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What’s next for Barneys’ landlords?

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What the downsizing spells for the luxury retailer’s various landlords remains unclear (Credit: Getty Images)

What the downsizing spells for the luxury retailer’s various landlords remains unclear (Credit: Getty Images)

Barneys this week filed for bankruptcy and announced its plan to shutter 15 of its 22 luxury department stores. What the downsizing spells for the luxury retailer’s various landlords remains unclear, at least for the moment.

Retail experts told The Real Deal that negotiations are likely and that concessions from the landlords could be possible to prevent Barneys from vacating some locations.

“To lose that tenant in this market wouldn’t be very smart, because who’s going to replace them?” said Peter Brauss, a managing principal at Lee & Associates.

From Brooklyn to Santa Monica, Philadelphia to the Fashion Outlets of Chicago, the closures come amid an evolving retail landscape, battered by rising competition from e-commerce.

“A perfect storm,” said Robin Abrams, a vice chairman in Compass’ commercial division — and one that other retail chains have been weathering in recent years.

From Brooklyn to Santa Monica, Philadelphia to the Fashion Outlets of Chicago, the closures come amid an evolving retail landscape, battered by rising competition from e-commerce.

The Barneys locations that will remain open include its 275,000-square-foot flagship at Ben Ashkenazy’s 660 Madison Avenue in Manhattan — where annual rent nearly doubled — along with another in the city, and stores in Beverly Hills, San Francisco, and in Massachusetts. Abrams predicts that the Chapter 11 proceedings could potentially bring Barneys and its landlords to the negotiating table.

“It would make sense for them [Barneys] to approach their landlords and talk about some kind of compromise, whether it be renegotiating deal terms, downsizing space, or all the things they had talked about before they filed,” she said. “My guess is that they will have those conversations, and that, if they are to maintain some of these high-profiles, expensive spaces, it will be based on some terms with a little flexibility.”

Brauss predicts similar talks would take place, but acknowledged anything is possible.

In the event that Barneys were to vacate that location in the future, Brauss can see an office space-retail hybrid emerge. “But keep in mind, that’s an enormously capital-intensive thing to do. You’re talking about — I don’t know — $200, $300 per square foot to convert from retail to office space, and you’re probably going to have to do a new lobby, and it’s going to take two or three years before that all gets done.”

“So unless you’ve got a plan in your pocket and you’ve got oodles of cash to spend,” added Brauss, “your best bet is to try to keep these guys one way or another.”

Reports of Barneys’ potential bankruptcy surfaced in July, after news that rent at the flagship store at 660 Madison, which accounts for nearly half of all sales, had jumped last January to $30 million from $16 million. A representative for landlord Ashkenazy declined to comment.

On Tuesday, Daniella Vitale, Barneys CEO and president, indicated next steps would include a review of current leases; the company now has until Oct. 24 to find a buyer and avoid liquidation.

The company on Wednesday secured a new offer from Brigade Capital Management and B. Riley Financial that will pay out $75 million and also inject an additional $143 million for operations costs while Barneys looks for a buyer.

The events also fall in line with wider trends across the high-end retail industry at large. “The days are over where you can support tons of flagships,” said Abrams. “You may have one or two to drive sales, but overall: You need to be profitable.”

But all is not lost for the retail industry, Abrams said. While pop-up stores and repurposed malls and department stores continue, short-term and long-term retail deals are returning. “We’re getting back to healthier times and starting to see people not as frightened when it comes to locking in retail leases, and that’s a really good thing.”

Still, a fleet of flagship stores does not necessarily carry the same allure it may have in the past, and one lesson for landlords remains consistent: Times have changed.

“If I brought Barneys to you a year ago, you’d have been like: fantastic, great tenant, let’s do it,” said Brauss. “These days, I think you want a tenant that is going to stand the test of time, that you look at and understand why they are going to be around in 10 years.” And, if you can’t, then consider: “Maybe I shouldn’t be doing this deal.”


Airbnb sues Palm Beach County … again

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Anne Gannon and West Palm Beach (Credit: iStock and Airbnb)

Anne Gannon and West Palm Beach (Credit: iStock and Airbnb)

Airbnb continues to its legal fight against Palm Beach County.

The vacation rental platform filed a new lawsuit against the county and tax collector Anne Gannon over the county’s requirement that Airbnb provide tax information to hosts, according to the Palm Beach Post.

The county is requiring that Airbnb must collect a valid bed tax account number and provide bed tax information to hosts before a property can be listed on the website. Airbnb argues that the new ordinance violates the Florida Constitution, according to the Post.

Airbnb also said the ordinance’s “unconstitutional and unlawful provisions” will make Airbnb “suffer irreparable harm, the extent of which is incalculable.”

Palm Beach County’s new set of rules on vacation rentals were approved on June 18.

The ordinance also requires that Airbnb collect bed taxes and remit them to the vacation rental host, who in turn will give the bed taxes to the tax collector’s office.

Both Airbnb and the vacation rental site HomeAway sued Palm Beach County in November after commissioners approved the first set of vacation rental rules.

The pending lawsuits alleged that the regulations violate state and federal law and would violate their customers’ rights.

Last week, Airbnb settled a federal lawsuit it brought against the city of Miami Beach.

The vacation​ rental tech company had sued Miami Beach in late 2018, after the city commission passed new regulations. Those measures require Airbnb ​to ​display the resort tax account and business tax receipt numbers for each listing by their hosts within zones that allow short-term rentals. [Palm Beach Post]Keith Larsen

Convene edges out rivals WeWork and Knotel at London skyscraper

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Convene CEO Ryan Simonetti and a rendering of Bishopsgate

Convene CEO Ryan Simonetti and a rendering of 22 Bishopsgate

An under-construction skyscraper in London was the battleground for a trio of well-capitalized flexible office space firms in growth-mode.

New York-based Convene, a startup that partners with commercial landlords to offer meeting spaces and amenities in office buildings, ultimately won out. The firm signed a 100,000-square-foot lease at 22 Bishopsgate in central London, the firm’s chief executive Ryan Simonetti told The Real Deal. It will be the firm’s first international location.

Simonetti said negotiations for the space began early 2018, and that Knotel, WeWork and U.K.-based The Office Group were among the firms vying for the location. The Office Group, which is majority owned by Blackstone Group, “looked at 22 [Bishopsgate] a couple of years ago,” but “didn’t bid or make a proposal,” its chief executive Olly Olsen said in an email. Knotel and WeWork declined to comment.

“We’ve realized that things in London take a little bit longer than they do in New York to get done,” Simonetti said.

Securing space in premier buildings has been a favored move by co-working and flexible-space firms seeking to establish themselves in a new market. In New York, an early location locked in by Dutch firm Spaces was a 110,000-square-foot space at the Chrysler Building. When The Office Group sought to open its first New York location, it was reportedly in a bidding war with Knotel and WeWork at the Flatiron Building.

London has become a hotbed of co-working activity, with almost 12 million square feet leased to flexible office space companies (about 4.6 percent of the office market), according to a Cushman & Wakefield report published in April. It has become center stage for both European and American firms to prove their mettle. Last year, WeWork became the largest office tenant in central London with almost 3 million square feet, and Knotel has 13 locations there, spanning 160,000 square feet. The Office Group, based in London, has 32 locations there.

Renderings of Bishopsgate

Renderings of Bishopsgate

Convene’s new location — a 1.3 million-square-foot tower being developed by Lipton Rogers and a subsidiary of AXA Investment Managers — is abundant with amenities, including a rock-climbing wall that overlooks the city and lobby that doubles as an art gallery. Rents in the building range from $85 to $100 a square foot, the Financial Times reported in June.

Under the lease terms, Convene will provide a 50,000-square-foot space across two floors for meetings and conferences and another 50,000 square feet will be allotted to its flexible workspace product, known as WorkPlace, for small- and medium-sized companies.

AXA will be a major tenant in the building, along with Nasdaq and law firm Cooley. In January, insurance firm Aspen withdrew its lease from the building, as it sought to downsize its operations, according to London-based Estates Gazette, a real estate industry magazine.

Since it launched in 2009, Convene has raised $260 million, and is backed by some of the most prominent U.S. office landlords, including Brookfield Asset Management, RXR Realty and the Durst Organization.

In July 2018, Convene raised $152 million in a series D funding round, which valued the company at more than $500 million. Simonetti said the firm is currently in negotiations for another funding round, which he expects to announce in coming months.

Convene has rolled out locations at a rapid rate, and expects to have 30 locations by the end of 2019. Seven of those locations will include the firm’s WorkPlace offering, which pits the company against other co-working firms that primarily offer office space.

Last year, Convene signed a 116,000-square-foot lease at RXR Realty’s 530 Fifth Avenue, and in June, it announced a partnership with Hines to open locations across the Texas landlord’s portfolio.

These are the pricey properties linked to Ponzi-schemer Robert Shapiro

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Robert Shapiro and a few of the properties (Credit: iStock)

Robert Shapiro and a few of the properties (Credit: iStock)

It was 2016 and Robert Shapiro was at the peak of his home buying and developing binge.

That September, the CEO of Sherman Oaks, California-based Woodbridge Group of Companies spent $90 million to acquire the historic Owlwood Estate. The deal for the 12,200-square-foot mansion with sunken tennis court, guardhouses and two separate guest houses was the second-most expensive sale in Los Angeles County at the time. As the crown jewel in his company’s portfolio, that Holmby Hills mansion was among many properties that Woodbridge had been buying up with what seemed like a treasure chest full of cash.

“The Owlwood Estate has been the unchallenged symbol of uber-luxury since being built during the Great Depression, and we will keep it that way for another 80 years,” Shapiro said in a statement at the time.

Three years later the mansion is still standing but Woodbridge is not. And Shapiro’s treasure chest now looks like it contained only fool’s gold.

Owlwood is back on the market, now asking $115 million, down from the $180 million Woodbridge was seeking not long after acquiring it. In late 2017, the government began investigating Shapiro for orchestrating a $1.3 billion Ponzi scheme. Shapiro was later accused of using his many shell companies to bilk more than 9,000 investors, dangling purported real estate investments as the lure.

A federal judge has since appointed a new CEO to liquidate Woodbridge’s numerous properties and assets, in order to pay back investors who were defrauded.

On Wednesday, Shapiro pleaded guilty to charges in federal court, admitting he “misappropriated” between $25 million and $95 million to fund his extravagant lifestyle, which included Picasso paintings, 14-karat white gold earrings, private planes and, oddly, a 1969 Mercury convertible.

Many of the investors – about 700 of them – were retirees based in Florida who poured $114 million into Woodbridge, a firm that was previously headquartered in Boca Raton, Florida. In exchange for the guilty plea, 61-year-old Shapiro will avoid trial but could still face up to 25 years in prison.

Mansions and empty land
During the firm’s five-year run, Woodbridge acquired a number of luxury properties in L.A. While some — like Owlwood Estate — were historic homes, others were simply empty plots of land that Woodbridge promised to build into mansions.

Since the Securities and Exchange Commission sued Shapiro in December 2017, many Woodbridge-owned properties have hit the market. While some sales have already been approved in bankruptcy court — which is required since Woodbridge filed Chapter 11 two years ago — others are still listed.

Woodbridge, using over 100 Shapiro Property LLCs, purchased nearly 200 properties in and around Aspen, Colorado, and Los Angeles for $675 million, according to the complaint. The company also paid over $12 million in transaction-based commissions to 20 sales agents in Florida.

Here’s a rundown of some of the more notable homes the disgraced developer has owned.

Carla House | Los Angeles

Home on Carla Ridge and Former Woodbridge Group CEO Robert Shapiro

Home on Carla Ridge and Former Woodbridge Group CEO Robert Shapiro

A Trousdale Estates mansion, one of the few built by Woodbridge Group of Companies, hit the market in July for $46 million. The property, known as the Carla House, spans 20,000 square feet and includes seven bedrooms, an elevator, 80-foot swimming pool and movie theater. Designed by architect Noah Walker, it also features expansive decks overlooking the Hollywood Hills. Tomer Fridman and Sally Forster Jones of Compass have the listing. The property traded hands in February to an entity known as “Woodbridge Wind-Down Entity,” managed by Fredrick Chin, the court-appointed administrator of the properties.

1 Electra Court | Hollywood Hills

1 Electra Court (Credit: Hilton&Hyland)

1 Electra Court (Credit: Hilton&Hyland)

Billionaire Frank Binder paid $29.5 million for the 4.5-acre Hollywood Hills megamansion in December. It was among the assets owned by Woodbridge Group that would be sold via bankruptcy court.

The property was built in 1990, and includes two swimming pools and rooftop lawns. It changed hands a few times before businessman Eddy Aslanian bought it for $4.4 million in 2002. He sold the estate and several acres of hillside land for $30 million to Megan Ellison, who flipped the property, which was more than 9 acres then, to Woodbridge Group in 2017 for almost $36 million. Woodbridge subsequently sold some of the land the following for $12 million, shrinking the property to 4.5 acres.

1118 Tower Road | Beverly Hills

1118 Tower Road (Credit: Realtor)

1118 Tower Road (Credit: Realtor)

A bankruptcy court approved the sale of a Spanish Colonial home at 1118 Tower Road for $7.3 million in January. Barrie Clapham bought the house for $650,000 less than what it was listed for on Redfin.  The five-bedroom house was built in 1926 and includes 5,900 square feet of space, a pool and spa. Jon Grauman with the Agency had the listing for the deal, which is in escrow.

711 Walden Drive | Beverly Hills

711 Walden Drive (Credit: Redfin)

711 Walden Drive (Credit: Redfin)

The bankruptcy court also approved the $13.8 million sale of the five-bedroom, 8,200-square-foot mansion at 711 Walden Drive to Nathalie and Bernard A. Khalili. The seller was Riley Creek Investments LLC, a Delaware-based entity tied to Woodbridge that filed for bankruptcy in 2017.

Woodbridge Road home | Palm Beach

145 Woodbridge Road (Credit: Realtor)

145 Woodbridge Road (Credit: Realtor)

Perpro Systems International Inc., a company linked to Shapiro, paid $492,500 for the house at 145 Woodbridge Road in Palm Beach in 1993. The British Virgin Islands company sold it to another Shapiro entity, Coverdale Realty Corp., in 2003 for $1.73 million. Shapiro sold it for good in 2004 for nearly $1.7 million. The three-bedroom, roughly 3,000-square-foot home is near the ocean and was built in 1951.

Skygarden | Holmby Hills

10721 Stradella Court in Holmby Hills (Credit: Zillow)

10721 Stradella Court in Holmby Hills (Credit: Zillow)

Woodbridge paid $14.6 million to acquire a 1-acre plot of dirt at 10721 Stradella Court in Holmby Hills in February 2016, later tapping SAOTA to design renderings for a 15,000-square-foot spec home, named “Skygarden.” Two months later, Woodbridge and now-shuttered Mercer Vine brokerage marketed the property for $100 million. Buyers could also buy just the dirt, complete with design plans, for nearly $20 million. In February, the property was transferred to “Woodbridge Wind-Down Entity.”

Granada Pointe Complex | San Fernando Valley

Robert Shapiro and the Granada Pointe complex at 11541 Blucher Boulevard

Robert Shapiro and the Granada Pointe complex at 11541 Blucher Boulevard

In April 2018, Woodbridge sold a 52-unit apartment complex, dubbed Granada Pointe, for $21.5 million. The buyer of the 2011-built building at 11541 Blucher Avenue was Adil A. Barakat Family Trust. One of the many LLCs tied to Woodbridge had purchased the property a year prior for $19.5 million.

Rough quarter: Resi sales fall in Broward, increase slightly in Miami-Dade

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(Credit: iStock)

(Credit: iStock)

It was a rough quarter for residential sales in Miami-Dade and Broward County.

Sales either fell or rose marginally in the second quarter, year-over-year, according to the Miami Association of Realtors. Home prices kept rising, but at a slower pace than before.

Miami-Dade
Total residential sales in Miami-Dade increased ever so slightly, up 0.6 percent, year-over-year, to 7,861. Single-family home sales rose 1.8 percent to 3,854, and condo sales declined 0.6 percent to 4,007.

Residential sales volume totaled $3.6 billion in the second quarter. Both single-family home sales volume and condo sales volumed fell year-over-year.

The median price of single-family homes in Miami-Dade increased 2.9 percent to $360,000. The median condo price increased 2.5 percent year-over-year to $247,000.

Broward County
Single-family home sales rose by 2.7 percent year-over-year, to 4,666 closings, while condo sales declined by nearly 6 percent to 4,805 sales. Total residential sales came out to 9,471, a 1.8 percent drop year-over-year.

Total sales volume in the second quarter totaled $3.3 billion.

The median price for single-family homes increased to $365,000, up 1.6 percent. Condo prices rose as well, up 3.26 percent to $175,000 year-over-year.

Inside Stephen Ross’ massive empire of gyms, condos, coffee and more

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Related CEO Stephen Ross (Credit: Getty Images, Wikipedia, Facebook, and Twitter)

Related CEO Stephen Ross (Credit: Getty Images, Wikipedia, Facebook, and Twitter)

The backlash over hosting a Trump fundraiser has been swift for developer Stephen Ross.

Within 24 hours of word getting out, Equinox members and SoulCycle devotees have threatened to boycott both brands, which are owned by Ross’ Related Companies. (In San Francisco, some staged a protest.) Miami Dolphins receiver Kenny Stills publicly criticized the team owner for agreeing to host the event at his Hamptons home. And in a joint statement, the CEOs of Equinox and SoulCycle tried to distance themselves from the fracas and Ross himself.

“We believe in tolerance and equality, and will always stay true to those values,” they said. “Mr. Ross is a passive investor and is not involved in the management of either business.”

Not only is Ross the owner of those brands, but the real estate billionaire’s investments reach far wider.

READ MORE: 

Steve Ross traded future profits for a penthouse. Other developers do it too

Stephen Ross trades Central Park for Hudson Yards. Here’s a peek at his other homes

The 79-year-old developer — worth an estimated $7.7 billion, according to Forbes — founded Related in 1972 with a focus on affordable housing. Today, his empire has $50 billion in assets owned or under development, including the 28-acre mega-development Hudson Yards. The company’s investment arm, Related Fund Management, has raised $5 billion to date. Ross also owns a minority stake in Jorge Pérez’s Related Group. And in 2012, he co-founded RSE Ventures, a venture capital firm that describes itself as “part investor” and “part incubator” that’s backed 17 startups to date. Through Vayner/RSE, a partnership between Gary Vaynerchuck, Vayner Media and RSE, Ross has supported dozens more.

Ross released a statement Wednesday night describing himself as an “outspoken champion of racial equality, inclusion, diversity, public education and environmental sustainability.”

“I have known Donald Trump for 40 years, and while we agree on some issues, we strongly disagree on many others and I have never been bashful about expressing my opinions,” he said. “I started my business with nothing and a reason for my engagement with our leaders is my deep concern for creating jobs and growing our country’s economy.”

Business backlash
Fallout over the fundraiser is still threatening to take a toll on Ross’ many businesses — including luxury condos.

Related is actively marketing apartments at 70 Vestry Street and at Hudson Yards, as well as 520 West 28th, where a penthouse is asking $48.75 million. The optics of the fundraiser, which is at Ross’ Hamptons home, are “very, very bad for business,” said one brokerage source, who said a client who recently inked a deal at Hudson Yards is now having second thoughts.

In West Palm Beach, the developer owns CityPlace, which it recently rebranded as Rosemary Square. The mixed-use property is currently undergoing a $550 million redevelopment. Last year, Related secured approval for a 21-story apartment building on the site of a former Macy’s building at CityPlace.

Ross also owns the Miami Dolphins’ Hard Rock Stadium, which in addition to now hosting the annual Miami Open tennis tournament will be home to the Super Bowl in 2020.

Kenny Stills, a wide receiver for the Dolphins, criticized Ross’ decision to host a fundraiser for Trump.

Christina Tosi, founder of Milk Bar, also went on the offensive. “Milk Bar is in no way affiliated with the Trump fundraiser,” she wrote in a letter posted to the company’s website. “Stephen Ross is one of many investors in our company, all of whom come from different perspectives.”

Yoga, catering and rental cars
Outside of development, Related itself has spawned subsidiaries, including some through Equinox, which in addition to SoulCycle owns Pure Yoga, Blink Fitness and Rumble. Over the past seven years, Related also took a stake in Danny Meyer’s Union Square Events and CORE Real Estate, a boutique residential brokerage that handles Related’s resales. In 2017, Related bought an $80 million stake in Ladder Capital, one of the Trump Organization’s biggest lenders; a year later, it attempted a takeover bid, but was rejected.

In recent weeks, Related also invested in an airport car rental company called Conrac Solutions, and it acquired Pioneer Railcorp, owner of short-line railroads, in partnership with Brookhaven Rail Partners and Stephen Capital Partners. Earlier this summer, it said it would partner with Uber to build a skyport for Uber Air vehicles.

Neither is Ross’ first foray into transportation.

Until last year, Related also owned Citi Bike through a subsidiary called Bikeshare Holdings LLC. In 2014, Bikeshare acquired Motivate (formerly Alta Bicycle Share), which operated Citi Bike. Motivate was acquired by Lyft for a reported $250 million in 2018. This year, RSE Ventures, the fund co-founded by Ross, bet $1 million on a drone racing league.

The Detroit native is also among the biggest donors to the University of Michigan, where he earned an accounting degree in 1962. To date, Ross has committed $378 million to the university, according to reports, including a $100 million gift to the business school, which was named after him in 2004.

In 2018, a Detroit Free Press investigation cast a shadow over those gifts after it found the University of Michigan has invested in the companies of its donors, including more than $140 million in five funds through Related Fund Management. Ross and a group of partners also ended up in court after claiming a $33 million charitable tax deduction, which the IRS called a “tax avoidance scheme.”

New ventures
In all, Ross has knit a web of more than 30 companies with overlapping interests in sports, entertainment, hospitality and technology — both through Related and its subsidiaries, as well as through investments from RSE.

To date, RSE has backed 17 companies, according to Crunchbase.

They include companies like Outstanding Foods, which creates plant-based food; and Omaze, which connects influencers and charities. In June 2018, RSE invested $20 million in Bluestone Lane, the Australian coffee chain. It bet $19.5 million on &pizza, a chain that started in Washington, D.C.

The common thread is obviously real estate.

Related’s Hudson Yards, for example, will house Equinox’s first hotel. Bluestone Lane is a tenant in the Hudson Yards Mall. Equinox and SoulCycle are both tenants at the Related Group’s SLS Brickell, a twin-tower, 690-unit luxury condo development in Miami. Pérez’s Related Group sold the commercial spaces leased to the fitness tenants to Related Companies last year for $12.2 million, financing the deal with a loan from Ladder Capital.

Restaurants backed by RSE (of which there are many) will have spots in Hudson Yards. And media company VaynerMedia and the public relations firm Derris — both backed by RSE — work with several other companies the fund has invested in.

In 2014, RSE also partnered with Gary Vaynerchuck to form Vayner RSE, a $25 million seed fund and incubator that lists a “family” of 79 startups on its website, including Snapchat; Pillow, a hospitality company that deals with rentals; and Pixel Press, an app that lets kids make video games on an iPad.

Ross is a master of “connecting the dots,” RSE co-founder Higgins told Eater last year.

Higgins, a former press secretary to Rudy Giuliani, did not immediately respond to a request for comment. But in 2016 he was among a group of Republicans who publicly stumped for Hillary Clinton and told USA Today he struggled to explain Trump’s rhetoric to his son. “I’m willing to set aside any views I might have about taxation or anything else,” he said, “because I think preservation of the republic is more important.”

See below for a list of Ross’ personal holdings, as well as holdings through Related and RSE:

(This list does not include 79 startups backed by Vayner/RSE)

  • &pizza (pizza chain)
  • Banza (nutritious food brand)
  • Bluestone Lane (Australian coffee chain)
  • Crossfield Digital (mobile app developer)
  • Derris (communications firm)
  • Dog City (doggy daycare)
  • Drone Racing League
  • Fanvision Entertainment (hardware and software for sporting events)
  • Fuku (fast casual chicken from Momofuku Group)
  • Hard Rock Stadium (sports venue)
  • International Champions Cup (soccer tournament)
  • June (smart appliances)
  • Krossover Intelligence (coaching tools; acquired by Stack Sports in 2017)
  • LOLA (feminine care products)
  • Miami Dolphins (football franchise)
  • Milk Bar (bakery)
  • Momofuku (Asian restaurant)
  • New Hudson Facades (architectural façades)
  • NextVR (virtual reality)
  • Omaze (platform to connect influencers and charities)
  • Outstanding Foods (plant-based foods)
  • Pocket Living (homes for first-time home-buyers)
  • Radiate (creator of two-minute video lessons; acquired by NYSE in 2018)
  • Relevent Sports Group (soccer events and media)
  • Resy (restaurant software)
  • Skout Cybersecurity (cloud-based analytics and cybersecurity)
  • Snark Park (exhibition space)
  • Starry (internet service provider)
  • Student Sports (event and grassroots marketing for student athletes)
  • Vayner Media (digital agency)

Correction: This story previously listed Prime Sport as part of RSE Ventures.

AmTrust Bank building sells in Coral Gables

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AmTrust office building at 2701 Ponce de Leon in Coral Gables

AmTrust office building at 2701 Ponce de Leon in Coral Gables

Ubiica LLC and Maven Real Estate paid $12 million for the AmTrust Bank office building and three adjacent lots in Coral Gables.

The joint venture acquired the properties from New York Community Bank in an
off-market transaction, according to a release. The 25,428-square-foot AmTrust office building at 2701 Ponce de Leon Boulevard is near The Plaza mega-project that is under construction.

In addition to the AmTrust building, the joint venture acquired a 2,933-square-foot lot at 160 Almeria Avenue, a 15,000-square-foot lot at 130 Almeria Avenue, and a 12,500-square-foot lot at 103 Sevilla Avenue.

The AmTrust building was last purchased for $4 million in 2009. It was built in 1984 and was previously the Bank of Coral Gables building before it was acquired and operated as AmTrust Bank, according to the release.

Marc Schwarzberg and Jose Ortega of Maven Real Estate are also developing other projects in Coral Gables, including the former Church of Scientology building on Giralda Plaza. The project totals nearly 25,000 square feet of restaurant and retail space, including a rooftop restaurant and bar. Ubiica LLC is led by Alejandro Salazar and Rodrigo Gana.

Maven is also restoring the historic La Palma building, a 21,807-square-foot mixed-use project at 112 Alhambra Circle in Coral Gables.

Close by, Agave Holdings, a commercial real estate firm that includes the family behind the Jose Cuervo spirits brand, is building The Plaza, a 2.25 million-square-foot project with a 242-key hotel, 174 apartments, 161,000 square feet of retail space and more than 2,000 parking spaces. The development group recently closed on a $100 million construction loan.

Coral Gables is seeing a wave of new development.

Miami Beach developer Stephen Bittel recently put in a proposal to build the Mile Hotel and Shops, a 120-key development at 220 Miracle Mile. Earlier this year, the city approved 100 Miracle Mile, a mixed-use project proposed by AJP Ventures that include a 14-story building with 135 luxury rental units.

Mark your calendars: These are South Florida’s top real estate events next week

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Here are a couple of real estate events coming up next week!

Host: Creative Propulsion Labs
Date: August 15th
Time: 7:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m.

Creative Propulsion Labs is hosting its Out of the Box Thinking in Real Estate event at the company’s home building, 1501 Northwest North River Drive from 7:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. Come to this event to discuss the most utilized technologies in real estate today. Speakers include Jason Doyle of Gridics and Brian Alonso of Built Story.

Host: CCIM Florida Chapter
Date: August 16th
Time: 3:30 p.m. to 5:30 p.m.

CCIM’s Florida Chapter is holding a lunch & learn event at Bear Lakes Country Club, 1901 Village Boulevard from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Attend to gain insight on 1031 exchanges and Opportunity Zone investment strategies. Tom Russell of Asset Preservation and Adam Yormack of Escalante Yormack will be speaking at the event.

To search for future industry events or browse past ones, click here. And to submit more industry events, please reach out to events@therealdeal.com.


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All Falls Down: Kanye West’s “Star Wars”-themed affordable housing plan hits snag

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Kanye West (Credit: Getty Images)

Kanye West (Credit: Getty Images)

Rapper. Clothing designer. Entrepreneur. Donald Trump fan. And now, affordable housing developer?

The outspoken rapper’s plan for a community of dome-like houses for low-income residents modelled after the “Stars Wars” movies has hit a snag, according to TMZ.

Calabasas city officials have cited the Grammy-winning artist for building several dome structures, which he claims are temporary prototypes, without having received permits.

He’s now being forced to bring them into compliance by Sept. 15, or tear them down. West’s plan comes as California — and Los Angeles in particular — continues to grapple with a severe shortage of affordable homes and a growing homeless problem.

West has been working with a team to design the prefabricated shelters, inspired by Luke Skywalker’s childhood home, as affordable housing. His vision, he has said, is to create a community bridging the lower and upper classes.

West had four structures built on the 300 acres he owns in Calabasas, prompting neighbors to complain to the Department of Public Works about late-night construction. After two visits to the area, inspectors concluded that the project was not temporary, and required proper plans and building permits, according to reports.

He and his wife, Kim Kardashian are no strangers to that area. In early 2018, they poured $20 million into overhauling their Hidden Hills mansion nearby. And the year before that Kim Kardashian and her mother, Kris Jenner, bought a total of three condominiums at Avanti in Calabasas.

In addition to housing, Kanye West has also mentioned plans to open his own architecture firm.

“We’re starting a Yeezy architecture arm called Yeezy home,” he tweeted out in May. “We’re looking for architects and industrial designers who want to make the world better.”

A month later, he told TV personality Charlamagne Tha God he was “going to be one of the biggest real estate developers of all the time.” [TMZ] Natalie Hoberman

Fitch cites extreme weather in credit rating of Miami’s Rickenbacker Causeway, Kanye’s affordable housing plan hits a snag: Daily digest

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Every day, The Real Deal rounds up South Florida’s biggest real estate news, from breaking news and scoops to announcements and deals. We update this page at 9 a.m., 12:30 p.m., and 4 p.m. ET. Please send any tips or deals to tips@therealdeal.com

This page was last updated at 12:30 p.m.

 

Fitch said natural disasters could impact Miami’s Rickenbacker Causeway. Fitch analysts said “the causeway is exposed to extreme weather events in relation to rising sea levels and vulnerable to traffic and revenue disruptions.” The concerns didn’t impact the credit rating, however, as the bridge is still rated a BBB+. [Miami Herald]

 

Kanye West (Credit: Getty Images)

Kanye West’s Star Wars themed affordable housing plan in Los Angeles hits a snag. The outspoken rapper’s plan for a community of dome-like houses for low-income residents modelled after the “Stars Wars” movies has run into trouble with city officials, according to TMZ. Calabasas city officials have cited the Grammy-winning artist for building several dome structures, which he claims are temporary prototypes, without having received permits. [TRD]

 

A maintenance worker for the 3360 Condominium Association in Palm Beach allegedly defrauded the association. For 18 months, Joseph Maselli double-billed the Palm Beach condo association, according to the police. In total, he allegedly defrauded the association out of $17,000. [Palm Beach Daily News]

 

Residential sales fall in Broward County and increase slightly in Miami-Dade County. Home prices kept rising across the two counties, but at a slower pace than before. In Miami-Dade County, single-family home sales rose 1.8 percent to 3,854, but condo sales declined 0.6 percent to 4,007. [TRD]

 

Related CEO Stephen Ross (Credit: Getty Images, Wikipedia, Facebook, and Twitter)

Stephen Ross’ massive business empire includes gyms, condos, coffee and more. The 79-year-old developer — worth an estimated $7.7 billion, according to Forbes — founded Related Companies in 1972 with a focus on affordable housing. Today, his empire has $50 billion in assets owned or under development, including the 28-acre mega-development Hudson Yards. He also owns the Hard Rock Stadium in Miami Gardens. [TRD]

 

AmTrust Bank building sells in Coral Gables. Ubiica LLC and Maven Real Estate paid $12 million for the AmTrust Bank office building and three adjacent lots in Coral Gables. The joint venture acquired the properties from New York Community Bank in an off-market transaction, according to a release. The 25,428-square-foot AmTrust office building at 2701 Ponce de Leon Boulevard is near The Plaza mega-project that is under construction.

 

Zillow shares fall after company reports losses in key division. Investors punished Zillow after it reported earnings this week as the company reported losses from its year-old home-flipping business. Shares fell 16 percent on Thursday. A year ago, the company told investors it had underestimated the time it would take to close home purchases. [Bloomberg]

 

Malaysia filed criminal charges on Friday against a top executive at Goldman Sachs. The former executive now works for Alibaba of China and is alleged to have been involved in the 1MDB scandal, according to the New York Times. The charges increase the legal challenges for Goldman Sachs over its role in the multibillion-dollar international fraud scandal that led to the ouster of Malaysia’s prime minister. [New York Times]

 

Compiled by Keith Larsen

“The rich will get richer anyway”: HUD Secretary Ben Carson dismisses concerns that Opportunity Zones will only benefit rich people

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Secretary of the Department of Housing and Urban Development Ben Carson (Credit: Getty Images and iStock)

Secretary of the Department of Housing and Urban Development Ben Carson (Credit: Getty Images and iStock)

Ben Carson is well aware of the complaints directed at the federal Opportunity Zones, and how the tax incentive program meant to boost struggling communities may only end up benefiting rich investors and developers.

On Friday, Carson, the Secretary of the Department of Housing and Urban Development, offered his frank assessment of that belief.

“Some people have complained, and said, ‘This is just a mechanism for rich people to get richer,’” he said during a morning talk at the Marriott Hotel in Brooklyn. “Um, news flash, rich people are going to get richer anyway.”

Ben Carson

Ben Carson

Carson’s comments, delivered during a keynote speech at the Opportunity Zones Expo, drew scattered chuckles from the audience of investors and real estate industry players. “Can you believe he just said that?” one person in the audience said.

The program, which HUD partly oversees, has designated more than 8,000 census tracts across the U.S. as “distressed.” Investors who develop in those Opportunity Zones can defer federal taxes on capital gains until Dec. 31, 2026. Investors can reduce that tax payment by as much as 15 percent and pay no taxes on possible profits from an Opportunity Zone fund if they hold onto the investment for 10 years. The initiative was part of the 2017 tax overhaul, and by mid-2018 began to catch on with investors.

In March, Carson said HUD will give preference to developers and investors who build affordable housing in Opportunity Zones when it comes to awarding certain grants.

Still, the program has faced criticism for benefiting wealthy investors who are planning projects in neighborhoods not considered distressed, and will instead provide a large return on investment.

In Baltimore, officials there were found to have redrawn an Opportunity Zone to include a development led by Under Armour chief executive Kevin Plank, who had lobbied state officials for the change.

In Chicago, a similar situation emerged after an area that did not meet city guidelines for an Opportunity Zone was later added to include a $2 billion project to redevelop a former hospital, after state officials intervened.

And in New York, Amazon was eligible to offset millions of dollars of capital gains taxes in its failed bid to open a headquarters in Long Island City, where much of the high-rise neighborhood is an Opportunity Zone.

Carson is currently touring the country to promote Opportunity Zones, and on Friday announced updates to the program’s rules.

Developers who redevelop mixed-use buildings in Opportunity Zones will now be eligible to receive Section 220 mortgage insurance for projects that derive up to 30 percent of gross income from commercial space. Previously, that had been limited to 15 percent.

“This will hopefully incentivize private investment, which will spur grocery stores, so we won’t have these food deserts,” Carson said, referring to neighborhoods with a lack of supermarkets.

The Federal Housing Administration is also expected to unveil a new set of incentives for Opportunity Zones, he said, which will lower mortgage and application fees for loans the agency issues.

Carson also promoted the Trump administration’s vision for the program, saying the president intends to “foster the ingenuity of the private sector.”

“There’s no lack of innovation or entrepreneurship in this nation. What gets in the way is the regulations and zoning restrictions,” Carson told the crowd. “That’s what we are working together for.”

Private equity landlord drops $10M for Palm Beach Gardens apartments

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Legacy Place at 1000 Legacy Place in Palm Beach Gardens and Alton Townhomes at 8072-8110 Hobbes Way

Legacy Place at 1000 Legacy Place in Palm Beach Gardens and Alton Townhomes at 8072-8110 Hobbes Way

In the aftermath of the controversial rent reform laws in New York City, at least one property owner has decided to sell off assets in the city and focus on South Florida.

The private equity firm Sky Lake Partners, led by Marlena Demenus, purchased 29 units at multifamily properties in Palm Beach Gardens for $9.92 million, according to a release. Sky Lake bought 19 units at the Legacy Place at 1000 Legacy Place and 10 units at Alton Townhomes at 8072-8110 Hobbes Way.

Sky Lake bought the Alton townhomes from developer Kolter Group, while it purchased the units at Legacy Place from New York-based Bhansali Equities, according to Compass Commercial’s Brad Kuskin, who represented Sky Lake in the deal.

The purchase price broke down to $341,000 per unit. The units range from one to four bedrooms and the owner plans to rent out the properties, Kuskin said.

The move is part of Demenus’ decision to completely sell off her entire $34.7 million portfolio of New York properties, which include apartments in Harlem and the Bronx, according to Kuskin. Demenus is buying properties in Florida in part because the state has more favorable tax laws compared to New York, Kuskin said.

Some high net worth individuals are moving to the Sunshine State after President Trump’s 2017 tax legislation capped the amount wealthy individuals in high tax states can deduct. Florida, meanwhile, has no state income tax.

Sky Lake’s first deal in South Florida was a $14.75 million purchase at the Residences at Latitude Delray Beach, where it plans to convert the apartment complex to annual rentals.

Sky Lake is a private equity firm specializing in multifamily and mixed-use real estate investments, according to Demenus’ LinkedIn page. Sky Lake recently sold nine buildings in New York City.

Defunct Facchina sues to collect $4.3M for MiamiCentral office building work

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 2 MiamiCentral and 3 MiamiCentral

2 MiamiCentral and 3 MiamiCentral

When Shorenstein Properties purchased 2 MiamiCentral and 3 MiamiCentral in May for $159.4 million, the San Francisco REIT also allegedly inherited millions of dollars in construction debt from the previous owner. Florida East Coast Industries, the parent company of VirginTrains USA, sold the buildings at 600 Northwest First Avenue to Shorenstein.

Last month, Facchina Construction of Florida, the project’s now-defunct general contractor, sued the Shorenstein affiliate that now owns the buildings for nonpayment of $4.3 million in construction work that was allegedly completed in 2016.

According to Facchina’s complaint, Florida East Coast’s then-subsidiary All Aboard Florida refused to pay the bill. Facchina was hired in 2015 to construct the mixed-used buildings that include a total of 595,145 square feet of office, retail, and parking. In 2018, the firm filed a lien for the unpaid amount and is still trying to collect, the lawsuit states.

Spokespersons for Shorenstein and Florida East Coast declined comment. Mariela Malfeld, Facchina’s attorney, did not respond to a phone message seeking comment.

Alex Barthet, a Miami-based construction lawyer not involved in the litigation, said the lien is not extinguished by the sale. But to keep the lien alive, Facchina had to file its lawsuit. “This is the real power of a construction claim of lien and what gives contractors financial security for their work,” Barthet said. “The Facchina liens were filed almost exactly one year ago, so it is likely that this lawsuit was filed to prevent the claims of lien from being extinguished.”

Previously, Miami-based Estate Shell, a subcontractor on the 3 MiamiCentral garage portion, sued Facchina, All Aboard and Balfour Beatty in 2017 over a $3 million dispute, according to the Orlando Sentinel. Miami-Dade Circuit Court records show the lawsuit was stayed and went to arbitration. However, Estate Shell is seeking to overturn the arbitrator’s final judgment according to a motion filed in late July. Facchina went out of business while working on the project.

Since 3 MiamiCentral and 2 MiamiCentral opened last year, the tenant roster includes Viacom, the Confederation of North Central America and Caribbean Association Football (CONCACAF), Carlton Fields and Atlantic | Pacific Companies. Shorenstein financed the purchase with a $126 million loan from Wells Fargo. Not included in the purchase: the train station for the high-speed rail service formerly called Brightline and now Virgin Trains USA.

Real estate bigwigs on their minimum wage days

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From left: John Catsimatidis, Darcy Stacom and Brad Hargreaves (Illustration by Paul Kisselev)

It’s hard to forget a first job, whether it was scooping ice cream, waiting tables or selling knives door-to-door.

But it’s funny to think that the CEOs, developers and top industry brokers — who these days have hundreds of employees under their purview and salaries that put them in the uppermost stratosphere of earners — once made minimum wage.

Last year, The Real Deal brought you the first edition of this annual series, in which bigwigs like Harry Macklowe, Don Peebles and MaryAnne Gilmartin talked about shoveling snow, pumping gas and flipping burgers at McDonald’s, respectively.

This summer we went back for more, talking to six more industry power players to find out how they got their start and what they learned from their first foray into the workforce.

Darcy Stacom
Chair and head of New York City Capital Markets at CBRE

When CBRE’s Darcy Stacom was 15 years old, her parents called her into the living room of their Greenwich, Connecticut, home and told her to take a look around.

“I’m thinking, ‘Someday, this will be mine,’” she said, “and they go, ‘We just want you to know we plan on spending every dime, so we’re sending you to work in New York City this summer.’”

So, her mother and father, Matthew Stacom — the late veteran broker who played a key role in the making of the Sears Tower in Chicago — got her a job at her father’s firm Cushman & Wakefield. She worked in the mailroom in the summer of 1976 before her sophomore year of high school and in the market research department the following year, Stacom said.

“I was expecting to spend the summer at the country club with all my friends,” she noted. “Instead, I ended up commuting [by train].”

Stacom, who is now 59 and likely rakes in millions per year as one of the city’s top investment sales brokers, said she started out earning a rate that amounted to about $13,000 a year at the time.

She reported to a middle-aged female manager in Cushman’s market research department. And her responsibilities, such as updating building surveys, would sometimes increase in the afternoons due to her boss’ curious habit of occasionally slumping over after lunch, Stacom recalled.

“This woman was fantastic, but she was not quite with it in the afternoon,” she said. “I came to realize that her endless glasses of water were vodka.” 

Stacom also volunteered at Greenwich Hospital as a candy striper, a gig that eventually landed her on the front page of the Greenwich Times thanks to the many hours she put in. But that was the only non-real estate gig she ever held. Stacom attended Lehigh University, worked at Cushman every summer through college and started there full-time one week after graduating. (Her parents, of course, never actually spent all of their money.)

“I really saw all of the functions that went on behind brokerages and became very respectful of the people in the mailroom or on the reception desk or the switchboard or in market research,” she said. “They were the ones that were paid the least, but in many ways, really made things stick or let them fall apart.”

John Catsimatidis
Founder and CEO of Red Apple Group

Greece-born billionaire John Catsimatidis has dabbled in everything from real estate to radio to politics, but he’s still arguably best known as the head of the New York City grocery store chain Gristedes.

The supermarket portion of Red Apple Group spans about 350,000 square feet and generates slightly less than $300 million in revenue per year, making up about 2 percent of Red Apple Group’s overall business, according to Catsimatidis.

So it’s fitting that the 70-year-old mogul got his start at a supermarket called the Red Apple on 137th Street and Broadway in 1966.

“I just finished Brooklyn Tech High School,” Catsimatidis said. “I went home and sat on the couch, ready to watch television all summer until college.”

But his mother had other ideas and went to the local grocery store, less than three blocks from their home, to get him a summer job that paid $1.10 per hour. Instead of watching television, Catsimatidis  said, he spent the season — about 10 hours per day and seven days per week — packing yogurts  and making sure all the beers were cold.

He went to New York University that fall to study engineering but dropped out during his senior year to buy and run his first grocery store building  — a property on Grand Concourse in the Bronx that he said he purchased for about $400,000. That move eventually led to Catsimatidis acquiring Gristedes from 7-Eleven’s parent company, the Southland Corporation, in 1986.

“I was making $1 million a year at the age of 23,” he said. “Then I started buying real estate.”

Young Woo
Founder and principal of Youngwoo & Associates

Before launching his eponymous development firm in 1979 and spearheading about 55 residential and commercial projects across the city, Young Woo milked cows.

“Our family actually immigrated from Korea to Paraguay [in 1965], and we couldn’t stay in Paraguay, so we moved to Argentina,” Woo recalled. “The first job we got was working at a dairy farm and milking the cows.”

He was 12 years old when he held down that first job on that Argentinian farm. 

The 66-year old developer said he appreciated working on a farm at such a young age and got a kick out of competing with other workers to see who could get the most milk.

But Woo wasn’t a big fan of the 2 a.m. wakeup calls, which were necessary to make sure the milk was ready to deliver to a cheese factory before 7 a.m. And he said the cows needed to be milked every day to make sure they would be able to consistently produce.

His family spent more than two years on the farm; Woo ultimately ended up in New York and landed in the real estate industry thanks to his background in architecture.

Although Youngwoo & Associates is now best known for big projects like its 22-story mixed-use development at 2420 Amsterdam Avenue in Washington Heights, DeKalb Market in Downtown Brooklyn and a $500 million Opportunity Zone fund, the firm —  which is currently developing more than $1 billion worth of construction — also still owns farmland in Paraguay and a winery in Argentina.

For Woo, getting to know the animals back when he was milking cows was one of the most fascinating parts of the job.

“Cows are like humans. You can tell their personalities by looking at their faces, and you know some of them are the bad guys or good guys,” he said. “It’s amazing how each cow has a different personality.”

From left: Pam Liebman, Young Woo and Benjamin Brafman (Illustration by Paul Kisselev)

Pam Liebman
President and CEO of the Corcoran Group

Corcoran’s CEO, Pam Liebman, learned at an early age to stand up for herself in the workplace.

The Staten Island native got her first job while she was a student at Curtis High School, working at her local swim club over the summer.

Liebman, who recalled being a good student and president of the student body at the time, said she mainly took the job because she was bored and wanted to work. She doesn’t remember what she earned but said it was “considered good pay” at the time.

The 57-year old — whose firm closed $4.53 billion in Manhattan sales in 2018 and had 1,320 agents in the borough as of January — recalled one day when her boss tried to get her to stay on lifeguarding duty for one more shift after she had just finished working a double.

“They were totally favoring the guys because this other guy was supposed to do the next shift on the chair, and I think [my boss] just wanted to hang with him or something,” she said. “He said, ‘Pam, why don’t you do another shift?’ I said, ‘Why don’t you go to hell?’”

So she quit on the spot and got a job at a nearby club for the rest of the summer.

Liebman said she worked about four lifeguarding gigs before taking a job as a camp counselor when she was at the University of Massachusetts Amherst.

But she turned out to be less effective at managing seventh-grade campers than managing residential agents, noting that she almost got fired for being too hands-off.

“I think I was ignoring the kids too much and not supervising them,” she said, “because at some point, I was just like, ‘I don’t really care. Do whatever you want to do. Just say I didn’t know about it.’”

But right after graduating college, in 1984, she joined Corcoran, and she hasn’t looked back.

Benjamin Brafman
Founder of Brafman & Associates

Benjamin Brafman has had a long career as one of the country’s most prominent criminal defense attorneys, representing celebrities such as Sean Combs and Michael Jackson and real estate execs like Charlie Kushner and Steve Croman.

The 70-year-old lawyer started his own defense practice in 1980 and estimates he has since worked on at least 1,500 cases, with a success rate of about 80 percent. Brafman represented Kushner 15 years ago in his trial for witness tampering and tax evasion. In 2017 he represented Croman, who spent eight months in jail after pleading guilty to charges of tax fraud and mortgage fraud.

But prior to passing the bar, and even graduating high school, Brafman worked as an assistant to a group of waiters and busboys at a hotel in Rockaway Beach called the Baders. He was 12 years old and would walk from his home in Arverne, a few blocks away, to help them set up the tables and meal stations for about 10 hours each day in the summer.

“I wasn’t officially working for the hotel,” Brafman said. “I was actually working for a couple of the waiters who I had befriended and who liked me, and I think they paid me 50 cents a meal. And I’ve been working ever since.”

Brafman said he had a “very winding” path to his career as a lawyer — one that also included stints mowing lawns, tutoring and selling Monkees concert T-shirts.

And he still has fond memories of his first gig at the Rockaway Beach hotel. “The waiters were cool guys, and it was fun,” he said. “It wasn’t hard work.”

Brad Hargreaves
Founder and CEO of Common

Brad Hargreaves runs one of the city’s first and most active co-living companies, with 30 properties (some renovated buildings, some ground-up) in New York, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Chicago, Seattle and Washington, D.C.

Hargreaves, 33, studied molecular biology at Yale University, and his first job in college was a far cry from his efforts to shake up the rental space. He joined a Connecticut-based startup called 454 Life Sciences, where he sold genome sequencers — used to automate the process of reading DNA strings — mainly to Asian buyers. The startup was acquired by another company and shuttered in 2013.

“I was the intern, and therefore the lowest man on the totem pole, so I had to be up at 3 a.m. selling genome sequencers to Japanese scientists,” Hargreaves said.

The sequencers were mainly used to better understand serious diseases like cancer by examining the underlying genetic causes. And the main accounts at the time were large government organizations and universities, along with a few agriculture and pharmaceutical companies, he noted.

That internship soon turned into a part-time job, and Hargreaves stayed with 454 Life for about nine months overall. At the time, the sequencers were selling for about $50,000 apiece, which he estimated was more than he earned during his entire time with the company.

“It was fun to sell them,” he said. “But you had to have real expertise on these things and what they could do, so it was a good mix of very technical knowledge and sales. You’re still going for the close.”

Though he liked the work, Hargreaves decided to try his hand at entrepreneurship and went on to launch Common in 2015. Prior to that he co-founded an education startup called General Assembly, and he said seeing employees, students and teachers struggle to find decent affordable housing options helped spark the idea for Common.

The co-living company, which now serves 800-plus members, has landed $65 million in venture funding to date.

“I went into college wanting to start a biotechnology company,” Hargreaves said. “I realized about halfway through college that the thing I actually liked [most] was starting companies.”


Florida Keys homeowners could get a big cash buyout

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Florida Keys after Hurricane Irma (Credit: Getty Images)

Florida Keys after Hurricane Irma (Credit: Getty Images)

Florida Keys homeowners who are still reeling from damage caused by Hurricane Irma can tap into a lifeline from the state of Florida.

Florida set aside $75 million of hurricane recovery money from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development to buy out flood-damaged homes, with about $10 million of the money earmarked for the Keys, according to the Miami Herald.

The cash is meant to be used in areas where it does not make sense to rebuild, the Herald reported. The rest of the $1.8 billion dollar payout will be used to cover housing repairs, and building and buying new affordable housing.

Homeowners have until Aug. 15 to submit an application through their city or county. The application opened on July 16.

The new payouts could change some of the development landscape in the Keys. The state placed Monroe County under a rate of growth ordinance (ROGO) a number of years ago due to concerns about evacuating the islands in advance of a hurricane. The ordinance involves a complicated points system for plots of land and housing. Any developer or homeowner who wants to build a new home has to acquire enough points.

It can take a number of years for developers to acquire enough points, according to the Herald. By buying up hurricane damaged property, the state can then distribute more of these points to allow more construction. The county estimates it could be out of ROGO points by 2023, according to the Herald. [Miami Herald] – Keith Larson

Real estate stocks rally despite trade war worries

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Zillow CEO Rich Barton (Credit: iStock and JD Lasica via Flickr)

Zillow CEO Rich Barton (Credit: iStock and JD Lasica via Flickr)

Real estate stocks have performed well this week despite wider market volatility, fueled by an escalating trade war, which last week led the S&P 500 to its worst week of 2019.

At the close of market on Friday, The Real Deal reviewed the stock prices of 28 major real estate companies. From opening bell on Monday 17 were up, with mostly small percentage drops for the other 11.

Of the 28 stocks, troubled brokerage giant Realogy had the biggest uptick — reporting an increase of 23 percent for a closing share price of $5.92 at the end of Friday.

Zillow, meanwhile, led the decline. The listings company was down 18 percent from $48.09 at the beginning of the week. Its stock price dropped following the release of its second-quarter earnings Wednesday. While the company’s revenues increased by 84 percent to $599.6 million, its losses had also gone up — totalling roughly $72 million compared to just $3 million last year.

“Timing issues for the Premier Agent revenues was one of the key reasons for today along with the inventory adjustment in the Homes business, although the move the Flex significantly expands the potential total available market for Premier Agent potentially over time,” said Brad Berning, an analyst with Craig-Hallum Capital Group, in an email Wednesday.

A representative for Zillow declined to comment on the stock price, instead directing TRD to a portion of the company’s quarterly shareholder letter, which states: “We understand this is a sizable shift from the ‘search and find’ nature of Zillow 1.0, but we are more confident than ever that evolving to a transaction-driven company is the right direction for our customers, the industry, the company, and our shareholders.”

The intensifying trade war between the United States and Donald Trump reached a boiling point earlier this year, when Chinese President Xi Jinping increased tariffs on $60 billion of U.S. goods in retaliation for President Trump’s decision to raise tariffs on $200 billion in Chinese products from 10 percent to 25 percent.

Despite the rising stock prices, the real estate industry is not immune to the unrest as the costs of building materials increase, and a creeping sense of unpredictability complicates new-development plans.

The Weekly Dish: Robuchon restaurants set Miami opening dates, new restaurants planned for MiMo & more

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 Miami Design District (Credit: Miami Design District)

Miami Design District (Credit: Miami Design District)

L’Atelier de Joël Robuchon and Le Jardinier | Miami Design District
L’Atelier de Joël Robuchon and Le Jardinier are both opening later this month, New York-based Invest Hospitality announced. Joël Robuchon, an award-winning French chef, died about a year ago.

Le Jardinier will open on Aug. 16 in a 4,200-square-foot, 108-seat space, according to a release. The restaurant, at 151 Northeast 41 Street suite 235, will also include a 64-seat outdoor patio and a 17-seat marble bar.

L’Atelier will open Aug. 28 in a 3,300-square-foot space above Le Jardinier, with a 34-seat dining counter and table seating for 20, according to the release.

French architect Pierre-Yves Rochon designed both restaurants.

Concept from the Angry Crab and Puttin’ on the Schnitz | MiMo District
A new seafood concept from the Chicago-based group behind the Angry Crab and San Soo Gab San is coming to the MiMo District. F+B Hospitality, led by Felix Bendersky, and Phil Gutman of Brown Harris Stevens Miami brokered the 2,500-square-foot lease for 6928 Biscayne Boulevard.

In addition, Puttin’ on the Schnitz, a restaurant by Adam Gersten of Gramps, will open at 1085 Northeast 79th Street.

Bendersky also brokered the nearby leases of El Bagel at 6910 Biscayne Boulevard and OMG Brigaderios at 6912 Biscayne Boulevard.

Asking rents range between $35 per square foot and $45 per square foot.

65 Miracle Mile | Coral Gables
Restaurateur and nightclub owner Roman Jones leased the former Tarpon Bend space on Miracle Mile in Coral Gables. Jones, principal of Coral Gables Concepts, plans to open a Gables-inspired restaurant in the 6,378-square-foot space, according to a release.

Alan Howard of Kerdyk Real Estate’s commercial division brokered the deal.

Jones is known for his Kiki on the River restaurant on the Miami River.

Tarpon Bend closed earlier this year after being open for 15 years.

Here’s how much it will cost you to sell your home on an iBuying site.

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Gary Keller of Keller Williams (Credit: iStock and Wikipedia)

Gary Keller of Keller Williams (Credit: iStock and Wikipedia)

Real estate companies from Zillow Group to Keller Williams have jumped on the nascent iBuying craze. But what’s the cost to home sellers who sell their homes with these services?

An extra 13 to 15 percent.

That’s according to a new study from data firm Collateral Analytics, which aimed to put a price tag on the cost of using iBuying platforms, which allow buyers to purchase homes instantly online, Inman reported.

However, if selling a home with an iBuying company may tack on extra fees compared to traditional brokerages, among other costs, the service may be worth it. “For some sellers, needing to move or requiring quick extraction of equity, this is certainly worthwhile, but what percentage of the market will want this service remains to be seen,” the study concluded.

Demand for the service is a question playing out in real time, as traditional brokerages like Keller Williams work to launch their own iBuying platforms in an effort to cash in on the craze, pioneered by startup Opendoor.

In the second quarter, Zillow’s revenues ballooned 84 percent to almost $600 million, thanks in part to the launch last year of its iBuying program, Zillow Offers. But the new product also had a cost for Zillow, which saw its losses come in at $72 million in the second quarter, versus $3 million in 2018.

Instant homebuying also has some risks, the study found. These include vacant properties becoming more susceptible to break-ins and the portals’ valuation models overvaluing properties owned by more informed sellers. [Inman] — Mary Diduch 

Todd Michael Glaser buys West Palm Beach location for his development firm

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Todd Michael Glaser (Credit: Haute Living)

Todd Michael Glaser, who last year bought two houses in Palm Beach, paid $2.67 million for property in West Palm Beach to serve as the local office of his real estate development company.

Glaser and his wife, Kim, bought a former bank building and adjacent land at 301 Southern Boulevard, near the western end of the Southern Boulevard bridge connecting West Palm Beach to Palm Beach.

The seller is former Palm Beach resident Lee Munder, who had owned the property on Southern Boulevard since 2004 and had stored his collection of antique cars there. The old Wachovia Bank and a vocational school previously occupied the 7,769-square-foot building, which Glaser plans to renovate.

David Solomon of EWM Realty International represented Glaser in his acquisition of the Southern Boulevard property. John Jaspert, a vice president of CBRE, listed the building for sale almost a year ago and showed it to approximately 60 prospects.

A Miami Beach native, Glaser told the Palm Beach Daily News he expects a revitalization of the section of Southern Boulevard where his newly acquired property is located because the area has “the same feel as what was going on in Miami in 1988 and 1989.”

In November, a company run by Glaser paid slightly less than $11 million for Casa Vera, a landmarked house a 125 Via Del Lago in Palm Beach, and already has listed it for sale for $13.9 million.

Last summer, the Glasers paid $5.9 million for  a landmarked house at 1221 North Lake Way in Palm Beach, which the couple is renovating. [Palm Beach Daily News] – Mike Seemuth

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