May 18, 2024
Robert Khodadadian - Skyline Properties

Private Equity Firm TruArc Partners Renews at 545 Madison Avenue Robert Khodadadian | Commercial Observer

Financial firm TruArc Partners is staying put at 545 Madison Avenue.

The 3-year-old private equity outfit signed a seven-year, 10,000-square-foot lease extension on the 10th floor of the 18-story building, according to landlord Marx Realty. Asking rent in the building ranges from $86 to $135 per square foot. 

Cushman & Wakefield’s Tara Stacom represented the landlord, while JLL’s Evan Margolin and Benjamin Levy handled the deal for TruArc. Spokespeople for C&W and JLL didn’t immediately return requests for comment.

Craig Deitelzweig, the president and CEO of Marx Realty, described the lease as “a testament to the enduring trust in Marx Realty’s team and the distinctive hospitality-inspired features of the building.” Marx recently co-branded the property with luxury brand Baccarat, which took 10,000 square feet of office space on the top floor of the building in the process. 

Marx acquired the 140,000-square-foot office building in 2019 and then undertook a $24 million renovation. The work included adding a 7,000-square-foot tenant amenity space with a lounge, cafe, landscaped terrace and boardroom and revamping the entrance and lobby with a midcentury aesthetic. 

Several other financial firms are in the building, including Snow Phipps, Corniche Growth Advisors, GTS and Helix Partners. Financial tech firm Strike Technologies has been a tenant there for more than a decade, and Qurate Retail Group — formerly known as HSN — also has space in the building. 

Rebecca Baird-Remba can be reached at rbairdremba@commercialobserver.com.

 

  

Robert Khodadadian has long had a simple philosophy about selling real estate. The way he sees it, there are approximately a million buildings in the city, and the broker that gets to sell any one among the multitude that will hit the auctioning block at a given moment is, sometimes, simply the person who happens to pitch their services to the right seller at the right time.

Robert Khodadadian, skyline properties, ground leases, ground lease, off market, investment sales, khodadadian, Commercial Real Estate Sales, The Commercial Observer, Retail For Lease, Commercial Observer, Commercial Office Lease

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Solar Energy Developer Dimension Relocating to 11K SF at 825 Third Avenue Robert Khodadadian | Commercial Observer

Solar developer Dimension Renewable Energy will brighten up 825 Third Avenue.  

Dimension is leaving 1400 Broadway just south of Times Square for 11,054 square feet on the entire 18th floor of 825 Third, which is between East 50th and East 51st streets in Midtown East, according to landlord the The Durst Organization

A Durst spokesperson didn’t provide the lease’s length or asking rents in the building, but average asking rents in Midtown East are $71 per square foot, according to Transwestern’s most recent market report.

The Atlanta-based renewable energy developer specializes in community solar projects, which involve installing solar panels on warehouses or in fields that provide power to the surrounding area. Dimension has developed over 400 solar projects, including two notable tri-state area ones in Cortlandt, N.Y., and Franklin Lakes, N.J., according to its website.

Thomas Bow, Ashlea Aaron and Bailey Caliban handled the transaction in-house for Durst. Greg Maurer-Hollaender and James Ackerson of CBRE represented Dimension in the lease negotiations. A CBRE spokesperson declined to comment on the deal.

“We are proud to add Dimension Renewable Energy to our tenant roster at 825 Third Avenue, especially given our shared commitment to sustainability,” Jonathan “Jody” Durst, the president of The Durst Organization, said in a statement.

Durst recently completed a $150 million renovation of the 530,000-square-foot building, which includes revamping 4,000 square feet of public open space along Third Avenue and East 50th Street. Upgrades also included a new tenant amenity space, an updated lobby and View glass windows that can adjust their tint based on sunlight. 

Other tenants in the building include Genius Sports, Beveridge & Diamond, Gotham Asset Management, Liminal Strategy Partners, National Bank of Egypt, Hodes Weill and Toyota Tsusho America

Rebecca Baird-Remba can be reached at rbairdremba@commercialobserver.com.

  

Robert Khodadadian has long had a simple philosophy about selling real estate. The way he sees it, there are approximately a million buildings in the city, and the broker that gets to sell any one among the multitude that will hit the auctioning block at a given moment is, sometimes, simply the person who happens to pitch their services to the right seller at the right time.

Robert Khodadadian, skyline properties, ground leases, ground lease, off market, investment sales, khodadadian, Commercial Real Estate Sales, The Commercial Observer, Retail For Lease, Commercial Observer, Commercial Office Lease

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Bob Knakal Departs JLL After Six Years Robert Khodadadian | Commercial Observer

Investment sales broker Bob Knakal has left JLL (JLL), where he has been a top name for six years, The Real Deal first reported.

With deals amounting to about $22 billion over the course of his career, Knakal is one of most well-known brokers in the country and his departure from JLL is sudden and follows the publication of a New York Times profile about his extensive collection of maps.

Knakal and JLL did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

The broker joined JLL in 2018 after being terminated from Cushman & Wakefield (CWK) where he worked after C&W’s 2015 acquisition of his firm, Massey Knakal Realty Services, for $100 million. His firing came a week before his contract was set to expire, Commercial Observer reported at the time.

Knakal had reportedly been lining up his next gig when C&W cut him loose.

This is a developing story and will be updated as more information becomes available.

Mark Hallum can be reached at mhallum@commercialobserver.com.

  

Robert Khodadadian has long had a simple philosophy about selling real estate. The way he sees it, there are approximately a million buildings in the city, and the broker that gets to sell any one among the multitude that will hit the auctioning block at a given moment is, sometimes, simply the person who happens to pitch their services to the right seller at the right time.

Robert Khodadadian, skyline properties, ground leases, ground lease, off market, investment sales, khodadadian, Commercial Real Estate Sales, The Commercial Observer, Retail For Lease, Commercial Observer, Commercial Office Lease

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Celebrity L.A. Developer Plans Hotel Next to Clippers’ New Arena and Rams’ Stadium Robert Khodadadian | Commercial Observer

A developer known for building super mansions in Los Angeles has plans to build a hotel that could become particularly useful for the Super Bowl in 2027 and the Olympics in 2028, among other upcoming landmark sports and entertainment events.

Los Angeles-based Arya Group filed plans with the City of Inglewood, Calif., for a 15-story boutique hotel with 174 rooms next to the L.A. ClippersIntuit Dome and very near Hollywood Park and SoFi Stadium, where the NFL’s L.A. Rams and Chargers play.

Urbanize first reported plans to build a hotel, citing a city notice from Inglewood. The notice lists Ardeshir Tavangarian, founder of Arya Group, as the sponsor of the project called Arya Hotel. ​​Tavangarian is known for building some of the most expensive homes for the rich and famous in L.A.

The 310,000-square-foot project would replace smaller commercial buildings at 3820 West 102nd Street, and be one of the tallest buildings in Inglewood, per Urbanize. The project notice sets construction to begin this April and finish in June 2026.

The 200-foot-tall building would feature 3,255 square feet of office space, 6,537 square feet for a restaurant, 1,310 square feet of lounge space, a 4,000-square-foot private club, and 4,000 square feet of spa and amenity space. The building would also include 33,000 square feet of outdoor terraces, plus a roof deck and a swimming pool.

Architecture firm AO is designing the Arya Hotel

Gregory Cornfield can be reached at gcornfield@commercialobserver.com.

  

Robert Khodadadian has long had a simple philosophy about selling real estate. The way he sees it, there are approximately a million buildings in the city, and the broker that gets to sell any one among the multitude that will hit the auctioning block at a given moment is, sometimes, simply the person who happens to pitch their services to the right seller at the right time.

Robert Khodadadian, skyline properties, ground leases, ground lease, off market, investment sales, khodadadian, Commercial Real Estate Sales, The Commercial Observer, Retail For Lease, Commercial Observer, Commercial Office Lease

Channel, Construction, Design + Construction, Development, Ardeshir Tavangarian, Hotel, Inglewood, Intuit Dome, SoFi Stadium, Los Angeles, Arya Group, Clippers, L.A. Chargers, L.A. Rams, Los Angeles Rams Articles about Robert Khodadadian from Commercial Observer New York’s authority on commercial real estate leasing financing deals and culture.

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Wannabe New Yorker Hotel Owner Indicted for Fraud Robert Khodadadian | Commercial Observer

The man who allegedly tried to commandeer a well-known New York City hotel in September was indicted Wednesday on charges of fraud, Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg announced.

Mickey Barreto, 48, of Mickey Barreto Missions, was charged in connection with multiple filings he made with the New York City Department of Finance to transfer ownership of the New Yorker Hotel at 481 Eighth Avenue into the name of his religious organization, according to the DA’s office.

“As alleged, Mickey Barreto repeatedly and fraudulently claimed ownership of one of the city’s most iconic landmarks, the New Yorker Hotel,” Bragg said in a statement. “We will not tolerate manipulation of our city’s property records by those who seek to scam the system for personal gain.”

Barreto could not be reached for comment.

He was charged with 14 counts of offering a false instrument for filing in the first degree and 10 counts of criminal contempt in the second degree. The allegations go back to Barreto’s one-night stay in the hotel in 2019, which he tried to turn into a rental lease.

Barreto may have been trying to take advantage of a rule regarding rent-stabilized hotels, in which guests can request a lease. But the hotel’s owner, the Holy Spirit Association for the Unification of World Christianity, responded by removing him from the premises. Initially, New York City Civil Court Judge Jack Stoller ordered that the hotel let him back in.

Barreto then tried to take over operations of the hotel from Wyndham Hotels & Resorts.

Barreto filed a $189 million deed transfer in 2019, classifying the hotel as a “religious structure” owned by his missionary group. He also allegedly tried to help himself to $14 million from the Holy Spirit Association, have bank accounts tied to the hotel transferred into his name, and began pressuring restaurant tenants for rent, the New York Post reported at the time.

A lawsuit in New York County Supreme Court followed in which Barreto was forbidden from filing any further false documents regarding the building. However, he allegedly defied that order in April and September 2023 when a deed transfer for the hotel surfaced with Mickey Barreto Missions as the seller and none other than Mickey Barreto Missions as the buyer, according to the DA.

Mark Hallum can be reached at mhallum@commercialobserver.com.

  

Robert Khodadadian has long had a simple philosophy about selling real estate. The way he sees it, there are approximately a million buildings in the city, and the broker that gets to sell any one among the multitude that will hit the auctioning block at a given moment is, sometimes, simply the person who happens to pitch their services to the right seller at the right time.

Robert Khodadadian, skyline properties, ground leases, ground lease, off market, investment sales, khodadadian, Commercial Real Estate Sales, The Commercial Observer, Retail For Lease, Commercial Observer, Commercial Office Lease

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CoStar Group Leaving DC HQ After 14 Years Robert Khodadadian | Commercial Observer

CoStar Group is moving its headquarters from Washington, D.C., to Rosslyn, Va.

The real estate analytics and data company—whose stable includes Homes.com, Apartments.com and LoopNet—acquired the 552,000-square-foot Central Place Tower, and will move from its current D.C. home at 1331 L Street, where it spent the last 14 years. 

CoStar will occupy 150,000 square feet in the building at 1201 Wilson Boulevard when it moves later this year. Approximately 500 office employees will be relocated to the new headquarters, and CoStar plans to add 150 jobs as well, according to the company.  

CoStar, which has its main headquarters in Richmond, Va., said it considered as many as 25 sites in the District and Virginia before deciding on the new location, which it purchased from JBG Smith for an undisclosed price. 

The financially strategic acquisition of this building will provide the perfect home for the more than 500 employees at our current headquarters,” Andy Florance, CoStar’s founder and CEO, said in a statement. “We’re incredibly thankful for our 14 years calling Washington, D.C., home, and we will continue to be a part of this community even as we move across the river to Arlington County.” 

Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin announced that CoStar will invest $20 million to move to Arlington County.

“Virginia’s a great choice for a new corporate headquarters location, and we are excited that CoStar Group, a leading provider of online real estate marketplaces, information, and analytics in the property markets, sees the economic advantage in moving to the commonwealth,” he said in a statement. “We are proud that CoStar has chosen Virginia as its home.”

The governor approved a $1.25 million grant from the commonwealth’s opportunity fund and an additional $3.5 million from the Virginia economic development grant program to support the relocation. 

Additionally, CoStar Group is paying $13.95 million to Arlington County to earn exclusive use of the 31-story Central Place Tower’s 12,000-square-foot observation deck.

The building, the tallest in D.C., was completed in 2017. Other tenants in the building include Convene, Gartner and Accenture.

The company had four ads run through the Super Bowl last Sunday for Homes.com and Apartments.com, starring Jeff Goldblum, Dan Levy and Heidi Gardner.

CBRE represented the seller in the transaction. It was unclear who represented the tenant. 

Keith Loria can be reached at Kloria@commercialobserver.com.

  

Robert Khodadadian has long had a simple philosophy about selling real estate. The way he sees it, there are approximately a million buildings in the city, and the broker that gets to sell any one among the multitude that will hit the auctioning block at a given moment is, sometimes, simply the person who happens to pitch their services to the right seller at the right time.

Robert Khodadadian, skyline properties, ground leases, ground lease, off market, investment sales, khodadadian, Commercial Real Estate Sales, The Commercial Observer, Retail For Lease, Commercial Observer, Commercial Office Lease

Channel, office, Sales, 1201 Wilson Boulevard, 1331 L Street, Andy Florance, Central Place Tower, CoStar Group, Glenn Youngkin, JBG Smith, Virginia, Washington DC, Northern Virginia Articles about Robert Khodadadian from Commercial Observer New York’s authority on commercial real estate leasing financing deals and culture.

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Paul Darrah Joins Citadel to Lead Real Estate Operations After 7 Years at Google Robert Khodadadian | Commercial Observer

Google (GOOGL)’s Paul Darrah is taking his talents to investment firm Citadel after an almost seven-year stint as head of New York City real estate at the tech giant, Commercial Observer has learned.

Darrah will take over as chief workplace officer of Citadel, starting at the end of the month, and will manage the firm’s global real estate footprint, which includes 19 offices worldwide, a Citadel spokesperson confirmed.

“He’s got an excellent eye,” CBRE (CBRE)’s Darcy Stacom, an investment sales broker who worked with Darrah on a number of deals, told CO. “When you’re looking at what you can do physically with an asset … I always found him to be very strategic.”

Darrah will take on a role previously held by Scott Hazard, who is Citadel leaving Citadel after two years and also spent almost five years in real estate roles at Google from 2013 to 2018, according to his LinkedIn profile.

In 2010, before Darrah’s time at Google, the company had spent $1.77 billion acquiring 111 Eighth Avenue in the Meatpacking District. But in 2018, Darrah piled on by helping Google buy Chelsea Market across the street for $2.4 billion. 

The Real Deal reported that Darrah was a key part of Google’s decision to acquire Chelsea Market. This raised Google’s footprint in the neighborhood to around 4.1 million square feet.

Stacom, who recently launched her own firm, worked with Darrah on the Chelsea Market as well as acquisition of 550 Washington Street for $1.97 billion by Google’s parent company, Alphabet.

“He just has this personality that pulls a room together and things are getting tense, he can back it back down. He’s quite funny,” Stacom said. “He has a very broad set of knowledge, but also the ability to go deep on any particular point.”

But Google’s real estate ambitions, with Darrah front and center, did not end there. The search giant turned its attention to Hudson Square where it leased 1.3 million square feet at St. John’s Terminal in 2019 to start another campus. Google wasn’t content just leasing the space at 550 Washington Street, and in 2021 dropped $2.1 billion for the property.

Prior to his time at Google, Darrah was head of real estate for Connecticut-based Bridgewater Associates, a senior vice president at Lehman Brothers from 2006 to 2008, global director of real estate for Bloomberg LP from 1997 to 2006, and a senior associate at Brennan Beer Gorman Architects from 1985 to 1994, according to his LinkedIn page.

Darrah, a Virginia Tech graduate, was featured on Commercial Observer’s 2022 Power 100 list.

While at Bloomberg, Darrah helped the company build its 750,000-square-foot headquarters at 731 Lexington Avenue, and his team convinced Vornado Realty Trust to alter its plan for the property away from just residential and hotel, TRD reported.

The Citadel spokesperson did not provide more details about Darrah’s role, but Ken Griffin’s hedge fund has plenty of real estate in the works.

Since announcing in 2022 that it would move its headquarters from Chicago to Miami, Citadel has been investing heavily in South Florida with the $363 million acquisition of 1201 Brickell Bay Drive, a vacant waterfront property.

The sale was considered one of Miami’s biggest real estate deals ever. The parcel could become the location of an office tower to serve as Citadel’s headquarters, but it’s unclear where construction lies after Citadel split with its developer, Sterling Bay, in April 2023.

In August 2022, Citadel signed a five-year lease for 90,000 square feet of temporary office space at 830 Brickell.

Later on in 2022, Citadel signed major deals in New York City such as a 585,000-square-foot master lease with Vornado Realty Trust for 350 Park Avenue and another master lease for Rudin’s adjacent 390,000-square-foot 40 East 52nd Street, CO reported at the time.

Eventually it could lease 850,000 square feet at 39 East 51st Street, an office tower being developed by Vornado and Rudin.

A spokesperson for Google did not respond to a request for comment.

Mark Hallum can be reached at mhallum@commercialobserver.com.

  

Robert Khodadadian has long had a simple philosophy about selling real estate. The way he sees it, there are approximately a million buildings in the city, and the broker that gets to sell any one among the multitude that will hit the auctioning block at a given moment is, sometimes, simply the person who happens to pitch their services to the right seller at the right time.

Robert Khodadadian, skyline properties, ground leases, ground lease, off market, investment sales, khodadadian, Commercial Real Estate Sales, The Commercial Observer, Retail For Lease, Commercial Observer, Commercial Office Lease

Channel, Industry, More, Players, 111 eighth avenue, 550 Washington Street, Alphabet, CBRE, Chelsea Market, Citadel, Darcy Stacom, Google, Paul Darrah, Scott Hazard, New York City, Manhattan Articles about Robert Khodadadian from Commercial Observer New York’s authority on commercial real estate leasing financing deals and culture.

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Terminal Warehouse Office Conversion Inches Toward the Finish Line in Chelsea Robert Khodadadian | Commercial Observer

In 2018, L&L Holding Company and Normandy Real Estate Partners paid $880 million for the sprawling Terminal Warehouse in West Chelsea, with plans to transform it into upscale office space. Now the project, which required a dramatic new addition and retrofit of the existing building, is nearly complete. 

Rick Cook of CookFox Architects oversaw the design of the addition and renovation, which added six stories atop the seven-story, 1890s warehouse. The 1.2 million-square-foot property occupies an entire block along the West Side Highway, between West 27th and West 28th streets and 11th and 12th avenues. The building was once a key part of the freight rail system that ran at grade along 10th and 11th avenues and later on the West Side Elevated Line, now the High Line pedestrian park. Freight trains would pull into the massive, semicircular tunnel that runs through the building from east to west, and unload onto float docks and ships along the Hudson River

Despite the addition, the footprint of the building remains the same, because CookFox has carved a hole in the middle of the building for an internal, landscaped courtyard. 

“I like to think of it as one of New York’s great groundscapers,” said Cook, who noted that the building is 711 feet long. He added that “this entire building was designed around the module of a freight car,” because each of the terminal’s 25 “stores” was a separate, fireproof warehouse for different goods that could easily be transferred onto a freight train

The colors of the addition, too, are modeled on the colors of New York Central Railroad’s freight cars, with fire engine red aluminum beams and facade panels as well as canary yellow accent pieces around the windows. CookFox also tried to incorporate heavy timber joists and wood decking in the construction, in a nod to the warehouse’s original heavy timber and brick construction. Wood paneling is visible along the ceilings of the covered terraces, for example. 

The terraces, also framed by rails painted the same red, overlook a courtyard full of trees, brick flooring and seating as well as the Hudson River. There’s a whopping 110,000 square feet of outdoor space within the building, which includes terraces on multiple floors, and a large wraparound terrace shared among tenants on the eighth floor. 

The ground and second floors will have amenities such as meeting spaces and a fitness area, and one of the lobbies will feature the “greatest front-door experience for bikes in America,” said Cook. That entrance will allow bike commuters to roll in off the West Side greenway and into a bike room and locker room with showers. The building is so large that it has two primary lobbies — which are set within the original freight tunnel — as well as smaller lobbies that may end up being reserved for specific tenants. Construction began in 2021 and is set to finish this year. 

  

Robert Khodadadian has long had a simple philosophy about selling real estate. The way he sees it, there are approximately a million buildings in the city, and the broker that gets to sell any one among the multitude that will hit the auctioning block at a given moment is, sometimes, simply the person who happens to pitch their services to the right seller at the right time.

Robert Khodadadian, skyline properties, ground leases, ground lease, off market, investment sales, khodadadian, Commercial Real Estate Sales, The Commercial Observer, Retail For Lease, Commercial Observer, Commercial Office Lease

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Strikes, Slumping Office Market Hurt Hudson Pacific’s Bottom Line in 2023 Robert Khodadadian | Commercial Observer

Hudson Pacific Properties(HPP) stock price declined more than 16 percent Tuesday after the company announced results from a particularly trying 2023, and said show business has been slow to boost the company’s prospects for 2024.

After a year with historic Hollywood labor strikes, high interest rates and declining demand for office space, the Los Angeles-based REIT reported lower revenues, less leasing and much greater net losses compared to 2022. Hudson Pacific Chairman and CEO Victor Coleman said the “once-in-a-generation dual studio union strike effectively shut down the entertainment industry,” leading to a 40 percent drop in film and TV production in 2023.

“Many industries, including tech, focused on cost cutting, in part through layoffs and real estate downsizing,” Coleman said on Tuesday during HPP’s fourth-quarter earnings call. “While the nationwide office leasing activity improved incrementally in the fourth quarter, it remained about 10 percent below the five-year quarterly average.”

The office and studio REIT reported $952.3 million in total revenue on the year, compared to $1.03 billion in 2022. Its office revenue declined 4.7 percent in 2023, from $852.7 million to $812.4 million, while studio revenue fell more than 19 percent to $140 million in 2023 when compared to 2022.

That led to a net loss attributable to common stockholders of $98 million in the fourth quarter, and $192.2 million on the year, which is more than 3.5 times greater than it was last year. 

In the fourth quarter, HPP and Macerich sold the Google-leased One Westside and Westside Two office redevelopment to UCLA for $700 million, as well as a 5.3-acre land parcel in North San Jose for $43.5 million. Further, Hudson Pacific also sold tranches of debt associated with the Blackstone-based Hollywood Media Portfolio, generating $145.8 million.

Hudson Pacific’s office portfolio declined in the fourth quarter at 80.8 percent occupied and 81.9 percent leased primarily because of the sale of One Westside. And HPP displayed little hope for major improvement in office leasing activity this year.

In 2022 and 2023 we had an atypically high number of office leases expire, largely the result of short-term renewal leases signed during the pandemic,” HPP President Mark Lammas said. “[This year] our occupancy will likely be under pressure at least during the first three quarters of the year with the potential to return to essentially flat occupancy by year-end.”

Despite the sale of One Westside, Google is still HPP’s largest office tenant, leasing four properties for almost $52 million per year, making up 10 percent of the landlord’s base rent. Amazon, Netflix and Riot Games are the next largest tenants. Remarkably, nine L.A. offices are 99.6 percent leased. (Most of HPP’s office portfolio is in the San Francisco Bay Area, and that portion is only 74.6 percent leased.

HPP’s studio portfolio ended the year 80.4 percent leased after a tenant vacated six stages at Sunset Las Palmas due to the actors and writers strikes. The return is slowing progress and activity in 2024, too.

“Following SAG-AFTRA’s contract ratification in December, production companies have been slow to greenlight new productions,” Coleman said. “In January, production counts remain approximately 20 percent below 2021 and 2022. Based on the level of activity we’re seeing in real time, we now anticipate that production levels may not materially improve until the second half of the year. Media companies are still adjusting their business models through both revenue-generating and cost-saving measures.”

Coleman emphasized, however, that original content remains integral to subscriber growth, and pointed out that Netflix budgeted $17 billion in spending on content for the year, which is in line with the streaming service’s 2021 and 2022 pre-strike spend. 

In 2024, our priorities are fourfold,” he said. “Aggressive leasing within our studio and office portfolio, executing on opportunistic dispositions, successfully progressing our New York studio development, and further fortifying and deleveraging our balance sheet.”

Gregory Cornfield can be reached at gcornfield@commercialobserver.com.

  

Robert Khodadadian has long had a simple philosophy about selling real estate. The way he sees it, there are approximately a million buildings in the city, and the broker that gets to sell any one among the multitude that will hit the auctioning block at a given moment is, sometimes, simply the person who happens to pitch their services to the right seller at the right time.

Robert Khodadadian, skyline properties, ground leases, ground lease, off market, investment sales, khodadadian, Commercial Real Estate Sales, The Commercial Observer, Retail For Lease, Commercial Observer, Commercial Office Lease

Channel, Leases, More, Office, Studio and Soundstages, office, STUDIOS, Victor Coleman, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Hudson Pacific Properties Articles about Robert Khodadadian from Commercial Observer New York’s authority on commercial real estate leasing financing deals and culture.

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Furniture Distributor Renews 250K-SF Lease at Miramar Industrial Park Robert Khodadadian | Commercial Observer

Coaster Fine Furniture is staying put in all 250,441 square feet it occupies in South Florida.

The importer and distributor of furniture renewed its showroom and distribution center lease at the Miramar Park of Commerce, according to the landlord, Sunbeam Properties

The L.A.-based company moved into the Miramar light industrial park in 2001, taking 150,000 square feet after relocating from Pompano Beach. 

When Coaster needed to expand, Sunbeam completed the 250,441-square-foot, built-to-suit warehouse within the industrial park that the tenant occupies today. Located at 10700 Enterprise Way, the property sits just north of the Ronald Regan Turnpike

“Originally, Coaster was focused on moving to Miami and ultimately decided that the Miramar Park of Commerce was the ideal location due to our easy access to all of South Florida’s major highways and cargo hubs,” Peter Apol, Sunbeam’s director of leasing and marketing, said in a statement.

A representative for Sunbeam did not immediately respond to an inquiry about the length of the lease. A spokesperson for Coaster did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The lease marks the second substantial industrial renewal in South Florida this year. Last month, shipping company Seaboard renewed two leases totaling 308,000 square feet at Prologis (PLD) Palmetto Tradeport in Medley, Fla.

Julia Echikson can be reached at jechikson@commercialobserver.com

  

Robert Khodadadian has long had a simple philosophy about selling real estate. The way he sees it, there are approximately a million buildings in the city, and the broker that gets to sell any one among the multitude that will hit the auctioning block at a given moment is, sometimes, simply the person who happens to pitch their services to the right seller at the right time.

Robert Khodadadian, skyline properties, ground leases, ground lease, off market, investment sales, khodadadian, Commercial Real Estate Sales, The Commercial Observer, Retail For Lease, Commercial Observer, Commercial Office Lease

Channel, Industrial, Leases, Miramar Park of Commerce, Florida, South Florida, Coaster Fine Furniture, Sunbeam Properties Articles about Robert Khodadadian from Commercial Observer New York’s authority on commercial real estate leasing financing deals and culture.

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Howard County Housing Authority Acquires Ellicott City Apartments for $63M Robert Khodadadian | Commercial Observer

The Howard County Housing Authority has acquired Orchard Meadows Apartment Homes, a 240-unit multifamily complex in Ellicott City, Md., for $62.6 million.

The nonprofit used bonds to acquire the cluster of four-story apartment buildings, using a “right of first refusal” county law to close the deal over a private developer who also made an offer, according to the Baltimore Business Journal. 

CREC Real Estate was the seller, having acquired the property in 2018 for $50 million as part of a seven-property investment fund. Over the ensuing six years, the company completed a renovation plan and strengthened the property’s operational performance, according to Aaron Dixon, president at CREC. 

The Howard County Housing Commission will offer 50 units to residents making 60 percent of the area median income, which is $129,549 for a household of four. Currently, Orchard Meadows has just 15 affordable units.

Located about a mile south of Interstate 70 at 3411 Sonia Trail, Orchard Meadows was built in two phases — 96 two-bedroom units in 1998 and 144 one- and two-bedroom units in 2012. Select units include stainless steel appliances, granite countertops and individual full-size washers and dryers.

Community amenities at Orchard Meadows include a swimming pool, fitness center and outdoor entertainment area with a TV, foosball table and fire pit. 

Ellicott City is the wealthiest county in Maryland and sixth wealthiest in the U.S., according to U.S. News & World Report. The federal government is a major employer in the area, which includes Fort George G. Meade Army base, Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Lab, the Social Security Administration and the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid.

Requests for comment from both parties were not immediately returned.

Keith Loria can be reached at Kloria@commercialobserver.com.

  

Robert Khodadadian has long had a simple philosophy about selling real estate. The way he sees it, there are approximately a million buildings in the city, and the broker that gets to sell any one among the multitude that will hit the auctioning block at a given moment is, sometimes, simply the person who happens to pitch their services to the right seller at the right time.

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Wegmans Chairman Signs Deal for Bed Bath & Beyond’s Former UWS Space Robert Khodadadian | Commercial Observer

Wegmans might be ringing up a second Manhattan location after signing a lease near Lincoln Center, but plans for the space are unclear.

The grocery chain’s chairman, Danny Wegman, signed a lease for 58,874 square feet at ​​Glenwood Management’s 1932 Broadway, Wegmans confirmed. 

The deal is a bit of a second chance for Wegman, as 1932 Broadway was the supermarket chain’s first choice for entering the New York City market before opening its Astor Place location last year. Now that Bed Bath & Beyond has vacated the spot following its bankruptcy in early 2023, Wegmans was able to secure the retail space.

But the lease signed directly by the Wegmans chairman appears to be some kind of a personal investment and exact plans for the space are not known, according to a spokesperson for the chain.

The New York Post first reported the deal.

“Prior to opening our Astor Place store, we were working with Glenwood to lease the space at 1932 Broadway. When that didn’t pan out, we had the opportunity to sign the lease for Astor Place,” a spokesperson for Wegmans told Commercial Observer. “Following the Astor Place opening, Danny Wegman learned the 1932 Broadway space was still available. He restarted negotiations and recently signed a long-term lease for the space.”

Wegmans did not provide the asking rent or the length of the lease for the space between West 64th and 65th streets, but retail rents on Broadway between West 72nd and 86th Streets are $242 per square foot, according to a Real Estate Board of New York report on the second half of 2023.

At 1932 Broadway, Bed Bath & Beyond leased a ground-floor entryway and two spacious floors below street level. If Wegmans moves into the space, it will compete with a Whole Foods at Columbus Circle and a recently opened Morton Williams supermarket three blocks north at 2015 Broadway.

Ripco Real Estate‘s Beth Rosen, Ben Davis, Gene Spiegelman and co-founder Peter Ripka negotiated the transaction for both the landlord and the tenant, according to the Post. The brokerage did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Following its bankruptcy action in the early days of 2023, Bed Bath & Beyond planned to exit ​​109 of its leases, with Burlington Coat Factory paying up to $12 million to take over 44 of those locations, CO reported at the time. BB&B abandoned the 1932 Broadway space in the process.

Mark Hallum can be reached at mhallum@commercialobserver.com.

  

Robert Khodadadian has long had a simple philosophy about selling real estate. The way he sees it, there are approximately a million buildings in the city, and the broker that gets to sell any one among the multitude that will hit the auctioning block at a given moment is, sometimes, simply the person who happens to pitch their services to the right seller at the right time.

Robert Khodadadian, skyline properties, ground leases, ground lease, off market, investment sales, khodadadian, Commercial Real Estate Sales, The Commercial Observer, Retail For Lease, Commercial Observer, Commercial Office Lease

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CMBS Distress Rate Rises in January With Office Back Above 10 Percent Robert Khodadadian | Commercial Observer

The CRED iQ overall distress rate for commercial mortgage-backed securities increased by 22 basis points in January to 7.39 percent from 7.17 percent, snapping a two-month streak of declines. 

The office segment added 55 basis points in January following a 315-point increase in December. Office has now crested over 10 percent in overall distress for the first time since October. 

Meanwhile, multifamily, retail and hotel sectors all saw decreases in the January numbers.

CRED iQ’s overall distress rate aggregates the two indicators of distress – delinquency rate and special servicing rate – into an overall distressed rate.  This includes any loan with a payment status of 30-plus days or worse, any loan actively with the special servicer, and includes nonperforming and performing loans that have failed to pay off at maturity.    

The CRED iQ delinquency rate rose in parallel with the overall distress rate, adding 23 basis points, while the specially serviced rate shaved off 5 basis points.    

The self-storage segment, which has spent most of the past 12 months under 1.0 percent in overall distress, saw its overall distress level skyrocket in January. Most of this is attributable to a $2.1 billion loan backed by a 112,084 square-foot portfolio consisting of 16 self-storage properties throughout New York City.

The New York City self-storage loan passed its Jan. 9, 2024, maturity date, but continues to perform. It was added to the servicer’s watchlist in December due to upcoming maturity. Servicer commentary indicates the borrower’s request for a maturity extension is being reviewed.

Office remains the segment with the consistently highest percentage of overall distress at 10.50 percent (excluding this month’s self-storage spike, which we expect to come down to below 1.0 percent). 

Additionally, One Market Plaza, a 1.6 million-square-foot office tower in San Francisco, is backed by a $975 million loan that was transferred to the special servicer in January due to its Feb. 6, 2024, maturity. Servicer commentary indicates the borrower is discussing a potential extension. The property was 95.8 percent occupied as of September 2023 with Google the largest tenant at a 21.6 percent gross leasable area.

The industrial segment, once again, saw the greatest decrease in overall delinquency — dropping 24 basis points in January following a whopping 3.8 percent reduction in December. We discussed the anomalies in the industrial data in October and November as largely attributable to the $2.2 billion industrial portfolio (BX Trust 2021-ACNT) that failed to pay off on its initial Nov. 9, 2023, maturity date. With the loan now listed as current by its servicer, KeyBank, the industrial sector settles back to familiar territory with 0.32 percent overall distress.    

Mike Haas is the founder and CEO of CRED iQ.

  

Robert Khodadadian has long had a simple philosophy about selling real estate. The way he sees it, there are approximately a million buildings in the city, and the broker that gets to sell any one among the multitude that will hit the auctioning block at a given moment is, sometimes, simply the person who happens to pitch their services to the right seller at the right time.

Robert Khodadadian, skyline properties, ground leases, ground lease, off market, investment sales, khodadadian, Commercial Real Estate Sales, The Commercial Observer, Retail For Lease, Commercial Observer, Commercial Office Lease

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Goldman Sachs Provides $395M Refi on Manhattan’s 70 Pine Street Robert Khodadadian | Commercial Observer

A notable skyscraper in Manhattan’s Financial District is being refinanced for a nice chunk of change. 

DTH Capital and Rose Associates have secured a $395 million refinancing for 70 Pine Street, the 67-story, mixed-use tower that was converted from an office building into a hotel and luxury apartment complex in 2016, Commercial Observer has learned. 

The Art Deco high-rise, completed in 1932 during the Great Depression, was designated by New York City as a historical landmark in 2011. 

Goldman Sachs (GS) provided the nearly $400 million loan, while the JLL Capital Markets team of Chris Peck, Geoff Goldstein and Christopher Pratt arranged the financing on behalf of the sponsors. 

“Rose Associates and DTH Capital are amongst the most experienced sponsors in the industry,” said Peck in a statement. “Their market-leading redevelopment of this iconic property presented lenders with a spectacular opportunity in New York’s strong luxury housing market.” 

Mark Ehrlich, Rose Associates’ chief investment officer, said in a statement that even in a tough credit market, the refinancing for 70 Pine drew “significant interest” from other parties. 

“This property has outperformed as an asset since leasing began in 2016, and it is a shining example of a successful office-to-residential conversion,” said Ehrlich. 

Located in the heart of the Financial District — where it is flanked by 40 Wall Street and the Woolworth Building at 233 Broadway — 70 Pine has long been regarded as an indelible part of the New York City skyline, as its trapezoidal crown and numerous limestone setbacks recall the heyday of Art Deco architecture in America. 

Originally built exclusively for office use, the building was the third-tallest skyscraper in the world upon opening in 1932. For much of its history, 70 Pine was the corporate headquarters for the Citgo energy conglomerate and later world headquarters for AIG, which bought controlling ownership in the building in 1976 and held onto it until its 2009 bankruptcy

Beginning with their 2012 purchase, Rose Associates and DTH Capital began transforming 70 Pine from an outdated office tower into a luxury apartment complex and hotel. Renovations were completed in 2016, with the 165-key Mint Hotel opening that year. 

Aside from the Mint Hotel, 70 Pine boasts 612 market-rate rental apartments, replete with stainless steel appliances and high-end finishes. Residents have access to a 22,000-square-foot fitness center, two golf simulators, two bowling alleys, a screening room and a historic bank vault from the 1930s. 

Moreover, 70 Pine includes a pair of Michelin-starred restaurants: Saga and Crown Shy. The building is near eight subway lines, and steps from Fulton and Wall streets. 

Brian Pascus can be reached at bpascus@commerecialobserver.com 

  

Robert Khodadadian has long had a simple philosophy about selling real estate. The way he sees it, there are approximately a million buildings in the city, and the broker that gets to sell any one among the multitude that will hit the auctioning block at a given moment is, sometimes, simply the person who happens to pitch their services to the right seller at the right time.

Robert Khodadadian, skyline properties, ground leases, ground lease, off market, investment sales, khodadadian, Commercial Real Estate Sales, The Commercial Observer, Retail For Lease, Commercial Observer, Commercial Office Lease

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Film Studio Operator MBS Group Inks 300K-SF Warehouse Deal in Queens Robert Khodadadian | Commercial Observer

MBS Group has leased a 300,000-square-foot warehouse in Glendale, Queens, to store film equipment, as the film and TV production industry continues to boom in the outer boroughs, Commercial Observer has learned. 

The company, also known as Manhattan Beach Studios, took 300,000 square feet at GLP’s 66-31 and 66-35 Otto Road, according to sources familiar with the deal. MBS Group declined to comment on the transaction or disclose the lease terms of the deal

The property just south of All Faiths Cemetery includes 240,000 square feet of warehouse space, 73,000 square feet of parking and nine loading docks, according to GLP’s website. The site also has freight rail access and is adjacent to Fresh Pond Junction, a large freight yard operated by New York & Atlantic Railway and CSX

JLL’s Leslie Lanne and Adam Citron represented the landlord and declined to comment on the lease. It’s unclear who brokered the deal for the MBS Group.

GLP appears to co-own the property with Sitex Group, which acquired three sites on Otto Road for $36 million in 2019. The Otto Road warehouses seemed to trade hands for $112 million in 2020, sparking confusion. Then Sitex told The Real Deal that it was merely buying out the leases of the existing tenants, and it intended to hold onto the properties for years to come. 

GLP and Sitex didn’t immediately return requests for comment.

MBS Group recently sealed a deal to operate the new Borden Studios, a 220,000-square-foot film production facility within a multistory warehouse project developed by Innovo Property Group at 23-30 Borden Avenue in Long Island City, Queens. It also operates Silvercup Studios and Kaufman Astoria Studios, both nearby in western Queens, according to its website. In addition, MBS provides production services to Steiner and CineMagic East River Studios in Brooklyn, along with York Studios’ campuses in the South Bronx and Maspeth, Queens

Rebecca Baird-Remba can be reached at rbairdremba@commercialobserver.com.

  

Robert Khodadadian has long had a simple philosophy about selling real estate. The way he sees it, there are approximately a million buildings in the city, and the broker that gets to sell any one among the multitude that will hit the auctioning block at a given moment is, sometimes, simply the person who happens to pitch their services to the right seller at the right time.

Robert Khodadadian, skyline properties, ground leases, ground lease, off market, investment sales, khodadadian, Commercial Real Estate Sales, The Commercial Observer, Retail For Lease, Commercial Observer, Commercial Office Lease

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Data Centers Lean More On Proptech, and Proptech Leans Back Robert Khodadadian | Commercial Observer

In a world that increasingly relies on artificial intelligence and the promise of quantum computing, data centers capable of handling the exponential demand from such technologies are rapidly multiplying globally.

Inevitably, proptech is more than ever involved in data center development and maintenance in what was once a tiny target within the vast realm of commercial real estate. From opening doors, to building the facilities, to capturing carbon emissions, proptech is addressing the life cycle of data center proliferation.

Proptech’s work literally starts at the front door, said Trent Loebel, CEO and president of Torus, a company based in Sydney, Australia, whose software platform digitizes the management of physical keys for all types of buildings. U.S. data center growth has led Torus to increase its client footprint in America.

“Data centers, much like every other building or facility, inevitably have a lot of physical keys, which are often mandated to be used for certain doors and to secure certain areas,” said Loebel. “But they’re always required, at least as a backup to the electronic-controlled doors. Typically it’s all in the base of the building, where technicians and engineers would need access to plant equipment like heating, ventilation, secure areas, and to access data racks.”

Physical keys are not used for the highest-security areas, which are electronically controlled, added Loebel. However, an average data center will have dozens or even hundreds of physical keys that are used by data center customers, contractors and maintenance staff.

They sit in drawers, cupboards, on hooks, even in the most sophisticated buildings and facilities,” said Loebel. “We’re providing a digital platform and a cabinet that physically secures those keys, according to the permissions that sit in the software platform.”

Even in modern office buildings in which tenants might never use a physical key, there are maintenance workers who still rely on them, Loebel said. One such Torus client office building in London has maintenance workers using 1,800 physical keys. In addition, “Securing every door with electronic access is very expensive,” he said. “It’s about $3,000 per door. And where there is low usage, high-security mechanical keys are always more appropriate.”

Speaking of London, proptech is addressing data center expansion in the U.K. and beyond, said David Mitchell, founder and CEO of London-based XYZ Reality, a startup that has built an augmented reality headset specifically for construction. Contractors can use the headset, which XYZ claims is the world’s most accurate engineering-grade augmented reality device and the most advanced data capture solution, to project a 3D hologram of a building information model (BIM). That allows contractors to see progress and detect issues while walking an active job site.

The company primarily sells to data centers due to the complexity of the projects and XYZ’s ability to let builders see the actual electrical, HVAC, and other infrastructure plans overlayed in reality on an active data center project. In some cases, they’ve detected million-dollar mistakes before they happened, said Mitchell, who declined to name the large data center builders who are XYZ’s clients.

“Ultimately, our vision is builders building from holograms, and we want to accelerate project delivery,” Mitchell explained. “We’ve built a custom, in-house, augmented reality headset, which is basically constructing and uploading all the health and safety standards for construction. So we leverage that headset in the field and it captures all the daily activities that are happening on site such as progress capture, feeds all that information back up to a cloud platform, which distributes that data and insights to all project stakeholders.”

XYZ’s clients are data center owners and operators, but the company is finding further market penetration with general contractors adopting the technology as well as subcontractors, Mitchell said. “But we have 95 percent of our revenue right now with the client themselves — the asset owner.”

Founded in 2017, XYZ has grown to 120 employees and raised $50 million in venture capital, while deploying its product throughout Europe and the U.S., with plans to soon enter India, Japan and South Korea, he said.

The market is exploding right now,” Mitchell added. “You can see this wave of AI coming as well. That’s definitely very present right now in the industry. And they’re looking to build these things as quickly as possible on a global scale. So they’re always on the lookout for how we can build better, faster and more collaboratively.”

In fact, the global data center market size was valued at $194.81 billion in 2022 and is projected to grow at a compound annual growth rate of 10.9 percent from 2023 to 2030, according to consultancy Grand View Research.

Among the data center construction challenges that XYZ seeks to alleviate is 3D modeling at scale, said Mitchell.

“To be able to load up a data center of 30 or 50 megawatts in real time in the field and then be able to connect that data back to a live cloud environment, that’s no trivial engineering task to solve for,” he said. “The level of complexity and the size of the data required there in the use of the platform is significant.”

The point of solving such complex issues can significantly lower the cost of data center construction. Mitchell cited one of XYZ’s MEP contractors in the U.S. that increased strut installation from four to 50 per day with fewer workers. “What we’re delivering today is this progress capture tool on the site to eliminate rework, which is typically about 10 percent of project costs. And that’s particularly a sensitive topic these days where sustainability is key, removing the carbon footprint.”

Proptech startup CarbonQuest is one company that focuses on building decarbonization. It is currently exploring applying its technology to data centers in particular.

“We enable decarbonization in various types of buildings and facilities through distributed carbon capture,” said Anna Pavlova, senior vice president for strategy, market development and sustainability at Manhattan-based CarbonQuest. “We’re different from other carbon capture companies in the sense that we don’t go into power plants or other very large industrials, but we focus on medium-sized facilities and buildings in a distributed manner, partnering with fuel cells and combined power providers as well.”

Founded in 2019, CarbonQuest has started to focus on data centers because such facilities are massive power consumers that usually don’t plug into a typical electric grid, which often cannot handle their energy demands. Instead, they need other sources of cheap and resilient power, said Pavlova. Moreover, like other companies, they are under great pressure to decarbonize.

“When they look for independent power, that leaves really one or two options, fuel cells or cogeneration, combined heat and power, and sometimes fuel cells can be part of that,” she said. “All those independent power systems typically run on natural gas, so that is a problem from a decarbonization perspective. 

“So a carbon capture system with a fuel cell, or with a combined heat and power engine, can solve both problems. You’re getting local 24/7 resilient reliable power independent of the grid. At the same time, the capture portion makes sure that the CO2 that is produced by the fuel cell or by the engine is trapped before it is emitted into the atmosphere. That makes it a low-carbon system that can run their data center.”

Philip Russo can be reached at prusso@commercialobserver.com

  

Robert Khodadadian has long had a simple philosophy about selling real estate. The way he sees it, there are approximately a million buildings in the city, and the broker that gets to sell any one among the multitude that will hit the auctioning block at a given moment is, sometimes, simply the person who happens to pitch their services to the right seller at the right time.

Robert Khodadadian, skyline properties, ground leases, ground lease, off market, investment sales, khodadadian, Commercial Real Estate Sales, The Commercial Observer, Retail For Lease, Commercial Observer, Commercial Office Lease

Channel, Features, Industrial, Industry, Leases, More, Technology, Anna Pavlova, David Mitchell, proptech, proptech insider, Trent Loebel, National, New York City, CarbonQuest, Torus, XYZ Reality Articles about Robert Khodadadian from Commercial Observer New York’s authority on commercial real estate leasing financing deals and culture.

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MetaProp’s Latest ‘5 Borough’ Cohort Launches With $1M, City Support Robert Khodadadian | Commercial Observer

The MetaProp Accelerator @ Columbia University announced Tuesday that it has committed a total of $1 million in funding for seven proptech startups selected for its 2024 cohort.

The Manhattan-based early-stage investment firm launched what it calls its “5 Borough” program earlier this month for its ninth annual cohort with support from the New York City Economic Development Corporation (NYCEDC).

MetaProp’s aggregate initial commitment of $1 million comes out of its latest $150 million venture capital fund, whose investors include global industry giants AECOM, CBRE, Cushman & Wakefield, Ivanhoe Cambridge, JLL, Mitsui Fudosan, PGIM and RXR.

The startups selected present a diverse mix of founders looking to solve big problems in timely and challenging areas of proptech, including sustainability issues of decarbonization and climate risk, as well as in artificial intelligence,” Aaron Block, co-founder and managing partner at MetaProp, said in a statement to PropTech Insider. “Buildings account for two-thirds of the greenhouse gas emissions in New York City. After Local Law 97 was passed in 2019, it became imperative for MetaProp to identify and help grow emerging technologies in the decarbonization sector. We’re excited to have such proptech innovators dealing with these challenges included in our 2024 class.”

New York City combines a unique ecosystem of real estate, proptech, academia and government to support and grow tech startups that could in turn become new and growing tenants in the city, Block added. “Offices in New York City are struggling with high vacancies, low occupancy, lender repossessions, distressed funds being raised, and more,” he said. “This is one interesting example of local ecosystem leaders helping to stimulate inbound interest in our city through support of growing, innovative tech businesses.”

New York City is a global leader in real estate and climate technology, and the MetaProp Accelerator at Columbia University is an important partner to scale new products and approaches that decarbonize our built environment,” said Melissa Román Burch, chief operating officer for the NYCEDC. “We look forward to the kickoff of the 5 Borough program, which will enable entrepreneurs to grow their companies right here in NYC, create jobs, and develop new technologies to help the city meet its ambitious climate goals.”

Chosen from among more than 150 applicants worldwide, the latest accelerator cohort includes companies from Calgary, Dallas, Las Vegas, New York and Stockholm, with 57 percent of the founders women or people of color. The founders include a NASA and SpaceX rocket scientist, a former FBI special agent, and a serial entrepreneur who exited to Dell.

The cohort’s technologies address issues like natural disasters, risk assessment technology, AI-powered construction data, and business-to-business (B2B) software as a service aimed at helping lower carbon emissions from offices.

The cohort is composed of EcoClaim, a Calgary-based platform that insurers use to measure, verify, and reduce operational emissions; Faura, a Las Vegas-based climate and property risk analytics startup that helps insurance companies and homeowners reduce their natural disaster risk; Light RFP, a New York City-based procurement platform that empowers property managers and commercial real estate developers to quickly identify the best vendors for their projects; Palazzo, another New York-based company that uses an AI-powered interior design tool to help homeowners create realistic and high-quality visuals for their designs; PinPoint Analytics, a Manalapan, N.J.-based AI-powered construction platform that analyzes data and trends to ensure bid accuracy; Spacemaze, a Stockholm-based B2B software company that tries to optimize savings, reduce waste and lower carbon emissions for workplace teams; and Verfico, a Dallas-based company that analyzes workforce data, promotes diversity on job sites, and monitors for wage theft..

The cohort’s 22-week, 5 Borough program features tech talks, workshops, education sessions, real estate property tours and events in cooperation with top industry players. Events will take place throughout the city, including Roosevelt Island.Fifty companies have participated in MetaProp’s acceleration program since its launch in 2015. Graduates have raised more than $200 million in combined venture funding and have exited to industry leaders like Alarm.com, Comcast, JLL and Realtor.com.

Philip Russo can be reached at prusso@commercialobserver.com

  

Robert Khodadadian has long had a simple philosophy about selling real estate. The way he sees it, there are approximately a million buildings in the city, and the broker that gets to sell any one among the multitude that will hit the auctioning block at a given moment is, sometimes, simply the person who happens to pitch their services to the right seller at the right time.

Robert Khodadadian, skyline properties, ground leases, ground lease, off market, investment sales, khodadadian, Commercial Real Estate Sales, The Commercial Observer, Retail For Lease, Commercial Observer, Commercial Office Lease

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Senior Housing Development Approved for National 4-H Site in Chevy Chase Robert Khodadadian | Commercial Observer

Galerie Living, an Atlanta-based senior living operator, is teaming with Washington, D.C., developer Community Three on Corso Chevy Chase, a new senior housing development on the former site of the National 4-H Center in Chevy Chase, Md.

The Montgomery County Planning Board approved plans for the development last week, and the project is set to begin construction in the fall. 

Galerie Living acquired the site in December 2021 and, in response to community feedback, reduced the massing and height of the project and addressed concerns about parking and traffic.  

“We offer an exclusive product in our Corso brand that we believe is missing in the market,” Joshua Peterson, president of Galerie Management, told Commercial Observer. “We are hospitality and lifestyle focused with our amenities and culinary programs, while also offering quality care and services. It’s something that you can’t find in the area.”

Corso Chevy Chase will consist of 287 independent-living units, 190 assisted-living beds and 30 beds for memory care. It will also include 5,000 square feet of retail that will be open to the public.

The 4-H headquarters will be demolished, and the new senior housing will be targeting a completion date of mid-2026.

“As we move forward to refine the details of the design and on to implementation, we are very fortunate to have collectively built a solid partnership that will ultimately result in a better, more sustainable, and additive redevelopment effort,” Grant Epstein, president of Community Three, said in a prepared statement. 

Keith Loria can be reached at Kloria@commercialobserver.com.

  

Robert Khodadadian has long had a simple philosophy about selling real estate. The way he sees it, there are approximately a million buildings in the city, and the broker that gets to sell any one among the multitude that will hit the auctioning block at a given moment is, sometimes, simply the person who happens to pitch their services to the right seller at the right time.

Robert Khodadadian, skyline properties, ground leases, ground lease, off market, investment sales, khodadadian, Commercial Real Estate Sales, The Commercial Observer, Retail For Lease, Commercial Observer, Commercial Office Lease

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MBA CREF 2024: 5 Questions With Freddie Mac’s Kevin Palmer Robert Khodadadian | Commercial Observer

Kevin Palmer has faced stiff market challenges since assuming his role as head of Freddie Mac (FMCC) multifamily transactions in May 2022, just as interest rates began their rapid rise.

Palmer, who was promoted to lead McLean, Va.-based Freddie Mac’s multifamily lending efforts after 21 previous years with the government-sponsored enterprise (GSE), spent some time with Commercial Observer at the annual the Mortgage Bankers Association CREF conference in San Diego. He shared his thoughts on the state of the multifamily lending market and the GSE’s new tightened underwriting requirements for broker-involved transactions. 

The comments have been edited for length and clarity.

Commercial Observer: Are you worried about the state of the market today, and how the multifamily sector will be affected in 2024 if interest rates don’t come down to the levels expected

Kevin Palmer: 2023 was a bumpy market, and I would expect we’re going to continue to see bumpiness in the market. We’ve got a decent amount of headwinds that we’ve seen and we’re continuing to see in 2024, and higher interest rates are one of those. We’ve also got a lot of maturities happening, and the combination of those two is something that we’re watching really closely.

At the same time, the multifamily market has been pretty resilient, relatively speaking. The fundamentals are still good. From an occupancy perspective it’s still pretty strong, and the unemployment market in the economy remains pretty good. Just a couple of weeks back when I was at the National Multifamily Housing Council talking with a lot of the borrowers, it seems like there’s a lot of capital continuing to be in this space that’s ready to be deployed, and I think that helps put a floor on the issues that are out there. The other thing is what I call the Freddie factor, which is the fact that Freddie Mac will continue to be there from a countercyclical perspective as a constant provider for that liquidity in this market to help create stability in this important market as we continue to provide that funding needed for affordable housing.

Many U.S. markets in the Sun Belt are now facing oversupply issues with new rental properties coming online this year. How do you see this dynamic affecting the multifamily market?

Supply is another headwind that we’ll face in 2024, specifically with the Sun Belt market and Mountain West regions. There’s going to be a lot of pressure there from new supply that is going to put downward pressure on rents. But if you take even just a half a step back, so far we’ve seen nationally good continued demand for new housing and the supply that has been delivered has been able to be absorbed pretty well. We still see that overall rents nationally will be up in 2024, but every market is a little different so you’re going to see variation. Then, take another step back from a long-term perspective, and you see a multi-decade high of new supply being delivered in 2024, and if you look at 2025 and beyond, the supply level goes down quite a bit

From a housing availability perspective, we still need more housing to come online and we’re looking at how we can help support a more consistent supply of housing and rentals to be able to come online. From a demographics perspective there’s going to be a lot of new household formations that are going to happen over the next couple of years, and there’s a need to support additional supply to be able to preserve affordability in this market.

How is the pullback of many banks focused on CRE lending impacting Freddie Mac’s role in the market?

We saw that in 2023 because even though our volume was down in 2023 relative to 2022 — we were just under $50 billion — the size of Freddie Mac in the market was bigger, our footprint was larger and we will probably see something similar in 2024. I think that reflects the whole countercyclical nature of Freddie Mac that when you have some liquidity providers pull back, we’re able to kind of step in and fill that gap. 

There are certain areas that we’re watching closely. Construction financing was a key area that banks have and continue to provide financing, and we need that to continue on to be able to help support that future supply. We have programs such as our Forward program that helps provide construction lenders more confidence as we’re a takeout for that product. Once that property has been built and sufficiently stabilized, we provide the financing afterwards. And so we’re hoping that with that program we can continue to see good liquidity in that construction market, to be able to ensure that the market stays more stable.

Last November you tightened underwriting requirements in an attempt to ensure all loan documents are delivered directly from borrowers to Freddie Mac lenders and not passed to a broker. How is this guide update helping in reinforcing your seller relationships?

In November of last year, we did update our guide to ensure a proper chain of custody and documentation. With Freddie Mac, we fully underwrite the loans before we fund those and it does reinforce that relationship that we have. We work directly with our Optigo lenders and they may work with other third parties to be able to get that overall work done. This policy helps reinforce that the integrity of the source documents that we use to underwrite the loans is critical and we are relying on our Optigo lenders to be able to provide that to us.

We have seen recently a pool of smaller nonperforming loans for sale. Overall, what are defaults looking like this past year versus other crises like COVID and the GFC

We are seeing certain areas of distress. Overall, our portfolio continues to perform pretty well and our last reported delinquency level was just below 30 basis points, but I would expect that there will be continued pressure on performance. There are certain areas of our portfolio such as senior housing, or our small loans program, or floating-rate loans that we’re watching very closely as they have underperformed relative to the rest of our portfolio. But we’ve got a great asset management team at Freddie Mac that is proactively watching the issues that may come out and looking for ways to be able to help work with those borrowers to be able to keep the performance strong. Additionally, as we see broader distress in the industry, Freddie Mac can really roll up our sleeves and work on a lender-by-lender or borrower-by-borrower basis to provide the customized solutions needed to be able to help support and improve performance overall.

Andrew Coen can be reached at acoen@commercialobserver.com 

 

  

Robert Khodadadian has long had a simple philosophy about selling real estate. The way he sees it, there are approximately a million buildings in the city, and the broker that gets to sell any one among the multitude that will hit the auctioning block at a given moment is, sometimes, simply the person who happens to pitch their services to the right seller at the right time.

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MBA CREF 2024: Former PIMCO CEO Warns of the Impact of Industry Noise Robert Khodadadian | Commercial Observer

The sun was shining in San Diego as the Mortgage Bankers Association’s CREF ’24’s Monday sessions kicked off

Attendees at the commercial real estate finance convention, descending on the Manchester Grand Hyatt hotel after a night of Super Bowl parties, discussed the not-too-interesting game that made up for it in spades in overtime — as well as Usher’s halftime performance — over coffee and pastries before taking their seats for their own Super Bowl, of kinds. 

Unlike Usher’s enthusiastic proclamation of “Yeah!” in his hit song, attendees are taking an optimistic yet decidedly cautious approach to CRE in 2024. 

Mohamed A. El-Erian, president of Queens College and former CEO and co-chief Investment officer of PIMCO, was the conference’s MVP on Monday, kick-starting the packed event with the (multi) billion-dollar question of “What’s Ahead in the Global Economy?” 

El-Erian was interviewed by Mark Jones, the Mortgage Bankers Association’s chairman and president of Union Home Mortgage, as well as Mike Fratantoni, chief economist for the MBA. 

A straight shooter, El-Erian said the biggest risk in our industry right now is the noise that exists within it

There’s so much noise, and people will extrapolate from the weakest point in the market, and that contaminates everything else,” he said. 

While that contagion of generalization presents the biggest risk right now, the industry can fight through it with clear information, El-Erian said.

There’s a ton of dry powder on the sideline that doesn’t want to be contaminated by contagion. It doesn’t want to get soaked by this overhanging cloud,” El-Erian said. “So, let’s not fall victim to noise.” 

El-Erian was asked what worries him today in this market, having had plenty of experience transacting through other downturns and crises, including the Global Financial Crisis as CEO of PIMCO. 

What’s on his mind today are three questions: Can the U.S.’s economic exceptionalism prevail — and within that, can we avoid a recession and also reach interest rate stabilization? Can we avoid contamination from geopolitical contagion? And what will happen to the existing stock (of housing, for example) that was refinanced at very artificial interest rates? 

In considering those three unanswered questions and the potential ramifications of each, El-Erian said that it requires the weighing up of each scenario, and reacting accordingly — and he looked back to 2008 as an example of when the seemingly unthinkable came to fruition. 

One weekend before Lehman Brothers’ collapse, the PIMCO investment committee was meeting nonstop to consider three potential outcomes for the ill-fated bank. First, the 86 percent likelihood that the bank would not fail; second, the 12 percent probability that it would but that its failure would be dealt with in an orderly fashion “as no regulators in their right mind would allow otherwise;” and third, the 3 percent likelihood that Lehman would collapse and cause a global meltdown of financial markets. 

When the PIMCO team realized the third scenario was en route, they acted accordingly and established their credit default swap provisions before the wider market reacted, he said. 

El-Erian didn’t hold back when it came to the Federal Reserve, caveating his comments with the disclaimer that “I’ve been accused of being too harsh on the Fed,” which was received by a laugh from the audience. 

Still, he outlined a number of policy mistakes he believes the Fed has made. 

First, the use of the word “transitory” in its analysis when describing the inflationary environment. Second, its lack of action when it finally retired the word “transitory” (“CPI was over 7 percent, interest rates hadn’t moved, and quantitative easing was still at play,” he said.). Third, the aggressive hiking of interest rates “wasn’t necessary.” Next up, the Fed’s lack of accountability, with El-Erian saying it “hasn’t owned up to its mistakes,” and instead hired former Fed chair Ben Bernanke to explain them. Finally, the Fed has made a number of forecasting errors, El-Erian said, describing those as a “bad series of mistakes.” 

Later, El-Erian participated in 30 minutes of question and answers with attendees, answering market questions, andin a market with continued uncertainty — was surely the most popular guy at the Grand Hyatt that morning. 

Cathy Cunningham can be reached at ccunningham@commercialobserver.com.

  

Robert Khodadadian has long had a simple philosophy about selling real estate. The way he sees it, there are approximately a million buildings in the city, and the broker that gets to sell any one among the multitude that will hit the auctioning block at a given moment is, sometimes, simply the person who happens to pitch their services to the right seller at the right time.

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PHOTOS: L.A. Mandates Developer Clean Graffitied Skyscraper in Downtown Robert Khodadadian | Commercial Observer

PHOTOS: L.A. Mandates Developer Clean Graffitied Skyscraper in Downtown Robert Khodadadian | Commercial Observer





The City of Los Angeles is giving developers of the abandoned Oceanwide Plaza tower until Friday to clean the unfinished skyscraper before they step in and do it for them.

The City Council voted last week to set a deadline of Feb. 17 for China-based developer Oceanwide to clean the debris and spray paint at the graffiti-covered, 53-story tower, located prominently in Downtown L.A. across from Crypto.com Arena (formerly Staples Center) and L.A. LIVE, CoStar reported. Otherwise, the city will do it and bill the company for a process that could include the city demolishing portions of the property.

Images of the tagged floors went viral over the past couple of weeks. Twelve arrests were made Sunday at the site, as officials recovered spray paint cans and an illegal firearm. That adds to six other arrests made in different instances the last couple of weeks, according to local media reports. Police say they have regained control of the building.

Oceanwide ran out of money for the 2 million-square-foot condo, hotel and apartment development that takes up a full block on South Flower Street, and halted construction in 2019. The developer indicated in 2022 that it wanted to restart fundraising and construction for the three-tower complex, but that plan failed. 

“For the last few years, the unfinished Oceanwide Plaza property at 1101 South Flower Street has been a blight on Downtown Los Angeles’ South Park neighborhood,” read a motion by Councilman Kevin De León, whose district includes the towers.

De León said it would cost at least $500 million to buy the property, and another $1 billion to complete an affordable housing project, and the city would also have to forgive roughly $500 million in liens related to the property.

The city could also address other negligent property owners as a result of the graffiti issue at Oceanwide Plaza, council members said at the meeting. Councilwoman Imelda Padilla said she can think of four other properties that are “mini versions” of Oceanwide Plaza,” CoStar reported.

“We have these all over Los Angeles,” Padilla said.

Gregory Cornfield can be reached at gcornfield@commercialobserver.com.

  

Robert Khodadadian has long had a simple philosophy about selling real estate. The way he sees it, there are approximately a million buildings in the city, and the broker that gets to sell any one among the multitude that will hit the auctioning block at a given moment is, sometimes, simply the person who happens to pitch their services to the right seller at the right time.

Robert Khodadadian, skyline properties, ground leases, ground lease, off market, investment sales, khodadadian, Commercial Real Estate Sales, The Commercial Observer, Retail For Lease, Commercial Observer, Commercial Office Lease

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TPG Real Estate Credit Provides $79M ReFi for Puget Sound Multifamily Robert Khodadadian | Commercial Observer

Sound West Group, a developer based in Washington state, has secured a $79 million loan to refinance Marina Square, a 270-unit, mixed-use apartment complex in the Puget Sound community of Bremerton, Wash.

TPG Real Estate Credit, a subsidiary of TPG Real Estate Partners, provided the five-year, floating-rate loan. The JLL Capital Markets Debt Advisory team of Seth Heikkila, Tom Wilson and Steve Petrie arranged the loan on behalf of Sound West Group

JLL’s Heikkila noted in a statement that multifamily market dynamics in the Bremerton area have been buttressed by the Puget Sound Naval Shipyard, the Kitsap naval base and Harrison Medical Center. He added that a recent CoreLogic study forecasts Bremerton, a one-hour ferry ride west of Downtown Seattle, to be a top three market in the country for home value appreciation.

The loan from TPG allows Sound West Group to fully execute its business plan for Marina Square,” said Heikkila. “This will only further drive demand for high-quality multi housing rental assets like Marina Square.” 

Located at 280 Washington Avenue, Marina Square features luxury studio, one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments. The building is a short walk from the Bremerton Ferry Terminal, offering direct service to the Seattle waterfront. Marina Square’s amenities include a roof deck, three venue spaces, a kayak launch and public grills. 

The building features nearly 9,200 square feet of retail across three spaces. 

Marina Square also benefits from its proximity to Bremerton Boardwalk, an outdoor promenade of restaurants, shops and historic sites, and Harborside Fountain Park, a 2.2-acre waterside plaza that includes the Bremerton Naval Museum

The six-story building was completed in 2022, and the National Association of Industrial and Office Parks named it the 2023 Mixed-Use Development of the Year. 

Brian Pascus can be reached at bpascus@commercialobserver.com 

  

Robert Khodadadian has long had a simple philosophy about selling real estate. The way he sees it, there are approximately a million buildings in the city, and the broker that gets to sell any one among the multitude that will hit the auctioning block at a given moment is, sometimes, simply the person who happens to pitch their services to the right seller at the right time.

Robert Khodadadian, skyline properties, ground leases, ground lease, off market, investment sales, khodadadian, Commercial Real Estate Sales, The Commercial Observer, Retail For Lease, Commercial Observer, Commercial Office Lease

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Law Firm Barry McTiernan & Moore Moving HQ to 18K SF at One Battery Park Plaza Robert Khodadadian | Commercial Observer

Law firm Barry McTiernan & Moore will relocate its headquarters to One Battery Park Plaza, landlord Rudin announced.

The legal defense firm signed a 16-year lease for 18,464 square feet on the top floor of the 35-story building, the New York Post first reported.

Asking rent was $70 per square foot, according to a source with knowledge of the deal.

The source said Barry McTiernan will relocate its headquarters from about 18,000 square feet at 101 Greenwich Street.

Barry McTiernan & Moore was founded in 1930 and provides counsel to insurance companies facing general liability claims, according to its website. It has also defended companies in the New York metro area against environmental class actions involving asbestos, talcum powder, benzene, silica, lead poisoning, and chemical exposures.

Cushman & Wakefield (CWK)’s Mark Weiss, who arranged the deal for Barry McTiernan & Moore with Jonathan Schindler, described it as “a highly respected firm, a leader in the field.”

“Rudin understood that and was very accommodating with everything our client needed,” Weiss said.

Barry McTiernan wasn’t the only company relocating its offices to One Battery Park.

In a smaller deal, nonprofit mental health and social service provider Partnership with Children inked an 11-year lease for 8,036 square feet on the second floor of the 870,000-square foot building, according to the landlord. 

Asking rent was $52 per square foot, according to a spokesperson for CBRE (CBRE), which represented the nonprofit organization in the deal.

Partnership with Children will relocate from its current headquarters at 299 Broadway in the second quarter of 2024. The move is an expansion, according to Rudin, but a spokesperson for the organization declined to disclose the size of the expansion.

“We feel privileged to have represented Partnership with Children on this important endeavor and are excited for their relocation to One Battery Park Plaza, a great asset with great ownership,” said CBRE’s Ramneek Rikhy, who brokered the deal for the nonprofit with Zachary Price and Marlee Teplitzky.

Rudin Vice President Kevin Daly represented the landlord in both deals.

These relocations further demonstrate that companies are prioritizing distinctive, high-quality work environments backed by strong building ownership,” Rudin co-CEO Michael Rudin said in a statement.

Other recent deals in One Battery Park Plaza include architecture firm Curtis + Ginsberg relocating to 12,602 in the property in August, Commercial Observer previously reported. 

Abigail Nehring can be reached at anehring@commercialobserver.com.

  

Robert Khodadadian has long had a simple philosophy about selling real estate. The way he sees it, there are approximately a million buildings in the city, and the broker that gets to sell any one among the multitude that will hit the auctioning block at a given moment is, sometimes, simply the person who happens to pitch their services to the right seller at the right time.

Robert Khodadadian, skyline properties, ground leases, ground lease, off market, investment sales, khodadadian, Commercial Real Estate Sales, The Commercial Observer, Retail For Lease, Commercial Observer, Commercial Office Lease

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Senior Care Providers Buy SoCal 200-Bed Facility From Landlords for $24M Robert Khodadadian | Commercial Observer

A Los Angeles-based health care company has purchased the building it uses for a senior care facility from its landlord, according to brokers Avison Young

California Healthcare & Rehabilitation Center, which was the tenant at 6700 Sepulveda Boulevard in Van Nuys, purchased the 49,818-square-foot property from Boca Raton, Fla.-based Pinnacle Holdings of Florida for $23.5 million. 

“Ultimately, due to the higher costs of construction and capital required for development, senior housing operators provided the strongest buyer pool, and it made sense to negotiate a deal with the existing tenant,” Avison Young Principal Peter Sherman said in a statement. 

California Healthcare & Rehabilitation Center will continue to occupy the 201-bed facility through the foreseeable future, per Avison Young. Representatives for the health care provider could not immediately be reached for comment. 

The senior living and nursing home industry nationwide suffered during the COVID-19 pandemic, with more than 450 facilities closing their doors since the pandemic started in early 2020. Yet the likely rise of occupancy and demand, largely from aging Baby Boomers, is helping the industry rebound from its COVID woes.

Case in point is Westlake Senior Living Center, an 86-unit facility near Thousand Oaks, Calif., which in September secured a $43.2 million refinancing loan from Santa Rosa, Calif.-based Poppy Bank

Nick Trombola can be reached at NTrombola@commercialobserver.com.

  

Robert Khodadadian has long had a simple philosophy about selling real estate. The way he sees it, there are approximately a million buildings in the city, and the broker that gets to sell any one among the multitude that will hit the auctioning block at a given moment is, sometimes, simply the person who happens to pitch their services to the right seller at the right time.

Robert Khodadadian, skyline properties, ground leases, ground lease, off market, investment sales, khodadadian, Commercial Real Estate Sales, The Commercial Observer, Retail For Lease, Commercial Observer, Commercial Office Lease

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Franz Colloredo-Mansfeld Explains Cabot Properties’ Latest Expansion Robert Khodadadian | Commercial Observer

Franz Colloredo-Mansfeld is riding high entering 2024. Cabot Properties, the longtime investor’s Boston-based private equity firm, announced Jan. 31 that it had raised $1.57 billion in the firm’s Fund VII, which invests, develops and operates industrial logistics properties across the U.S., Europe and Asia. 

Cabot has deployed more than $15 billion into the industrial sector since its 2002 launch, and raised approximately $5.75 billion worth of equity. With offices in Boston, London, Munich, Amsterdam, Melbourne and now Tokyo, Cabot Properties is prepared for the continued growth of e-commerce across the planet. Colloredo-Mansfeld sat down virtually with Commercial Observer last week to discuss his career, the growth of Cabot Properties, how private equity fundraising works, and why the industrial sector has become arguably the hottest asset class in commercial real estate in the mid-2020s. 

This interview has been edited for length and clarity. 

Commercial Observer: What is the history of Cabot Properties? How did your firm start? 

Franz Colloredo-Mansfeld: The firm goes back 40 years. My father ran a big development company, Cabot Cabot & Forbes, and as part of that business he formed an investment advisory affiliate called Cabot Partners. In 1989 and 1990 that business went through restructuring. The investment advisory affiliate separated off from the development company and became an independent firm that focused on advising large institutional investors, some of whom are still with us 40 years later, like New York State Teachers’ Retirement System. 

And how did you get into the industry? 

The early 1990s were not a good time in CRE. At that time, I’d finished business school at Harvard and began a career at McKinsey & Company, and earlier in my career I’d been an investment banker. But my father got sick with cancer in the mid-1990s, so I left McKinsey in 1996 and joined him at Cabot Partners. It was relatively small, 17 employees, and went through a complicated restructuring, and we took the company public in 1998 as an industrial real estate investment trust. 

We were an industrial REIT, a niche sector of the time. As it turns out, the year we went public in 1998, if you added up all sales online there were about $5 million in online sales, and now we’re over $2 trillion in online sales today, so the world has changed in ways that favor our sector, that’s for sure. We sold the public company in 2001, re-formed our business with a group of partners, and became a private equity fund sponsor. We sponsored our first value-add fund in 2002 and that began the series of value funds as we just finished Fund VII last year. 

Was it difficult to move from investment banking and consulting into CRE finance?

Perhaps I had it in the blood. As an investment banker, I was involved in lots of financings. I was primarily in the M&A group, corporate strategy, capital fundraising related to financing transactions, and that was useful experience, for sure, as at the heart of our business we’re an investment firm making acquisitions. But the experience at McKinsey was also very helpful: How do you lead a business? How do you think about strategy? How do you position the firm? How do you build a team? Those are all things I spend time on today

How has the industrial landscape changed since your firm went public 20 years ago? 

E-commerce is a huge driver of tenant demand. The investable universe has tripled over the last 15 years due to e-commerce, and that has led to institutionalization of the industrial property sector. When we went public, industrial REITs were only 4 percent or 5 percent of the overall public market of real estate; today it’s over 30 percent. What was the gold standard at the time, office and retail, those sectors today in the public markets are quite small. And that’s true of private institutional markets. 

The industrial sector is now the biggest of the four major sectors. Multifamily and industrial have emerged as the two biggest institutional property sectors, and we’ve tried to evolve our business in response to that.  

Before we get into that, how has your fundraising evolved in response to that technological shift?

The amount of institutional capital looking to invest in what we do has grown dramatically. In the old days, when we were raising our first fund, you were trying to convince investors that you could generate mid-teens returns from warehouses. That wasn’t an easy pitch. And the world has changed and people now see the opportunity in our sector.

Therefore the types of investors have expanded dramatically. Initial rosters were U.S. only, they were endowments, foundations who’d support first-time funds. We’re fortunate that a lot of our capital still comes from investors who joined our first fund, but the roster of investors has broadened to include different types of investors inside and outside the U.S. 

And your investment strategy? How has that evolved? 

In the early days, supply chains were focused on reducing cost for inventory. You had a dynamic at play where tenants, users, were looking to maintain very low costs for their supply chains. So they’d move to the next exit to save a nickel on their rent. It was a very competitive business and the dynamic wasn’t supporting rent growth, so our focus at the time was looking for opportunities where there was some arbitrage, where tenants would favor a particular type of location and give you a premium for that rent.

And we were very focused on competitive cost basis on assets. It was a value-focused strategy. So the strategy over time has remained consistent: We obviously care about the basis of the assets, but we increasingly focus on the deepest, most liquid markets and institutional flows that come into the sector. 

Which markets in particular? 

The major coastal markets. The Northeast, greater New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania — that market is very attractive to us. The Baltimore-Washington corridor is attractive, Atlanta is a major industrial hub, South Florida because of the population growth and economic dynamism. Texas — Dallas is our biggest market. Houston is an interesting market. Southern California is a big one for us. Chicago, too. 

But the trends in the U.S. are now playing out globally. We have broadened our investment activity, first to England about 10 years ago, then to Northern Europe about seven years ago, and then to Australia about five years ago, and we just opened an office in Tokyo. We’re focusing on these major market economies where we see the same drivers: e-commerce, institutionalization, and the trend that’s amplified by COVID is a renewed focus on supply chains. 

Tenants are focused on maintaining inventory to support their business. The warehouse rent is a small percentage of overall supply chain costs — labor costs are the biggest factor and energy costs are the second-biggest factor. So they are willing to pay premium rents to maximize those other variables. They want buildings closer to population centers and closer to their workforce. 

Tell me about the Fund VII goals?

We’re trying to invest this fund at an interesting time, because pricing has improved, perhaps in a period where interest rates are still high but stabilized, so it’s easier to forecast and underwrite. We’re looking for opportunities where there is perhaps some distress among developers, or sellers of property that have portfolios unrelated to logistics, but logistics are the most liquid thing they have at the moment. So we’re anticipating that transaction volume across the U.S. will increase. The U.S. will be at least 70 percent of what we can do in Fund VII, as we do have limits on what we can do outside the U.S. 

What makes international investing tougher?

In Europe, deals are very expensive. Yields have been low and growth has been weak. That dynamic is changing, though. We have an inflection point in Europe. You have increased levels of e-commerce activity, there’s more demand and more limits on supply, the development is constricted in most major markets, in Northern Europe and England. So you’ve had strong growth in the last 18 months, and pricing will adjust more quickly there. 

In ways it’s more difficult than the U.S. With our institutional capital, which is primarily tax-exempt, the capital gains are not a factor for us when we invest in the U.S. But outside the U.S. we are exposed to taxes, so the hurdle rates for investments are higher for us for that reason. We are also hedging because most of our capital comes from U.S. investors, so we provide hedging for them for non-U.S. activity.

The U.S. has this advantage of being an enormously liquid, unified market, but the EU, while it’s a common currency, each country has its own regulations and tax structures, so it’s more difficult to transact in Europe and in Australia because we are managing the administration of all those transactions.

What are the downsides to private equity investing? It seems too good to be true. 

I wish it were easy. Every time we raise a new fund, you’re only as good as your last fund. We’ve had the wind at our back with all the trends playing out in our sector, but there are still risks out there. The Global Financial Crisis was a very difficult time for our sector. The largest public REITs almost went bankrupt. The dynamic of the GFC was not just a drop in demand, but capital structures caused firms to go under. We had a fund we raised in 2005 — and were investing in 2006, 2007 and early 2008 — and that turned out to be top of the market. We didn’t have a loss. That fund generated a positive result, but just barely, so we learned a lot. 

What lessons did you learn?

A. The capital structure. You can be a great investor, but if you don’t get the debt structure right it doesn’t matter. We had no defaults going through the GFC, but the leverage was higher and the result would’ve been better with lower leverage. We’ve since taken a more conservative approach with leverage. During the recent run-up in rates, we took leverage across our funds down — we have capacity to do that — so we learned from that type of experience.  

B. Quality buildings. The quality buildings were able to maintain occupancy. Maybe you don’t get the rent growth, but if you have a high-quality building, you’ll find a tenant in that building. One reason our focus has shifted toward development is we want the highest quality across the portfolio. In our view, there’s risk in doing development, but if you choose the right location and target, the deepest segment of the tenant market, you’ll find a tenant for your building. 

How has technology changed the industrial sector as an asset class?

There are different dimensions to that. Obviously, the impact on our business from e-commerce is a tech-related advancement that has been tremendously beneficial to us. The buildings themselves have evolved. There haven’t been dramatic changes but they need to appeal to major third-party logistics operators. You need more cubic space, better truck circulation, you need excellent access, and then in the last three to four years, particularly in Europe, you need a building that’s increasingly energy efficient.

So investments are made in HVAC systems, lighting systems, to reduce energy consumption, and then you have this additional opportunity to use these buildings to provide solar power to tenants or to communities. 

Sounds like a fascinating sector. How do you see non-industrial assets shaking out?

In our sector, there wasn’t a lot of distress, but there was a reset of pricing. In multifamily and office, you’ve had more pressure emerge from higher rates and lower yields. In multifamily, you’ve seen supply issues, and rent levels in many markets have not been growing. So that puts pressure on investors in those businesses. But in 2024 there will be opportunities for investors in that business. 

Office is more difficult. There are major structural factors at play, and a dynamic where it’s under-demolished. And so there needs to be an adjustment as buildings are repositioned as multifamily buildings or repurposed. I think that is years away, and I think you’ll find people make very strong returns, but you need a long time frame and patient capital to benefit

Last question: What are your hobbies? 

I’ve got four kids, they’re all grown now, so I like to chase them around, and I also have a grandson. I enjoy that a great deal. I like doing things with them. They are all skiers, all four kids are racers, skiing is a big part of our lives in the winter. We live on a farm north of the city that has been in our family for four generations, and it’s a shared passion. It’s mostly a horse farm, but it’s great to have these common pursuits.

Brian Pascus can be reached at bpascus@commercialobserver.com.

  

Robert Khodadadian has long had a simple philosophy about selling real estate. The way he sees it, there are approximately a million buildings in the city, and the broker that gets to sell any one among the multitude that will hit the auctioning block at a given moment is, sometimes, simply the person who happens to pitch their services to the right seller at the right time.

Robert Khodadadian, skyline properties, ground leases, ground lease, off market, investment sales, khodadadian, Commercial Real Estate Sales, The Commercial Observer, Retail For Lease, Commercial Observer, Commercial Office Lease

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Sunday Summary: The Big Shuffle Continues Robert Khodadadian | Commercial Observer

Over here at Commercial Observer since the beginning of the year (and maybe even before) we’ve noticed an ever greater number of personnel moves. This week was no exception.

We should probably start with the big news: Darcy Stacom, Queen of the Skyscrapers and a 20-plus year veteran of CBRE (CBRE), has announced that she’s leaving to start her own firm.

“This is in many ways a long time coming,” Stacom told CO. “Many moons ago I said [to the CBRE brass], ‘You ought to be thinking about a successor.’ ”

The details of the new firm, called Stacom CRE, are not fully formed yet, but since the announcement hit on Tuesday Stacom’s phone has been ringing off the hook from colleagues and well-wishers eager to congratulate her, or possibly do business with her.

“Some of my longtime clients [called and said], ‘I would love to be your first client,’ ” Stacom said.

Second up, Robert K. Fetterman, one of the legends of real estate who started RKF before selling it to Newmark (NMRK) back in 2019, is returning to Newmark after a four-year hiatus.

“Happy to report that this retail legend is back!” said Aurora Capital Associates’s Jared Epstein by way of announcement via Instagram on Tuesday.

 

Speaking of Newmark, it also grabbed Jonathan Firestone from Eastdil Secured to head up its debt platform with Jordan Roeschlaub.

 

But there were non-Newmark hirings, too. Chris LaBianca, who had headed up lending at UBS for the last decade, told us on Friday that he was headed to Natixis to lead its CMBS originations.

 

And for one more major bombshell this week in hiring: Macerich announced that their new CEO will be former Spirit Realty Capital president and CEO Jackson Hsieh, who will be succeeding Thomas O’Hern starting March 1.

 

These people all had a much better week than Nir Meir

Another big name came out of the real estate headlines this week — but not in the way he would have wanted.

Nir Meir, who had been one of the main heavies of HFZ Capital Group, was arrested and indicted in Miami-Dade County (days after filing for bankruptcy) in an $86 million fraud case that will have him extradited back to New York.

Among the charges that HFZ and construction firm Omnibuild were indicted on include whoppers such as larceny, conspiracy, falsifying business records, tax fraud and money laundering regarding the construction and sale of HFZ’s far west Chelsea condominium The XI on 11th Avenue.

But the Manhattan DA singled out Meir specifically. “These indictments depict allegations of widespread fraud within the real estate industry primarily spearheaded by one man: Nir Meir,” Alvin Bragg said in a statement. “My office’s Rackets Bureau is laser-focused on fraud in the construction and real estate industries and will continue to root out people who steal from investors and corrupt the market.”

Yikes.

A blast from the past

Remember Neumann? (No, not that Newman.) Adam Neumann. The guy who founded WeWork? The guy who raised billions of dollars on the promise of coworking? The guy who rented millions of square feet becoming (for a little while) the biggest tenant in New York? The guy who hired Run-DMC to DJ WeWork parties and smuggled marijuana on a private plane? The guy who turned out a historically bad IPO, crashed as CEO, borrowed hundreds of millions against overpriced stock, and was played by Jared Leto in the television show?

He’s back.

And not back in the sense that he’s got a new real estate venture (which he does, by the way). He’s back trying to buy WeWork!

Along with Dan Loeb’s Third Point, Neumann is attempting to buy the coworking firm out of bankruptcy — however, the left behinds at WeWork are none too happy about it. According to an article in Bloomberg, Neumann’s lawyer Alex Spiro at Quinn Emanuel Urquhart & Sullivan has been writing angry letters to WeWork to get financial information out of them.

“We write to express our dismay with WeWork’s lack of engagement even to provide information to my clients in what is intended to be a value-maximizing transaction for all stakeholders,” Spiro wrote.

The nerve!

Speaking of blasts from the past

What would have been one of the biggest leases in all of Los Angeles last year — a 300,000-square-foot deal at the Gas Company Tower in Downtown L.A. for the city’s Housing Department — was quashed at the last minute when the CMBS bondholders at the 52-story building rejected it.

The rejection of the deal was doubly painful because the building needed a big tenant. It had gone into receivership in April of 2023 after its owner, Brookfield, defaulted on $748 million in debt.

Well, it looks like it’s back, baby! (Yes, that was a little George Costanza of us. We guess Neumann … er Newman put us in the mood.) 

After shopping around other properties, the L.A. Department of General Services came back and a deal is currently in the works to put five city departments in 310,000 square feet of space for the next 15 years.

Speaking of big leases…

No, there wasn’t quite a 310,000-square-footer on the East Coast, but there were a few biggies. Intercontinental Exchange (which owns the New York Stock Exchange) struck a deal with Fisher Bros. for 142,946 square feet at 1345 Avenue of the Americas. And the international law firm Dentons renewed 159,500 square feet at Rockefeller Group’s 1221 Avenue of the Americas. (Sixth keeps sizzling!)

There were even some meaty non-Avenue of the Americas leases, like Burlington Stores, the discount retail chain, which signed a 16-year expansion of its offices by 67,865 square feet at Empire State Realty Trust’s 1400 Broadway.

But we also saw a notable closing, or two.

Essex Crossing, the Lower East Side mixed-use complex, announced that it was shutting down its subterranean food court Market Line and clearing out all remaining vendors by April 1. Which shouldn’t have been the biggest surprise in the world. Veselka, Nom Wah Tea Parlor, Cafe Grumpy, Pho Grand, Slice Joint and Grand Delancey had already pulled up stakes.

Restaurants remain hard. And that’s true everywhere. We also learned that L.A. favorites Manzke and Bicyclette are closing shop.

It’s also true across retail.

“Demand for retail space has resulted in a mixed trend, leaning towards the positive side as excess retail space is gradually being worked out of the market,” a new NAI Capital report said. “Still, the retail market has a way to go to return vacancy to ‘normal’ levels.”

But things do return. And not only will that include retail, it might even include (shudder) office.

Some players are even preparing for such a return. Several distress funds are gearing up for the next phase of the real estate market, and their plan might make for some interesting Sunday reading.

See you next week!

  

Robert Khodadadian has long had a simple philosophy about selling real estate. The way he sees it, there are approximately a million buildings in the city, and the broker that gets to sell any one among the multitude that will hit the auctioning block at a given moment is, sometimes, simply the person who happens to pitch their services to the right seller at the right time.

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Medical Research Company Buys Miami Lakes Office Robert Khodadadian | Commercial Observer

Indago Research and Health Center paid $11.7 million for a low-rise office building in Miami Lakes, Fla., property records show.

The two-story building sits on two acres at 8181 NW 154th Street, at the corner of Northwest 82nd Avenue, half a mile west of the Palmetto Expressway. Miami Lakes is a small inland community about 16 miles northwest of Downtown Miami.

The Hialeah-based company, which conducts clinical research, plans to occupy parts of the 59,973-square-foot building, according to Ricardo Du Pond of Fortune Christie’s Real Estate, who represented the seller, Miami Lakes Plaza LLC.

The building, which was constructed in 1991, is now 74 percent leased with tenants that include Divine Plastic Surgery and Chinitas Beauty and Eyebrow Spa by Dailyn, per Du Pond. Michael Ambrose of Ambrose Commercial Realty Group represented the buyer in the off-market transaction.

The seller had purchased the property for $6.4 million in 2012, per records. 

At the close of 2023, the Miami Lakes office market boasted a vacancy rate of 15 percent and asking rents of $33 per square foot, according to data from Cushman & Wakefield

Julia Echikson can be reached at jechikson@commercialobserver.com

  

Robert Khodadadian has long had a simple philosophy about selling real estate. The way he sees it, there are approximately a million buildings in the city, and the broker that gets to sell any one among the multitude that will hit the auctioning block at a given moment is, sometimes, simply the person who happens to pitch their services to the right seller at the right time.

Robert Khodadadian, skyline properties, ground leases, ground lease, off market, investment sales, khodadadian, Commercial Real Estate Sales, The Commercial Observer, Retail For Lease, Commercial Observer, Commercial Office Lease

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NYC Building Permits Spike — But Only for One- to Three-Family Homes, Not Apartments Robert Khodadadian | Commercial Observer

New York City’s slowing pipeline for new construction had a big spike at the end of 2023, but the majority of those new building applications were for one-, two- or three-family homes in the outer boroughs rather than much-needed apartment buildings, the Real Estate Board of New York found in its latest report.

There were 728 new building filings in the fourth quarter of 2023, a 113 percent increase from the previous quarter and a 73 percent increase from the fourth quarter of 2022, REBNY found. 

While that seems like good news as the city continues to face a housing shortage, the increase was largely thanks to a record-breaking number of permit filing for one- to three-family homes, 568 applications to be exact. 

In a rare exception, Staten Island had more new building filings than any other borough, 520, a 395 percent increase from last year. The borough accounted for 76 percent of new building filings in the fourth quarter, while Queens came in second with just 14 percent, followed by Brooklyn with 10 percent, the Bronx with 4 percent and Manhattan with 1 percent, the report found.  

“This data makes clear that New York City is not building the kind of multifamily rental housing needed to address our worsening supply crisis,” said Zachary Steinberg, the REBNY senior vice president of policy. “Without policies in place to spur greater rental housing construction, one cannot expect this problem to fix itself. Elected officials in Albany must take action to create new housing that will support our housing market and broader economy.”

REBNY blames the spike in smaller-home construction on New York City’s building electrification law — Local Law 154 — which went into effect on Jan.  1. The legislation requires new buildings under seven stories to be fully electric — with exceptions for certain industrial uses, labs, hospitals and utilities — so developers who wanted to build small homes with older forms of gas heating rushed to get their permits in by the end of 2023, according to REBNY

Despite the increase in permits, the total square footage proposed — 6.2 million — represented a 58 percent decrease from the fourth quarter of 2022. The last quarter of 2023 saw only two filings for buildings more than 300,000 square feet, eight fewer than 2022 and a 33 percent decline of the quarterly average since 2008. Developers proposed 4,406 units, a more than 50 percent decrease from the same time a year ago. 

REBNY has long pinned blame for the decline in new building and foundation permits for larger properties on the loss of the 421a tax exemption for new rental construction in June 2022. Gov. Kathy Hochul recently pitched extending the deadline for ongoing projects to qualify for 421a by four years and has vowed to seek a new replacement for 421a.

The trade group’s construction pipeline update comes just as the New York City Department of Housing Preservation and Development released a survey showing the city’s rental vacancy rate tightened to just 1.4 percent in 2023.  

The category with the most vacancy was apartments priced above $2,400 a month, which still had a relatively low vacancy rate of 3.4 percent. The other price brackets all had vacancy rates below 1 percent, with units renting for less than $1,100 a month coming in at just 0.4 percent vacant. The last vacancy survey relied on data collected in 2020 and reported that 4.5 percent of the city’s units were vacant at the height of the pandemic. 

Rebecca Baird-Remba can be reached at rbairdremba@commercialobserver.com.

  

Robert Khodadadian has long had a simple philosophy about selling real estate. The way he sees it, there are approximately a million buildings in the city, and the broker that gets to sell any one among the multitude that will hit the auctioning block at a given moment is, sometimes, simply the person who happens to pitch their services to the right seller at the right time.

Robert Khodadadian, skyline properties, ground leases, ground lease, off market, investment sales, khodadadian, Commercial Real Estate Sales, The Commercial Observer, Retail For Lease, Commercial Observer, Commercial Office Lease

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Natxis Adds Chris LaBianca From UBS to Lead Conduit Origination Robert Khodadadian | Commercial Observer

Chris LaBianca, who spent nearly a decade heading up commercial real estate lending  at UBS, has departed for a similar role at Natixis

The Paris-headquartered bank announced Thursday that it had hired the industry veteran to lead commercial mortgage-backed securities (CMBS) conduit originations out of its New York office. LaBianca will work out of Natixis’ corporate and investment banking (CIB) division.

LaBianca was previously head of commercial mortgage originations at UBS, going back to 2013, and in 2022 was transferred from investment banking to lead CRE efforts in the bank’s wealth management division. UBS promoted Jeff Dortona and Bobby Wiginton as co-heads of originations in real estate finance 18 months ago to to fill LaBianca’s responsibilities. 

It’s an exciting time to be joining Natixis CIB,” LaBianca said in a statement. “We have assembled a team with deep industry experience.”

At UBS, LaBianca spearheaded lending efforts alongside David Nass, head of real estate finance. The pair were regular honorees on Commercial Observer’s Power Finance 50 list, executing $4.3 billion of originations in 2022

Prior to UBS, LaBianca held roles at RCG Longview, Bank of America, Chase Manhattan Bank, Chemical Bank and Prudential.

Natixis also announced the hiring of David Kadin as a senior originator in its Los Angeles office. Kadin was previously head of debt for the Western U.S at Nuveen Real Estate for five years. 

It also appointed Julie Han as head of underwriting and David Schwartz as head of portfolio lending. 

Further details about the group’s new structure could not be immediately gleaned.  

The company said the hires round out a “strategic reinforcement” of Natixis’ CRE platform that began to take shape in June 2022 with the addition of 30-year veteran Precilla Torres as head of real estate and hospitality of the Americas. It later appointed Chuck Lee as head of CMBS Americas. 

 “We are entering a new era of opportunity regarding our coverage of the real estate sector,” Thierry Bernard, Natixis CIB global head of real estate & hospitality, said in a statement. “The caliber of the talent that we have brought on board reflect our commitment to the space and to accelerating the growth of the business with continued investment.” 

Officials at UBS did not immediately return a request for comment.

Andrew Coen can be reached at acoen@commercialobserver.com 

  

Robert Khodadadian has long had a simple philosophy about selling real estate. The way he sees it, there are approximately a million buildings in the city, and the broker that gets to sell any one among the multitude that will hit the auctioning block at a given moment is, sometimes, simply the person who happens to pitch their services to the right seller at the right time.

Robert Khodadadian, skyline properties, ground leases, ground lease, off market, investment sales, khodadadian, Commercial Real Estate Sales, The Commercial Observer, Retail For Lease, Commercial Observer, Commercial Office Lease

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Ice Cream Jubilee Scoops Up Space in Georgetown Robert Khodadadian | Commercial Observer

Ice Cream Jubilee has inked a 580-square-foot space at 3333 M Street in Washington, D.C.’s Georgetown neighborhood. 

The cottage-like space was previously a District Doughnut, which vacated last year, and before that it was the longtime home of Sweetgreen. 

The property is owned by EastBanc, according to public records. 

Founded in 2014 by Victoria Lai, Ice Cream Jubilee offers handcrafted ice cream flavors. The chain currently has four other stores in the D.C. area: 4620 Wisconsin Boulevard NW in the District’s Yards neighborhood; 11990 Market Street in Reston, Va.; 151 West Falls Station Boulevard in Falls Church, Va., which opened in January; and 4430 Calvert Road in College Park, Md.

The shop also offers vegan and dairy-free options and pup cups for pups. 

Another location, at 1407 T Street NW, closed in October, citing on Instagram that the landlord chose not to renew the lease. 

The new Ice Cream Jubileestore is set to open in March. The company also announced on Instagram that there will be three other locations opening in 2024, along with an ice cream truck that will travel the streets of D.C. 

Keith Loria can be reached at Kloria@commercialobserver.com.

  

Robert Khodadadian has long had a simple philosophy about selling real estate. The way he sees it, there are approximately a million buildings in the city, and the broker that gets to sell any one among the multitude that will hit the auctioning block at a given moment is, sometimes, simply the person who happens to pitch their services to the right seller at the right time.

Robert Khodadadian, skyline properties, ground leases, ground lease, off market, investment sales, khodadadian, Commercial Real Estate Sales, The Commercial Observer, Retail For Lease, Commercial Observer, Commercial Office Lease

Channel, Leases, Retail, 11990 Market Street, 151 West Falls Station Boulevard, 3333 M Street, 4430 Calvert, 4620 Wisconsin Boulevard NW, EastBanc, Ice Cream Jubilee, Victoria Lai, Washington DC, Georgetown, Northern Virginia Articles about Robert Khodadadian from Commercial Observer New York’s authority on commercial real estate leasing financing deals and culture.

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