Monday, October 29, 2007

Jones Lang LaSalle

Last updated: October 23, 2007 11:03am
Hop Industries Buys 76,600-SF Building
By Eric Peterson
LYNDHURST, NJ-Hop Industries, a supplier of plastic film, sheeting and related products, has acquired the 76,600-sf building it had initially leased as part of a relocation from Garfield. The single-story building, consisting of warehouse, manufacturing and office space, is located at 1251 Valley Brook Ave.

The identity of the seller was not disclosed; the sale price was $8.8 million, or about $114 per sf. The building had at one time been fully occupied by a regional division of YKK USA Inc., which itself has relocated within the Northern New Jersey region.

And the building’s acquisition by Hop Industries was completed with the help of $6.8 million in permanent-debt financing arranged by James Gunning and Donna Falzarano of CB Richard Ellis Debt & Equity Finance, Saddle Brook. The funding was provided by Principal Real Estate Investors, according to Gunning.

“Hop Industries will greatly benefit from this new location,” Gunning says. “It’s convenient to New York City, with access to the ports, as well as routes 3, 17 and 21 and the New Jersey Turnpike.

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Jones Lang LaSalle

Last updated: October 25, 2007 08:55am
Jones Lang LaSalle Acquires Klatskin
By Eric Peterson
HASBROUCK HEIGHTS, NJ-Jones Lang LaSalle made Charles Klatskin an offer he couldn’t refuse, and as a result his organization will become part of the larger JLL universe. JLL will acquire the assets of Klatskin Associates LLC and Klatskin Associates Management Co., which combined form the New Jersey operations of Lee & Klatskin Associates, based here. Both sides declined to disclose the terms of the deal.

“The combination of our industrial expertise and local knowledge with Jones Lang LaSalle’s depth of services will provide our clients with the ultimate real estate services team,” says Klatskin, a well-known figure in New Jersey commercial real estate circles. “And I am going to grow the industrial business for JLL.”

“This addition advances several of our strategic goals,” says Peter Riguardi, president of JLL’s tri-state region. “Those goals are commanding a major presence in key market, expanding our national industrial brokerage business and continually improving our service capabilities. The combination of our two firms adds an important piece to our national industrial services platform.”

Klatskin will continue to play what company officials term, “a key advisory role” for the New Jersey team. His firm’s other principals--Robert Kossar, David Knee, Charles Fern, Joel Lubin and Anthony Scaro--will join JLL as SVPs. An additional 20 Klatskin brokers will move over to JLL as well, boosting the firm’s New Jersey staff to more than 300.

Klatskin's main office here will become JLL’s third office in the state, the main office is in Parsippany. Staffers currently based in Klatskin’s Edison office will move into JLL’s existing office in Woodbridge by the first of the year.

Klatskin founded the firm as the Charles Klatskin Co. in 1966. In 2001, he hooked up with the Philadelphia-based Binswanger to form Binswanger Klatskin, and in 2005 moved over to an alliance with the California-based Lee & Associates to form Lee & Klatskin Associates. The deal will not affect Klatskin’s holdings in Forsgate Industrial Partners, an industrial development company he founded in 1965 that’s currently headed by his son, Alex.

For JLL, the deal follows a series of other recent acquisitions, including the Los Angeles-based Zietsman Realty and the North Carolina-based Corporate Realty Advisors earlier this year, and Spaulding & Slye in 2006.

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Jones Lang LaSalle

Last updated: October 26, 2007 12:00pm
Three Apartment Complexes Trade for $8M
By Eric Peterson
(Read more on the multifamily market.)

LIVINGSTON, NJ-In three separate transactions, apartment complexes totaling more than 100 units in three counties have been sold for a combined $8.1 million. The deals were brokered by Gebroe-Hammer Associates, based here, whose managing director says, “the sales exemplify the strength of the multifamily market in Northern New Jersey.”

In Palisades Park, sales associate Elliot Schechter, VP David Jarvis and EVP David Oropeza collaborated on the sale of 10 Henry Ave., a four-story mid-rise that was 95% occupied at the time of sale. The buyer, identified only as a “long-time Gebroe-Hammer client,” is said to own several buildings in the area. The buyer, another long-time client, sold the property as part of a 1031 exchange, according to Jarvis.

“Bergen County is a very attractive region for investors,” Jarvis says. “Any time a property becomes available, buyers act quickly and decisively to secure a winning bid.”

In East Orange, meanwhile, Oropeza negotiated the sale of 73 Carnegie Ave., an 18-unit, four-story building that traded for $1 million. The property had just one vacancy at the time of sale. The buyer was described as, “a first-time buyer based in New Jersey.” The seller was Golden Sun Realty of Paterson, NJ.

The third transaction came in Union City, where G-H VP Scott Callahan brokered the sale of Skyview Apartments at 1300 Palisade Ave., a five-story, 43-unit building. The buyer was described as, “a New York-based investor who is purchasing for the first time in Union City,” Callahan says. “The seller is a frequent Gebroe-Hammer client with a strong portfolio in both New Jersey and New York.”

Copyright © 2007 ALM Properties, Inc. All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part without permission is prohibited.
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Jones Lang LaSalle

Last updated: October 23, 2007 03:13pm
Trucking Firm Leases 141,000 SF
By Eric Peterson
(Read more on the industrial market.)

SECAUCUS, NJ-Locally based Hartz Mountain Industries has signed Cous Transport Systems Inc. to a lease for 140,737 sf of industrial space at the company’s 77 Metro Way building, also here. The asset is located within Hartz Mountain’s Harmon Cove Business Park.

Terms of the lease were not disclosed. The building’s remaining space is currently listed on Hartz’s website with an asking rent “upon request,” and for a minimum term of five years. The remainder of the 384,543-sf building is still on the market, an availability that totals just more than 243,800 sf.

“The Northern New Jersey industrial market has been a consistent performer,” says Hartz Mountain president and COO Emanuel Stern. “At our Harmon Cove industrial properties, we continue to see high demand, partially due to the opening of Exit 15X on the New Jersey Turnpike, which essentially made Harmon Cove 15 minutes closer to the Ports of Newark and Elizabeth, as well as Newark Liberty International Airport.”

“We are looking forward to a long professional relationship with Hartz Mountain Industries,” says Su Lee, president of Cous Transport Systems. His company, a local trucking and motor freight operation, is currently based in Ridgewood.

The building at 77 Metro Way officially hit the market at the beginning of this year when Hartz held a broker open house for the then completely vacant building. The asset has had various occupants over the years, most recently an apparel distributor. Located near both Route 3 and the New Jersey Turnpike, and mass transit access via the Secaucus Junction train station, the building’s features include 27-foot ceiling heights.

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Jones Lang LaSalle

Last updated: October 24, 2007 10:09am
Bank Opens New 25,000-SF HQ
By Eric Peterson
CAMDEN, NJ-Susquehanna Patriot Bank has opened its new 25,000-sf headquarters at Steiner & Associates’ Ferry Terminal Building on this city’s waterfront, moving here from nearby Marlton. The move marks a couple of milestones: Susquehanna Patriot Bank is the first financial institution to be headquartered in Camden in more than two decades, and the recently completed 100,000-sf building is the first totally privately financed office building in Camden in at least 40 years.

“We serve customers and communities on both sides of the Delaware River,” says Joseph Lizza, president and CEO of Susquehanna Patriot Bank, which has 15 branches in South Jersey and another 22 in Pennsylvania, and approximately $2.1 billion in assets. “So this move places us in a very central, convenient location.”

The new four-story Ferry Terminal Building is an initial component of the Columbus, OH-based Steiner’s Cooper’s Crossing mixed-use waterfront development. The building itself includes three levels of office space, a restaurant and additional retail stores. At full build-out, Cooper’s Crossing will cover 30 acres and has a projected price tag in the $200-million range.

Copyright © 2007 ALM Properties, Inc. All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part without permission is prohibited.
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Jones Lang LaSalle

Last updated: October 25, 2007 12:19pm
$6M Mortgage Set for 27-Unit Residential
By Eric Peterson
(Read more on the multifamily market.)

LAKEWOOD, NJ - A $6.4-million mortgage is set for a community of 27 attached homes in this Ocean County city. The loan, which will fund the project’s development, was secured through A-Z Financing, a Brooklyn, NY-based broker. The deal was facilitated by the Community Preservation Corp., the first made through the firm’s Trenton, NJ office, which opened earlier this year.

“This project is an example of why we opened the Trenton office, which is to provide more opportunities to build personal connections with borrowers in the central and southern portions of the state,” says Robert Riggs, CPC VP and regional director in Trenton. His firm, a not-for-profit mortgage lender, has its main New Jersey office in Jersey City.

“Lakewood is a town that is developing rapidly,” Riggs says. “This is a market-rate project that meets the needs for moderately-priced housing for large families in Lakewood.”

The developer of the project was described only as, “a local businessman.” Permits for work at the site have been filed and foundation work is expected to be finished before winter.

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Jones Lang LaSalle

Last updated: October 26, 2007 09:35am
Two Universities Start Work on $150M Tower
By Eric Peterson
NEW BRUNSWICK, NJ-Construction has officially started for a $150-million, 18-story medical research tower Downtown. Among other things, the building will house the Stem Cell Institute of New Jersey, which will occupy 160,000 sf across five full floors.

“The Institute will serve as the nexus of cutting-edge scientific breakthroughs that will improve and save lives of millions of our fellow citizens,” says Gov. Jon Corzine. “As we build this institute, we are building on a longstanding commitment to ensure that New Jersey is a world leader in the stem cell revolution.”

The Institute is a joint venture between Rutgers University and the University of Medicine & Dentistry of New Jersey-Robert Wood Johnson Medical School. The building will rise on a former parking lot next to Robert Wood Johnson University Hospital, near the Cancer Institute of New Jersey. Completion is slated for early 2011.

State, university and hospital officials have also announced that the facility will include the Christopher Reeve Pavilion, named for the late actor, a Princeton native, who became an activist for stem cell research following his paralyzing horse riding accident in 1995. The Stem Cell Institute itself will include a combination of research, clinical study and outpatient treatment facilities.

The money for the building is coming from state funds. A year ago, Corzine signed into law a bill providing $270 million to build a variety of research facilities. In June, almost $9.2 million in predevelopment funding was approved for the Stem Cell Institute of New Jersey, the initial allocation from that $270 million. And in July, Corzine signed the New Jersey Stem Cell Research Bond Act, a $450-million bond referendum that will provide research grants to eligible institutions over a 10-year period. The act will be on the agenda for the state’s voters in next month’s elections.

Copyright © 2007 ALM Properties, Inc. All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part without permission is prohibited.
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Jones Lang LaSalle

Last updated: October 19, 2007 03:52pm
The Post-Bankruptcy Tug of War
By Joe Cavaluzzi
Joe Cavaluzzi is a regular contributor to Real Estate New Jersey.

What happens when your project gets mixed up in a bankruptcy? Some of the state’s top bankruptcy and real estate lawyers and bank workout specialists addressed that question during the recent RealShare New Jersey session moderated by George Jacobs, president of Jacobs Enterprises Inc.

The conclusion was that it depends on what the development partners have done to prepare for it in setting up their partnership and what the lenders have done in structuring the financing. In that regard, the Kara Homes bankruptcy was an irresistible sideline to the conversation.

Four panelists with extensive bankruptcy experience each took a position for the purpose of the discussion, with Ken Orchard, a workout specialists from NorthFork Bank, assuming the role of the bank trying to get its money back. “In deals with various partners, we start by underwriting the deal to the weakest link. Banks need to do a better job of focusing upfront on the lending process because time has never improved the situation once a company enters bankruptcy,” said Orchard, one of 14 bank creditors in the room during Kara Homes’ bankruptcy negotiations.

“I focus on the sponsorship,” he said. “Our first preference is to not wind up in court. Are we interested in seeing the developer proceed with the project? Yes, but we’re most interested in getting our money back.”

Attorney David Bruck of Greenbaum, Rowe, Smith & Davis represented the interests of the debtor. He was one of 20 lawyers in the room for Kara’s bankruptcy discussions. Unlike the other 19, who represented creditors in the case, Bruck was sitting at Kara Homes’ table.

Kara Homes had joint venture interests with its partners on individual developments, and all of the partners had an interest in the land-owning entity as well. But the partnership and its borrowing structure had likely not been well thought-out in advance and had not addressed what would happen if the project ran into trouble. That leaves the debtor to assume the contracts with the other partners or reject the contracts. But Bruck said the latter might be an unfavorable choice because the debtor may want to sell the contracts. “There should be someplace in the lending agreement that defines how to pass on the managerial rights of the debtor,” he said. “Without that, the creditors’ committee has the right to take over the project, and the partners may not want that.”

Andrew Sherman, a bankruptcy attorney with Sills Cummins Epstein & Gross, said most partnerships don’t address the possibility of bankruptcy when setting up a deal. Structuring it as an LLC or other type of partnership may work better than a simple partnership agreement. In the RealShare New Jersey discussion, Sherman represented the interests of a partner to a development company that has declared bankruptcy.

“From a lawyer’s perspective, you can avoid bankruptcy by planning for it when the partnership is drawn up,” Sherman said. “Or, when everything starts to fall out of bed, you can start getting into the partnership documents and figure out what’s going to happen when things start to get worse.

“Once you get into bankruptcy court, all of the provisions you put in may not matter because the judge is going to say his goal is to preserve value to those who are secured lenders or those who are the loudest,” Sherman explained. “Usually, the loudest wins.” Richard Hauer, a bankruptcy partner with the real estate accounting and advisory firm Schonbraun McCann Group, assumed the role of mediator for the purpose of the panel discussion. He, too, was concerned with preserving value.

“My role is to try to extract value out of the situation, to bring a level of reasonableness to all of those contracts,” Hauer said. “I’m there to avoid a liquidation because in many situations that’s not going to be in the best interest of my client. It probably is in everybody’s best interests to keep the deal together and not turn management of the project over to an outside entity.”

One thing all of the panelists agreed on is that time is on the side of the borrower. “The debtor views time as an ally,” Bruck said. “People get tired, but the other side of this is that the market is different. So, we hope to get out as quickly as possible. The market was substantially different when Kara got out [settling its bankruptcy in early October of this year] than when it filed for bankruptcy two years ago.”

Deal fatigue sets in over time, according to Orchard. Creditors wear down. Their attention turns to other interests. “The borrower doesn’t get deal fatigue, it’s everybody else,” he said.

RealShare New Jersey, held in the Glenpointe Marriott in Teaneck, was produced by Real Estate Media, which publishes Real Estate New Jersey and GlobeSt.com.

Copyright © 2007 ALM Properties, Inc. All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part without permission is prohibited.
For reprint information call 410-571-5893 or e-mail afaulkner@remedianetwork.com.
Jones Lang LaSalle

Last updated: October 26, 2007 12:08pm
Regus Leases 21,000 SF at Mack-Cali Asset
By Eric Peterson
PARAMUS, NJ-The Regus Group, a Dallas-based provider of furnished offices, has leased 21,000 sf at Mack-Cali Realty’s Mack-Cali Centre III at 140 E. Ridgewood Ave. here. On the building’s fourth floor, the company will open a business center consisting of 86 offices, 147 workstations, one boardroom, one videoconferencing studio and one meeting room.

The term of the lease is 138 months, with CB Richard Ellis representing Regus in the transaction. Further details were not released; an availability in the 240,000-sf building is currently listed with an asking price of $26 to $28 per sf.

“We selected Paramus for our new location because of the strong growth trends that the Northern New Jersey office market continues to experience,” says Michael Berretta, VP-business development for Regus. “We have experienced increased demand from clients in this area, and our new Paramus center will allow us to offer an alternative to our Saddle Brook business, which has been a strong performer.”

The new business center is Regus’ seventh deal with the Edison, NJ-based Mack-Cali, and its 22nd center overall in New Jersey. The company’s worldwide reach is now 950 locations in 70 countries.

Copyright © 2007 ALM Properties, Inc. All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part without permission is prohibited.
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Jones Lang LaSalle

Last updated: October 29, 2007 03:45am
Kohl’s and Sam’s Club Sign Leases for Center
By Brianne Harrison
LINDEN, NJ-Kohl’s and Sam’s Club have signed leases to anchor Linpark Square, a 280,000-sf retail complex currently under construction here. Garden Commercial Properties, the Short Hills-based developer of the site, oversaw the lease signing.

Sam’s Club will occupy nearly 140,000 sf of space, and Kohl’s has reserved slightly more than 100,000 sf. Another 25,000 sf remains available for future tenants. “Linpark Square combines all the geographical and demographical elements that retailers seek in a commercial complex,” says Mario Dudzinski, VP of real estate for Garden. “Its location along the Route 1 and 9 corridor will ensure an abundance of drive-by traffic, while the surrounding communities provide an established customer base.”

When complete, Linpark Square will consist of five free-standing retail buildings. The complex is at the intersection of Routes 1 and 9 and Park Ave. Garden Commercial expects the project to be complete in 2008.

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Jones Lang LaSalle

Last updated: October 29, 2007 10:58am
$20M Loan Completes Building Improvements
By Eric Peterson
(Read more on the debt and equity markets.)

PARSIPPANY, NJ-UBS Global Asset Management has picked up a $20-million first mortgage secured by its ownership share in 9 Entin Rd., a 197,000-sf, three-story office building on 15 acres here. As reported by GlobeSt.com, UBS, on behalf of one of its value-added funds, teamed up with Lincoln Property Co. just more than a year ago to buy the asset from Hartz Mountain Industries for $26.8 million, or about $136 per sf.

The 36-month, fixed-rate loan was provided by ING Investment Management in a transaction arranged by Dana Brome and Susan Larkin of the Hartford office of Holliday Fenoglio Fowler. HFF will also service the loan.

“The borrower purchased 9 Entin Rd. in June 2006 and took the opportunity to raise occupancy by reconfiguring the access road, which originally was only accessible from the southbound side of I-287,” Brome says. “After reconfiguring the roadway connecting Entin Rd. to the adjacent Macl-Cali Business Campus, tenancy rose from 47% to 74%, and is continuing to rise.”

The latest tenant signing came just last month when DuPont subsidiary Belco took 23,000 sf. And earlier this year, Daiichi Sankyo signed a lease for 32,000 sf, joining AIU Insurance and Emerson Radio Corp. on the tenant roster. Besides the roadway reconfiguration, 9 Entin Rd. has also gotten common area upgrades since it was acquired.

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Jones Lang LaSalle

Meadowlands Redevelopment Difficulties Continue
By Brianne Harrison
LYNDHURST, NJ-In a letter sent to EnCap October 5, the State Environmental Infrastructure Trust informed the developer that it could no longer draw from the nearly $300 million in publicly supported low-interest loans that were issued to cover the costs of the Meadowlands project. EnCap was also instructed to withdraw three pending applications for almost $3.5 million in withdrawals from the loan pool.

This is the latest setback for the once-promising project, which sought to place luxury housing, hotels and golf courses on land that was formerly used as landfills. According to Christopher Gale, an official with the New Jersey Meadowlands Commission, EnCap was chosen to remediate and redevelop the site because “it was judged at the time that they had unique experience from their landfills-to-golf project in Houston.” The project he refers to is the successful Wildcat Golf Club, an $18-million two-course club on the site of a former landfill.

EnCap began remediating the site in 2004. Work ground to a halt earlier this year, however, as costs began spiraling out of control and the Department of Environmental Protection slapped EnCap with a $1-million fine for failing to control methane emissions from the site. EnCap requested permission to replace the contractor responsible for cleaning up the site, Mactec Development Corporation, but the request was rejected by state officials. Mactec has since left the site and has filed claims seeking $25 million in back payments from EnCap.

In an effort to cover the rising costs of the project, EnCap attempted to raise almost $400 million by issuing bonds backed by future property tax breaks the company expected to receive from North Arlington and Rutherford. The state rejected the proposal.

In light of EnCap’s continuing financial difficulties, the Meadowlands Commission issued two letters, on September 10 and October 5, threatening to terminate EnCap’s development agreement on November 20 unless the company resumes work on the site and pays a $16 million security guarantee. According to the Meadowlands Commission, EnCap has not yet responded to the letters.

The day after the first letter from the Meadowlands Commission was issued, the DEP issued an Administrative Order and Notice of Civil Administrative Penalty Assessment, listing many violations of state environmental protection laws at the Meadowlands site. These violations include:

  • Failure to properly fence the project area, with the result that waste continues to be illegally dumped at the site
  • Placing dredged material that did not meet requirements as cap material
  • Failure to place necessary decontamination equipment at the site, resulting in contaminated soil being tracked out of the site and onto nearby roadways
  • Failure to confine the excavation to a size consistent with the number of pieces of digging equipment and trucks at the site
  • Excavating waste without properly disposing of it
  • Failure to control surface water run-off
  • Allowing fill material to erode into a nearby creek
  • Failure to maintain or acquire certain necessary permits

EnCap was given seven days to acquire the necessary permits and to address many of the violations. In addition, the DEP issued a $3.3 million demand for payment to cover the cost to the state of disposing of dredged fill dirt from the site. In 2004, EnCap promised to arrange for the disposal of the fill dirt. According to the DEP, EnCap is currently appealing the fines and the AONOCAPA.

According to both the Meadowlands Commission and the DEP, it has not yet been determined what will become of the project if EnCap’s development agreement is revoked. Repeated calls and e-mails to EnCap seeking comment were unanswered.

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Jones Lang LaSalle

122-Room Courtyard Under Construction
By Eric Peterson
WAYNE, NJ-Jos. L. Muscarelle Inc. has received its approvals to build a new Courtyard by Marriott hotel at the confluence of I-80 and routes 23 and 46 here. The three-story hostelry will contain a total of 122 guest rooms once it's completed, in about a year. Cost of the project has not been released.

“This has been a long process,” says Joseph Muscarelle, CEO of the Maywood, NJ-based development company. “But we’re looking forward to completing the project. We feel as though it will do very well in this location. There are lots of residents and businesses that will benefit from the services the hotel has to offer.”

The new hotel is the third for Muscarelle, and second in New Jersey. The other Garden State property is a 154-key Courtyard by Marriott that’s currently under construction in Paramus. And Muscarelle has a partnership interest in the 619-room Westin Hotel that’s part of Pittsburgh’s Liberty Center mixed-use development.

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