April 24, 2024
Robert Khodadadian – The Real Deal, Robert Khodadadian
robert khodadadian the real deal Manhattan Commercial real estate Sales Property value Investment Property management Real estate brokers Tenant leasing Rent roll Building inspections Due diligence Zoning regulations Title searches Environmental assessments Building codes Market analysis Property tax Financing Property appraisal Lease negotiations Landlord representation Tenant representation Net operating income Cap rate Cash flow Commercial mortgage-backed securities Appraisal value Property redevelopment Site selection Leasehold improvements Commercial property management Lease agreements Commercial property inspections Tax incentives Historic tax credits Energy efficiency Building amenities Commercial property marketing Lease renewals Tenant retention Property insurance Escrow services Closing costs Commercial property auctions Opportunity zones Real estate investment trusts (REITs) Property ownership structure Building maintenance Real estate market trends Property listing services Site plans Common area maintenance fees Asset management Exit strategies Lease options Property surveys Site feasibility studies Economic incentives Equity financing Debt financing Property tax assessments Building permits Commercial property development Subleasing Short-term rentals Lease buyouts Tenant improvements Lease assignments Commercial tenant screening Tenant credit analysis. How much would you pay for a ghost town? There’s one in Arizona that comes complete with a refurbished general store. The owner is asking $1.1 million. A cannabis company tried selling the desert town of Nipton in California for $5 million, but ultimately only got $2.5 million from the adult circus that now owns The post Secretive company buys California ghost town for $23M appeared first on The Real Deal. Robert Khodadadian - The Real Deal <!-- wp:html --><p>How much would you pay for a ghost town?</p> <p>There’s one in Arizona that comes complete with a refurbished general store. The owner is asking <a href="https://therealdeal.com/new-york/2022/09/24/night-at-the-museum-ghost-town-general-store-turned-home-lists-at-1m/">$1.1 million</a>. A cannabis company tried selling the desert town of Nipton in California for $5 million, but ultimately <a href="https://therealdeal.com/new-york/2023/01/15/real-life-schitts-creek-for-2-5m-this-adult-circus-bought-a-whole-town/">only got $2.5 million</a> from the adult circus that now owns it. </p> <p>Putting those meager millions to shame, a secretive company with the nondescript moniker Ecology Mountain Holdings just bought a California ghost town for $22.5 million, <a href="https://www.sfgate.com/travel/article/eagle-mountain-california-ghost-town-18096768.php">SFGate</a> reported. </p> <p>The only publicly available information about the buying entity is its name; its Cerritos, California address; and that it bought the ghost town, Eagle Mountain, California.</p> <p>The seller was Eagle Mountain Acquisition LLC, an apparent affiliate of Kaiser Steel, the long-gone steel company that established the town in 1948, according to the outlet. Kaiser Steel was one of many companies owned and led by Henry J. Kaiser, a 20th century industrialist who had shipbuilding, health care, automobile, aluminum, real estate and media enterprises. His most visible legacy remaining today is the health care giant Kaiser Permanente.</p> <p>Kaiser’s Eagle Mountain, a three-hour drive inland from Los Angeles and far out-shined by its neighbor, Joshua Tree National Park, became a thriving steel town for a few short decades, according to the outlet. The mine’s employee base swelled to just under 1,000, and they were served by an early model of the Kaiser prepaid health care plan.</p> <p>The town opened a post office, a 350-seat rec center and a 100-student high school in its good years. But Kaiser Steel closed its doors in 1983, and so did the Eagle Mountain mine. The prosperity of blowing iron ore out of the hillside had withered. </p> <p>After the mining business died, a private prison called the Eagle Mountain Community Correctional Facility briefly operated in town.</p> <p>While some ghost towns like Nipton have been rebranded into tourist attractions, Ecology Mountain Holdings’ ambitions for this redevelopment remain, like most things with the company, unknown.<br />–– <em>Kate Hinsche</em></p> <p>The post <a href="https://therealdeal.com/la/2023/05/27/secretive-company-buys-california-ghost-town-for-23m/">Secretive company buys California ghost town for $23M</a> appeared first on <a href="https://therealdeal.com/">The Real Deal</a>.</p> <p> How much would you pay for a ghost town? There’s one in Arizona that comes complete with a refurbished general store. The owner is asking $1.1 million. A cannabis company tried selling the desert town of Nipton in California for $5 million, but ultimately only got $2.5 million from the adult circus that now owns<br /> The post Secretive company buys California ghost town for $23M appeared first on The Real Deal.  Uncategorized, California, ghost towns, Joshua Tree, Los Angeles The Real Deal </p> <p>Robert Khodadadian has long had a simple philosophy about selling real estate. 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.</p><!-- /wp:html -->

How much would you pay for a ghost town?

There’s one in Arizona that comes complete with a refurbished general store. The owner is asking $1.1 million. A cannabis company tried selling the desert town of Nipton in California for $5 million, but ultimately only got $2.5 million from the adult circus that now owns it

Putting those meager millions to shame, a secretive company with the nondescript moniker Ecology Mountain Holdings just bought a California ghost town for $22.5 million, SFGate reported. 

The only publicly available information about the buying entity is its name; its Cerritos, California address; and that it bought the ghost town, Eagle Mountain, California.

The seller was Eagle Mountain Acquisition LLC, an apparent affiliate of Kaiser Steel, the long-gone steel company that established the town in 1948, according to the outlet. Kaiser Steel was one of many companies owned and led by Henry J. Kaiser, a 20th century industrialist who had shipbuilding, health care, automobile, aluminum, real estate and media enterprises. His most visible legacy remaining today is the health care giant Kaiser Permanente.

Kaiser’s Eagle Mountain, a three-hour drive inland from Los Angeles and far out-shined by its neighbor, Joshua Tree National Park, became a thriving steel town for a few short decades, according to the outlet. The mine’s employee base swelled to just under 1,000, and they were served by an early model of the Kaiser prepaid health care plan.

The town opened a post office, a 350-seat rec center and a 100-student high school in its good years. But Kaiser Steel closed its doors in 1983, and so did the Eagle Mountain mine. The prosperity of blowing iron ore out of the hillside had withered. 

After the mining business died, a private prison called the Eagle Mountain Community Correctional Facility briefly operated in town.

While some ghost towns like Nipton have been rebranded into tourist attractions, Ecology Mountain Holdings’ ambitions for this redevelopment remain, like most things with the company, unknown.
–– Kate Hinsche

The post Secretive company buys California ghost town for $23M appeared first on The Real Deal.

 How much would you pay for a ghost town? There’s one in Arizona that comes complete with a refurbished general store. The owner is asking $1.1 million. A cannabis company tried selling the desert town of Nipton in California for $5 million, but ultimately only got $2.5 million from the adult circus that now owns
The post Secretive company buys California ghost town for $23M appeared first on The Real Deal.  Uncategorized, California, ghost towns, Joshua Tree, Los Angeles The Real Deal 

Robert Khodadadian has long had a simple philosophy about selling real estate. 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.

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