Saturday, December 22, 2007

Collapse site in ‘top to bottom’ review

lower manhattan. Inspectors from the Dept. of Buildings will do a “top to bottom” review of crane operations today at a site near Ground Zero where seven tons of falling steel seriously injured an architect last week, officials said yesterday.

Tishman Construction Corp. spokesman Richard Kielar said DOB officials visited the 200 Murray St. site Saturday and lifted all stop work orders except for crane operations, pending an ongoing investigation.

Architect Richard Woo, 39, remained hospitalized in stable condition yesterday but may never walk again after suffering a spinal injury, according to press reports. An employee of Toronto-based Adamson Associates Architects, Woo was working in a trailer near the $2 billion future headquarters of Goldman Sachs when a nylon sling failed early Friday, sending 14,000 pounds of 30-foot metal studs to the ground roughly 13 stories below. The sling was designed to carry up to 19,000 pounds, according to a DOB spokeswoman.

Five violations were issued following the accident, including four to Tishman and another to the contractor leasing the crane for unsafe hoisting operations.

The crane accident set off Notify NYC, the city’s pilot program to send text messages, e-mails and automatic telephone calls to disseminate critical information during emergencies.

“I know lots of people got it and they were happy to understand what was going on,” Office of Emergency Management Commissioner Joseph Bruno told Metro. Lower Manhattan “is particularly nervous about what goes on there, so I think it was effective.”

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source: metro.us

MTA eyes 3 for W. Side job: report

Three builders who have each offered to pay $1 billion for the MTA's West Side railyards have the inside track to develop mega-projects there, Crain's New York Business is reporting - even though the MTA may force them to merge their plans.

"I think they will try to get us all to work together, if possible," an executive at one developer told Crain's.

The speculation comes as the Metropolitan Transportation Authority mulls five proposals from deep-pocketed developers to build office towers, apartments, park space and cultural buildings atop 26 acres of railyards west of 10th Ave. It's one of the last places in Manhattan where a visionary builder can create a new community from scratch.

The MTA is free to pick and choose elements from the five plans, whether to attract the best tenants, maximize its revenue or shape the future neighborhood.

The authority put architectural models of the plans on public display, but has kept mum on the financing. A decision could come early next year.

According to Crain's, the top contenders are the developers that have partnered with a major tenant, guaranteeing occupancy.

Related Cos. wants to build a media-friendly headquarters for Rupert Murdoch's News Corp.; Durst Organization and Vornado Realty Trust want to build a new Condé Nast headquarters, and Tishman Speyer has joined forces with Morgan Stanley. That leaves Brookfield Properties and Extell Development as long shots, Crain's said.

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source: nydailynews.com

Holidays Find Loan Crisis Spreading to Businesses and Neighbors

Marcia is not in the holiday mood this year. She is not putting any Santas, reindeer or lights outside her house. She is probably not going to have many presents inside. There will be no home improvements anywhere. The fact is, she does not know how long she can even call the place hers.

A little more than a year since she bought her Bronx home for $535,000 with no cash down, she is facing foreclosure. Even if she could scrape together the $7,500 to catch up on her overdue mortgage payments, other calamities await: an interest rate that will rise in coming months and a huge balloon payment hovering in the distance like a financial Hindenburg.

“I’m not doing anything to fix up the house,” said Marcia, a nursing home aide who declined to give her last name during an interview at a community agency that offers counseling on preventing foreclosure. “I just work, eat, sleep and hope they don’t take my home. This is the worst Christmas I ever had.”

She is not alone in her stress and fears among the boxy brick houses that line the streets of her Williamsbridge neighborhood. The binge of subprime loans that flooded this area a few years ago has now given way to foreclosures and forced sales by homeowners saddled with onerous mortgages they could never repay. The effects of this free-for-all are increasingly felt even among those who did not take on risky loans. Longtime neighborhood residents worry that their property values will be sunk by the double whammy of poorly maintained homes and revolving-door neighbors, while shopkeepers on the nearby commercial strip on Boston Road — especially those who sell hardware or home furnishings — say business has plummeted by 50 percent or more, as strapped homeowners cut costs.

“Everybody’s scared,” said Khemraj Ramprasad, the owner of K & R Paint and Hardware. “People are not repairing their homes as much. They’re not painting. People are taking every penny they have and putting it into paying the mortgage.”

His sales have been off for much of the year, he said. Despite his store’s name, he has not restocked his paint inventory, since people are hardly buying any. Business has slacked off so much, he spends his days remodeling the store, building new wooden display shelves in hopes of generating more sales from those customers who do venture inside.

“This is affecting everybody,” he said. “Ask anybody around here: Business is very bad.”

Housing advocates have been too busy trying to deal with the ever-growing numbers of panicked homeowners to gauge the collateral damage from the lending crisis. But many of them are not surprised that it is beginning to take a toll on the larger community.

“On the street level, there are signs of deferred maintenance,” said Sarah Gerecke, the chief executive of Neighborhood Housing Services of New York City, a nonprofit group that counsels homeowners. “People can’t afford to fix screen doors, keep up their roof or yards. Neighborhoods that used to be spotless now show signs that owners can’t afford to keep up their homes.”

In some cases they cannot even work up the money to furnish their homes. Few customers have visited Boston Road Furniture, despite a handwritten come-on taped to the window that promises anyone can “Get Up to $3,000 Instantly No Job No Credit Check.”

Marcus St. Marie, the store’s owner, remembers when West Indian immigrants like him would flock to local stores.

“You come to this country, and what is the first thing you look for?” he asked. “A home. And then the furniture.”

Sales have been so bad since March, he said, that he has laid off four of his store’s five employees. He has no idea how much longer he can hang on.

“We need a government loan,” he said. “This country is falling apart. We need customers. We need some help. So many ‘For Sale’ signs in this neighborhood. People just have to leave their homes and run.”

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source: nytimes.com

West Side Story

NEW YORK — The Hudson Yards trace a rectangular scar on the western hip of Manhattan, hemmed in to the north by 33rd Street, and stretching two blocks eastward from the Joe DiMaggio Highway, which skirts the banks of the Hudson River. From above, it appears as though someone has peeled back a layer of asphalt to expose the inner workings of the city's railway system: 26 acres of tightly packed, parallel tracks converge in a funnel at one end, before disappearing underground and into the throat of nearby Penn Station.

The western and southern fringes of the yards, on 30th Street, are wreathed by the curving hulk of the High Line, an elevated trestle that has long since fallen into rusty disuse. Sidewalks are choked with weeds and the occasional empty bottle of cough syrup, while pedestrians are almost non-existent — a jarringly desolate counterpoint to the bustling crowds and skyscrapers just a brief stroll away.

Yet, if one is to believe local politicians, this squalid piece of land is the "next frontier" in New York's development (Governor Eliot Spitzer), a "once-in-a-generation opportunity" (Mayor Michael Bloomberg) and, just possibly, the second coming of the iconic Rockefeller Centre (deputy mayor Don Doctoroff).

Only a few years after abandoning an unpopular scheme to build a football stadium above the tracks, the Metropolitan Transit Authority has shifted gears, and invited proposals to transform the yards into a thriving neighbourhood, complete with housing, commercial towers, a cultural centre, hotels and more than a dozen acres of public space.

The cost of the project, at an estimated $12-billion (U.S.), is massive, as is the potential payoff — not just for New York itself, which suffers a chronic shortage of space, but for the five companies competing to develop what is regarded as the largest untapped building site in the city, never mind one of the most logistically complex. The sheer magnitude of the project would make it a transformative undertaking for any of these builders, but none more so than Canada's Brookfield Properties Corp.

Brookfield, which has a Toronto parent but is based in New York, is widely regarded as a formidable office landlord, with a portfolio of roughly 100 properties that punctuate the skylines of New York, Los Angeles, Toronto and Boston, among other urban centres. In Manhattan's financial district it has a dominant foothold, boasting five buildings, with a combined nine million square feet, huddled close to Ground Zero.

As a developer, however, its credentials are far less certain. Although it has attempted to rebuild this part of its business recently, acquiring more than 16 million square feet in development sites, it is still regarded as an upstart. The Hudson Yards would change that perception overnight, conferring instant credibility, nearly doubling the company's development portfolio and, if things go as planned, adding as much as 40 per cent to its operating profit (or about $400-million, based on last year's figures).

"They're meaningful, but I think collectively and individually they haven't yet put us on the map as a development company," conceded Ric Clark, Brookfield's chief executive officer, referring to the company's current pipeline of projects. "What does the Hudson Yards mean to us? This project, as well as the one that we own two blocks to the east on 9th Avenue, is of such a scale that from a branding standpoint it will be very, very meaningful to the company. It's a huge opportunity."

Bucking an underdog image

Brookfield may be an underdog in the Hudson Yards sweepstakes, but at least it has a chance, something that would have been almost unthinkable five years ago with a project of this size. At the end of the 1980s, when the economy cratered and it became painfully apparent that the commercial real estate sector had been grossly overbuilt, the company exited the business and chose to focus instead on buying assets, managing buildings and leasing.

Early this decade, however, around the time that Mr. Clark took over as CEO, the company decided it should once again be a full-service real estate company, and create a development expertise that could attract new tenants.

Since that time, Brookfield's development arm has swelled from three people to 25, although in a company of 1,200 employees this remains a tiny number.

Currently, four projects are under way, including the Bay Adelaide Centre in Toronto and Bankers Court in Calgary, which together account for about 3.1 million of the company's 17 million square feet of development sites.

Hudson Yards, to put these figures into context, would consume 12 million square feet on its own and, assuming a rough valuation yardstick of $1,000 a square foot, could cost more than $12-billion. Developers typically finance about 80 per cent of these costs, but that would still require a contribution of between $2-billion and $3-billion, roughly one-third of Brookfield's market capitalization.

Little wonder that the project has galvanized some of the most powerful names in North American real estate: Tishman Speyer, owner of the Chrysler Building and Rockefeller Centre; a partnership between the Durst Organization, one of New York's oldest family-owned real estate empires, and Vornado Realty Trust, which owns 64 million square feet of properties and a sizable chunk of development sites near the yards; Related Cos., which is best known for developing the Time Warner Center in midtown Manhattan; and Extell Development Co., a smaller firm that made headlines two years ago after buying nearly $2-billion worth of land on the Upper West Side from Donald Trump, round out the list of bidders.

For several weeks last month, all of these groups were crammed into a small showroom across from Grand Central Station, where the public could inspect their models, talk to company officials and provide commentary in a suggestion box.

Brookfield, with some luck, won a coveted spot next to the entrance, and its presentation was arguably the most sophisticated — walls were plastered with images of gleaming glass buildings and families gamboling in green parks. One model — rendered in a kind of clear plastic — outlined its proposed design, while a larger, cut-out version depicted how the new Hudson Yards would meld with midtown Manhattan. Much like the other proposals, this one featured a mixture of eco-friendly skyscrapers, and affordable housing, retail shops, cultural facilities and green space, all rising up, somewhat improbably, through a massive slab suspended above the rail yards.

Aesthetically, though, the Brookfield design bears some striking differences from its peers, thanks to the large group it assembled to craft its proposal. Six architectural firms, three planners and a pair of engineering companies combined on the project, in part so that the area would reflect the diverse architecture of the city (and avoid the kind of heavy, monolithic ambience that has come to characterize the redeveloped Battery Park).

The centrepiece of Brookfield's vision for the yards is undoubtedly a two-tiered residential complex, overlooking a wide park at the western end of the yards, that is tethered part-way up by what looks like a giant glass band (the horizontal supports are meant to double as indoor running tracks). Two commercial towers would loom at the opposite end, near 10th Avenue, the most imposing of which would be 400 metres — just shy of the Empire State Building. There would also be 15.4 acres of public space and parks.

Yet the slick presentations belie a vexing logistical problem for the builders: pouring foundations and erecting a platform without disrupting the train traffic. Every morning, after disgorging passengers at Penn Station, the trains continue east and park in the yard; at rush hour, they swing back to Penn, pick up travellers, and transport them to Long Island and New Jersey.

The MTA has said it can close just four of the 30 tracks at any one time to facilitate construction, meaning any development effort will require considerable precision.

Most developers, including Brookfield, are pitching a plan that would set foundations in the ground, and use the buildings to help disperse the weight of the platform, which would reach 10 metres above street level at its highest point. The exception is Extell, which has proposed suspending a thin platform, in a kind of gentle curve, by way of rods that would be strung between buildings on the northern and southern reaches of the yard.

None of the builders have revealed the cost of their plans, but the platform itself is expected to cost roughly $1.5-billion to build. Observers have pegged the development rights at between $500-million and $1-billion.

"A lot of times, when you have a big master plan project, you have flexibility and time; you can adapt and change," explained Josh Sirefman, a former senior official in the Bloomberg administration who joined Brookfield early last year and is helping to spearhead the Hudson Yards effort. "You don't have that luxury here. You have to know, when you build that platform, where the buildings are going, because the railroad wants you to get in, get out, and be done. There's an intense amount of co-ordination with what hours you can work."

Complicating matters further is the uneven grade of the area, particularly a steep hill that descends from 10th Avenue, which is well above the yards, to the Hudson River, where trains are at street level. The unusual nature of the site has created all kinds of unexpected headaches; merely designing lobbies for Brookfield's office towers here required an enormous amount of engineering work, given that their placement would be directly above a sensitive area of the tracks.

But the company has been grappling with precisely this issue for some time now, given its other development project at 9th Avenue, directly across from the Farley Post Office, a Beaux Arts colossus that is itself slated for redevelopment.

This 9th Avenue site, about 40 per cent the size of yards, may be even more complex, given its placement above a busier portion of underground tracks. Brookfield is hoping to break ground on a platform at this site next year, and will no doubt argue that this puts it in a unique position to develop the adjacent corridor of the Hudson Yards.

"I think one of the advantages that we have over the other four competitors is we've actually spent a couple of years studying how to do exactly this, which is how to build a platform and a structure over an active railway in order to create the site," Mr. Clark said. "We've got a bit of a head start versus our peers in that regard."

It also has a head start in some courts of public opinion (two online polls showed its proposal to be the clear favourite), although it's far from clear that that will carry much, if any, weight. More importantly, Brookfield has cultivated the support of some urban activists who are closely involved with Friends of the High Line, a well-mobilized group that has been lobbying for the restoration of the elevated tracks around the yards.

This kind of political savvy is evident in Brookfield's hirings — in addition to recruiting Mr. Sirefman from City Hall, its board of directors includes Diana Taylor, the girlfriend of Mayor Bloomberg —but that is merely the cost of entry in the New York real estate world, where most of the big developers can boast of strong ties to government decision makers.

Popular as Brookfield's plan seems to be, the bidding could hinge on an element that it lacks — an anchor tenant. Even Governor Spitzer raised this question with company officials when he made a surprise visit to the showroom a couple of weeks ago. (The company's intelligence isn't bad, either. Mr. Clark was being interviewed for this piece when a secretary handed him a slip of paper, explaining that Brookfield had been tipped about Mr. Spitzer's imminent arrival; after turning chalk white, he excused himself, scrambled to his car service and made it to uptown in 10 minutes, just as the Governor was about to leave).

Related Cos., a veteran developer viewed by some as the front-runner, has a pair of heavyweight partners in Rupert Murdoch's News Corp., which would build its corporate headquarters here, and the investment bank Goldman Sachs Group Inc.; the Durst-Vornado team has inked publishing giant Condé Nast to a potential deal; and Tishman Speyer has joined forces with another investment bank, Morgan Stanley, raising the spectre that Hudson Yards could become an alternate hub of media or financial power. Along with Brookfield, only Extell has yet to announce an anchor.

New York Magazine, which recently handicapped each developer's chances (Related was the odds-on favourite; Brookfield was pronounced the "dark horse"), suggested those with anchors will have a leg up on the competition, which is expected to be decided in February or March. It also predicted, however, that the city will choose not to hand the entire project to one bidder, and that Brookfield's lack of a committed partner might give it the flexibility to grab a piece of the action if the work is spread around.

world-class ambitions

Mr. Clark and his team, not surprisingly, insist that the lack of a blue-chip tenant at this stage will not hurt their chances. They claim that a well-conceived development plan will lure corporate interest, and argue that signing up a partner too soon could leave a lot of potential revenue on the table.

"We felt that it was not appropriate to enter into a below-market deal," explained Mr. Sirefman.

"We're very confident about our ability to absorb all the space."

Given the collapse of the residential mortgage market this year, the crumbling economy, and looming layoffs at the big brokerage firms — which are among the city's biggest tenants — this may seem an odd time to be salivating over a project as massive, costly and potentially risky as the Hudson Yards. Then again, this is New York, where the general laws of real estate do not always apply.

According to the department of planning, the city will have to find 111 million square feet of room by 2025 to accommodate an estimated 440,000 new workers. Midtown's proportional share of that would be about 45 million feet, a number that could be all but impossible to reach without earnest development of the area in and around the Hudson Yards.

Officials here are concerned that if more space isn't added, the city will increasingly lose commercial tenants — and lucrative tax dollars — to nearby New Jersey and Long Island, where it is cheaper to develop and build.

There are other factors at play, which add to Mr. Clark confidence that he can secure big-name tenants for the site. One is security. After 9/11, companies are enticed by the prospect of a new building that has been upgraded with the latest in security measures, whether it be reinforced cores, blast-resistant glass or a foundation that is placed further away from the street.

The brokerage firms provide another source of opportunity. Yes, they have been badly shaken by the subprime mortgage debacle, and many will no doubt put a clamp on their wallets for the foreseeable future.

Yet there is a growing trend in the sector toward reconsolidating a firm's operations under a single roof, and reversing the dispersion that was set in motion by security concerns after the terrorist attacks in 2001. Some of these firms have outgrown their multiple locations, while others believe it would simply be more efficient to house the bulk of operations together. Morgan Stanley's decision to sign up as a partner is a case in point.

If Brookfield could somehow snag Hudson Yards, Mr. Clark believes it could increase operating profit by between 30 and 40 per cent — that is on top of the 50-per-cent increase he expects from the company's current development pipeline.

Over the next decade, he doesn't think it unreasonable that the development contributions may double Brookfield's operating profit. Of course, given the long-term nature of this business — the Hudson Yards platform likely wouldn't be completed until 2014, and that's if things move on schedule — it takes a while for these projects to make their way to the bottom line. In the meantime, Mr. Clark and his development group would gladly settle for some acknowledgment.

"I think it's world class now," he insisted of the development business. He paused a moment, before continuing: "What we potentially lack at the moment is recognition of our abilities."

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source: theglobeandmail.com

Mixing townhouses with towers

The privacy of a townhouse with the convenience of an apartment -- it sounds like the ultimate New York City sell, but now, a spate of new development townhouses, including some by ersatz prewar architect Robert A.M. Stern, are pushing the envelope further than ever.

Townhouses next to towers have been popular for years; zoning restrictions play a large role, because townhouses along a street corridor can help a tower developer get city approval for projects where height restrictions are in place -- and ground-level retail is not an option. Especially in the West Village, where historic townhouses command astronomical prices, projects like 1 Morton Square or 255 Hudson have sold townhomes-with-services as a vertical alternative to buying a larger apartment.

Now, the Related Companies is doing its best to add an extra soupçon of luxury. The developer's Superior Ink residential complex at 400 West 12th Street, overlooking the Hudson River, has some townhouse interiors designed by 15 Central Park West architect Stern alongside a 16-story Yabu Pushelberg-designed tower.

The Stern houses will feature the architect's well-documented flair for reconstructing historic New York luxury living. Many of the inconveniences of prewar townhouses, however, will not be reinstituted: Central heating and air conditioning will stand in for radiators, kitchens will be equipped with the most modern appliances, and getting to the top floor won't be such a chore with an elevator in each house.

Will the seven Superior Ink townhouses draw buyers also interested in their prewar counterparts? "You can't substitute age," said Related vice chairman David Wine. "When you buy a townhouse, you're buying history. But having history and working mechanicals is a very difficult thing to accomplish."

Residents will also have access to the tower's services, which include a concierge, and townhouse residents can even enter their homes via the tower's underground parking garage, which Wine says is helping drawing interest from celebrities who want the privacy of a hidden entrance. "They don't get those things in any other townhouse in the West Village," he said.

For a developer, profit margins on these new townhouses vary. Per square foot, most townhouses currently in development cost about the same as the tower apartments in the same complexes, depending on the architecture and how physically integrated the townhouses are into their accompanying towers.

But the benefits in terms of neighborhood relations can be priceless. Related built the Superior Ink townhouses in response to neighborhood opposition to the original design for the tower, which critics found somewhat out of step with the low-rise neighborhood.

The current design calls for a 17-story tower balanced by lower-height (roughly 45-foot) townhouses along 12th Street. The townhouses are commanding decidedly higher prices than ground-floor apartments would have, with townhouse prices ranging from $12 to $18 million.

The 68 condos in the tower, by contrast, start at under $2 million. Completion for the project, which began selling in October, is expected in about a year and a half.

Similarly, Northside Piers in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, also added townhouses to a tower project to suit zoning restrictions that limit building heights along a park leading to the waterfront.

The three-story homes are listed as "townhouses" on the development's Web site, but contrast starkly with the traditional exteriors of Related's houses in the West Village. Rather than the traditional three or four windows across each level, the homes, which start at $1.86 million, have river-facing terraces with angular chrome railings.

The Northside Piers units are set directly up against a 30-story tower of apartments, so they don't have backyards. As with Superior Ink, townhouse dwellers at Northside Piers will have full access to the amenities afforded to tower residents when the project is occupied, around May. Pre-sales started in January, but none of the townhouses has sold yet; developer Toll Brothers noted that sales are on pace with what was expected.

David Von Spreckelsen, a vice president at Toll Brothers, said, "You have the best of both worlds. You can have the privacy and the sense of community if you want that."

Another Toll Brothers development in Williamsburg, North8, includes duplexes that do have backyards but are essentially the bottom level of the high-rise built atop the two-bedroom "townhouses." Configuring the tower to offer open backyard space within was a challenge, Von Spreckelsen said, but short of having retailers on the ground floor of the tower, duplexes were the next best thing.

"Generally, it's not easy to get people to live right on street level," he said. "So my concept was to recess the building with a little garden in front and have units with stoops built in to the multi-family building.

"I did them as duplexes so peoples' bedrooms wouldn't be at street level."

Von Spreckelsen admitted, though, that most buyers in Williamsburg are looking for studios and one-bedroom apartments, and the townhouses have not sold as quickly as the condos in the tower. The North8 townhouses start at $1.18 million.

Another new project combines townhouse-style living with condos -- but without the tower.

The eight townhomes, as they are called at the Foundry at Hunters Point, at 51st Avenue and 5th Street in Long Island City, range in size from 1,100 to 1,450 square feet.

While the townhomes have separate entrances, the units are integrated into the overall development, which is a low-rise, four-story structure.

Developer Erik Ekstein said prices were lower on a per-square-foot basis for the townhomes compared to the rest of the 57 units, a mix of one-, two- and three-bedroom layouts. The townhouses are $715 a square foot, and the rest of the units are $800 a square foot. Prices at the Foundry start at $400,000; sales started last month.

Ekstein said his goal was to create a modern interpretation of the townhouse. One of his townhouses, for example, is a single story with 17-foot ceilings.

Townhouse residents have access to a 6,000-square-foot common courtyard, an 800-square-foot gym and private cabanas.

At an über-hot Manhattan building, Ian Schrager's 40 Bond, the five townhouses priced from $7 to $10.5 million sold quickly, and one is in the process of being resold for $12.5 million, according to Corcoran's Kirk Rundhaug, who is marketing the development. The townhouses have very modern interiors, similar to the apartments in the 11-story tower, and are fully integrated into the building's signature cast-iron exterior.

Rundhaug said the townhouses were integrated into the building, in part, to get back profit normally lost on undesirable ground-floor apartments.

The townhouses have "created this new mindset that it's OK. You have to have a different kind of mindset to live on the first floor of a building," he said. Having private entrances set back from the street helps allay concerns about living on the ground floor.

Plus, said Rundhaug, "We only needed five people."

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source: therealdeal.net