Quantcast
Channel: Los Angeles - The Real Deal
Viewing all 18760 articles
Browse latest View live

Weedmaps’ Ghost Management Group inks space at Row DTLA

$
0
0
Ghost Management CEO Doug Francis and Row DTLA

Weedmaps Chairman Doug Francis and Row DTLA

UPDATED, June 20, 3:25 p.m.: The newest tenant at the Row DTLA is cannabis industry tech firm Ghost Management Group.

Ghost Management Group’s biggest brand is Weedmaps, an online platform for finding cannabis retailers. The Irvine-based firm is taking 115,000 square feet of office space — the three top floors — at the Arts District complex, according to the Los Angeles Business Journal.

Ghost Management joins Adidas, the Dutch co-working firm Spaces and the advertising studio WC+A at 777 S. Alameda Street.

Weedmaps is popular with cannabis enthusiasts in L.A., but it highlights L.A.’s nagging problem with unlicensed shops. Weedmaps doesn’t differentiate between licensed and unlicensed shops, which means users won’t necessarily know if they are buying from an unlicensed seller.

California ordered Ghost Management to stop advertising unlicensed shops last year, but authorities have used it to identify unlicensed shops as recently as this Spring, when L.A. County sued a property owner in South L.A.

The Row DTLA was developed by Atlas Capital Group and Square Mile Capital and has 1.3 million square feet of office space, along with 65 retail spaces. It’s an adaptive reuse project of a wholesale produce market built in the early 1920s.

It’s one of many office-retail projects the Arts District. Right now Continuum Partners is working on a 107,000-square-foot office and retail complex near the L.A. River. Further south, Lowe Development is working on a 100,000-square-foot space.

CBRE’s Chris Penrose, Jeffrey Pion and Michelle Esquivel represented Atlas and Square Mile. Newmark Knight Frank’s Ryan Harding and Mark Gardner repped Ghost Management. [LABJ] – Dennis Lynch 

Correction: A previous version of this story listed Doug Francis as CEO of Weedmaps. In March he was named Chairman of Weedmaps’ Board of Directors. The CEO is Chris Beals.


Last chance to get your tickets to TRD LA Residential Showcase + Forum

$
0
0

The Real Deal is hosting its annual Los Angeles Residential Showcase and Forum on Friday, June 21, at The London West Hollywood. This year’s forum will focus on how social media and guerrilla marketing play into securing exclusive listings and the impact of new trends and challenges in L.A.’s hottest neighborhoods. Just recently added to the programming is a third discussion that will focus on the trending topic of diversity in real estate.

Our powerhouse lineup of speakers include, Ivan Estrada, Douglas Elliman; Sally Forster Jones, Compass; Joyce Rey, Coldwell Banker; Aaron Kirman, Compass; Michael Williamson, Sotheby’s International; George Penner, Deasy Penner Podley; Ernie Carswell, Douglas Elliman; Yvonne Arias, The Property Lab; Kofi Nartey, Compass; Jennifer Berman, Berman & Pollinger; Alexandra Tieu, Forbes Real Estate Council; Louisette Geiss, Real Women in Real Estate.

Moderating these panels will be Jennifer Berman, Berman & Pollinger; Don Peebles, Peebles Corporation and Stuart Elliott, The Real Deal.

Our full programming for the event includes:

8:00 – 8:30 AM: Registration, showcase, networking and a light breakfast

8:30 – 9:30 AM: Panel and Q&A The residential state of the market: Analyzing the impact of new trends and challenges in LA’s hottest neighborhoods

9:30 – 9:45 AM: Networking and coffee break

9:45 – 10:45 AM: Panel and Q&A The art of securing a listing: How social media and guerrilla marketing tactics have changed the game when it comes to securing the most elusive property listings.

10:45 AM – 11:00 AM: Networking and coffee break

11:00 AM – 11:45 AM: The Diversity dilemma: how to create a more inclusive industry

11:45 AM – 12:30 PM: Showcase, networking and light lunch

Sponsors for this event include 5 Arch Funding, Agent Image, Bosch, Gaggenau, Greater Los Angeles REALTORS, Kay Properties and Investment, Nadel Architects Inc., Side Inc, Real Estate Innovation Network, Smith & Berg Partners and Thermador and Veeve.

Check out our event page daily for the latest forum updates and to get your tickets today!

“Men take risks and women don’t”: WeWork’s former head of compensation accuses company of gender pay discrimination

$
0
0
Former WeWork SVP Lisa Bridges claims the company's co-president, Jennifer Berrent, told her “men take risks and women don’t"

Former WeWork SVP Lisa Bridges claims the company’s co-president, Jennifer Berrent, told her “men take risks and women don’t”

A former WeWork executive who oversaw compensation and benefits claims she faced retaliation after raising evidence of gender pay discrimination at the co-working company.

In a lawsuit filed Thursday in New York State Supreme Court, Lisa Bridges accused company executives of ignoring “glaring” evidence of pay discrimination.

Bridges, WeWork’s former senior vice president of total rewards, claims the firm’s current co-president, Jennifer Berrent, allegedly responded that “men take risks and women don’t.”

“[Bridges] was told that men are paid more than women because, for example, men take risks and women don’t and women are ‘second earners,’” the complaint read.

The lawsuit also alleges the company used inflated share prices to mislead employees on the value of its stock. It claims that in preparation for its initial public offering, WeWork hired investment bankers who were offered equity in the company before they began working, a move that contradicts the company’s own equity policy.

Bridges could not be reached for comment. Her attorney, Seth A. Rafkin, did not respond to a request for comment.

A spokesperson for WeWork said in a statement that the lawsuit is meritless and that the company intends to fight it.

“[Jennifer] Berrent is of the highest moral and ethical character, and we stand behind her completely,” the statement read. “We will continue to support women leaders.”

The allegations come as WeWork’s parent company, the We Company, powers toward an initial public offering while making efforts to straighten its business practices. The We Company says it is valued at $47 billion. Last week, another lawsuit was filed against the company alleging age discrimination, in which a 62-year-old California-based executive claimed a younger employee was hired to take over his role.

Bridges, who was hired in August 2018, claims in her lawsuit that WeWork “was compensating women significantly less than men, particularly with respect to equity.”

The plaintiff claims she coordinated a study by WeWork’s People Analytics Team in October that found a “glaring” pay disparity between men and women. The findings of the study were allegedly presented to Berrent, who was Bridges’ immediate boss as the company’s head of human resources and chief legal officer.

In one example at WeWork’s UK offices, the company allegedly paid a woman working the same job as a man a salary of $85,000 while paying the man a salary of $123,000, according to the lawsuit. Bridges also claims that two men hired to the human resources department to work alongside her, including one who was more junior, were paid $50,000 more than her.

Berrent, who is named as a defendant in the lawsuit, allegedly later told employees at a company town hall meeting in December that there was no pay disparity between men and women at the company.

Bridges claims that she met with Berrent again in February to express her concerns after she learned the company allegedly approved equity award grants to many employees. Of approximately 58 awards valued over $1 million, only three were given to women, according to her lawsuit.

Bridges claims Berrent then retaliated against her and shut her out of important HR meetings.

WeWork allegedly told Bridges it would investigate her claims and assigned a third-party investigator. After she provided materials to support her complaint to the investigator, Bridges claims she received a letter from WeWork’s general counsel, Jared DeMatteis, saying she had breached the company’s confidentiality policy.

Shortly after, Bridges alleges she was put on leave.

Before joining WeWork last year, Bridges worked at other corporations, including Dropbox and Dell, overseeing compensation. Following a stint at McDonalds from 2006 to 2007, Bridges sued the fast food giant, alleging she was fired after she raised evidence that showed the company had misrepresented executive compensation. That lawsuit was dismissed following a settlement.

Chetrit buys national portfolio of 10K+ rental units

$
0
0
Joseph Chetrit, Joseph Chetrit (top), and University Hill located in Nacogdoches, Texas (bottom)

Joseph Chetrit, Knoxville Point located in Dunlop, Illinois (top), and University Hill located in Nacogdoches, Texas (bottom)

UPDATED, June 21, 11:15 a.m.: The Chetrit Group bought a portfolio of more than 10,000 rental apartments spread across the country.

Chetrit bought the 55-property portfolio with buildings in Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Illinois, Indiana, Louisiana, Mississippi, Ohio, New York, Tennessee and Texas, brokers who worked to finance the acquisition told The Real Deal.

Roco Real Estate, based in Bloomfield Hills, Michigan, sold the properties.

Chetrit financed the deal with a $481 million loan from JP Morgan Chase, according to Robert Verrone and Patrick Perone of Iron Hound Management Company, who arranged the debt. At a loan-to-value ratio of 84 percent, the purchase price works out to nearly $573 million.

The financing closed on Wednesday.

In a separate transaction, Chetrit refinanced another portfolio on Tuesday with a $280 million from Arbor Realty, also arranged by Iron Hound. The portfolio consists of 56 multifamily complexes and 5,400 apartments in Florida, Indiana, Kentucky, Ohio and Pennsylvania.

Chetrit acquired the portfolio in 2015, and the new financing pays off debt from December 2017

Joseph Chetrit did not respond to a request for comment.

Post Road Management worked with Iron Hound on the larger of the two deals, and Galaxy Capital Solutions helped with diligence and closing.

Chetrit has refinanced a handful of properties in recent months. Earlier in June, the investor received a $133 million refinancing package for his development at 500 Metropolitan Avenue in Williamsburg, New York. In April, the company received $152 million from CCRE for 65 Broadway in Manhattan, also known as the American Express building. Back in December 2018, the company also received $85 million in refinancing for its mixed-use project at 545 West 37th Street in Manhattan from JPMorgan Chase and Mack Real Estate.

In South Florida, Chetrit recently closed on $55 million in financing from Rabina Properties for its long-planned mixed-use Miami River development.

Fortress could sell resi lender CoreVest for $400M

$
0
0
Fortress co-CEO Wes Edens and CoreVest CEO Beth O'Brien (Credit: Getty Images, iStock)

Fortress co-CEO Wes Edens and CoreVest CEO Beth O’Brien (Credit: Getty Images, iStock)

Fortress Investment Group is considering a sale of CoreVest, a residential real estate lender that it acquired in 2017.

SoftBank-owned Fortress is “exploring strategic options including a sale” of Irvine, California-based CoreVest, Bloomberg reported. Sources told the outlet that the lender could be valued at $400 million or more.

The firm offers short-term credit lines, bridge financing and loans on both portfolios and single properties. It claims to have closed more than $5 billion in loans across 35,000 properties since its founding in 2014, amid a wave of institutional investment in single-family rentals that followed the housing crisis.

The company, formerly known as Colony American Finance, was originally the “single-family lending unit” of Colony American Homes, the rental unit of Trump pal Thomas Barrack‘s Colony Capital.

Fortress, a New York-based private equity firm, rebranded the company as CoreVest after acquiring it for an undisclosed sum in July 2017 — about the same time Softbank was in the process of buying Fortress in a $3.3 billion deal.

Fortress is an active investor in real estate worldwide, and was recently reported to be the largest private rental landlord in Japan. [Bloomberg] — Kevin Sun

The Naked Princess sells Westwood penthouse for record price

$
0
0
Jordana Woodland and the condo (Credit: Getty Images)

Jordana Woodland and the condo (Credit: Getty Images)

The founder of the lingerie brand Naked Princess has sold her duplex penthouse condo in Westwood for a record price.

Jordana Woodland unloaded the unit at the Remington for $13.3 million, the highest price paid for a condominium in Los Angeles County this year. The closing price was still a sharp drop from its original asking.

Woodland is the ex-wife of Michael Goguen, a former Sequoia Capital partner who was ousted from the venture capital firm after sexual harassment allegations in 2016.

A representative for the brokers declined to confirm the identity of the seller. It’s unclear who bought the nearly 6,000-square-foot unit, though one source identified the buyer as a developer who will use the unit for personal use.

Woodland, who is also an actress, acquired the unit in 2017 through a title transfer, records show. She began shopping the condo shortly afterward, listing it for nearly $20 million that following month. It most recently listed in January for $15.9 million.

Designed by LM Pagano Design, the penthouse includes three bedrooms and five bathrooms. There’s also a two-story living room, marble fireplace, office and city views.

Greg Holcomb and Cassandra Petersen of Compass had the listing. Sally Forster Jones, also at Compass, represented the buyer.

Here are LA County’s top 5 multifamily investment sales of May

$
0
0
Four of the top multifamily sales of May

Four of the top multifamily investment sales of May in L.A. County

There was no doubt about which deal led Los Angeles County’s top five multifamily investment sales in May.

Through its Opportunity Zone fund, Starwood Capital Group paid $110-million for a 375-unit mixed-use development in San Pedro. That amount nearly matched the top five multifamily investment sales in April, which combined for $114 million. As the only property on the list in May located in an Opportunity Zone, Starwood’s long-term investors expect to benefit from significant tax breaks.

Overall, the top five multifamily deals were spread out last month, from Tarzana to the northwest, down to the southern tip in San Pedro, and to the city of Bellflower in the southeast.

The Real Deal compiled the list based off property records from PropertyShark, as well as business registration records.

550 S. Palos Verdes Street — Starwood Capital Group | $110 million

Starwood used its $500 million Opportunity Zone fund to buy into a 375-unit mixed-use development in downtown San Pedro. The deal teamed the company with Holland Partners. The seven-story project is called 550 Harborfront. Holland Partners purchased the 2.5-acre site in 2017 for $24.5 million. The development is expected to be completed next year with 5,000 square feet of commercial space.

616 Esplande — IDEAL Capital Group; Aegon Real Assets | $53.5 million

San Francisco-based Stockbridge Capital Group sold a storm-damaged apartment complex in Redondo Beach to a joint venture of IDEAL Capital Group and Aegon Real Assets. The price was $53.5 million, and the new owners plan to redevelop the 105-unit property at 616 Esplande. About 80 percent of the units had been vacated from the 82,200-square-foot complex at the time of sale, after it suffered water damage last October. Stockbridge paid $50 million for the property in 2015.

1450 S. Point View Street — Mark Sonnino | $21 million

An entity tied to Mark Sonnino, protege of George Soros, paid $21 million for a 29-unit multifamily complex that was built this year on the east end of Mid City. The seller was an entity that belongs to the developer of the building, Mojtaba Sajjadieh. The property is located a block off Pico Boulevard at the corner of Saturn and Point View streets. Out of the 29 units, two are set aside as affordable.

15357 Bellflower Boulevard — Berkman Hong | $10 million

Berkman Hong with Anime Investments, LLC purchased a 47-unit property in the city of Bellflower for $10 million, records show. The sellers of the property at 15357 Bellflower Boulevard were Jun and Toshiko Fukushima. The building, called Somerset Plaza, was built in 1963, and it includes 32,800 square feet of space.

18529 Calvert Street — Paul Johnsen | $9.7 million

Mark Golastani and Dean Shabbouei sold their 24-unit property near the north border of Tarzana for $9.7 million. The four-story property, called Calvert Place Apartments, was completed last year and is fully leased. The building spans 23,000 square feet, including 10 one-bedroom units with 700 square feet, and 14 two-bedroom units with 1,050 square feet.

Resi brokers are making hay in Wellington

$
0
0

A sculpture at the Palm Beach International Equestrian Center

In a tony enclave in Palm Beach County, streets have names like Appaloosa Trail and Equine Lane, signs demand that horses have the right of way, and fully outfitted barns sell in the multimillions of dollars.

Welcome to Wellington, considered the winter equestrian capital of the world. It’s the seasonal playground for families of such billionaires as Bill Gates, Michael Bloomberg and the late Steve Jobs, as well as celebrities Billy Joel and Bruce Springsteen.

Properties trading hands here — usually for many millions of dollars — are anchored by sprawling barns, with riding rings, tack (equipment) rooms, horse treadmills and staff apartments.

The community comes alive during the Winter Equestrian Festival, which runs from January through March, and polo events at the International Polo Club Palm Beach extending into late April or May.

The festival draws thousands of spectators and competitors to the Palm Beach International Equestrian Center for competitions that include hunters and jumpers (hunters use lower fences than jumpers and are judged more on style, while jumpers are judged more on speed), dressage (similar to horses dancing) and polo. It’s often the daughters of magnates who compete, like Georgina Bloomberg, Eve Jobs, Jennifer Gates and Jessica Springsteen.

“Guys like yachts, girls like horses,” said Martha Jolicoeur of Douglas Elliman in Wellington, a former competitive equestrian who closed $65.6 million in sales last year, ranking her as the brokerage’s highest-grossing agent in Florida.

For real estate brokers, the fast-paced winter season marks the busiest time of the year, when most equestrian properties change hands. “Eighty percent of our sales are between Christmas and Easter,” said Thomas Baldwin, broker/owner of the aptly named Equestrian Sotheby’s International Realty. With 40 agents, his brokerage handles about 100 sales — many of them for equestrian properties — totaling $175 million per year.

Brokers say the past season was a strong one. In fact, during the past two years, Baldwin said, he has noticed an increase in sales year-round. He had an $11 million farm and a $6 million farm go under contract recently, both of which are set to close in July.

“In the summer they decide, ‘Let’s buy something — we know we’re going to be in Wellington [for the winter season],’” said Carol Sollak, co-owner of Engel & Völkers in Wellington. Her brokerage has various pending sales set to close this summer, she said. Engel & Völkers, Equestrian Sotheby’s, Douglas Elliman and Keller Williams, are among the most active in the highly competitive Wellington market for equestrian real estate.

The neigh-borhood

Equestrian farms, which generally range from 2.5 acres to 40 acres or more, dominate the 14.4-square-mile Equestrian Preserve in Wellington.

The most valuable properties are within a short “hacking” distance of the showgrounds, eliminating the need to bring the horse by trailer, brokers say. (Hacking is riding a horse at normal walking speed.)

“It’s $1 million an acre with no structure if you’re within a 10-minute hack,”
Baldwin said.

But that’s just the starting price. Already built-out, luxurious farms, which may include a mansion as large as 20,000 square feet, plus a barn with more than two dozen horse stalls and staff quarters, riding rings, a horse treadmill and other equestrian features, can be priced as high as $25 million or more, he said.

Jen Drahan, an agent with Keller Williams’ luxury division in Wellington, said that about 100 Wellington farms are currently on the market. Of a total of about 900 equestrian properties in the village, that’s a drop from about 130 a year ago, brokers say.

“Farms that are updated and modernized and not needing a big renovation or construction tend to move faster,” Drahan said.

According to a Douglas Elliman first-quarter report, 14 single-family homes with two-plus acres sold during the first quarter, up 40 percent from the first quarter of 2018. The average price was $3.5 million, up 111 percent from the same period of 2018.

“The difference we are seeing now is the Trump effect with the tax breaks, and with New York, Connecticut and New Jersey rates increasing, we’re seeing more and more people coming here and becoming full-time residents,” Baldwin said.

Among sales in late April, records show billionaire Andrey Borodin, a Russian exile living in the United Kingdom, paid $23 million for a polo facility that was once home to the Venezuelan polo team Lechuza Caracas. Borodin’s Park Place Polo Fields Corporation bought the 62-acre property at 4370 South Road. Sotheby’s Baldwin brokered the sale, but declined to disclose the buyer.

Netscape founder Jim Clark and wife Kristy’s property, Artemis Farm

Completed in 2015, the equestrian compound includes a 60-stall polo barn, a 12-stall show-jumping barn, tack rooms, feed rooms, an aquatic horse walker, staff apartments with a kitchen and a manager’s office.

Buyers of equestrian properties often hail from the Northeast, the Midwest, California and Canada, as well as from Argentina, Venezuela and Colombia, brokers say. Yet in the hot summer months, the area is largely vacant of residents and horses, as owners take them to Kentucky, North Carolina, Saratoga or Europe to compete.

An extra perk for property owners: They can apply for an agricultural designation to get a discount on property taxes, which could range from 30 percent to 50 percent, brokers say. But if a home is on the property, that portion of the it is not subject to the tax break.

A won horse town

Wellington incorporated in 1985, and the 28-square-mile village now has a population of about 65,000. It is anchored by the 2,200-acre Palm Beach Polo and Country Club, which was initially developed in the late 1970s. Today, it has 1,250 homes, with condos beginning in the mid-$300,000s and single-family homes priced at more than $12 million, Baldwin said. The club does not allow barns.

The club was developed by Bill Ylvisaker, considered a founder of Wellington, who brought polo to the area, said Michael O’Dell, assistant planning, zoning and building director for the village.

“He created a high-end environment, and inside of Palm Beach Polo and Country Club he created the original polo fields and polo stadium, and that’s how he marketed Wellington — the polo lifestyle, the farm operations, the equestrian operations,” O’Dell said.

In the 1980s, the 248-acre International Polo Club was built; Mark Bellissimo and his partners bought it for $72 million in 2016. Bellissimo and his partners also own and operate the Palm Beach International Equestrian Center in Wellington, which they bought for a reported $135 million in 2006. It’s where competition at the Winter Equestrian Festival takes place.

“The big differentiator is the competition,” O’Dell said. “That’s why we have residents like [Bill] Gates who buy properties here. They are here for so long, they want to be living in their own home.”

Among the properties currently on the market is a 4.1-acre estate at 2993 Appaloosa Trail, listed for $13.9 million by Douglas Elliman’s Jolicoeur. She declined to disclose the owner of the property, called Poden Farms, but records show it is Neil Moffitt, the former CEO of Hakkasan Group, whose daughter is a competitive rider.

The recently renovated 8,700-square-foot mansion, built in 2006, comes with a 16-stall barn, two guest apartments, staff quarters, an arena, saltwater pool, summer kitchen, seven paddocks and two horse treadmills, including a water treadmill.

“Neighborhoods that have experienced the biggest growth and highest appreciation are the neighborhoods that the horse people buy in, sell in and reside in when they are here,” Jolicoeur said, “because without the horse people in Wellington, Wellington would be similar to any other town in Florida.”

Even barns without a main residence, but furnished with chandeliers, staff quarters, riding rings and other outdoor areas, can be priced at $8 million to $12 million or more. And a four-month lease can cost $400,000 for a 20- to 26-stall barn, Baldwin said.

Perhaps the largest, most well-known high-end area for equestrian barns is Grand Prix Village, which has 35 properties — just one with a house and all with horse training facilities. Owners include the Firestone family (of tire manufacturing fame) and the Johnsons of Fidelity Bank, area experts say.

There, Sotheby’s Baldwin has an $8 million listing for a four-acre, 26-stall barn built three years ago, at 14878 Grand Prix Village Drive. It comes with an owner’s lounge, sand ring, treadmill for horses, three-bedroom staff quarters and six paddocks.

It’s currently leased out to Legacy Stables. On a recent day, the firm’s trainers and groomers were attending to the stately horses, including Chabentyno, who was getting a laser therapy treatment on a leg, geared to help stimulate circulation.

Show ponies

Buying the house and barn is just the start of the expenses involved in the equestrian life. Most who live the equestrian lifestyle own 12 to 30 horses, and polo “patrons” or teams may have 30 ponies each, Baldwin said. Horses competing internationally can cost $2 million to $5 million each, he added.

The interior of 2993 Appaloosa Trail

“There’s so much money there, it’s mind-boggling,” said Toni Schrager, co-owner of Brown Harris Stevens Miami, whose daughters used to show in Wellington. “The money that people spend on their horses — they have treadmills, they have pools, massages, chiropractors.”

In Wellington, developers also build spec barns, with or without homes on their properties.

Pinecrest-based spec home developer Deniz Ergener and his partner Dan O’Rourke built a spec barn and home in Wellington’s Palm Beach Point a few years ago. They sold the property for $5.15 million in 2015, a couple of months after listing it for $5.35 million, Ergener said. The five-acre property has a 12-stall, 9,000-square-foot barn, an 8,000-square-foot house and a 1,600-square-foot grooms’ quarters, Ergener said.

“A barn is more important than a house, actually,” Ergener said. “Most people love their horses — they care about their horses more than anything else. When they come to a showing, they want to see the barn before the house.”

Nancy Batchelor, a top Miami Beach-based agent for EWM Realty International, is an equestrian who competes in the hunter division in Wellington during the season. “I do it for fun, and it helps me relax and focus,” she said.

In March, Batchelor paid $750,000 for a 2,800-square-foot house with a pool at the Aero Club in Wellington, five minutes from the showgrounds. She keeps her horses separately at East Wind Farms in Southwest Ranches.

“It’s a very horse-friendly community, with horse paths, some of the best vets, anything to do with equine — it’s all there,” she said of Wellington. “During the season, [there are] the events, the parties, the fundraising. It’s really an exciting place to be.”


Amid LA’s housing shortage, enter the prefab — and stylish — home

$
0
0
Christian Johnston and ARCspace

Christian Johnston and ARCspace

A prototype modular home in the Arts District is getting attention as a potential way to address Los Angeles’ affordable housing crisis.

The Sustainable Buildings Council’s 1,240-square-foot ARCspace prototype is faster, cheaper and more environmentally friendly to build than traditional housing, according to the Los Angeles Times.

L.A. Mayor Eric Garcetti is among those who have visited the home and expressed support for the design.

Perhaps the biggest challenge the mayor faces is how to address the city’s housing crisis, coupled with its growing homeless population.

Built by Sustainable Buildings Council — a group formed by filmmaker Christian Johnston — it is meant as a “living lab” and test case for the council’s prefab method.

It’s made out of four modules fabricated off site and assembled at the location. The on-site assembly took less than 48 hours, and cost around $150 per square foot.

Prefab home construction is a growing movement in housing-strapped L.A. Some developers have turned to the method to increase the number of affordable units in the high-priced city.

Aedis Real Estate is planning a 98-unit supportive housing project built out of shipping containers, on Crenshaw Boulevard in Park Mesa Heights. Clifford Beers Housing is also working on one in South L.A.

Last month, prefab single-family home startup Connect Homes closed a $10.8 million round of funding.

ARCspace is built out of new materials, not recycled containers, which sometimes need to be cleaned of possible lead paint and hazardous chemicals.

Johnston says the modular design allows for growth and custom configurations.

“You have the ability to start small, then go vertical, horizontal, and then, if your housing needs shrink, you can take them off and put them in the backyard,” he said. [LAT] — Dennis Lynch

Investors, speculators plow into US housing market: report

$
0
0
First-time home buyers are struggling to compete with deep-pocketed institutional investors. (Credit: iStock)

First-time home buyers are struggling to compete with deep-pocketed institutional investors. (Credit: iStock)

More than one of 10 homes sold in the U.S. last year went to investors and speculators. And in the bottom third of the market, the proportion was one out of five.

The involvement of private-equity firms, speculators and other investors in the U.S. housing market has hit all-time highs, the Wall Street Journal reported, citing data released by CoreLogic this week.

Housing markets saw a wave of institutional investment following the financial crisis, with firms like Blackstone and Starwood Capital Group scooping up thousands of foreclosed properties across the country.

Investor interest appeared to dip after a 2013 peak as markets began to recover, but has since rebounded. Economists attribute this sustained investor appetite to strong rental demand, online home-buying technology and low interest rates.

Though institutional investment was credited with stabilizing markets in 2011 and 2012 by making all-cash buys amid amid a mortgage credit slowdown, millennials and other first-time home buyers now find themselves struggling to compete with their deep pockets.

In some cases, people in cities like New York and San Francisco who have been priced out of local markets are choosing to pick up investment properties in places like Georgia and Tennessee — sometimes without ever having been to those states.

The top market for investor purchases in 2018 was Detroit, where investors bought two out of five lower-priced homes, followed by Philadelphia, where nearly half of starter homes went to investors. [WSJ] — Kevin Sun

Affordable developer looks to add to its growing list of projects in South LA

$
0
0
CRCD President and CEO Mark Anthony Wilson, Jr and the South LA development site

CRCD President and CEO Mark Anthony Wilson, Jr and the South LA development site

Affordable housing developers are proposing a flurry of projects in housing strapped Los Angeles, and one of the most prominent has been the Coalition for Responsible Community Development.

The nonprofit is adding another project to the mix. It wants to build a pair of mixed-use affordable housing complexes in South Los Angeles that would total 112 units, according to Urbanize.

CRCD is planning the two developments on Main Street between 67th and 68th streets, according to the report. It is seeking a total of $35.7 million in federal funding for the two developments.

There will be several facilities and services for the community at the two buildings, including case management offices, gyms, a child-care center, a dance studio, and cafes. There will also be courtyards, community rooms, and lounge areas.

The company also broke ground on a 50-unit project one block south of the site. That project is a joint venture with frequent partner L.A. Family Housing. They’re also developing a 32-unit project in Florence. Last month CRCD filed plans to convert three Downtown L.A. buildings into affordable housing with commercial space.

A recent state-level analysis determined that L.A. County needs more than half a million affordable units to meet local demand. Around 58 percent of “low-income” households pay more than 30 percent of their paycheck towards rent. [Urbanize]Dennis Lynch 

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

$
0
0

Here are some real estate events coming up next week!

Host: MIPM; MetaProp NYC
Date: June 25th
Time: 5:30 p.m. to 8 p.m.

MIPIM is partnering with MetaProp NYC to hold an event at the Gas Company Tower, 555 West 5th Street from 5:30 p.m. to 8 p.m. Come to this event to connect with industry professionals and take part in a discussion on the future of technology in real estate.

Host: CREW LA
Date: June 28th
Time: 11 a.m. to 3 p.m.

CREW LA is holding a DTLA Renaissance Tour at Grand Market Central, 317 South Broadway from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Attend this tour to hear Hal Bastian speak on the renaissance of Downtown Los Angeles and how it plays into the current development of the area.

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.

A challenge to Bravo: Make “Million Dollar Listing” more diverse

$
0
0
From left: Amir Korangy, Jennifer Berman, Louisette Geiss, Don Peebles, Alexandra Tieu, and Kofi Nartey at The Real Deal's residential real estate showcase on Friday (Credit: Jeff Newton)

From left: Amir Korangy, Jennifer Berman, Louisette Geiss, Don Peebles, Alexandra Tieu, and Kofi Nartey at The Real Deal’s residential real estate showcase on Friday (Credit: Jeff Newton)

Amir Korangy wasted no time addressing the elephant in the agent-packed room at The Real Deal‘s residential real estate showcase on Friday: If Los Angeles’ top agents truly want to demonstrate their commitment to diversity in the real-estate industry, he said, they should start by pushing for change on their wildly popular TV show, Bravo’s “Million Dollar Listing.”

“They should put their money where their mouth is,” Korangy, TRD publisher, said during his remarks for the panel on diversity at the London West Hollywood. “And either give up their place on the program for another woman or a person of color or demand that the producers of that show put more diversity on screen.”

His remarks followed criticism TRD received for initially putting together a panelist lineup that had nine males and only one female, not including the female moderator. After Tracy Tutor, an influential real estate agent and cast member on “Million Dollar Listing,” criticized TRD for not putting together a lineup representative of the industry, she called on her colleagues to show solidarity by bowing out of the event. Her co-stars on the show, Josh Altman and Josh Flagg, did so.

In a June 12 Instagram post, Korangy acknowledged the misstep, and pledged to address it. The speaker lineup was changed to be more representative of those selling some of the country’s most expensive homes. An additional panel, “The Diversity Dilemma,” was added to the programming. Don Peebles, head of the development firm Peebles Corporation, moderated that discussion, which featured Kofi Nartey, Jennifer Berman, Alexandra Tieu and Louisette Geiss.

Nartey, who leads the sports and entertainment division at Compass, said he strives to hire diverse individuals for his team.

“Different perspectives bring different experiences,” he said. “We have to engage not only with the minorities and women but we have to do it from the perspective of wanting different voices at the table.”

The concept of mentorship and the impact it can have on minorities entering the industry took center stage during the discussion. Tieu, a real estate consultant, implored those power brokers in the room who are running brokerages or teams to take on apprentices in a way that is inclusive to every person at the firm.

“If you find yourself doing mentorship at the golf course, ask yourself if that is accessible to every person on your team,” Tieu said. “If the answer is no, you probably should rethink how you’re mentoring people.”

Peebles, founder of the Peebles Corp., moderated the panel. “Opening up the doors of opportunity and putting people in positions to be successful” is critical, he said. Beyond mentoring, companies should start “seeing diversity as a value to a business.”

Korangy noted TRD‘s reporting on issues such as the gender gap at the top of the industry and the culture of sexual harassment that still persists today. He committed to continue to invest in reporting that would shed a light on bad behavior. And he issued a challenge to Altman, Flagg, and the bosses at Bravo: Don’t be selective about where and when you choose to fight for diversity.

Bravo’s hit franchise is now on its 11th season in Los Angeles. Its cast has four white males — Altman, Flagg, James Harris and David Parnes — and only one female, Tutor. The only other female in Bravo’s lineup is Samantha DeBianchi, who stars in the Miami spinoff.

Out of a total of 17 agents to have been cast in the franchise, only two are female. None is black.

“Right now, that show is all good-looking white men and two white women,” Korangy said. “I know we’re in Hollywood and people don’t like to mess with their celebrities, but I really believe this is a greater cause.”

Don Peebles is launching $500M fund for emerging minority and women developers

$
0
0
Don Peebles

Don Peebles

Development firm Peebles Corp. is launching a $500 million investment fund for minority and women developers in markets that include New York, Los Angeles and South Florida, The Real Deal has learned.

The Peebles Corp. founder Don Peebles announced the company’s new fund during TRD’s annual residential real estate showcase on Friday, at the London Hotel in West Hollywood, where he moderated a panel on diversity in the industry.

For minorities and female developers, “access to capital has been the biggest challenge,” said Peebles, who has been an outspoken advocate for diversity in the industry. “I looked at how to address that for a number of years. No one in the country is doing this on a national level.”

In addition to supplying capital, Peebles said his company will look at ways to support the emerging developers. Through co-developing or partnerships, he hopes the fund will “help mitigate risk and help them grow quicker.”

To ensure “boots on the ground” support, Peebles said the fund will invest in projects based in cities where Peebles’ firm already operates: South Florida, New York City, Los Angeles, Boston, Washington D.C., Philadelphia, and Charlotte.

The fund will focus on urban infill projects that range between $10 to $70 million. There will be a variety of commercial and multifamily projects, with an emphasis on projects that offer affordable housing.

“The idea is to create this business model that shows that investing in emerging developers and investing in diversity will result in higher returns with less risk,” Peebles added.

Peebles said he is having discussions with global banks and other financial institutions to invest in the fund, though he declined to identify them. He anticipates the fund will consist of a small group of investors.

The firm is targeting 60 deals in the fund, Peebles said. He anticipates there will be similar funds in the future.

“It’s a very positive thing to have the developments that are taking place in communities of color, to have the projects be developed by people of color,” Peebles said. “We see this as a win-win and an untapped market.”

This week in celeb real estate: Gwen Stefani and Gavin Rossdale chop price in Beverly Hills, Naked Princess sells penthouse…and more

$
0
0
Gwen Stefani, Gavin Rossdale, and their former home in Beverly Hills Post Office, and Jay Stein with his home in Beverly Hills

Gwen Stefani, Gavin Rossdale, and their former home in Beverly Hills Post Office, and Jay Stein with his home in Beverly Hills 

A wave of expensive properties hit the market this week, adding to the glut of luxury residences on the market. There was also one notable price cut for a property in Beverly Hills that’s been languishing for as long as its former owners have been divorced.

Rockstars and former couple Gwen Stefani and Gavin Rossdale chopped the ask on their 15,000-square-foot home from $35 million to $24 million, a 31 percent drop. Located in a gated neighborhood in Beverly Hills, the home includes seven bedrooms and seven bathrooms. There’s also a tennis court and swimming pool. Stefani and Rossdale paid $13.3 million for the home in 2006, a decade before they split. They put the home on the market in shortly after divorcing.

Jay Stein, chairman of department store retailer Stein Mart, put his 8,400-square-foot pad on the market this week at $29.5 million, Variety reported. Stein and his wife Deanie bought the home for $22.5 million nearly three years ago, though they didn’t appear to make significant upgrades to the Trousdale Estates home. The modern, one-story home includes six bedrooms, eight bathrooms, a wine cellar and infinity edge swimming pool.

In the Holmby Hills, a Spanish-style mansion once owned by the late actor Vincent Price has hit the market for $21 million. Billionaire Peter Sperling, son of the founder of the University of Phoenix, is selling the 11,650-square-foot home. In addition to eight bedrooms and 14 bathrooms, the residence includes a library, theater, game room with a bar and an art studio. He bought the home for nearly $15 million in 2004. Price, who starred in several horror movies including “House on Haunted Hill,” died in 1993.

Jordana Woodland, founder of lingerie brand Naked Princess, broke an L.A. County record this week. The actress, who was married to disgraced venture capitalist Michael Goguen, sold her penthouse duplex for $13.3 million. While that reflects a sharp drop from the original $20 million ask, it still marks the most expensive condo sold so far this year. It’s unclear who the buyer is. Located in the amenity-rich Remington tower, the 6,000-square-foot unit includes three bedrooms and five bathrooms.


Airbnb may follow Slack’s direct listing route

$
0
0
Airbnb CEO Brian Chesky (Credit: iStock)

Airbnb CEO Brian Chesky (Credit: iStock)

Following the buzz around Slack’s unconventional route to a Wall Street debut this week, Airbnb is considering a similar strategy.

The home-sharing platform is one of more than a dozen firms that are in talks with Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley — who, along with Allen & Co., dominate in the field of Silicon Valley direct listings — about the option, people familiar with the matter told Bloomberg News.

The news comes as Slack Technologies Inc. on Thursday debuted on the stock market through the direct-listing model, which is when a stock starts trading without raising more capital or issuing new shares of the company. Given the smoothness of Slack’s debut – and the underwhelming initial public offerings from Uber and Lyft – there could be at least five more such listings next year, Bloomberg reported.

Airbnb has been in the midst of preparing for its own IPO. In April, the company invested in OYO, an Indian-based hotel manager.

Airbnb, led by CEO Brian Chesky, also recently partnered with RXR Realty to turn 10 floors of 75 Rockefeller Plaza into residential space.

Earlier this year, Airbnb turned over records on its hosts in response to a subpoena issued by the city. That information, in part, led to officials filing suit against 13 people and firms this week for allegedly turning housing units in Queens, Manhattan and the Bronx into illegal hotels. [Bloomberg] — Mary Diduch 

US existing home sales bounce back in May as spring buying season heats up: report

$
0
0
(Credit: iStock)

(Credit: iStock)

Sales of existing homes bounced back last month, as a rocky winter gave way to a robust spring buying season in all parts of the county.

Economists credited plummeting mortgage rates for a 2.5 percent national uptick in sales of previously-owned homes between April and May, according to a National Association of Realtors report cited in Bloomberg. About 5.34 million contracts closed last month, beating the association’s predictions.

The median sale price for existing homes, which comprise about 90 percent of national home sales, rose by 4.8 percent over May 2018, reaching $277,000. Numbers are set to be released Tuesday for sales of newly-built homes.

Sales volume notched up across all four regions studied by the Realtors: the Northeast, South, Midwest and West. The Northeast saw the biggest spike, with a 4.7 percent rise.

The number of homes on the market nationwide expanded to 1.92 million, the most since July.

Home prices are even on the rise in the Chicago area, which was forecast to have one of the weakest housing markets in the country this year.

Ths strong numbers released Friday fly in the face of signs the national housing market is cooling off, including a May report showing a slowdown in home price growth.

Earlier this month, the 30-year fixed-rate average mortgage rate fell to 3.72 percent, its lowest level in nearly two years.

[Bloomberg] — Alex Nitkin

 

Colliers fires head of real estate services for “improper trading”

$
0
0
Dylan Taylor (Credit: Colorado Concern)

Dylan Taylor (Credit: Colorado Concern)

The CEO of Colliers International‘s real estate services division has been fired for misconduct related to improper trading, the company said Friday.

Dylan Taylor had been with the commercial brokerage for 10 years, and was promoted to lead the division just six months ago.

He was fired over allegations he conducted “improper trading activity in Colliers securities in breach of his employment obligations,” the company announced.

In response, Taylor brought forward allegations of his own, which he claimed formed the basis for a potential constructive dismissal claim. The company said it had “no reason to believe the validity of such claims” but would appoint a special committee to look into the claims.

Colliers has eliminated the position of CEO of real estate services altogether. Going forward, Jay Hennick, the chairman and CEO, will oversee will oversee operations, with support from CFO John Friedrichsen.

Taylor had been with Colliers International since July 2009, following stints at JLL and Newmark Knight Frank.

In January, Colliers announced that veteran brokers David Amsterdam and David Kotansky were tapped to lead the firm’s new U.S. capital markets platform. — Sylvia Varnham O’Regan

Here are LA County’s top 5 industrial sales of May

$
0
0
Craig Realty founder Steven Craig and 23880 Madison Street (Credit: Google Maps)

Craig Realty founder Steven Craig and 23880 Madison Street (Credit: Google Maps)

The tally of the five priciest industrial investment sales in May for Los Angeles County represented a sharp drop from the month before.

Carried by a $35 million purchase in Glendale, the top sales combined for just $75 million. That’s a 64 percent drop from the month before, when investors shelled out a combined $207.8 million.

Despite the drastic dip, L.A.’s industrial market has maintained its position as the hottest in the country in terms of overall demand and investment.

May’s list includes two properties in or near Hollywood, but otherwise they are spread from Torrance to Glendale. The Real Deal compiled the list based off property records from PropertyShark, as well as business registration records.

815 S. Maryland Avenue — Dennis Lin | $35.5 million

Dennis Lin with Peninsula Property Holdings purchased an assemblage of properties spanning 143,000 square feet for $35.5 million. The 4.7-acre property is located at 815 S. Maryland Avenue, and it was owned by Byron Z Moldo and UCN Partners. It mostly consisted of automobile shops and parking lots.

940 N. Mansfield Avenue — Chrome Hearts Eyewear | $14.3 million

Chrome Hearts Eyewear, through its entity 940 N Mansfield LLC, purchased a property near Hollywood from a trust that belongs to Albert Sweet and Craig C. Darian. The deal was for $14.3 million. The warehouse and distribution site was built in 1947 and it spans 10,730 square feet. Sweet, founder of Occidental Entertainment Group Holdings, owned the property since 2006, records show. Last year, Chrome Hearts, a fashion retailer, purchased an office building across the street, which Sweet also owned, for $12 million.

5950 Corvette Street — Craig Realty Group | $10.6 million

Craig Realty Group, through its entity FCA Realty LLC, purchased a 49,430-square-foot industrial site in the City of Commerce for $10.6 million. The seller was a trust the belongs to Donna Mellos and Anthony Mellos. The food processing warehouse was built at 5950 Corvette Street in 1989 on a 2.34-acre site. Newport Beach-based Craig Realty develops shopping centers, and recently proposed a megaproject at Citadel Outlets in Commerce, calling for three new hotels, massive retail components, and a new monorail.

23880 Madison Street — Gerald L. Thomas | $7.5 million

Gerald L. Thomas, through his entity Madison Street LLC, purchased a property at 23880 Madison Street in Torrance for $7.48 million. The sellers were Karen G. Rakita, Lisa A Pierson, Eric L. Pierson and Daniel D. Pierson. The building dates to 1979, and is 28,650 square feet, on a 1.3-acre site.

6309 Eleanor Avenue — Bernard Huberman | $7.3 million

Ben Kitay sold the only property on the list that is located in an Opportunity Zone, which means long-term investors can take advantage of tax breaks. The buyer was Bernard Huberman through his entity Napa Vista Tolucay LLC, for a price of $7.3 million. The property is located just off Vine Street at 6309 Eleanor Avenue in Hollywood. It was built in 1955 and includes 9,100 square feet. It was last purchased almost 19 years ago for $2.5 million.

Ciao! Wealthy buyers come back to Italy

$
0
0
Italy's real estate market is on the rise, as home buyers seek everything from urban apartments to rural estates. Pictured above is a typical residential street in Venice. (Credit: iStock)

Italy’s real estate market is on the rise, as home buyers seek everything from urban apartments to rural estates. Pictured above is a residential street in Venice. (Credit: iStock)

While Italy has long attracted art lovers — not to mention pizza, pasta and gelato lovers — major real estate investors have largely avoided it for the last decade. But that’s now changing.

Casa & Country Italian Property’s Gemma Bruce said her luxury firm has recently seen an uptick in buyers looking for homes.

They are “people we dealt with six, seven, eight years ago who … suddenly reappeared,” she told Mansion Global. And many of those flooding in are high-income, savvy investors.

Home prices in Italy have increased in the last 12 months after hitting a post-crisis low in 2016 and 2017, according to Bruce.

In 2017, new (and favorable) tax policies were introduced. And those rules were tweaked again this year to entice retirees with foreign pensions.

The new tax rules have ignited interest among foreign nationals as well as Italians living abroad, according to Savills’ Jelena Cvjetkovic, who said appreciation in the residential market is strongest in large cities Milan, Rome and Venice. (Savills has two residential projects in Rome.) But other areas, including the smaller Florence, are also attracting interest. And sources say interest is also spanning different housing types, from luxury apartments to sprawling estates.

Those interested in vineyard estates, rural villas and even castles are usually interested in the Tuscany region, said Luca Giovanelli, a partner of Hamptons International in Italy.

Bruce said a house in Tuscany with some land and, perhaps, a swimming pool will sell for as much as $2.27 million, but that prices for architecturally significant estates can reach nearly $70 million. [Mansion Global] – Mike Seemuth

Viewing all 18760 articles
Browse latest View live


<script src="https://jsc.adskeeper.com/r/s/rssing.com.1596347.js" async> </script>