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Underline scores $15M in funding from Coral Gables

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Rendering of the Underline (Credit: The Underline)

The Underline just got another boost in funding, this time from the city of Coral Gables.

The Coral Gables City Commission voted Tuesday to direct $15 million from impact fees, which come from developers constructing projects in the area, to the linear park. Collecting the funds will take about five years and will likely come from projects like the controversial Paseo de la Riviera, the Miami Herald reported.

The proposed multimillion-dollar park project, which will run under the Metrorail from Brickell to Dadeland, is now only $15 million short of the $100 million it needs for construction. Friends of the Underline, the nonprofit leading the charge for the park, plans to break ground in about a year by starting construction on the Brickell portion.

In the Gables, the park will run in front the University of Miami and NP International’s Paseo de la Riviera, which recently secured construction financing.

Last month, the city of Miami’s planning and zoning department proposed providing bonuses to developers who contribute funds for the city’s portion of the planned 10-mile park.

About a year earlier, Miami city commissioners approved $50 million in funding for the Underline. The money will come from development fees charged by the city, while bout $67 million will be raised through private donations and other public funding.

[Miami Herald] – Katherine Kallergis


Ex-Heat star Chris Bosh wants $18M for Miami Beach estate

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Chris Bosh and his North Bay Road house (Credit: ESPN, One Sotheby’s International Realty)

Chris Bosh said goodbye to his team, and now he’s planning to do the same to his home.

The ex-Miami Heat star and his wife, Adrienne Williams Bosh, are listing their Miami Beach estate at 6396 North Bay Road for $18 million, according to the Wall Street Journal. The couple is looking to sell for “personal reasons,” said listing agent Diane Lieberman of One Sotheby’s International Realty.

Bosh was part of the Heat’s “Big Three,” which included Dwyane Wade and LeBron James. James sold his Coconut Grove home for $13.4 million in 2015 , while Wade, who reunited with James on the Cleveland Cavaliers this year, kept his Miami Beach mansion. Bosh eventually left the Heat due to a blood clot issue.

Records show he paid about $12.3 million for the seven-bedroom, nearly 12,400-square-foot North Bay Road estate in 2010, a year after it was completed. The property includes an infinity-edge pool, boat dock, outdoor kitchen, gym and guesthouse. [WSJ] – Katherine Kallergis

Senior housing developers score $93M in construction loans for Broward projects

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Rendering of Allegro at Parkland and Robert Karn (Credit: Meyer and Allegro Senior Living)

Allegro Senior Living Scores $44.5M Construction Loan

St. Louis-based Allegro Senior Living just scored a $44.5 million construction loan for a senior housing development in Parkland, property records show.

The company will be constructing a 175-unit, 186,000-square-foot senior and living-assistance complex at 5900 Loxahatchee Road. Architectural firm Meyer Design is designing the project, according to its website.

This will be the company’s first senior care community in Broward County. Records show Allegro bought the 8-acre parcel in April for $6.25 million. The lender for the loan is Synovus Bank.

The complex is set to open in early 2019, according to Allegro, which operates and develops senior living properties throughout Florida and Kentucky.

Rendering of Belmont in Fort Lauderdale (Credit: Belmont Village)

Belmont Village Senior Living Lands $49M Construction Loan

Houston-based Belmont Village Senior Living landed a $48.8 million construction loan for its planned 12-story, senior living building in Fort Lauderdale, property records show.

The company is planning to build a 204-unit, 212,000-square-foot complex at 1031 Seminole Drive, just north of the Galleria Mall. Compass Bank provided the financing.

The complex will offer independent-living, assisted-living and memory-care services, according to its website. Amenities include chef-prepared meals, a bistro, patios for dining, a fitness center, a heated saltwater swimming pool, a full-service salon and a movie room.

The rental complex is set to open in 2019, according to the company’s website. The developer also has properties in Los Angeles, San Diego and Chicago. It’s building in Fort Lauderdale will be Belmont ’s first project in Florida.

Nearby, developer Ocean Land is also planning a senior and assisted-living complex. The company wants to build a 42-story, 401-unit tower with 152 assisted-living residences and 57 memory-care units.

Fortune Realty caught in crossfire as Israeli couple tangles over $13M in Miami Beach properties

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2581 Lake Avenue and Edgardo Defortuna (Credit: MLS, Zillow)

UPDATED April 4, 2018, 4:45 p.m.: An Israeli couple’s divorce battle over their multimillion-dollar Miami Beach property portfolio has ensnared one of South Florida’s most prominent real estate leaders, one of his sales agents, and his brokerage and development company.

Nicole Ankonina is suing her estranged husband Itzhak Bernard Ankonina Incorvaia, Fortune International Realty founder and president Edgardo Defortuna, and Fortune broker Alex Daguer to stop them from selling 10 residential properties between South Beach and Mid Beach she is laying claim to, according to a Nov. 17 lawsuit filed in Miami-Dade Circuit Court. Fortune International and four companies controlled by Incorvaia are also named as defendants.

Update: the suit was voluntarily dismissed on April 2.

The 2017 assessed value of the homes is $12.87 million, ranging from $265,733 for a one-bedroom condo at 1529 Jefferson Avenue to $5.1 million for a seven-bedroom, eight-bathroom mansion at 2581 Lake Avenue. That property is currently listed for $13.9 million on Zillow.

Ankonina’s attorney Ilan Nieuchowicz declined comment. Incorvaia could not be reached for comment, while a Fortune spokesperson said the company does not comment on pending litigation.

The lawsuit and other court documents attached to the complaint state that during the dot-com bubble between 1999 and 2002, Ankonina sold her shares in a publicly traded software company she and Incorvaia founded, pocketing more than 4 million euros. She invested those earnings in real estate properties located in Israel and the U.S., including the 10 residences in Miami Beach, the suit says.

Ankonina alleges that even though the properties are legally titled to and controlled by Incorvaia, the couple each own a 50 percent stake in the homes. She initially filed for divorce from Incorvaia in Miami-Dade family court in June of last year, but he successfully had the complaint dismissed after she moved to Tel-Aviv. Over the summer, Ankonina filed for divorce in Tel-Aviv’s family court and has won two orders granting her an injunction against Incorvaia from selling their real estate assets and for violating the injunction, according to court documents.

However, the Israeli court doesn’t have jurisdiction over the couple’s U.S. properties. The lawsuit alleges Incorvaia retained Daguer and Fortune to sell the properties without Ankonina’s consent and that she sent her estranged spouse, Daguer and Defortuna cease-and-desist letters that they have ignored.

Ankonina wants a judge to enforce the Israeli court’s order by forcing Defortuna, Daguer and Fortune to stop marketing the properties for sale.

Harunobu Coryne contributed reporting.

National cheat sheet

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Lennar CEO Stuart Miller

From TRD New York:

Lennar’s $5.7B buy of CalAtlantic creates largest U.S. homebuilder

There’s a new heavyweight in the homebuilding industry. The merger of Lennar Corporation with CalAtlantic Group in a $5.7 billion deal announced last month means the new company will be the largest homebuilder in the U.S., The Real Deal reported. Miami-based Lennar will also assume $3.6 billion of debt in the deal, making the purchase price a total of $9.3 billion. Lennar and CalAtlantic recorded revenues of more than $17 billion combined last year. The new entity will be in charge of 240,000 home sites and 1,300 communities in 49 markets across 21 states. 

60th construction crane rises over Chicago

There are now 60 tower cranes looming over Chicago — nearly twice the number as they were in 2016, Bisnow reported. The city has seen an increase in development across all asset classes over the last three years, with Mayor Rahm Emanuel touting the growth as evidence of the economic opportunities in Chicago. The latest addition in construction hardware comes courtesy of Belgravia Group, which is building an 18-story luxury condominium tower called Renelle on the River. The project is 50 percent pre-sold, and units are selling for between $1.6 and $3.2 million.

Growing Houston sees developments push into “deer huntin’ country”

A planned 4,500-home development north of Houston — in Conroe and the Woodlands — is the latest expansion of the fast-growing city into formerly untouched lands. Howard Hughes Corp. broke ground on the 2,000-acre master-planned Woodland Hills community last month. “I remember this as old deer huntin’ country,” Conroe Mayor Toby Powell said, according to the Houston Chronicle. In regards to exposure to flood risk in the wake of Hurricane Harvey, the Howard Hughes Corp. told the Chronicle that “home sites that builders purchase from us will allow the builders to construct homes at or above the 500-year elevation.”

An under-construction green roof in Denver

Denver voters favor ambitious green roof initiative

Voters in Denver approved Initiated Ordinance 300, which requires buildings to incorporate rooftop gardens and solar panels to increase energy efficiency. New buildings with at least 25,000 square feet will be subject to the new rules, as will older buildings that replace their roofs or expand their square footage. Mayor Michael Hancock was opposed to the measure but said he will work to implement the rules. “We have always made a good-faith effort to implement the initiatives — once the people have spoken, that’s our job,” he told the Denver Post.

Housing complaints surface at Kushner Companies Maryland affiliate

An affiliate of Kushner Companies is being investigated for allegedly coercive debt collection practices and poor maintenance at housing developments in Maryland. Attorney General Brian Frosh of Maryland is looking into the situation at multifamily housing run by Westminster Management in response to media reports, according to CNN. Both the New York Times and ProPublica described problems such as mold and vermin in the properties, while the Baltimore Sun described aggressive practices such as arrests of tenants. CEO Jared Kushner stepped down to join the White House in January.

Utah investor may be retried over alleged Ponzi scheme

Federal prosecutors intend to retry Utah investor Rick Koerber, who has been accused of running a real estate Ponzi scheme. His eight-week trial resulted in a mistrial on Oct. 16 because jurors were unable to reach a unanimous verdict, according to the Salt Lake Tribune. Prosecutors filed a motion last month requesting a scheduling hearing to set a new trial. The prosecution alleged that $100 million was entrusted to the defendant and more than $50 million was redistributed to other investors. Despite the time and cost involved in retrying the case, U.S. Attorney for Utah John Huber said, “it is the right thing to do.” 

Garden State Plaza Mall

Struggling shopping malls are dragging down commercial property values 

Mall valuations took a 6 percent dive from September to October and fell by 11 percent in the last 12 months, according to a report by real estate research firm Green Street Advisors. Those dwindling values are weighing down the entire commercial real estate market, Green Street found. The firm’s commercial property price index, which tracks real estate investment trust-owned properties, decreased by 1 percent from September to October — the largest month-to-month drop since the financial crisis, the Wall Street Journal reported.

Atlanta Civic Center sale opens path for $300M redevelopment

The City of Atlanta closed the long-planned sale of the Atlanta Civic Center, clearing the way for a $300 million redevelopment plan. With the aging arts center now under the control of the Atlanta Housing Authority, a mixed-use, mixed-income development can be built on the site. “This project will represent the largest commitment to affordable housing in the city of Atlanta in more than 15 years,” Mayor Kasim Reed said, according to the Atlanta Journal Constitution.

Former Stiles brokers launch commercial firm in Oakland Park

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Mike Crissy and Patrick Conness (Credit: CCREA)

Former Stiles brokers Patrick Conness and Mike Crissy are launching Conness Crissy Real Estate Advisors, a new commercial brokerage based in Oakland Park.

The duo, which met at Stiles Realty in 2013, don’t plan on duplicating the business model of bigger firms. They just signed on IBB USA, a jewelry design company, which has its 120,000-square-foot headquarters at Sawgrass International Corporate Park in Sunrise.

Conness Crissy will also offer consultation and advisory services. It will work with IBB USA on the company’s plans to build a 9,000-square-foot facility for its executives, plus space that it plans to sublease.

Connes was with Stiles for seven years. Together, they led the industrial division, working with clients that included City Furniture, GE Aviation and Delta Apparel.

Prior to Stiles, they have worked for brokerages that include Massey Knakal Realty, JLL, Berger Commercial Realty and The Staubach Company.

Compass lands $450M from SoftBank

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From left: SoftBank’s Masayoshi Son, Robert Reffkin and Ori Allon (Credit: Getty Images, Instagram)

From TRD New York: Compass — the tech brokerage and fundraising machine — said Thursday that SoftBank will invest $450 million in what the New York City-based startup claims to be the biggest investment in a real estate tech company to date.

The funding gives Compass a total of $775 million in investor capital. Just last month, it raised $100 million at a $1.8 billion valuation.

Sources said SoftBank’s investment values Compass at $2.2 billion, higher than tech-based Redfin, which made its public debuted earlier this year and has a market cap just over $2 billion.

Compass will use the $450 million from the SoftBank Vision Fund to expand nationwide. This fall, CEO Robert Reffkin said the firm would have 20 percent market share in 20 major markets by 2020.

SoftBank is also a large backer of WeWork. It pledged to invest over $4 billion in the co-working company, which has a valuation of about $20 billion.

To find buyers, luxury brokers ditch the crowds during Art Basel

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From left: Oren Alexander, Bill Hernandez, Bryan Sereny, Danny Hertzberg and Julian Johnston, and Miami Beach (Credit: Wikimedia)

For what is arguably Miami’s highest-profile week, some of the city’s top luxury agents are avoiding the crowds and instead hosting more intimate cocktail parties at their properties.

The events began days before Art Basel, Art Miami and offshoot art shows opened their doors. Coldwell Banker’s The Jills team used the opportunity to target high-net-worth art collectors who arrived early by hosting a launch party for the penthouse at 1111 Lincoln Road on Friday, Dec. 1. “By the time the main Basel events happen, most of them have already left,” The Jills’ Hillary Hertzberg said.

Residential agents are banking on the buzz created by Miami Art Week to sell multimillion-dollar homes in what has been a very slow year. “We’ve had more showings and more offers than we’ve had in [all of] 2017,” The Jills’ Danny Hertzberg noted. “You feel it in the traffic, in the momentum.”

Between 50 and 75 people attended the 1111 Lincoln event, a stark difference from the thousands that typically flood blowout parties like Haute Living and Hublot’s annual Art Basel kickoff. The Jills showcased developer Robert Wennett’s 7,700-square-foot condo, designed by Pritzker Prize-winning architect Herzog & de Meuron, with landscaping by Raymond Jungles. Wennett also has part of his art collection throughout the penthouse, Danny Hertzberg said. It hit the market a week ago for $34 million.

Julian Johnston, broker and owner of Calibre International Realty, said he’s hosting and attending smaller events to reach buyers. He’s planning a brokers’ open house at 15 Palm Avenue in Miami Beach, which is on the market for $22.5 million.

In addition to going to shows like Scope Miami, Johnston attended InList’s Art Basel party celebrating Moishe Mana’s birthday – an annual event – to connect with current and potential clients.

Bill Hernandez and Bryan Sereny of Douglas Elliman are hosting a three-hour preview party with an art gallery on Saturday night at Murano at Portofino in South Beach.

They’re also inviting brokers and their clients to check out two units in particular: Setai PHVC, which is on the market for $12.15 million, and St. Regis unit 705N, which is listed for $3.1 million, plus $400,000 worth of art – a Chinese collection that includes works by Yu Han Xi, Li Gang and Yang Tao. For the Setai unit, the artwork is negotiable.

Elliman’s Oren Alexander is also taking the opportunity to show off one of his listings. The Alexander Team is hosting a lunch on Friday for top clients at 252 Bal Bay Drive, which is on the market for $33 million. He expects most of the 15 guests to arrive by boat.

Last year, he hosted a similar lunch aboard a yacht to showcase his team’s waterfront properties, capping it off with a helicopter ride.

Alexander has been attending smaller events all week, including one at Faena House with art collector and gallery owner Larry Gagosian.

“Most of the high-caliber events are pretty much over,” Alexander said. “Now it’s mostly just parties.”

On Wenesday, Cervera Real Estate hosted the opening night preview party of Red Dot Miami and Spectrum Miami, two sister shows in Miami’s Arts & Entertainment District.

And on Friday, Elliman is closing out its Basel activities with the launch of its fourth-annual art issue of Elliman Magazine at Delano South Beach. Tony Okungbowa, former resident DJ of “The Ellen DeGeneres Show,” will be providing the music.


Equity Office pays more than $110M for portfolio in Broward and Palm Beach

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430 South Congress Ave. and Prologis’ Hamid Moghadam (Credit: CBRE and Prologis)

Prologis just sold a portfolio of properties in Broward and Palm Beach counties to Chicago-based Equity Office for more than $110 million, property records show.

The portfolio includes industrial buildings in Delray Beach, Mangonia Park, Hollywood, Dania Beach, Fort Lauderdale, Pompano Beach and Coconut Creek. The deal was financed with an $83.5 million loan from Wells Fargo.

Equity Office, which is owned by the Blackstone Group, also bought properties in Seminole and Miami-Dade counties, as well as Illinois and Wisconsin. The sales in Miami-Dade County have not yet cleared records. Prologis and Equity Office were not immediately available to comment.

Records show the Blackstone affiliate picked up an industrial complex at 430 South Congress Avenue for $9.5 million and an industrial site at 1335 West 53rd Street for $4.6 million.

In Broward, industrial complexes at 3601 and 3613 North 29th Avenue in Hollywood sold for $23.5 million; properties at 3700 North 29th Avenue, 3401 North 29th Avenue and 5555 Angler Avenue in Dania Beach sold for $14.6 million; buildings at 3600 Northwest 35th Avenue, and 5535 and 5545 Northwest 35th Avenue in Fort Lauderdale closed for $12.1 million; and the warehouse complexes at 2800 North Andrew Avenue in Pompano Beach and 4801 Johnson Road in Coconut Creek sold for a combined $39.7 million.

The properties were originally owned by KTR Capital Partners, which was acquired by Prologis and Norway’s sovereign wealth fund in 2015 for $5.9 billion.

Equity Office owns a portfolio of more than 50 million square feet of office space across the country, according to its website. Blackstone acquired its assets in a $39 billion leveraged buyout in 2007.

Raging California fires move into LA

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Southern California wildfires (Credit: Getty Images)

From TRD Los Angeles: The wildfire that has been devastating California moved into the heart of Los Angeles on Wednesday, striking near city icons including the Getty Museum and the UCLA campus.

The conflagration, dubbed the Skirball Fire, burned up to the edge of the 405, the busiest highway in the country, and northbound lanes were closed for much of Wednesday, according to the New York Times.

Officials sent an emergency alert out to all of Los Angeles County on Wednesday night warning that they were in “extreme fire danger,” and the blazes have forced the evacuations of almost 200,000 people in the Los Angeles and Ventura areas.

The fire in Los Angeles’ Bel Air neighborhood had consumed about 475 acres as of Wednesday night and multiple buildings, including the estate of media mogul and Realtor.com owner Rupert Murdoch. Even small lots in Bel Air are valued over $1 million.

Jeff Hyland, president of brokerage Hilton & Hyland, told the Times that one of his listings, a $17 million mansion, is in the evacuation zone.

Overall, fires in the Los Angeles and Ventura areas have destroyed more than 300 buildings and forced the closings of the 101 freeway and hundreds of schools.

Although strong winds normally drive fuel fires in Southern California in the late fall and winter, there is an unusually large amount of dry vegetation this year, allowing the fires to become larger and more damaging.

The season normally peaks in October, but officials have said climate change may be causing more fires to break out later in the year. [NYT] – Eddie Small

Bahia Mar redevelopment scores final approval after years of negotiating

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Renderings of Bahia Mar and Jimmy Tate

Developer Jimmy Tate and his partners can now move forward with their plans to redevelop the Bahia Mar property on Fort Lauderdale Beach.

The Fort Lauderdale City Commission on Wednesday approved plans during a marathon meeting to bring apartment towers, a new hotel, restaurants, stores and marine space to the waterfront site, according to the Sun Sentinel. The eight-and-a-half-hour hearing ended at 3:30 a.m.

Tate’s plans include seven high-rise buildings with 651 apartments, a 256-key hotel, a five-story building with a grocery store, parking, office space, a yachting-amenities complex, marina village, public promenade and more. The developer expects the project to be completed by 2028, the Sun Sentinel reported. Kobi Karp is the architect.

Because the land is owned by the city, Fort Lauderdale will receive additional rent from Tate based on a 4.25 percent gross revenue fee. By the end of the 10-year construction and leasing period, the city would be getting up to $3.7 million a year, plus property taxes.

Increasing opposition to the project led the developer to withdrew its proposal for the project last year and submit new plans earlier this year.

In September, Tate closed on $50 million in financing for the Bahia Mar Fort Lauderdale Beach – a DoubleTree by Hilton, boosting its mortgage to $135 million. It will be demolished and replaced under the new plans. Tate Capital is planning to invest at least $500 million to redevelop the waterfront property into a major mixed-use project.

The Fort Lauderdale International Boat Show is also set to remain at the Bahia Mar resort through 2050. [Sun Sentinel] – Katherine Kallergis

Inside the fight to lead CRE’s data revolution

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(Illustration by Koytnski)

From TRD New York: In the last week of October, commercial real estate brokers all over the country received a package via snail mail from CoStar Group. Inside was the informational equivalent of a dirty bomb — the latest salvo in the data giant’s legal battle against its main rival, Missouri-based Xceligent. When brokers opened the UPS envelope, they found a brochure with a carefully assembled selection of news clippings and letters about Xceligent’s alleged theft of CoStar’s data. It also included a congressional letter and news reports about human and sex trafficking.

The bizarre root of that part of the story: CoStar won a court order in 2016 that led to the raid of an Xceligent contractor’s offices in the Philippines. The data giant later claimed to have found evidence indicating that the contractor, Avion, helped facilitate sex trade on behalf of another client, Backpage.

Soon after brokers received the package from CoStar, Alison Melton, an Indianapolis-based retail director at Colliers International, had reached a breaking point.

For days, she had been on the receiving end of a barrage of emails from CoStar and Xceligent — which both maintain large databases of commercial properties, players and deals — with the competing firms making accusations, denials and counteraccusations against each other.

“Dear CoStar Real Estate Manager and @Xceligent: With all due respect, I really don’t care,” Melton wrote in a LinkedIn post. “Please stop sending me your tattling emails.”

Her post, which racked up 150-plus likes, hit a nerve.

“All brokers/agents need to band together, no matter what size company and take our data back over,” one commenter wrote. “What a waste of money, how about lowering the exorbitant monthly subscription costs instead,” wrote another. Melton declined to comment for this story.

In many ways, commercial real estate brokers, landlords and other professionals are like the children caught in the middle of a messy custody fight.

In December 2016, CoStar sued Xceligent for copyright infringement, alleging it stole property images from CoStar databases. In June, Xceligent hit back, filing an antitrust lawsuit seeking to end CoStar’s alleged “decades-long monopoly.”

The legal spat between the two competitors, however, is a symptom of a more profound shift in the real estate industry: the rise of data as a sacred resource.

For as long as real estate firms have been around, they’ve measured their size and importance in square feet. But over the past few years, that’s started to change. Increasingly, they’re also measuring their worth in megabytes.

The war over real estate intel has not only spawned a slew of startups looking to take on Goliaths like CoStar and Xceligent and carve out their own niches; it’s also lured in a growing number of big global brokerages and market unicorns like WeWork. In WeWork’s case, a vault of user and building intel has helped justify a $20 billion valuation.

Perhaps most notably, the real estate data realm has attracted money from major investors including the Blackstone Group, Brookfield Properties and the Durst Organization — all of which clearly believe there are returns to be had.

(Click to enlarge)

“Anyone who is building data or software capabilities in the industry is trying to be a driver in the middle of that ecosystem,” said Bob Courteau, CEO of the Toronto-based real estate advisory, software and data solutions firm Altus Group, which has worked with Ivanhoe Cambridge, JLL and Colliers, among other clients.

While industries like Wall Street had their data revolutions more than a decade ago, real estate is just starting to catch up.

“Compared to other financial markets, we’re still in relative infancy in the use of data,” said Bob White, founder of the research firm Real Capital Analytics, which tracks global investment sales and real estate debt deals.

On the residential side, the fight is over the digital listings market, with giants like Zillow now going head to head with the brokerage world to milk the market for all it’s worth. And though sources say the commercial real estate sector can only benefit from having more information at its fingertips, they predict more legal conflicts and express concerns about laying the groundwork for monopolies. The rising value in property intel means “there’s increasing risks associated with that data,” said Mike Sroka, co-founder of Dealpath, a commercial real estate deal management software startup. He argued that there will likely be more litigation over the control of data in the years to come. “This is a lot of new territory, which means that the market hasn’t really ironed out all of these things yet,” Sroka explained.

There is also a fear that the brokerages, landlords and other real estate players that are too slow to embrace the trend will pay. The race for data will only heat up, said Chris Kelly, co-founder of the office services provider Convene, which counts Durst and Brookfield among its investors. The New York-based firm has raised $119.2 million in venture funding since launching in 2009.

“If you’re not a company that’s going after data,” Kelly said, “you’re going to fall behind.”

Bits are the new bricks

In some cases, data has become almost as important as the physical property.

Years ago, if a commercial broker needed information about a building, they would find out from another agent or go to the property. But as big, multinational institutions expanded their market share and began investing nationally and internationally, that became less feasible. In addition, with shareholders and investors to report to, those megaplayers needed more numbers and data to justify their real estate investments. Suddenly, data processing became all the more valuable and sexy.

To be sure, real estate firms have always relied on data. It’s just that they long kept records in filing cabinets and later in Excel spreadsheets. Over the past decade, though, the game has changed at a rapidly growing rate. Where New York real estate players once had to trek Downtown to the city’s Department of Finance or the Department of Buildings to get records, for example, that information is now online. And startups have seized on it to create algorithms to churn through permits, tax records and other information so that they can build — and monetize — their own databases.

Richard Sarkis, co-founder of the online property database Reonomy, said that even before CoStar launched in the late 1980s, having so-called “asymmetric information,” meaning intel that a competitor didn’t, was an advantage.

“Now,” he said, “it’s come back almost full circle.”

“You want to buy the best data that’s available out there,” Sarkis said, noting that “there’s real FOMO” — the popular acronym for “fear of missing out.”

Firms such as Honest Buildings and VTS now allow real estate companies to upload their own data, including rent rolls and construction bills, to online platforms to track their portfolios.

As the demand for data and online tools continues to skyrocket, sources said big real estate companies have become much more sophisticated in their use of intel over the past three to four years and are increasingly willing to pour money into digital technology.

Hans Nordby, a managing director at CoStar, said he has noticed more commercial real estate companies talking about how they can use their own data to get a competitive edge. “There’s a lot of talk about information making powerful businesses. I think that’s definitely true,” he said. Nordby declined to talk about the legal tangle with Xceligent, and CoStar would not comment on specific allegations against the company.

Benjamin Berookhim, an executive at JPMorgan Asset Management, said he has noticed an increased focus on data across real estate investment. “The clients are asking about it more, and it needs to be addressed,” he said.

Sources said the global commercial real estate brokerage CBRE had a watershed moment in 2016 when it hired Capital One senior vice president Chandra Dhandapani as its chief digital and technology officer. Bringing on a high-level bank executive to oversee technology and data signified the field’s growing importance in the brokerage business.

“We are focusing on improving visualization of existing data so that clients and internal users can more easily draw conclusions and insights from the data,” Chandra told TRD by email. “We are starting to use machine learning algorithms to provide contextually relevant information.” She declined to go into detail on how CBRE, which has 75,000 employees, plans to monetize those efforts.

JLL has also been investing heavily in the sector over the past few years. The commercial brokerage now has data teams on every continent, said Sean Coghlan, the firm’s head of investor research. JLL, which has close to 80,000 employees, uses that intel to support its brokers and advisers in addition to marketing the firm’s prowess to clients and making it a go-to source for the media.

“Most people in the industry acknowledge it’s a priority,” he said. “A lot of companies are playing catch-up to peer industries that are much farther ahead.”

Representatives for Cushman & Wakefield — another leading data provider among the global commercial brokerages — declined to comment for this story.

Berookhim said JPMorgan Asset Management began its data initiative about five years ago. The financial services subsidiary evaluated what kind of intel it needed and how it could better gather it, then hired an in-house research team and built its own proprietary data-processing platform, Berookhim said. He argued that the asset manager’s size and the scope of its investments allow it to collect useful data such as rent rolls and other financial stats. “The amount of information we have helps us extrapolate trends better,” he said.

Smaller firms have also jumped on the data bandwagon.

Quantierra, a self-described “quantitative” real estate advisory firm co-founded by former RCA executive Ben Thypin, is trying to muscle in with novel ways to use public property intel to generate leads. The firm launched nearly three years ago and has closed on more than $20 million in deals to date.

“Everyone knows the Bronx development market is hot, so we asked ourselves, how can we get in on this action but

not run into competition from all the other brokers?” he said.

The firm searched tax records to create a database of which property owners were likely in financial distress, and then contacted them offering help selling properties.

“We’re in contract on two of these sites as we speak and have never set foot on either site,” Thypin added.

The distorted picture

The proliferation of data and data platforms in commercial real estate has created an environment ripe for legal conflicts and a potential golden age for copyright lawyers.

A decade or two ago, ownership of information was clear-cut: If a filing cabinet or computer stood in your office, the data inside was probably yours. But that is no longer the case.

RE BackOffice, a small Pittsburgh-based commercial real estate software and services company founded in 2006, recently learned this the hard way. In October, it suddenly found itself at the brink of annihilation. Since about 2012, Xceligent had been paying the company to scrape the web for property images and information to put in its online database. RE BackOffice thought little of it, since the images were mostly pulled from brokerage websites accessible to anyone, according to a source close the company who spoke on condition of anonymity.

But that’s not how CoStar saw it, according to a federal lawsuit it filed against RE BackOffice on Oct. 19. CoStar accused the company of acting as an accomplice to Xceligent’s alleged “mass piracy.” It alleged that for years Xceligent directed the software provider to trawl CoStar’s databases and steal its images.

Faced with the prospect of a legal battle it could ill afford against a $10 billion corporation, RE BackOffice’s CEO, Harbinder Khera, surrendered. A day after the lawsuit was filed, he admitted to the wrongdoing in a court filing, and CoStar immediately trumpeted the news to its customers.

It wasn’t the first time the data giant seized on the murky ownership of intellectual property in commercial real estate.

“CoStar is the villain here,” said Thypin. “To them, litigation is a growth and market-share strategy.”

Khera could not be reached for comment.

Founded in 1987 by Andrew Florance, the son of a well-known architect in Washington, D.C., CoStar has grown into the country’s most dominant online database for commercial property and leasing information, with a market cap of nearly $11 billion as of Nov. 29. The company has 3,775 employees in 67 offices, and many of its researchers spend their days calling brokers and landlords to collect data, according to sources familiar with the firm.

By all accounts, CoStar has helped make the real estate industry more efficient and transparent, providing a vast amount of information to anyone willing to pay its hefty subscription fees, which can total thousands of dollars per year and person, depending on the product.

But CoStar also has a reputation for suing its competitors.

In 2014, the company filed a so-called John Doe lawsuit against several users of the crowdsourced lease and sales comp site CompStak, alleging they had uploaded and shared CoStar-owned property images without permission. Under pressure from CoStar, CompStak handed over their names, and the suit was dropped.

In 2015, CoStar filed a similar suit against RealMassive, which runs an online commercial real estate database. And it sued Xceligent for copyright infringement mere months after that company — which is now owned by the Daily Mail and General Trust — announced a push into CoStar’s biggest market: New York City.

The data giant claimed that photos carrying a CoStar watermark had appeared in Xceligent’s database. Xceligent argued that it never deliberately stole images, contending that CoStar watermarked images actually belonging to brokers and landlords, who shared those same images with the data provider.

Xceligent argued that preventing those players from sharing their images with other firms was anticompetitive.

“I think it’s comical, actually. CoStar has put together a brilliant strategy to defend their moat through photos,” said Nick Romito, the CEO of VTS. “[No other] business in the world has figured out a way to lightly put a watermark on a photo and then have people investigate to see ‘Is there a watermark?’ and if so, sue the shit out of them,” he added. “This is fucking crazy.”

Amy Goldsmith, co-chair of Tarter Krinsky & Drogin’s intellectual property group, said the law is clear: If a broker took the images, he or she owns them — unless that broker explicitly assigned ownership to CoStar. But the equation changes if the images in question were taken by the firm’s employees. “I doubt CoStar would have alleged copyright infringement of 9,000 images if it didn’t own the majority,” Goldsmith said.

Jefferson Scher, a partner in the intellectual property group at law firm Carr & Ferrell, said that “it’s hard for people to keep straight who owns the copyright of an image.” In most cases, the people who photograph properties own the rights unless they sign them away. But they may unknowingly sign them away online through so-called click agreements. “That’s sort of the catch, that we click on things without reading,” Scher noted.

The ambiguity of data ownership has also emerged as an issue for the co-working behemoth WeWork. In July 2016, Thinknum, a tech startup that monitors companies’ websites on behalf of investors, scraped WeWork’s online membership information to analyze its member churn. It then published its findings in a blog post, which was picked up by The Real Deal and other news outlets.

Office services provider Convene, which manages common space in One World Trade Center, is making a big data play to create smarter buildings.

As a member of WeWork, Thinknum had access to the numbers that the public did not and considered that information fair game, the firm’s co-founder Justin Zhen told TRD. But WeWork claimed the startup had violated its membership rules, pressured it to remove the post and kicked it out of its office space.

“Just like Watergate, where you can’t break in and steal files, you can’t break into someone else’s server and steal and scrape,” Goldsmith said.

Zhen argued that Thinknum never broke into anywhere, since the data it scraped was “readily accessible” to WeWork’s members. Representatives for WeWork declined to comment for this story.

Meanwhile, firms like VTS need to perform a delicate balancing act. While their business models are based on collecting and sharing data, they need to assure their customers that they won’t divulge sensitive information. When VTS signs contracts with its customers — which include the likes of Boston Properties and Blackstone — it typically reserves the right to aggregate their data to calculate figures such as average market prices without revealing anything about specific companies or buildings.

Romito said that in the company’s early days, many of its customers balked at sharing any data at all. Now, he said, they’re seeing the potential benefits and coming around. Last year, VTS merged with its rival Hightower in a blockbuster deal valued at $300 million that cleared a big potential obstacle to growth.

Eventually, VTS wants to turn its customers’ anonymized data into a research product it can sell, but Romito said that might still be years away. “We want to do it when the market is really ready, and when they’re comfortable,” he said.

RCA’s White said murky ownership rules and the desire among real estate firms to keep data out of the public eye will likely to lead to more legal disputes going forward. “There’s a lot of gray areas in terms of who owns what,” he said.

CompStak co-founder Michael Mandel said he’s more optimistic, drawing an analogy to the music industry, which saw a flurry of lawsuits in the late 1990s and early 2000s as big record companies fought against new online music-sharing platforms like Napster and Limewire. Eventually, as courts clarified copyright rules, the dust settled, allowing services like Spotify and Pandora to exist.

Mandel said he thinks something similar may happen in the real estate data industry. “There’s going to be more rules over what’s acceptable and what’s not,”
he said.

Banking on “big data”

Convene’s Kelly has a vision of commercial real estate’s future, which he calls the “empathetic” office building. Once someone enters a room, the building will recognize them through a signal from their cell phone.

Lights, desk height and temperature will instantly adjust to their preferences. Perhaps a message is sent to the concierge to order coffee just the way they like it. While today workers in the same office generally all have the same experience, Kelly said, their experiences will be individually tailored in the future — all thanks to data collection.

“In 10 years, you’ll walk through an office and be like, ‘Oh my God, I remember when I had to turn on every single switch and everybody was either too hot or too cold and everybody had the same desk and had to sit next to the same person every day,’” he said. “And you’re going to laugh about that.”

All of that speaks to the second commercial intel revolution underway: big data. 

While firms like Reonomy and RCA mostly use existing information — building measurements, rent rolls, comparables and debt and equity investments — others like Convene are collecting completely new types of data.

Convene’s main business is managing common amenities such as conference rooms, catering facilities and co-working spaces. But for the last 18 months or so, Kelly’s team has also been quietly working on software that would function as an office building operating system and eventually serve those “empathetic” buildings. The company is beta-testing the software at two undisclosed Brookfield properties, with plans to have it running at 25 office towers by the end of 2018.

The firm is also in the midst of a $150 million Series D funding round and plans to spend a big chunk of that money on the operating system, Kelly said.

Meanwhile, CBRE is making its own big data play, experimenting with beacon technology — a wireless Bluetooth system that’s been used in the retail world to send signals from cell phones to receptors to track customer movement.

And then there’s WeWork, which currently operates a test floor in its Times Square location at 1460 Broadway. The company says the data it collects on its members’ behaviors will give it a crucial competitive edge. And a fawning May profile in Wired magazine put that intel at the center of WeWork’s business model, arguing that the co-working behemoth “is wrangling data that it’s collected over the years to quietly reorganize an office around its workers.”

During a 2016 tour, David Fano, WeWork’s chief product officer (now chief growth officer), told TRD that the company was looking to create heat maps of where people work and congregate — information it could then use to design future office layouts. By tallying the traffic through certain doors, for example, it can determine which spaces are most and least useful and then modify its floor plans, which would presumably make the company more attractive to members and investors.

It could also use the technology to send members alerts for add-ons, which will help increase profits. If a member walked into a conference room that he or she hasn’t booked, for example, WeWork could instantly send a message to their phone offering to rent it.

Not everyone is convinced that gathering and using data on how office users move is really a game changer. “It’s a completely minor advantage,” said Zach Aarons, co-founder of MetaProp NYC, which operates a real estate tech accelerator and seed fund.

The making of monopolies

While the real estate industry has long been fragmented and inefficient, in many ways it’s also been remarkably egalitarian. Smaller brokerages like Eastdil Secured and Rosewood Realty, for example, go head to head with the global giants including CBRE and JLL in major markets.

But some believe the rise of data could turn that meritocracy on its head.

“It will be harder for smaller players to compete going forward,” Kelly said.

By virtue of their sheer size, big firms have more data. And if the largest investment sales firms were to figure out how to use their intel to predict which properties will likely appreciate in value, for example, they could serve their clients far better.

“Why would I ever trust anyone else to help me find property?” Aarons argued. “A small brokerage can’t do that. They don’t have the data and they don’t have the resources to build that kind of technology.”

The uneven playing field has even bigger implications for data and software companies. 

That’s because the bigger a database is, the more valuable it becomes to consumers. That reality virtually ensures that the dominant players like CoStar keep growing. Xceligent, meanwhile, has been losing steam at a rapid clip. In late November, Daily Mail and General Trust announced that it had dropped the money-losing data subsidiary’s carrying value to zero amid “disappointing” revenues from its push into New York.

“Data networks are inherently monopolistic,” Sroka said. The same issue has dogged the social media space, where Facebook quickly became the alpha dog; the e-commerce arena, where Amazon reigns supreme; and the online search world, where Google has virtually no credible rivals.

Scher of Carr & Ferrell argued those companies’ blueprints for success could be replicated by firms in other data-centric industries. “Google knows how people think,” he said. “If you want to compete with them, you can’t compete with the behavioral aspect of that data.”

If a firm were to compile a trove of behavioral data on office usage, it could also gain a strong competitive advantage. “Why not let some company be awesome at doing this?” Scher proposed. “It’s just a question of ‘Can we sustain a capitalist economy if it turns out there’s always only one company that wins every single industry?’”

In spite of conventional wisdom, Sroka argued that monopolies may be a good thing in this context. For many people, life is easier because everyone is on Facebook and because a web browser and search engine are run by the same company. The same principle applies to real estate data, he said.

Many already see CoStar as that commanding player in commercial real estate’s data revolution. “They’re a monopolist, basically,” Thypin said. Leasing brokers may grumble about the data giant’s steep prices, but they depend on its products and often have no viable alternative.

Some argue that there is one crucial difference between CoStar and Google, however. While the search engine giant collects its own data, CoStar depends on real estate companies to provide certain intel.

“It’s as if Windows was built on code provided by its customers,” Thypin said.

As real estate firms increasingly recognize the value of their data, they may become more reluctant to give it to CoStar for free only to have the company effectively sell it back to them in form of a subscription, Reonomy’s Sarkis argued.

“That’s going to create some cognitive dissonance, I assume,” he said.

To Sarkis and others, this means firms have a chance to compete with CoStar if they use novel technologies or grant users more control over their own data.

“Any incumbent is an incumbent for only so long,” Sarkis said.

Waterfront Palm Beach lots sell for combined $30M

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901 N Ocean Blvd (Credit: Redfin)

The owners of a waterfront lot in Palm Beach split their property in half and sold both parcels for a combined $30 million, records show.

A 2.3-acre oceanfront lot on North Ocean Boulevard that once held an 18,200-square-foot mansion was sliced in half and sold for an even $14.57 million each, according to the Palm Beach Daily News. Spec home developer Pat Carney bought the northern lot at 905 North Ocean Boulevard, and PBB Island Property LLC bought that southern lot at 901 North Ocean Boulevard.

Carney, CEO of Claremont, has said he plans to build a spec home on the property. In 2015, he sold the spec home at 390 North Lake Way for $31 million. 

Clark Beaty proposed to develop a house on the second lot on North Ocean Boulevard, according to the newspaper.

The sellers, Frederick Friedman, Roger Berkowitz and Rhonda Berkowitz, are listed as trustees of the Lorraine L. Friedman Revocable Trust. Records show the late philanthropists Jack N. Friedman and Lorraine Friedman bought the house in 1994 for $5.5 million. The property was put on the market for $38 million in 2012, and was listed as high as $41.9 million.

Corcoran Group’s Jim McCann represented the sellers. Claremont represented the buyers. [Palm Beach Daily News] – Amanda Rabines 

Invesca pitches 350-unit PIXL project in Plantation’s Gateway District

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Rendering of PIXL (Credit: Invesca Development Group)

Invesca Development Group this week pitched a plan to build up to 350 apartments aimed at millennials — more than a third of them micro units — in Plantation’s Gateway District.

The multifamily project, called PIXL, would be located at 4400 Northwest Eighth Court near Sunrise Boulevard and State Road 7/US 441, on the same site as Invesca’s under-construction 137-unit townhouse development Strata at Plantation.

Invesca CEO Christopher Longsworth presented the preliminary proposal for the complex, whose units will either be condos or rentals, to the Plantation Development Review Committee on Tuesday.

Rendering of the project (Credit: Invesca Development Group)

The development is slated to include 132 micro units, as well as one-bedroom units at 600 square feet each. When asked about the type of residents the project would be courting, Longsworth acknowledged millennials were his target demographic.

Edith Conaway, an attorney representing Invesca, told The Real Deal that Longsworth has yet to determine how the project will be financed.

The developer did note that phase one of Strata is already sold out and that he expects residents to begin moving in by the end of January.

Condo developers encourage buyers to kick their cars to the curb

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(Credit: Wikimedia, Pixabay)

Developers are increasingly telling buyers to ditch their cars in cities like Miami, San Francisco and New York.

In exchange for discounts, credits, car-rental and car-sharing services, the move saves residential developers building costs since they can reduce or eliminate garages. Some builders are also planning for a garage-less future, designing parking structures that can be easily converted or removed, according to the Wall Street Journal.

At the Zom apartment tower in downtown Miami, 23 percent of residents rent without parking spaces. The Orlando-based developer’s garages are about a third smaller than in its previous buildings. At Centro, a condo tower nearby, developer Harvey Hernandez didn’t include parking at all. Instead, he arranged for residents to have access to about 300 parking spots at an office building nearby on weeknights and weekends.

In San Francisco, Tishman Speyer partnered with Audi to offer a luxury car rental service at Lumina, a 42-story condo building. Units come with one parking space, but buyers can forego the space for a $10,000 credit and the option to rent one of eight Audis from $12 to $22 an hour. [WSJ] – Katherine Kallergis


National Cheat Sheet: Inside commercial real estate’s data wars, new leaders named at Elliman and Related … & more

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National Real Estate News

Clockwise from top left: The Skirball wildfire threatening the Los Angeles area, New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio, Art Basel in Miami, and Andrew Right, Anthony Foxx, Stephen Ross of Related.

From TRD New York: Who will lead commercial real estate’s data revolution?
With data increasingly considered a sacred resource in commercial real estate, a battle is raging between the companies that control the information used in many transactions. CoStar Group, the longtime industry leader, is fighting off competition from its main rival Xceligent and many other smaller firms, leaving brokers, landlords and other real estate professionals caught in the middle. CoStar and Xceligent are not only fighting in court, but have also launched PR attacks on each other, complete with reports of data piracy and even sex trafficking. [TRD]

Realtors: GOP tax plan will lower coastal home values and inventory
The National Association of Realtors predicts that changes to property taxes, mortgage interest, and deductions to state and local taxes will lower home values and decrease already struggling inventory levels across the country — particularly in high-tax, Democratic-leaning states like California, New Jersey, New York and Connecticut, Bloomberg reported. A proposed change to the capital gains tax on sales could encourage homeowners to keep their properties off the market. [TRD]

Hurt by online sales, malls themselves are now being sold online 
While using online marketplaces for commercial real estate sales has been common among properties with smaller footprints, malls, which are the top tier of retail spaces, are increasingly joining in on the digital sales. Ten-X Commercial, an online commercial real estate marketplace, has sold 50 malls since 2012, and Real Capital Markets has managed 57 mall transactions this year alone, in addition to 68 deals last year, the Wall Street Journal reported. [TRD]

Douglas Elliman names Scott Durkin president
Scott Durkin, who has lead Douglas Elliman’s national expansion for the last two years, has been named president of the residential brokerage. Durkin will assume some managerial responsibilities from Elliman CEO Dottie Herman and will keep the COO title he already has. The firm’s chairman, Howard Lorber, said that Herman, who owns 30 percent of the company, would be “an overall strategist and less focused on the day-to-day minutia.” [TRD]

Apartment List to provide apartment community listings for Realtor.com
Realtor.com announced that Apartment List will be its exclusive provider of listings for apartment communities. Apartment List will bring its more than 3.5 million rental unit listings to Realtor.com, and it expects that number to grow in the future. Last month, Facebook announced that Apartment List would provide listings for its expansion into real estate via the social media platform’s Marketplace feature. [HousingWire]

Related hires two former Obama officials to lead infrastructure initiative
Ex-Transportation Secretary Anthony Foxx, along with another former transportation official, Andrew Right, have been tapped to lead Related Infrastructure, which will invest in businesses developing or operating airports, toll roads and other types of infrastructure, the Wall Street Journal first reported. [TRD]

More than 20% of the US population now lives in common interest communities
Some 69 million Americans, or 20 percent of the population, are now living in common interest communities like condominiums or cooperatives, as opposed to single-family homes, according to a report by Forbes. Community living tends to be more popular among baby boomers and millennials, the two largest age groups in the U.S. Retired baby boomers are looking for homes with fewer maintenance issues, and millennials tend to prefer managed properties that offer amenities and entertainment. [Bisnow]

MAJOR MARKET HIGHLIGHTS

Real estate execs prepare to take on New York’s mayor and City Council
Mayor Bill de Blasio and the New York City Council have many real estate players anxiously surveying the political landscape. Although he’s faced criticism for being too cozy with New York’s real estate developers, de Blasio begins his second term as a potential adversary of the industry, while a stronghold of council members is pushing legislation that could put the reins on developers. It’s a high-stakes contest in a city where real estate generated $20.4 billion in taxes last year. Construction spending is expected to reach $102.6 billion combined in 2018 and 2019. [TRD]

Wildfire burns in wealthy Los Angeles neighborhoods, destroying multimillion-dollar homes
This week, the Skirball wildfire ripped through Bel Air, home to some of the most expensive real estate in the country. Residents were forced to evacuate and multimillion-dollar homes went up in flames, including media mogul Rupert Murdoch’s 16-acre Moraga Vineyards estate, a local NBC affiliate first reported. The fire has been propelled by heavy winds, as well as the region’s dry climate. [TRD]

Real estate and art will merge in Miami during Art Basel
Developers and brokerages capitalize on the well-heeled crowd in Miami for Art Week and Art Basel by hosting events meant to boost the exposure of their luxury projects, insiders told TRD. Condos are hosting parties and exhibits, and brokerages are sponsoring art fairs in the hopes of drumming up sales. TRD South Florida rounded up all the of the real estate-related festivities at this year’s exhibition. [TRD]

Report: Commercial property assessments in Chicago defy logic
While the real estate market in Chicago is changing rapidly, the valuations of thousands of commercial and industrial properties by Cook County did not change at all from one assessment to the next, according to a ProPublica Illinois-Chicago Tribune analysis of tens of thousands of property records. Nearly 25 percent of 40,000 parcels examined in the study had identical valuations in the reassessments of 2009, 2012 and 2015, despite wildly different market conditions. The Chicago Tribune found that Cook County Assessor Joseph Berrios’s office generally undervalued expensive downtown properties while overvaluing small business in poorer neighborhoods. [Chicago Tribune]

Steinbridge tries to make single-family rentals profitable in Philadelphia
The Steinbridge Group is buying houses in Philadelphia to test its theory that single-family rentals can be both profitable and affordable. CEO Tawan Davis told Bisnow that his company wants “to focus on people who need to live in and around the urban center, but can’t afford to buy a home because the starting price to get on the homeownership ladder is so high that working people can’t start owning as early as they might like.” Steinbridge has closed on 60 homes and is in contract on 40 more in Philadelphia. By the end of 2018, Davis hopes to spend $50 million on 500 homes in the city. [Bisnow]

With rents and traffic growing in Denver, a record number of people are leaving Colorado
A record number of Colorado residents are choosing to move out of the state, with many citing rising housing prices, trouble finding well-paying jobs and increasing traffic as reasons for leaving. New figures from the U.S. Census Bureau’s American Community Survey show that 193,000 Coloradans moved away last year — 10,000 more than in 2015. Home prices in metro Denver were up 57 percent over the past eight years through October, according to the S&P CoreLogic Case-Shiller home price indices. [Denver Post]

SoFla lease roundup: Dania Beach distribution center reaches full occupancy & more

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2650 SW 36th St (Credit: Google Maps)

Port 95 Business Center in Dania Beach reaches full occupancy

Port 95 Business Center has a reason to party. A Las Vegas-based event production company just inked a long-term, 19,913-square-foot lease at the park in Dania Beach, according to a release.

The lease brings the 230,036-square-foot distribution center at 2650 Southwest 36th Street to full occupancy.

3G Productions specializes in production, audio-visual installations, event staffing, sales and rentals. The company will be relocating from its location at Park Centre Business Park in Miami. Its new space in Dania Beach will be used to store equipment and will serve as a logistics center for the company’s South Florida operations.

Cushman & Wakefield’s Chris Metzger, Richard Etner Jr., Christopher Thomson and Matthew McAllister represented owner MSG Port 95, LLC. Developer Bridge Development Partners sold the property to MSG Port 95 for $27 million in 2014.

The first lease at Port 95 Business Center was signed by a Pembroke Pines-based produce distributor called Premier Produce in 2015.

Centrepark West office complex in West Palm Beach reaches 98% occupancy

Centrepark East and West office buildings, located within the 41-acre Centrepark Corporate Park in West Palm Beach, scored more than 144,000 square feet of leases, according to the firm that brokered the deals.

Colonnade Properties and affiliates of Grace Development and Flagler Realty bought the nine-building complex, totaling 479,145 square feet of office space, last year in November.

When Colonnade first bought the property, Centrepark West was 80 percent occupied. It’s now 98 percent occupied, according to a release. NAI/Merin Hunter Codman’s Neil E. Merin and Shelbi Quinn negotiated the leases.

Engineering and manufacturing company SV Microwave renewed their lease and took on an extra 63,000 square feet at 2301 and 2400 Centrepark West Drive, Quin said. An affiliate of the company, Times Microwave Systems, inked a 14,124-square-foot lease at Centrepark West.

Real estate services company, Seacrest Services inked a 13,560-square-foot, 10-year lease, at 2101 Centrepark West Drive. Brown & Brown of Florida, an independent insurance intermediary, agreed to occupy an 11,970-square-foot space at 1661 Worthington Road, earlier this year.

Johnstone Supply inks 32,000 sf lease at I-595 Business Center

Johnstone Supply, a heating, ventilation, air conditioning and refrigeration company, just inked a 32,000-square-foot lease at the under-construction I-595 Business Center in Dania Beach.

Once complete, I-595 Business Center will be a 150,000-square-foot showroom and warehouse at 3200 Southwest 30th Avenue, according to a release.

Chris Metzger, Richard Etner Jr., Christopher Thomson and Matthew G. McAllister represented owner MSG I-595, LLC.

Johnstone Supply has operations in Florida and South Carolina. It will be relocating from another Dania Beach location at 329 North Bryan Road, in the Broward International Commerce Center, according to the release. Johnstone Supply is a subsidiary of the Ware Group, a Jacksonville-based regional wholesaler, distributor, contractor and supplier of HVAC-R equipment.

The building is expected to be completed in August 2018, according to the release. It lies west of Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport and just south of Interstate 595.

Tax proposal could carry high costs for many homeowners

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Whether you already own a home or are thinking of purchasing, the new tax legislation pending before Congress poses serious questions: Am I going to get smacked with punitive new taxes? Will the value of my home decrease because previous real estate tax benefits have been stripped away? Or am I one of the lucky ones, well insulated against big losses?

Prospective buyers like Matthew Wie and Joe Weber already have figured some of this out and are taking defensive steps. Weber owns a house and lives with his family in the San Francisco Bay area, and Wie owns a home in Delaware. Both are looking to move and are considering shifting their home searches to locations where they’ll be less exposed to tax increases triggered by the new legislation.

Weber told me in an interview that as residents of California, he and his family face a dilemma: If the final federal tax bill slashes deductions of state and local taxes (SALT), purchasing a new home in high-tax California will be significantly more expensive.

“I’ll only be able to afford less,” he said — presumably a lower price tag and smaller space than he and his family could obtain elsewhere. So the Webers are seriously thinking about expanding their home search to either the Reno, Nevada, area, where taxes and prices are much lower and Weber has identified good school opportunities, or Seattle.

Wie and his wife and daughter are contemplating a similar scenario — moving from Delaware to Pennsylvania. “We’re relatively high earners,” Wie said in an email, “so the flat 3.07 percent Pennsylvania (income) tax would benefit us more than the higher property taxes or (the federal) tax change would hurt us.” Wie’s wife’s employment location and local school quality also are key considerations.

Wie and Weber participated in a national survey of 900 prospective home buyers conducted by real estate company Redfin. The survey found that 33 percent of people who expect to purchase within the coming 12 months say they would consider moving to a different state if Congress eliminates SALT deductions. The Senate and House-passed tax overhaul bills would cut maximum SALT deductions to $10,000 and limit them to property taxes only.

Other matters for owners and potential buyers to consider:

— (BEG ITAL)Home values impact(END ITAL). Though no independent or academic studies have been published estimating the effects of the new tax legislation on home values and prices, most studies to date have concluded that federal tax benefits are a component of property values. Strip these away and buyers will not obtain the full traditional financial benefits of ownership, and will pay less for homes.

Economists at the National Association of Realtors estimate that the tax changes could whack 10 percent off average prices around the country, with declines steeper in states with higher home costs and tax burdens, lower in areas with more moderate prices and taxes. The flip side of all this, of course, is that if prices do decline, that will make purchasing a home more affordable — potentially good news for renters and move-up buyers priced out of the current marketplace.

— (BEG ITAL)Tax-free capital gains exclusion(END ITAL). Under the legislation, owners will still be able to “exclude” up to $500,000 ($250,000 for single filers) of gain on their home sales. But to qualify they will need to have lived in their house for five of the preceding eight years; for decades the standard has been two out of the preceding five years. For many buyers who own homes for extended periods, this change won’t matter. But for many others it could pose problems, especially for people who transfer jobs in less than five years, and owners forced to sell because of divorce, health or other issues.

— (BEG ITAL)Mortgage interest, second home deductions(END ITAL). As of this writing, House and Senate conferees had not agreed on whether to cut the home mortgage interest deduction maximum to $500,000 or to eliminate interest write-offs on second homes. Both are only in the House version and would primarily affect upper income owners.

So where does all this leave you? It depends on what you own, where you live, what you earn and what you may want to buy. Overall, the Republicans’ tax changes look like a net plus for corporations and stockholders, but a net negative for people who’ve benefited the most from the tax code’s long-time preferences for homeownership over renting.

Fired basketball coach Rick Pitino wants $24M for Indian Creek estate

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Rick Pitino and his mansion (Credit: Wikimedia Commons, Luxhunters)

Ex-Louisville basketball coach Rick Pitino is listing his waterfront Indian Creek estate for just under $24 million, The Real Deal has learned.

Pitino, who was fired from the university in October for his alleged ties to a national college basketball recruiting scandal, is re-listing the property at 38 Indian Creek Drive for about $2 million less than when it was on the market last year, according to Realtor.com.

The expanded and renovated house now spans 12,000 square feet on a 1.25-acre lot, said listing agent Ralph Arias, of One Sotheby’s International Realty. The Mediterranean transitional-style home features eight bedrooms, a gym, 10 full bathrooms, a four-car garage and a motor court.

Records show Pitino and his wife Joanne paid $5.4 million for the property in 1999.

The two-time National Championship coach is looking to downsize, Arias said. In November, he filed a lawsuit against Louisville’s athletic association, asking for more than $35 million for an alleged breach of contract, the Courier-Journal reported.

Arias said the property is the least expensive home or lot available for sale in Indian Creek.

The exclusive island, which counts about 40 properties, is home to some of the 500 wealthiest people in the U.S., including activist investor Carl Icahn, car dealership mogul Norman Braman, and developers Jackie and Jeffrey Soffer. In July, Julio Iglesias listed an 8-acre assemblage of waterfront land for $150 million, or $18.75 million per acre.

Healthcare exec buys new home in Boca Raton

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1899 Royal Palm Way and Todd Roberti (Credit: Realtor.com and Edison Partners)

The head of a New Jersey healthcare company just paid $8.45 million for a new home at the Royal Palm Yacht and Country Club in Boca Raton, property records show.

Todd and Maria Roberti paid about $1,000 per square foot for the mansion at 1899 Royal Palm Way. Todd is the founder and principal of Premier Healthcare Exchange, a healthcare cost management company under the Zelis Healthcare umbrella

The seller is Steve Scaggs, owner of the waterfront seafood restaurant Two Georges at The Cove in Deerfield Beach. Records show Scaggs bought the property last year in May for $2.15 million. He owns another home in the neighborhood at 2364 East Maya Palm Drive.

Built this year, the 8,360-square-foot mansion includes six bedrooms, seven bathrooms and a four-car garage with a golf cart.

David Roberts, real estate broker and owner of Royal Palm Properties, had the listing. The house hit the market in September 2016 for nearly $8 million and was relisted last month for nearly $9 million, according to Realtor.com.

Features include marble and hardwood floors, an elevator, a fireplace, a library and media room, and a balcony with views of the golf course.

Last month, Houston Texas tight end CJ Fiedorowicz also picked up a Boca home. The NFL player paid $1.58 million for a 4,374-square-foot house at 710 Northeast 69th Street

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