Archives for posts with tag: Four Season

Hi,

Another quarter and another record breaking set of numbers for Manhattan and Brooklyn real estate.

The boom of the luxury and super high end condos have pulled the average price of a Manhattan apartment to an all-time high $1.81M and also helped trigger a rise in inventory with the sales commencements of several high profile New Developments across the borough.

Brooklyn also gets its share of records with the average price per square foot breaking a 7-year high to reach $704/sf. The historically low inventory has risen over the last quarter but in proportion far from the levels that a market requires to reach equilibrium.

In addition to the traditional Corcoran Manhattan and Brooklyn market reports, this newsletter will touch base on the current relationship between Manhattan inventories, price level and the effect of New Developments in the borough. To follow, the impact of Global Wealth and its potential contribution to New York Real Estate along with the consequences of China’s economy will present data that could help developers keeping their cool in regards to the rise in super high end properties hitting the market. Finally, Brooklyn’s alarming lack of inventory may show a swift in current developers’ strategy to anticipate a change of plans and bring more products for sale quicker than expected to feed a demand starved of choices.

I truly hope that this newsletter will be beneficial and informative while shaping your future real estate plans. Please feel free to contact me should you want to consult on your real estate projects.

Cheers,

Q2_2015_Newsletter

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Last year I covered the residential, commercial and residential expansions of the area below Chambers Street covering three distinct neighborhoods: Financial District, South Street Seaport and Battery Park City. We can now observe significant changes and an even more positive outlook for the years to come.Residential Q1’14 vs Q1’13 figures look very healthy. Condos average ppsf increased by 25% to $1,106, and the median price by 36% to $968K. The increasing demand for larger units (3-bed) with an average price that amplified by 30% to $2.350M is partially responsible for driving the prices upward. New Developments with 225 Rector as a Star product following by the W Downtown (pic below) and 75 Wall Street have a ppsf that increased on average by 30% to reach $1,391/sf and a median price who increased by 48% to $1,214M.

W Residences

Once stalled mixed-use luxury condo/retail developments such as 50 West Street is finally going up after securing a $400M debt/equity deal mid2013. The Top 30 floors of the iconic Woolworth tower are being converted into condominiums that will average over $3,000/sf. The Four Season hotel and residences on Church and Barclay Street is under construction (below) and 22 Thames Street is slated to become the tallest residential tower in Downtown.

FourSeason_Downtown

Knowing that the cap of residential construction has been reached in BPC, and the Financial District residential inventories have dropped by 42% in the past year, these developments will help accelerating the residential life in the neighborhood.The retail activity and prospects are showing signs that very few New Yorkers could have ever imagined just a couple of years ago or even months following Sandy: on the Battery Park City side, Brookfield Place $250M renovation is revamping the entire market place of the World Financial Center (see rendering below) and is now connected underground with the World Trade Center Path Train Station and Fulton MTA transit center. Le District, a French food marketplace is slated to open later in 2014, along with Umami Burger.

Brookfield place

On the other side of the highway, Westfield, who owned the retail space of the WTC recently announced the signature of Eataly at 3 WTC, which follows high end designers (Breitling, Canali, Montblanc) setting up retails next to the 17,000sf Victoria Secret store in the 365x115ft long main hall known as the Oculus (see bottom pic), described as “an elliptical fish-tank-like area with a movable glass eyelid on the ceiling”. Tom Ford, Tiffany and Armani are also eyeing space at 3 WTC

Calatravas-Oculus

Westfield place

The commercial landscape is also transitioning: the high rent and low vacancy rate of Midtown and Midtown South have pushed startup firms in need of quick, cheap and efficient set up to the Financial District that has been deserting by financial services and is now being invaded by tech, media, and Internet companies. Several drivers have pushed to this direction. First, the MTA Fulton transit hub converges more than 10 subway lines which will facilitate the commute of the many Brooklyners employed by these creative companies. Second, the price of $52.49/sf versus $66.24/sf for midtown south combined with flexible workplaces is an attractive feature. Also, some tenants are acting as magnets such as Conde Nast’s media empire who has taken over 1 million sf of office space at 1 WTC, the hot ad agency Droga5 who settled on 90,000 sf and collaborative space provider WeWork who took over 300,000sf on Wall Street. Finally the area has 20 new hotel projects under construction which will bring about 1,700 rooms to facilitate tourism and business travelers’ needs. 

 

As we see the 2008 financial crisis negative effects on Real Estate diminishing, stalled projects are now back on track and I selected 3 of the most impressive projects ongoing in the Downtown Manhattan.

First, 30 Park Place/99 Church street, which has been a whole in the ground surrounding by temporary walls displaying the names of cities worldwide for about 2 years. A whole that residents of 50 Murray may no longer appreciate soon, as developer Larry Silverstein is planning to build an 80 story condo/hotel branded as a Four Season Hotel and Private Residences New York Downtown which consist of 189 rooms, 157 condo units with the most expensive unit flirting with the $35 million. The projects was re-activated upon an agreement with Children’s investment Fund Management LLP for up to $660 million in construction financing.

 

30parkplacerender

Second project, located at 80 South Street, a once planned tower designed by Santiago Caltrava has experienced shifts in few ways. First, a new team of architect from Morali Architects has been hired. Their proposal brings the tower higher than the original plan (1018ft vs 760ft), will most likely be used as a mix used development featuring a boutique hotel, condominiums, and sky gardens. the project could see the light of the day in 2016 if discussions between the NY YIMBY and chief architect Anthony Morali move forward.

80 South Street

Last, but not least, 5 Franklin Place, now called Franklin Place, is one of the newest Tribeca condominium projects. The building comprises of 53 units and its first round of listings have been released just 15 days ago on Streeteasy. The project, which started in 2008, initially had an uneasy design drawn by Ben Van Berkels, but developer El Ad Group manifested some ambition and hired ODA to re-design the building. Since the sales office open in April 2013, over 30% of the units have been sold while only 5 out of the 20 story have been built so far. Completion is expected for Fall 2014.

5franklinplace