Page 4 - CooperatorNews New York December 2021
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4 COOPERATORNEWS —  DECEMBER 2021  COOPERATORNEWS.COM  PULSE  Industry Pulse  Insurance       Tribeca Condo Hires Mackoul Risk    Solutions  New York and New Jersey insurance   agency Mackoul Risk Solutions, which   specializes in co-op and condominium in-  surance, announces its recent partnership   with 6 Cortlandt Alley Condo Association   in Manhattan’s Tribeca neighborhood.   The building dates back to the 19th cen-  tury and today houses luxury lofts featur-  ing amenities such as a cyber doorman, a   cloud-based access control system, a fit-  ness center with Peloton bike, a residents’   lounge, a package room with cold storage,   and private storage spaces available for   purchase.    “This is a beautiful, historic building,   and we could not be happier to represent   them. We look forward to continuing our   working relationship with Kristian from   Choice New York Management,” says   Greg Mackoul, Business Development   Specialist for Mackoul.    Transactions  Kloss & Kushner List Puck Building   Penthouse   That was fast! In October,   Coopera-  torNews   Pulse included reporting from   The Real Deal   on the recent purchase of   The Puck’s last developer-held residential   unit that was the most expensive listing   to go into contract the week before Labor   Day  at  $42.5  million.  The  7,241-square-  foot penthouse was purchased by mod-  el-entrepreneur Karlie Kloss and her   husband, venture capitalist Joshua Kush-  ner—brother of Donald Trump’s son-  in-law and former White House advisor   Jared Kushner, and whose family business,   The Kushner Companies, redeveloped the   iconic Nolita property at the turn of the   millennium.   Now   People   reports that 29-year-old   Kloss and 36-year-old Kushner have put   their other penthouse in the building—  a three-bedroom, six-and-a-half-bath-  room condo unit—on the market for   $23,500,000.   Lavishly  designed  and  appointed,  the   home also includes its own media, fitness,   and laundry rooms, and is outfitted with a   smart home automation system. Accord-  ing to   People,   it’s listed with Nick Gavin   at Compass and Adam Modlin of Modlin   Group.  Luxury Sales Soar This Fall   Autumn in New York has seen a surge   in home sales above the $4 million mark,   according to   Mansion Global   and Olshan   Realty’s  weekly Olshan Report. Manhat-  tan has gone five straight weeks with 40   or more signed contracts on residential   properties in that price range.   For the week ended November 7, 2021,   46 such sales were transacted, amounting   to a total of $414.4 million, reports   Man-  sion  . The priciest of these was a pair of   penthouses in the Upper East Side’s the   Bellemont that listed for a combined $66.5   million. The yearly record for total value   of luxury sales in a week was set in Octo-  ber at $483.6 million.  The week’s next priciest signings were a   tie between a Tribeca loft and another Up-  per East Side penthouse that each asked   $27 million.  All of these sales were in condomini-  ums, which accounted for nearly 83% of   the luxury units sold in Manhattan in the   reporting period,   Mansion   notes.   Rose Hill Penthouse Sells for $18.75M   In the Manhattan neighborhood north   of  Madison Square  Park  now known  as   NoMad, newcomer Rose Hill—the Art   Deco condominium tower developed   by Rockefeller Group—announces via   press release that Penthouse A is now in   contract for $18.75 million, with closing   scheduled for before the end of the year.   The sale is one of the biggest for the neigh-  borhood in terms of total price and price   per square foot, which the release notes is   $4,267.    The three-bed, three-and-a-half bath,   4,394-square-foot penthouse duplex de-  signed inside and out by the New York-  based firm CetraRuddy spans the 42nd   and 43rd floors of the 45-story tower.   With large floor-to-ceiling windows and   ceiling heights of nearly 30 feet, the light-  filled residence also has 1,331 square feet   of exterior space spread across three pri-  vate terraces, with 360-degree views of the   New York City skyline, per the release.    The unit opens on a great room and   family room with various seating areas,   and nearby are both the kitchen and din-  ing room. Two bedrooms are on the main   floor, and the master suite takes up the   whole  top floor.  A flex room—a  touted   feature since the pandemic—can be cus-  tomized as a study, additional bedroom,   nursery, or however the owner likes.  The press release describes Penthouse   A as having finishes such as rusticated   hardwood floors and bronze hardware.   The kitchen is equipped with state-of-  the-art Miele appliances; custom, Ital-  ian-made cabinetry; and Calacatta Razzi   honed marble countertops. The master   bathroom has Greek Dolomite honed   stonewalls with Breccia Capraia accent   shower walls and dark marble floors with   radiant heat. A large soaking tub and cus-  tom walnut and bronze vanity with marble   countertops round out the spa-like space.    Located at 30 East 29th Street between   Park  and  Madison  Avenues,  Rose  Hill   includes a full suite of urban club-like   amenities. CORE, the exclusive sales and   marketing firm for the building, handles   the listing.  Law & Legislation  Co-op Virtual Meetings Now    Permanently Legal   In a press release, Great Neck-based   law firm Hankin & Mazel, PLLC an-  nounces that Governor Kathy Hochul has   signed the amendment to the New York   Business Corporation Laws allowing for   cooperative corporations to hold both an-  nual shareholder meetings and board of   directors meetings by electronic commu-  nication platforms. This legislation makes   permanent the previous executive orders   that allowed these types of meetings on an   emergency basis due to the pandemic.   Development  Debt Purchase Proposed for    Beleaguered High Line Development   Reporting from the   New York Post   in-  dicates that a deal is in the works for New   York  real  estate  investor  Steven  Witkoff   to take over $1 billion in debt from the   stalled residential development at Elev-  enth Avenue and West 17th Street known   as XI.   The $2 billion condo designed by Dan-  ish architecture group Bjarke Ingels is   made up of two towers, one 26 stories and   one 36 stories, that are set askew from one   another, giving the interrupted project the   nickname “The Twists.”   According to the   Post,   after a 2016   groundbreaking and three years of much-  watched construction at its tourist-centric   Chelsea location, developer Ziel Feldman   of HFZ Capital Group defaulted on the   project in 2020, bringing construction   of the 236 luxury units (priced up to $25   million), a high-end hotel, and an elabo-  rate spa to a halt.    Witkoff, who developed celebrity-fa-  vored 150 Charles St. and owns the office   floors  of  the  iconic  Woolworth  Building   in Lower Manhattan, is leading a group   that proposed the debt purchase. The   Post   notes that it is unclear whether his com-  pany Witkoff Group or other investors are   involved in the offer.   Following a judge’s ruling that HFZ   owed $136 million in monthly interest   payments since 2020 to a prime lender,   a  public debt  auction was  scheduled  for   October 28. There is also a $100 million   construction lien against the project, in   addition to “scores of creditor claims for   unpaid bills,” reports the   Pos  t.   The debt auction was postponed until   late December, according to previous   Post  reporting, but it’s possible Witkoff’s bid   will preclude the need for the postpone-  ment.  FiDi Condo Development Refinances  Another troubled condo development   is trying to stay afloat with some debt re-  structuring, according to   The Real Deal.  The outlet reports that Trinity Place Hold-  ings has secured an inventory loan with   Macquarie Capital, the investment arm of   Australian financial services firm Macqua-  rie Group, for its project at 77 Greenwich   Street in Manhattan’s Financial District.   The $166.7 million loan will allow Trinity   to pay off existing debt to its senior and   mezzanine lenders in advance of looming   expiration of forbearance agreements.   Massachusetts Mutual Life Insur-  ance provided the senior construction   loan of $190 million in 2017. After fail-  ing  to maintain  a required $15  million   liquidity, Trinity entered into its first of   three forbearance agreements with Mass-  Mutual in September 2019. Then, after the   March 2020 shutdown brought about by   the coronavirus pandemic led to a three-  month construction halt, which reported-  ly compromised sales efforts, Trinity and   MassMutual agreed to an extension on   construction and sales deadlines in De-  cember 2020. That same month, Trinity   secured $7.5 million in mezzanine financ-  ing through Davidson Kempner Capital   Management that was used to pay down   $8 million of senior debt and fund interest   reserves required under the senior loan   terms, according to   TRD.   Just prior to the   expiration of its forbearance agreement,   Davidson Kempner amended its terms   with Trinity and extended an additional   $22.8 million in mezzanine financing for   the project.  Meanwhile, Trinity replaced broker-  age The Marketing Directors with celeb-  rity broker Ryan Serhant, who rebranded   the building “the Jolie” in April after his   firm took over sales and marketing. As of   March, Trinity had reported 16 contracted   sales to investors, at prices ranging from   $1,538 to $3,057 per square foot. Closings   began in October, according to   TRD.  Under the terms of the inventory loan,   Serhant can offer potential buyers sweet-  eners such as covering closing costs and   credits for common charges,   TRD   notes.  Designed by FXFOWLE, the 40-story   tower includes 90 luxury condo units,   over 7,500 square feet of retail space,   and—notably—an elementary school.     n  Please submit Pulse items to  Darcey Gerstein at  darcey@cooperatornews.com


































































































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