also, the 21-unit Park Terrace row houses were recently developed by Vetter Denk Architects Inc. at 2001-2049 N. Commerce St. Just behind the row houses are 16 additional homes under construction.

Finally, Mandel Group Inc. continues development of the 75-unit Rivercrest project, on Commerce St., east of N. Humboldt Ave.


Jacksonville, Fla.'s Eagle Harbor to go Condo



 

A New York company is converting an Eagle Harbor apartment complex into condominiums. Tarragon Corp. will convert the 328-unit Vineyard at Eagle Harbor and sell the units at prices starting in the $120,000s.

The property, which is off County Road 220 in northern Clay County, will be renamed Cobblestone at Eagle Harbor.

The units will be available in one-, two- and three-bedroom configurations. Sales and marketing will be handled by Coldwell Banker The Condo Store.


Hollywood, Calif., Land Sells for $19.8Mln



 

Orest Mandzy

A Los Angeles development venture has paid $19.8 million for a collection of land parcels in Hollywood, Calif.

The venture, CSGF Pacific ABS Hollywood partners two developers with a financial partner and was arranged by Madison Partners of Los Angeles. Madison also arranged for the purchase of the three parcels, which total 2.3 acres and were acquired from from three separate owners.

The development venture is expected to construct a mixed-use project, which would include residential condominiums and retail space, on the site.

The three parcels, which are just west of the junction of Hollywood Boulevard and Western Avenue, are:

- 5512-20 Hollywood Boulevard, which was purchased from Holly Tree Village Partners and FLJC Co.;

- 5530 Hollywood Boulevard, purchased from a local partnership and

- 5544-50 Hollywood Boulevard, which was purchased from Alexander Becker Carpets Inc. and the Becker Revocable Trust.

Monday, July 24, 2006

For-Sale Signs Multiply Across U.S.



The housing market continues to weaken in much of the country as inventories of unsold homes rise and many sellers cut their asking prices, a quarterly survey by The Wall Street Journal shows.

There is no sign of a broad collapse of housing prices about a year after the once-hot coastal markets entered a long-anticipated cooling phase. But the general level of prices is edging down in some areas and leveling off in others, while the supply of homes for sale keeps rising.

The number of homes on the market in Orlando, Fla., for example, is nearly five times the year-earlier level, while the inventory has quadrupled in Phoenix and Tampa, Fla., and nearly tripled in the Washington, D.C., area.

In another sign of the housing market's growing weakness, the Commerce Department said housing starts fell 5.3% last month from May, to an annual rate of 1.85 million.

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Friday, July 21, 2006

Barnes & Noble Files Suit to Stop Mall's Residential Project



 
Barnes & Noble, a major tenant in Edina's Galleria shopping center, has gone to court to halt the development of a $100 million hotel and condominium high-rise on the parking lot of the mall.

In a suit filed in Hennepin County District Court, the Dallas-based bookseller says the development by Galleria owner Warren Beck threatens to alter the character of the mall and hurt its business. The suit says the development, called the Westin Edina Galleria Residences, violates the terms of the lease Barnes & Noble has had at the center since 1991. Among other things, it says the lease prohibits the shopping center site from having "living quarters, sleeping apartments or lodging rooms."

Hennepin County District Judge Charles Porter recently granted a request by Barnes & Noble that prohibits Beck from beginning work on the hotel and condo portion of the project, pending the outcome of a trial. Construction of the 18-story tower, which is to house a seven-story Westin Hotel and 11 floors of condos, has been scheduled to start late this year.

But Porter denied Barnes & Noble's request to also stop work underway on a parking ramp that is part of the project. The ramp is to be completed by early December, according to court documents.

In a phone interview Monday, Beck said he is "looking forward to proceeding with the project." He said about 60 percent of the 82 condo units have been reserved.

According to court documents, Beck is selling the condominium units with contingencies that would allow the purchase agreements to be canceled if the development isn't allowed to proceed.

The Westin is one of three hotels of that brand currently planned for the Twin Cities area by New York-based Starwood Resorts & Hotels. The others are to go into the former Farmers & Mechanics Bank Building in downtown Minneapolis and the proposed Bridges of St. Paul mixed-use project.

The court documents also say that if Beck were prevented from building the hotel and condo, he would consider other uses for the site, including an office tower or additional stores.

Thursday, July 20, 2006

Carley adds a partner to bolster spire deal



DAVID ROEDER

Since first revealing his alliance with architect Santiago Calatrava for a spired, 124-story building on the lakefront about a year ago, developer Christopher Carley has encountered plenty of skeptics. He's poised this week to strike a deal that will quiet some of them.

On Thursday, Carley is due to close on the acquisition of the property involved in the project. A source close to the situation said the land in the 400 block of East North Water Street, at its intersection with Lake Shore Drive, will sell for more than $60 million.

To close on the land, Carley has taken on a partner. The source said it is Shelbourne Development Ltd., based in Dublin, Ireland. The company has completed residential and commercial projects in Ireland, Great Britain and France.

Shelbourne's executive chairman is Garrett Kelleher, who, according to the company Web site, set up shop in Chicago in the 1980s to do loft conversions before returning to his native Ireland about 10 years later.

Terms of the partnership could not be learned, but the source said Carley will continue with day-to-day oversight of the project. "Shelbourne has a very large development group with deep strength in construction management," the source said.

It's possible Shelbourne could be a conduit for European investors. Carley, chairman of Fordham Co., has reported that about 20 percent of sales inquiries for what he's calling the Fordham Spire has come from overseas.

Reached Tuesday, Carley declined to comment. Plans call for the building to have 300 residential condominiums and 150 hotel units, some of which also may be sold. He has estimated the project's cost at $600 million, but materials costs are escalating quickly, and some experts believe Calatrava's unique, seemingly twirling design will be prohibitively expensive to build.

Carley is negotiating with hotel operators and project financiers. The source said Walsh Construction will be his general contractor and that the real estate firm Jones Lang La Salle Inc. is representing the project to lenders.

If completed as planned, the building would be the tallest in the United States but is not expected to be taller than the Burj Dubai office building under construction in the United Arab Emirates. The height of that Skidmore, Owings & Merrill LLP design is a state secret.

MANDARIN COMBAT: The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency said it's been trying to gain access to the future site of the Mandarin Oriental hotel at the northwest corner of Lake and Stetson. The EPA wants to check for thorium, a radioactive material that has turned up in Streeterville construction sites and in the Lakeshore East project. But the developers have denied access to the agency for about a year, said its spokesman, Mick Hans, and on-site coordinator Verneta Simon.

Construction magnate Gerard Kenny is president of the development firm that controls the site. Kenny said he has his own consultant checking for thorium and wants to present the findings to the EPA before opening the site to its inspection. So far, no thorium has turned up, Kenny said.

A spokesman for the city's Buildings Department said city agencies are trying to ensure the EPA gets access. The proposed 65-story Mandarin, while warmly praised by Mayor Daley, has yet to pass city planning review.

Thorium is no threat to most people, but could pose a hazard to construction crews. It has been traced to a manufacturer of lanterns in Streeterville during the early 20th century.

BUILDING ON BUILDERS: White Sox Chairman Jerry Reinsdorf and Robert Judelson, who used to be the "J" in the old JMB Realty Corp., are opening a third fund for their venture, the Fund for Builders LP. It buys model homes from developers, then sells them when the project is complete to cash in on appreciation. In about a year and a half, it has invested more than $40 million with six builders.

Also, Reinsdorf named his son, David, as the firm's vice president of asset management. A former LaSalle National Bank executive, David has more than 20 years' experience in residential construction and finance. Tim Lyons, formerly of Grubb & Ellis Co. and Balcor Co., was named chief financial officer.

CALENDAR NOTE: Here's a community-organizing idea others should try. The Streeterville Organization of Active Residents gathers Saturday with an aldermanic aide to walk the neighborhood and write down where public improvements are needed. They should note the missing street signs. SOAR will gather for breakfast at Max & Benny's 332 E. Illinois, and head out at 9 a.m.

DOING THE DEALS: Trammell Crow Co. arranged the $6 million sale of a 106,000-square-foot building at 1200 Business Center Dr., Mount Prospect. The tenant, Northfield Laboratories, bought it from First Industrial Realty Trust Inc.

Wednesday, July 19, 2006

New Study Pinpoints Top Places



Some of the nation's hottest housing markets are cooling, but the strength of the economy is balancing the risk of home-price declines, according to PMI Mortgage Insurance Co., which released its U.S. Market Risk Index on Tuesday.

The average risk score for the country's largest metropolitan statistical areas was 288 in the first quarter, one point up from the last quarter and 70 points up from a year ago. During the quarter, 25 metropolitan areas saw increases in risk, while 20 saw decreases.

Read more

Nicky Hilton to Launch Hotel Line



 

NEW YORK - Hilton Hotels Corp. heiress Nicky Hilton said Friday she is launching a line of hotels called "Nicky O" this November in Miami.

A Chicago location will follow. Designer Roberto Cavalli will design a 5,000 square foot penthouse suite at the South Beach, Miami hotel.

Suites will range from $300 a night to $5,000 a night.

Zilbert Realty Group in Miami is handling sales and marketing for the South Beach location, which is also offering 94 condo suites selling between $500,000 to $7 million.

Nicky Hilton is the granddaughter of William Barron Hilton and the great granddaughter of Conrad Hilton, who founded Hilton Hotel Corp. in 1946.

Hilton Hotels fell 65 cents, or nearly 3 percent, to $25.56 in midday trading on the New York Stock Exchange.

$500m downtown project gets initial OK



 
 
 
Prominent developer Ralph Sanchez and the principals of the Ponce Circle Development are sparing no expense in an attempt to get the $500 million Old Spanish Village project approved by the Coral Gables City Commission. And it appears to be working.

     At the July 11 meeting, developers presented videos, scores of printed materials (including a coffee table book) and had numerous consultants waxing poetic about the virtues of the massive 6.5 acre project which encompasses three full city blocks bounded by Ponce to the west, Galiano Street to the east, Palermo to the north and Malaga Avenue to the south.

     So far their efforts have paid off handsomely considering the city commission not only approved six applications, with 4-1 votes, to clear the way for the project (including the first reading of a change of land and zoning as well as a site plan review) at the meeting but even the sole commissioner who voted against the project, William Kerdyk, Jr., left the meeting impressed with the project's presentation.

     When the commission wasn't gushing in praise of Sanchez and the development effort, it was busy ignoring staff recommendation from Planning Director Eric Riel.

     Riel admitted that the project met several city objectives with its proposed planned area development (PAD) but that there were too many inconsistencies to allow it to move forward as is.

     Specifically, Riel said that the project did not sufficiently address traffic, parking and landscaping issues with enough zeal and provided too little green and open space.

     He also said the project did not address the issue of affordable housing which has been sorely lacking in the city.

     The director did present an alternative staff recommendation which would include 20 percent more green space, payment to mitigate the loss of 34 parking spaces and the addition of 75 more visitor parking spaces for the project, but that proposal was largely ignored by the commission.

     "The project is consistent with the Charrette and does include aspects to preserve historic buildings but mostly our objections come from the lack of open space, parking and other additional improvements," he said.

     In his closing remarks, Riel practically conceded defeat when he described the project  as a "good project" which probably would have received his staff's recommendation had it not been for a single family home smack dab in the middle of the project whose owner refused to sell to developers.

     Riel had as much luck convincing the seemingly awestruck commission to vote against the project as he had trying to do the same with the city's Planning and Zoning Board, when they approved the project 4-1 on June 14.

     After Riel had his chance, developers commenced their comprehensive presentation with historical expert Arva Moore Parks and architect Jorge Hernandez to sell the project.

     In researching the site of the project, which was once part of the historic Arts and Crafts Section of the City, and comparing them to current plans, Parks said that she was struck by a vision of the community that city founder George Merrick originally intended.

     Hernandez was equally effusive saying that Park's mere involvement in the projects spoke to the developer's vision.

     He went on to describe the specifics of the project saying it was broken down into four quadrants: the 2801 block which will include a 15-story building along Ponce, 6-story apartments buildings along Palermo and Sevilla Avenues and 3-story townhomes on Galiano Street; the 3001 block which will be built out nine stories throughout the front side with townhouses in the rear; the assemblage of townhouses along the southeast section of the project, all of which are three stories high; and the existing historic Arts Center Building which is being completely renovated.

     The project will include retail and commercial components along the ground floor of the Ponce buildings but is mostly residential in nature. The total development of the project is 895,815 square feet, slightly less than what developers say they could develop as of right commercially. There are a total of 458 units in the entire PAD.

     Developers said they agreed to add 50 parking spaces to the project bringing the total to 1070, almost 100 more than what was required by code.

     At the meeting developers also paraded out a virtual army of lawyers including two of the city's most experienced development lawyers, Laura Russo and Zeke Guilford, to make sure the project went through.

     Russo said the project used George Merrick's vision as its organizing principal while another heavyweight attorney Jeff Bass eviscerated Riel's claims that the project represented an example of spot zoning.

     "This is not spot zoning or reverse spot zoning and the fact that (Riel) anchored his comments (by saying that) means that he derived an erroneous legal conclusion and does not constitute a substantive professional (opinion)," Bass said.

     Mayor Don Slesnick acknowledged that he was troubled by staff's recommendation and the fact that its own board overruled its decision.

     "The Planning Department staff had their chance but that is not what Planning and Zoning Board wanted," the mayor said.

     Numerous citizens also chimed in with opinion on the project with most, including members of the Coral Gables Chamber of Commerce, expressing their support.

     Others, including Orlando Capote, owner of the single family home in the middle of the project, expressed reservations but even they did not seem to be put off by the project.

     Nearby resident Maria Puente said her biggest concern was the density and height of the proposed buildings and that some of the rendering put forth by developers were misleading in their scale. Still, Puente said the area was in need of revitalization and would be amenable to the project with some revisions.

     "The area could use some redevelopment and we do want it to grow but I think there needs to be a little more work," Puente said.

     As the discussion on the developer's applications dragged on, the commission's eventual approval seemed more and more likely.

     "I came to terms with the fact that the city is changing a long time ago," said Vice Mayor Maria Anderson. "It's not 'if' we are going to grow it's how we are going to grow."

     I think this is a catalytic project and it is going to change the city in a very positive way."

     While Kerdyk was impressed with aspect of the project and the lengths that developers went to the sell their vision, his troubles with the project's density would not allow him to give his support.

     The commissioner also feared that the conversion of single family homes to commercial might set a dangerous precedent in the city.

     "I can't recall that it ever happened here. Philosophically I have an issue with that. If developers can come in and rezone property what's to stop them from doing it (elsewhere)," Kerdyk said.

     Like Riel, Kerdyk acknowledged that aspects of the project were positive but insisted that a project of this magnitude should be driven by the city not a developer.

     "I want the dog to wag the tail - not the tail to wag the dog," he said.

     Commissioner Ralph Cabrera agreed in theory but said that reality teaches a different lesson.

     "You're right, we should do it, but guess what we didn't. And somebody with vision and the financial resources did," he said.

Tuesday, July 18, 2006

Consumer interest in second homes grows



 

When it comes to second homes, Americans remain fairly bullish, with sizable numbers saying they plan to purchase second homes soon and wouldn't mind flying -- not driving -- to reach them, according to findings of a new consumer survey by HomePages.com, operated by HouseValues.

The HomePages.com survey of more than 1,300 adult consumers found that 21 percent say they are considering purchasing a second home within a year, while another 42 percent said they're considering buying within the next two to six years.

Interestingly, nearly one-third (29 percent) of those considering purchasing second homes don't consider its proximity to their current homes a major factor, saying they'd be willing to fly to reach them.

"Vacation and investment homes remain a strong and prominent part of the real estate market, both as a means of providing an escape and providing supplemental short-term and long-term income," said Ian Morris, chief executive officer of HouseValues.

Indeed, a quarter (25 percent) of respondents said they are considering a second home for investment purposes, while 22 percent said they wanted one for "enjoyment" such as weekend getaways, vacations and family use.

In terms of proximity to geographic features, 40 percent of respondents said features such as water or mountains would not be a factor because "it's an investment property." Among those who do consider geography an important factor in where they buy, 36 percent listed proximity to water as key, followed by mountains (17 percent), golf courses (5 percent) and the desert (2 percent).

Although 29 percent said they would be willing to fly to reach a second home, the largest percentage -- 43 percent -- said they'd prefer it be within a one-hour drive of their primary residence. Nineteen percent said they'd be willing to drive up to two hours, while 9 percent said they'd be willing to make up to a six-hour drive.

Asked what factor would most likely cause them not to buy a second home, 32 percent of respondents listed rising home prices, followed by rising mortgage rates (18 percent) and job insecurity (12 percent). Thirty-eight percent listed a variety of other factors.

The online survey respondents comprised 65 percent women and 35 percent men visiting HomePages.com and JustListed.com. The survey was the latest in an ongoing series of informal polls conducted by HouseValues via the company's national HomePages.com consumer real estate Web service.

Monday, July 17, 2006

Federal Trade Commission - Competition in the Real Estate Marketplace

Federal Trade Commission - Competition in the Real Estate Marketplace

A federal site where you can report unfair practices in the real estate industry.

Friday, July 14, 2006

Chicago Condo Towers Proposed



DAVID ROEDER

The winning bidders for the Scottish Rite block on the Near North Side are showing development plans to the neighbors. The scenario calls for two condo towers on the block's parking lot and preservation of the buildings that occupy the rest of it, including a former cathedral at 929 N. Dearborn.

Mike Skatulski, senior managing director at Mesirow Financial Real Estate, said the towers would be about 30 stories tall and together include 450 to 520 units. Lower floors would be set aside for commercial space and for parking that can't be seen from the street, he said.

The Mesirow division, run by veteran developer Richard Stein, has joined with Enterprise Cos. in agreeing to pay more than $50 million for the block, bounded by Walton, Delaware, State and Dearborn. The seller is the Scottish Rite, a fraternal organization.

Skatulski said the project won't be as tall or dense as others being added to the Near North Side. He hopes the somewhat reduced scale and a commitment to preserve the existing structures, all of which go back to the 19th century, will ease the way politically. The cathedral could be donated to a nonprofit group, and one prospect Skatulski identified is the Newberry Library, which is immediately west of the site.

Representatives of some community groups were briefed about the plans Tuesday night. Skatulski said Chicago's Pappageorge/Haymes Ltd. will provide the architecture.

PITTSFIELD PLAN: Add the landmark Pittsfield Building, 55 E. Washington, to the list of downtown office edifices whose owners are considering new uses. Sources said the building, popular with doctors and dentists, is relocating tenants on seven or eight floors to free space in hopes of landing a hotel. Those floors could be sold while ownership keeps the rest of the building.

Built in 1927, the Pittsfield has undergone recent renovations to its lobby and elevators. It was running about a 25 percent vacancy rate before the hotel idea came along. But one wonders how many boutique hotels downtown can stand. The building owner, Miami Beach-based investor Robert Danial, could not be reached.

LEGAL LEASE: The law firm Barack Ferrazzano Kirschbaum Perlman & Nagelberg LLP has leased the top six floors at 200 W. Madison, taking 97,000 square feet in the building owned by Tishman Speyer Properties and Transwestern Investment Co. The firm signed a 15-year lease and is moving from 333 W. Wacker.

LINCOLN LODGE: Spiffier rooms and higher prices are in the offing for the old Days Inn of Lincoln Park, 1816 N. Clark. WexTrust Capital bought it last January for $15.5 million and plans a renovation to take it upscale. The first part of the project is ditching the Days Inn tie. It is being renamed, inaccurately, the Gold Coast Hotel and management has been turned over to Portfolio Hotels and Resorts. WexTrust is looking for a prestigious restaurant to take the ground-floor space.

LOCATION, LOCATION: Duke Realty Corp. is starting construction on an 88,000-square-foot industrial building at 11501 W. Irving Park in Chicago. It's just outside O'Hare Airport's south cargo entrance, and Duke believes it won't be long before its first building inside city limits will have tenants.

"With more than 1 million square feet of industrial product being condemned in the O'Hare Modernization Program, demand for first-generation space near the airport is increasing," said Andy James, senior vice president at Duke. Completion is due in the spring. Colliers Bennett & Kahnweiler Inc. is the leasing agent.

EAST LOOP LIFE: The British-style pub and grub chain Elephant & Castle is taking ground-floor space in Village Green Cos.' renovated apartment building at 185 N. Wabash. It will be the chain's third Chicago location and expands the drinking and dining options for the growing residential district of the East Loop.

DOING THE DEALS: Maurice Fisher, known for his involvement with major malls in the Chicago area, heads a partnership that has purchased the old Ethan Allen Furniture building at 820 E. Roosevelt, Wheaton. The 20,000-square-foot building will be converted into a retail and office center. Champion Realty Advisors LLC brokered the sale. . . . TCB Development Co. acquired a 21-acre business park at 600 Territorial Drive, Bolingbrook, for $7.2 million. The deal includes a 97,000-square-foot building and two 7-acre sites suitable for development. The campus, formerly owned by Molex Inc., can accommodate up to 300,000 square feet. . . . CB Richard Ellis Inc. represented Kester, a supplier of electronic connectors, in its relocation from Des Plaines to 64,000 square feet at 800 W. Thorndale in Itasca, where the company signed a 10-year lease. . . . Owners of the Inn of Chicago, 162 E. Ohio, will re-light the hotel's rooftop sign July 20 as part of a party heralding a planned renovation.

Hotel, Condo Building Planned for Downtown Chicago



By TOM DAYKIN

A Florida-based hotel developer is proposing a nine-story building with 120 extended-stay hotel rooms and 18 residential condominiums in downtown Milwaukee's largest night life area.

The $20 million development, which would include 10,000 square feet of street-level restaurant and retail space and one level of underground parking, is planned for the southeast corner of N. Water St. and E. Juneau Ave. The site, now a parking lot, is just north of the former Brew City Bar-B-Q building, 1114 N. Water St., which is being converted into a Bar Louie restaurant and tavern.

The project is being proposed by Development Opportunity Corp. of Fort Myers, Fla.

"We feel there is a demand for additional extended-stay rooms," said Phil Hugh, president of Development Opportunity and its affiliated hotel management firm, DOC Hospitality.

The hotel's rooms would be marketed to people staying in Milwaukee during corporate training assignments, those needing a place to stay while relocating to the Milwaukee area, and vacationers looking for larger rooms, Hugh said. All the rooms will be suites, with stoves, microwaves and refrigerators, he said.

The hotel might use the Staybridge Suites brand, Hugh said. That brand is owned by Intercontinental Hotels Group, which also owns Holiday Inn, Hotel Indigo, Candlewood Suites and other brands.

Development Opportunity is discussing financing options with various lenders, Hugh said. He hopes to begin construction by October and complete the project by January 2008.

Hugh's firm is working on the project with a local investors group, Market Street Partners II LLP, which owns lots at 1124 N. Water St. and 223 E. Juneau Ave.

Market Street wants to buy adjacent lots, totaling about 9,200 square feet, from the city's Redevelopment Authority to create a 30,200-square-foot development parcel. The authority will review that $443,340 purchase offer at its Thursday meeting, said Andrea Rowe Richards, spokeswoman for the Department of City Development.

Hugh is a former senior vice president at New York-based Cendant Corp., which owns several hotel brands, including Ramada, Howard Johnson and Super 8.

Development Opportunity, which Hugh started nearly three years ago, is renovating a 123-room hotel in Fort Myers, which is scheduled to reopen in August as a Holiday Inn. Development Opportunity also is developing a 62-room Hotel Indigo in Fort Myers, a 24-room boutique hotel in Pittsburgh and an 86-room Candlewood Suites in the Pittsburgh area.

The Staybridge Suites plan is the latest of several downtown hotel proposals that have surfaced recently as business travel has increased.

Others include developer Doug Weas' plans for a 150-room Renaissance ClubSport by Marriott, part of an 18-story mixed use project, at the southeast corner of N. Broadway and E. St. Paul Ave., in the Historic Third Ward.

Also, Chicago developer Richard Curto wants to build a 125-room boutique hotel and a 140-room hotel catering to business travelers as part of his mixed-use developments east of N. Water St. and north of E. Ogden Ave., in the Park East area.


Condo Market Freeze Causes Multifamily Sales to Hit Brakes



 

By Jillian S. Ambroz

The multifamily investment sales market is slowing down after a fierce run-up that was fueled largely by condominium converters.

But interest in rental properties remains strong and is expected to strengthen.

The month of May marked the first time in five years that the sector saw a decline in sales deals for two consecutive months. About $3.8 billion in apartment sales closed in May - a 30 percent drop from a year ago, according to Real Capital Analytics. For the year so far, the market has seen a 14 percent increase in sales. But that can be attributed to several REIT mergers and portfolio acquisitions.

The condo-conversion market has become downright frigid. The number of units selling for conversions is off by more than 90 percent from the peak in September 2005 when 111 properties totaling 27,784 units sold for a total of just over $4 billion, according to Real Capital, a New York research firm.

By comparison, May saw 19 properties with 2,706 units slated for conversion trade for a total of $334.3 million. That's a nearly 50 percent plummet from April, when 25 properties sold for a combined $655.8 million.

"The condo craze has quietly come to a virtual halt," Jay Massirman, a vice chairman with CB Richard Ellis' multifamily group in Miami, said. "There are some projects that are still viable, but many of the investors and speculators have backed off the market."

There are a lot of reasons for the sea change. Perhaps the biggest is lackluster consumer demand for units. Other reasons include higher interest rates, which have had a big impact on converters' ability to go through with their proposed projects as well as consumers' ability to finance the purchase of units; higher insurance and construction costs.

The condo craze in Florida began about five years ago. The drop-off started about five months ago in cities like Miami and Ft. Lauderdale, Rosendo Caveiro, a director with Cushman & Wakefield's Miami office, said.

The Florida market is looking at some 60,000 units statewide that are in some mode of condo conversion, Massirman said. Some of those could end up becoming for-rent apartments. Others simply won't be completed.

Lenders have become far more stringent in providing debt. "If they do loan money for building new luxury condos, the developer will not have to just provide reservations, they'll want contracts with real money," Caveiro said.

Meanwhile, high construction costs have put a damper on the development of new rental projects, in Florida and elsewehere.

In the first quarter, 11,221 units were completed, according to Reis, down from 21,637 a year ago. Meanwhile, 14,351 units were converted to condos. That compares with 25,770 units that were converted a year ago. The result is that the nationwide inventory has stayed flat at 8.9 million units.

So the national vacancy rate has improved, to 5.6 percent in the second quarter from 6.4 percent last year, according to Reis.

The average national effective rent grew to $936/unit in the second quarter, a roughly 4.5 percent increase from a year ago, according to Reis Inc.

So investors remain hot for rental properties.

Take San Francisco, which is still in recovery mode. Not too long ago, properties with condo maps in place were a hot commodity. That's no longer the case.

"The yield threshold for the converter has gone up substantially," said Phil Saglimbeni, a broker with Marcus & Millichap's Palo Alto, Calif., office. "The apartment guys are getting the deals. There's more perceived risk in selling to converters," he said.

Archstone-Smith, for example, has been among those actively pursuing rental properties. It just acquired a 322-unit complex in Fremont, Calif., for $79.6 million. It also paid $120 million for the Key West apartments in Manhattan and $165 million for the Marlborough House in Manhattan. Both New York deals were brokered by Douglas Harmon of Eastdil Secured.

"Any drift apparent in cap rates since the beginning of the year for solid conversion candidates has been almost entirely offset by increasing rental rates, and a broader and deeper worldwide appetite for large, stable, rental properties or portfolios," Harmon said. He added that high-end condo opportunities "have not lost any of their luster," while the "the condominium bloom fades from the rose of more pedestrian rental properties."

In New York, rents are higher and have increased even more than elsewhere in the country. Rents stood at $2,370/unit in the first quarter, up 6.2 percent from the same period a year earlier, according to Reis.

"New York rents have exploded," said Richard Bassuk, president of The Singer & Bassuk Organization, a Manhattan mortgage broker.

So lenders, which have become conservative when it comes to financing condo deals, are aggressive when courting rental transactions. "Lenders are willing to finance a much broader spectrum of developers doing residential rental development," Bassuk said. "This willingness to provide financing for rental projects has caused many developers to re-evaluate their plans to see whether once again residential rental development is attractive."

Condo-office conversion planned



 


A Brickell Avenue office building hit hard by Hurricane Wilma will be sold and converted into office-condominiums, adding to a growing trend in South Florida's commercial real estate market.

Developer Edgardo Defortuna, who made his name building and selling residential condos, has agreed to pay $68.5 million for the 20-story, 235,532-square-foot Colonial Bank Centre building at 1200 Brickell Ave. in Miami.

The deal, expected to close within the next two months, would be Defortuna's second office-condo conversion and the third on Brickell Avenue in three years. The others are 1000 Brickell and Defortuna's 1110 Brickell.

''I am positive the demand is there [for office-condos],'' from users and investors, said Defortuna, who heads Fortune International in Miami. He said 1110 Brickell is sold out.

``The buyer who used to buy a residential condo as an investment to rent is now switching to office or commercial space because they are concerned about overbuilding in the residential market.''

In recent years developers increasingly have bought office buildings and divided them into individual condo units for sale, primarily targeting small and medium-sized businesses whose space needs are largely fixed and business owners from Latin America, where it is more common to own office space.

Their pitch: It's better to build equity -- particularly when interest rates are relatively low and property values may increase -- than pay rent. They also argue buying eliminates the risk of rising lease costs.

But the concept remains untested in South Florida over the long haul. Many companies -- especially large ones -- prefer paying rent because it allows them to expand and contract as business needs dictate.

For now, planned or already completed office-condo conversions account for about 11 percent of the market, according to commercial real estate brokerage CB Richard Ellis. The firm notes many of the planned conversions may never happen.

The largest office-condo conversion announced to date -- the 21-story, 295,000-square-foot SBS Tower in Coconut Grove.

''I don't think it will be a flash in the pan,'' said Hank Bush, principal with Miami's Bush Development, an active office-condo converter in South Florida. ``It will never be 60 percent of the market, but I think it will be a significant component.''

Colonial Bank Centre, meanwhile, suffered extensive damage following Hurricane Wilma last year. The high winds punched out numerous windows in the tower that has Morton's Restaurant on its ground floor.

Defortuna said the windows are being fixed, and all repairs must be finished before closing.

Tenants include Kroll, an international investigations firm, and real estate development company Terra Group.

''1110 Brickell was a tremendous success for us,'' said Defortuna, referring to his first office-condo conversion. ``We are finished with that building, and now this one is double its size.''




 

Construction Costs Stall Many Las Vegas Condo Projects



 

Rising land and construction costs have created major barriers for entry into the Las Vegas high-rise luxury condominium market, giving early projects such as SoHo Lofts, Panorama and Sky Las Vegas a clear advantage over newcomers, executives of two projects under construction said.

Anything built on or around the Strip is going to sell for $1,300 to $1,500 a square foot, said David Pourbaba, president of Sky Las Vegas, which recently topped out construction of its 45-story tower next to Circus Circus.

"They will be priced to make the land and construction cost work," he said. "It's all relative. People pay $2,000 and $3,000 a foot in New York and London."

At the end of the second quarter, there were 246 existing luxury condo units on the market for resale at an average price of $1.1 million, or $631 a square foot, local research firm Applied Analysis reported. Units sold during the quarter averaged $787,000, or $459 a foot.

A market snapshot shows 135 projects with 91,934 units proposed for Las Vegas, including 2,321 existing units, 1,379 canceled units and 6,888 suspended units. About 13,500 are under construction and 16,286 are planned and pre-selling.

"From our perspective, it's nice to be on the front end of that wave," said Dusty Allen, managing member of the 275-unit Streamline tower being built by Martin-Harris Construction at Las Vegas Boulevard and Ogden Avenue.

Of the 15,811 units proposed for downtown Las Vegas, about 900 are under construction, he estimated. They include Streamline, SoHo Lofts, Newport Lofts and Juhl.

Among the projects that have been announced for downtown but have yet to break ground are Club Renaissance, Sandhurst, Cielo Vista, Liberty Tower and Gateway Las Vegas.

"The price per square foot to build has gone up significantly," Allen said. "Fortunately, we were able to lock in our construction prices early and provide a price-per-square-foot basis lower than $600. We still have some units priced under $500 a square foot."

Pourbaba estimated that hard costs for construction of Sky Las Vegas, with M.J. Dean as general contractor, have risen 8 percent to 10 percent to about $200 million. "What do they say? It ain't over till the fat lady sings," he said.

A lot of predevelopment planning went into the project, including purchasing steel and concrete at prices from two years ago, Pourbaba said. As a result, few changes were made to the plan.

Most of the projects canceled in Las Vegas were due to lack of construction companies capable of doing the job, not lack of buyers, he said.

Certainly, there is insufficient demand to absorb all of the luxury condo units in the pipeline, Applied Analysis principal Brian Gordon said. Observers have predicted that 25 percent to 50 percent of the proposed units will get built.

"While projects that are currently under construction have reached the critical mass in terms of sales to provide sufficient financing, the remaining 16,300 units vying for potential buyers will either prove their ability to move forward in the next 12 months or not," Gordon said. "Construction cost dynamics and consumer perceptions about extended sales periods decrease the likelihood for success for many of these projects."

Location, branding and experience remain keys to success, Gordon said. Projects announced by major operators and development companies are likely to enter the market with greater success.

Nearly 40,000 units in the pipeline are categorized as the hybrid condo-hotel and maintain some sort of rental program. About 70 percent are located around the Strip, including The Residences at MGM, Platinum, Project CityCenter and Cosmopolitan.

Thursday, July 13, 2006

2-tower plan surfaces for Scottish Rite block



 

BY DAVID ROEDER

The winning bidders for the Scottish Rite block on the Near North Side are showing development plans to the neighbors. The scenario calls for two condo towers on the block's parking lot and preservation of the buildings that occupy the rest of it, including a former cathedral at 929 N. Dearborn.

Mike Skatulski, senior managing director at Mesirow Financial Real Estate, said the towers would be about 30 stories tall and together include 450 to 520 units. Lower floors would be set aside for commercial space and for parking that can't be seen from the street, he said.

The Mesirow division, run by veteran developer Richard Stein, has joined with Enterprise Cos. in agreeing to pay more than $50 million for the block, bounded by Walton, Delaware, State and Dearborn. The seller is the Scottish Rite, a fraternal organization.

Skatulski said the project won't be as tall or dense as others being added to the Near North Side. He hopes the somewhat reduced scale and a commitment to preserve the existing structures, all of which go back to the 19th century, will ease the way politically. The cathedral could be donated to a nonprofit group, and one prospect Skatulski identified is the Newberry Library, which is immediately west of the site.

Representatives of some community groups were briefed about the plans Tuesday night. Skatulski said Chicago's Pappageorge/Haymes Ltd. will provide the architecture.

PITTSFIELD PLAN: Add the landmark Pittsfield Building, 55 E. Washington, to the list of downtown office edifices whose owners are considering new uses. Sources said the building, popular with doctors and dentists, is relocating tenants on seven or eight floors to free space in hopes of landing a hotel. Those floors could be sold while ownership keeps the rest of the building.

Built in 1927, the Pittsfield has undergone recent renovations to its lobby and elevators. It was running about a 25 percent vacancy rate before the hotel idea came along. But one wonders how many boutique hotels downtown can stand. The building owner, Miami Beach-based investor Robert Danial, could not be reached.

LEGAL LEASE: The law firm Barack Ferrazzano Kirschbaum Perlman & Nagelberg LLP has leased the top six floors at 200 W. Madison, taking 97,000 square feet in the building owned by Tishman Speyer Properties and Transwestern Investment Co. The firm signed a 15-year lease and is moving from 333 W. Wacker.

LINCOLN LODGE: Spiffier rooms and higher prices are in the offing for the old Days Inn of Lincoln Park, 1816 N. Clark. WexTrust Capital bought it last January for $15.5 million and plans a renovation to take it upscale. The first part of the project is ditching the Days Inn tie. It is being renamed, inaccurately, the Gold Coast Hotel and management has been turned over to Portfolio Hotels and Resorts. WexTrust is looking for a prestigious restaurant to take the ground-floor space.

LOCATION, LOCATION: Duke Realty Corp. is starting construction on an 88,000-square-foot industrial building at 11501 W. Irving Park in Chicago. It's just outside O'Hare Airport's south cargo entrance, and Duke believes it won't be long before its first building inside city limits will have tenants.

"With more than 1 million square feet of industrial product being condemned in the O'Hare Modernization Program, demand for first-generation space near the airport is increasing," said Andy James, senior vice president at Duke. Completion is due in the spring. Colliers Bennett & Kahnweiler Inc. is the leasing agent.

EAST LOOP LIFE: The British-style pub and grub chain Elephant & Castle is taking ground-floor space in Village Green Cos.' renovated apartment building at 185 N. Wabash. It will be the chain's third Chicago location and expands the drinking and dining options for the growing residential district of the East Loop.

DOING THE DEALS: Maurice Fisher, known for his involvement with major malls in the Chicago area, heads a partnership that has purchased the old Ethan Allen Furniture building at 820 E. Roosevelt, Wheaton. The 20,000-square-foot building will be converted into a retail and office center. Champion Realty Advisors LLC brokered the sale. . . . TCB Development Co. acquired a 21-acre business park at 600 Territorial Drive, Bolingbrook, for $7.2 million. The deal includes a 97,000-square-foot building and two 7-acre sites suitable for development. The campus, formerly owned by Molex Inc., can accommodate up to 300,000 square feet. . . . CB Richard Ellis Inc. represented Kester, a supplier of electronic connectors, in its relocation from Des Plaines to 64,000 square feet at 800 W. Thorndale in Itasca, where the company signed a 10-year lease. . . . Owners of the Inn of Chicago, 162 E. Ohio, will re-light the hotel's rooftop sign July 20 as part of a party heralding a planned renovation.

L.A. Mixed-Use Project Gets Recap



 

The Ratkovich Co. has recapitalized The Alhambra, a 1 million-square-foot mixed-use development outside of Los Angeles in a deal valued at more than $200 million.

The Los Angeles developer is partnering with AIG, which is taking out the stake that Connecticut General Life Insurance Co. had in the 45-acre property. And Goldman Sachs has agreed to provide $130 million in financing.

In addition, a $6.15 million loan was placed on the property's retail component, The Shops at The Alhambra, a 17,693-sf neighborhood center. The financing was arranged by Holliday Fenoglio Fowler LP, which also arranged the equity recap along with Grubb & Ellis.

Three years ago, Connecticut General Life had purchased a stake in the property for $27.5 million. IStar Financial had provided $87 million in debt.

The property at 1000 South Fremont Ave. in the city of Alhambra, consists of six mid-rise office structures. It was developed in 1999 as the headquarters for CF Braun Engineering. Now, tenants include a mix of commercial, public sector and education companies such as the USC Keck School of Medicine, Tenet Healthcare and the L.A. County Sheriff's Department.

The Shops at The Alhambra is connected to the main campus by a pedestrian bridge. Retail tenants include Starbucks, Jamba Juice, Subway and Pick-Up Stix. Overall, the property is more than 95 percent leased.

The new venture plans to add a residential component to the property. Plans call for more than 300 condominiums and townhouses, plus a state-of-the-art L.A. Fitness Center gym. In addition, there are seven acres that can be developed in the future.

Wednesday, July 12, 2006

Inman News - Real Estate News and Advice for Buyers, Sellers & Investors


South Koreans bullish on U.S.


With the blessing of their government, South Koreans are accelerating the pace of investment in U.S. companies and real estate. In the first three months of 2006, South Koreans invested $570 million in America, compared to $1.27 billion in all of 2005. The South Korean government has eased restrictions on citizens' overseas investments in the hopes of keeping the won from gaining too much on the dollar, the Wall Street Journal reports (if the won gets too pricey, that could hurt Korea's exports to the U.S.).

It's hard to say how much Koreans are spending on U.S. real estate, as opposed to stocks and other investments, but the Journal reports that more than half the buyers at a new 344-unit luxury condo on the Hudson River in West York, N.J. hail from the land of kimchi and Hyundai. Korean investors think the dollar will strengthen, and that even though the U.S. housing market has cooled they'll get better returns than in Korea, where taxes on real-estate profits discourage investment.
--Matt Carter, Inman News

Are There Enough Buyers to Go Around? - New York Times

Are There Enough Buyers to Go Around? - New York Times


July 9, 2006
Are There Enough Buyers to Go Around?
By JOSH BARBANEL

CONDOMINIUMS have become a familiar sight in Manhattan in the last couple of years, punctuating the skyline from Battery Park to Harlem and most neighborhoods in between.

But as these condos are marketed — each carrying sky-high prices and a competitive list of amenities — and still more are breaking ground, it is hard not to wonder whether there are enough buyers to go around.

Not only are there thousands of condos currently on the market, but a review of building plans submitted by developers to the state attorney general's office shows that this building binge has not yet slowed down and may produce a supply of new apartments that could be around for a while.

So far, applications have been submitted for more than 24,000 condominium apartments since January 2004, 7,000 of them in the first half of this year alone. This increase in filings comes as supply in the current market has been rising steadily, with broker listings nearly doubling since 2004. And since many developers list only a sampling of apartments in new buildings, the numbers of apartments available for sale is probably significantly larger than the inventory listed with brokers.

Still, despite caution by some lenders and some customers, many others, including condo developers, brokers and buyers who are still signing contracts and putting down hefty deposits, say they have an abiding faith in the resilience of the market in Manhattan.

Sales slowed sharply at the beginning of the year, when buyers hesitated because of the uncertainty about the direction of housing prices. But now brokers say that the pace is picking up, and they are seeing a slow but steady stream of visitors to sales offices and of contracts signed for new apartments.

Asking prices on new developments are no longer rising sharply, but confounding skeptics, they have remained fairly steady, at prices that are higher than buyers ever imagined five or 10 years ago. Developers say they are, for the most part, holding the line on prices, convinced that they have produced the right product for the right market.

"How strong is the market for $2 million apartments? Extraordinarily strong," said Gary Barnett, the president of Extell Development, which is currently marketing six condominium projects across Manhattan. "The market for $3 million and $4 million apartments is strong, too."

He said that the rising prices for land, soaring construction costs and careful reviews by lenders would eliminate weaker projects now under development, especially those by inexperienced developers, limiting the growth in supply over the next few years.

Jeffrey Jackson, the president of Mitchell, Maxwell & Jackson, an appraisal company, said he had been consulted on half a dozen projects that may be postponed or converted to rentals.

The Manhattan market is subject to the same laws of supply and demand as the rest of the country. But the bullish view of the Manhattan real estate market is based on the belief that it is unique. The first tenet is that it is a magnet for wealth from across the country and around the world. The second tenet is that there is a strong demand for larger apartments with higher ceilings, open views and well-designed kitchens and bathrooms — the type of apartments that have not been built in large numbers in a generation.

While rising interest rates may reduce the purchasing power of middle-income buyers, the market for the affluent will remain strong, brokers say, as the local economy remains solid; incomes for hedge fund managers, investment bankers and law partners remain high; and buyers from across the globe continue to view New York as a good place to invest.

"There is a tremendous amount of demand, and there is little housing in New York," said Stephen G. Kliegerman, the director of marketing development for Halstead Property. "There is a desire to live in New York City, and as fuel costs go up, even more people will want to live here."

Or as Mr. Barnett of Extell put it, "New York is the epicenter of the world, and everybody wants to own something here."

Of course, even the Manhattan market has had its low points. Park Avenue palaces faced foreclosure in the Depression, and town houses on the West Side sold for a pittance in the 1950's. In the 1980's, after a wave of apartment construction and conversions, many developers faced foreclosure. And the terrorist attack in 2001 sent rumbles through the market.

Frederick W. Peters, the president of Warburg Realty, said that he had experienced several downturns over the decades and likened the experience to driving off a cliff. And he does not see that occurring now. "The fact that we have experienced minimal price growth for a year suggests that the market has slowed down," he said. "The 'driving off a cliff' experience doesn't seem to be happening."

Jonathan J. Miller, an appraiser and the president of Miller Samuel, said he believed that many prospective buyers were ready to act but were holding back because of market uncertainty. At the same time, he said, Manhattan developers were holding the line on prices, confident that the new condos were worth their high prices.

"There are a lot of buyers, with money to spend, on the sidelines," Mr. Miller said.

Susan Petri, who works in communications for American Express, said that she and her husband have been shopping for a condo and that they found the same high prices at every place they looked. "This is New York — the demand will always exceed the supply," she said. "Everyone wants to live here."

But her husband, Roland, was more skeptical. They are trying to decide whether to settle in New York, where she now works, or in Scottsdale, Ariz., where he practices emergency medicine. He observed that the amenities touted in buildings in Manhattan were not that different from those found in new homes in Scottsdale and wondered whether they should wait to see if prices came down.

Julia Bohan said she carefully researched the housing market, systematically comparing prices per square foot, before signing a contract a few weeks ago to buy an apartment at the Ariel East, one of the two glass towers facing each other across Broadway at 99th Street. But in the end, she said she relied as much on intuition as cold, hard facts.

Two years had passed since her husband died, and she was in contract to sell their Upper East Side apartment, with a wraparound terrace and park views. The sale price was high enough to enable her to spend about $2 million at the Ariel for about 2,000 square feet of space, and put away some money for tuition, too. The apartment had lots of space at a better price than she found elsewhere in Manhattan.

"It is scary to do it alone after being married for 15 years," she said, "But I really feel confident that it is a solid investment. And it feels right, too.

During the years when prices were rising sharply and apartments were scarce, buyers were conditioned not to ask for concessions. If the price was too high, they would walk away. Today, Mr. Miller has this advice to buyers: "Always try to negotiate. Developers may be more open than in past years to negotiating. You have to ask."

Pamela Liebman, the president of the Corcoran Group, agreed but added that the developer's response would depend on "the mind-set of the building, how the building is doing."

"We have buildings where we have not done one penny of negotiation," she said.

During the ultrahot seller's market a few years ago, some developers would submit weekly or even daily amendments to offering plans, raising prices on new condominiums. Price increases come less frequently now, and a few developers have filed amendments lowering prices, though they attribute that to pricing errors, rather than to a faltering market.

At the Avery, which Extell is building on Riverside Boulevard at West 65th Street, buyers learned that many of the closing costs would be picked up by the developer, up to a total of 3.7 percent of the purchase price. But that's down from the 5 percent offered a few months ago.

Mr. Barnett, the Avery's developer, said that close to half of the apartments were now sold and as sales continued, help with closing costs would end entirely.

At 170 East End Avenue, Skyline Developers' 19-story glass tower near 87th Street, brokers were saying earlier this year that sales were slow. Orin Wilf, Skyline's president, disputed this but added, "We have been negotiable on our prices."

"We feel that our sales have been very steady because we are willing to work with customers," he said. "If a customer walks into our sales office and wants to spend $5 million on an apartment, and the apartment they want is $5.4 million, over 99 percent of the time the deal gets done."

He said that he had not offered to pay closing costs and expects prices to tighten in the future. "At almost 50 percent sold, we plan on doing less negotiations and more selling at higher prices."

When sales were slow at the Ariel East, Extell filed an amendment with the attorney general lowering prices on 42 apartments, with cuts ranging from $5,000 to $260,000 for one sixth-floor apartment. But prices on some upper-floor apartments were raised.

Mr. Barnett said that the price cuts were made because apartments in the Ariel West building had been selling faster, and that he wanted to encourage buyers to consider Ariel East. He said that when the price changes at the two condominiums were combined, prices actually went up.

At another smaller project, the Abbey, a former parish building on East 16th Street being converted to condominiums, most of the apartments sold for the asking price, or close to it. But according to property records, one apartment, a duplex on the top two floors, sold at a discount of $500,000, or about 27 percent below the asking price. Eight of 31 apartments are still listed as available.

The developer, Herbert Hirsch, said that he became convinced that a sloping triangular roof limited the use of some of the top floor of the duplex, so he reduced the price to account for this. He said buyers were out there looking but were worried by press accounts about the market and were postponing purchases.

"From the developers' standpoint the market talks to you," he said. "The market tells you what your property is worth, to the extent that people come through and love your product and pay the prices."

The New York Times reviewed condominium plans for larger projects — those with at least 30 units or those valued at more than $20 million — filed with the attorney general's office, which oversees all co-op and condominium offering plans for their compliance with state laws. But in addition to apartments, the listings of condominium units provided by the state often included retail stores, storage lockers and parking spaces, sometimes even wine cellars. So to get an accurate estimate of the number of apartments in the pipeline, those filings were compared with records from the New York City Buildings Department.

The review found that applications for 24,400 apartments in 240 larger projects in Manhattan and 5,000 apartments in 75 projects in Brooklyn had been submitted since January 2004. Of these, by the middle of June more than 13,000 had been approved for sale in Manhattan and 2,900 in Brooklyn. It is not known how many of these apartments were actually built and, if built, how many have been sold.

What is known is that the 24,400 applications far exceed the number of apartments actually on the market.

Last week, a report by Prudential Douglas Elliman put the current inventory at 7,640 apartments, both co-ops and condominiums, up from 3,922 in 2004. In recent years, the total number of annual apartment sales in Manhattan has been estimated at 10,000 to 12,000.

The filings with the attorney general's office also show that many newer projects, including conversions of rental buildings, are also in the works. There were 10,800 apartments in large Manhattan projects still awaiting approval for sale, including the 7,250 apartments in 59 projects submitted this year. About 2,300 apartments in Brooklyn are also awaiting approval for sale. If all these apartments are actually built, they could weigh on the market for several years to come.

But many developers said they believed that the condominium market was beginning to correct itself, and that the weakest projects may never get built. Banks, worried about overbuilding, have tightened up on financing. The boom in construction has pushed up land prices and construction costs, making fewer projects profitable.

In the meantime, some developers are not cutting prices no matter what. At 165 Charles Street, Izak Senbahar thought he had his finger on the pulse of the market when he put up a 16-story glass building designed by Richard Meier along the Hudson River, next door to two other Meier projects, and set prices as high as $20 million for the 31 apartments.

But last October, after about half the building was in contract, sales stalled. Not a single contract was signed for about six months, until April 2006.

Mr. Senbahar received a series of offers below the asking prices and could have sold out long ago, said James Lansill, a senior managing director of the Sunshine Group, which is marketing the building. Even brokers urged him to cut his prices, but he would not.

"He placed his bet and stuck with his bet," Mr. Lansill said. "He had a belief in his goal that is unwavering. He just said when the building is completed, people are going to come and buy this."

After vacant apartments were used for an exhibition of modern furniture earlier this year, sales took off once more, Mr. Lansill said. Since April, he said, five apartments have been sold, leaving five apartments available.

Two of those five apartments are being combined into a larger unit, he said, and a price increase was just filed with the attorney general's office.