LITTLETON, COLO., AND WOODINVILLE, WASH. — Loja Real Estate has acquired two shopping centers in Colorado and Washington for a combined $34.4 million. Loja purchased Village West in the Denver suburb of Littleton for $19.4 million. TJ Maxx anchors the property. Palmer Capital represented the unnamed seller in the transaction. Loja bought Woodgate Center in the Seattle-area city of Woodinville for $15 million. Capital Pacific represented the unnamed seller in the transaction.
Acquisitions
VICTORVILLE, CALIF. — Marcus & Millichap has arranged the $3 million sale of a vacant, 21,108-square foot auto dealership in Victorville. Drew Wetherholt and Emily Brun of Marcus & Millichap’s Ontario office marketed the property on behalf of the seller and secured and represented the buyer, both limited liability companies. The dealership is located at 14673 Civic Drive.
Occidental Management Closes on Acquisition of 190-Acre Sprint Headquarters in Overland Park, Kansas
OVERLAND PARK, KAN. — Occidental Management Inc. has closed on its previously announced acquisition of the 20-building, 190-acre Sprint headquarters campus in Overland Park. The purchase price was not disclosed, but the campus is valued at more than $342 million, according to the Johnson County Appraiser. The deal includes a sale-leaseback agreement with Sprint Corp., which will occupy the buildings primarily in the southern portion of the property. The first buildings opened in 1997 when Sprint consolidated operations in the Kansas City metro area. The campus was designed to accommodate 14,500 employees and reached maximum capacity in 2004 when Sprint merged with Nextel. Since then, Sprint has been downsizing. Of the roughly 4 million-square-foot campus, approximately 1.7 million square feet is leased to other tenants and 250,000 square feet is vacant, according to Gary Oborny, CEO and chairman of Occidental. Wichita-based Occidental has yet to release specific plans for the property’s future, but expects to do so by year’s end. The company does intend to re-invigorate the campus and focus on adding amenities that will help employers retain and recruit talent. “The Sprint campus has been one of our ideal acquisition targets in the Kansas City market, and we’re excited …
NEW YORK CITY — Publicis Group, a French marketing, advertising and public relations firm, has signed a lease renewal and expansion at 375 Hudson Street in Manhattan. The firm is renewing its original 680,000-square-foot lease, which is set to expire in 2023, and taking on an additional 280,000 square feet. The new lease term is 20 years, and the firm will take occupancy of the expanded space in August. Tishman Speyer owns 375 Hudson, which was built in 1987 and spans a full city block from King to West Houston streets. Howard Fiddle, Paul Amrich, and Ben Joseph of CBRE represented ownership in the lease negotiations. John Maher, Paul Myers, Mike Wellen, Greg Maurer-Hollaender and Cara Chayet, also with CBRE, represented Publicis.
NEW YORK CITY — A partnership between two local investment firms, Camber Property Group and California-based Belveron Partners, has acquired Highbridge House, a 400-unit multifamily property in The Bronx, for $77 million. The property is located at 113 Ogden Ave. and originally opened in 1972. The new ownership plans to convert the property into an affordable housing complex and invest $3 million in capital improvements to the building’s elevator and utility systems. Aaron Jungreis of Rosewood Realty Group represented the seller, Stellar Management, and the buyers in the transaction. New York Community Bank provided a $57 million acquisition loan for the deal.
NEW YORK CITY — Hodges Ward Elliott (HWE) has arranged the $36 million sale of River Court and Gerard Court, a 252-unit multifamily property in The Bronx for $36 million. The complex, which is located at 1065-1075 Gerard Ave. near Yankee Stadium, offers studio, one- and two-bedroom units with elevator access. Daniel Parker, Paul Gillen and Ariel Tambor of HWE represented the seller, Related Cos., in the transaction. The buyer was Prana Investments, an investment firm with offices on both coasts.
Marcus & Millichap Negotiates $3.9M Sale of Office Property in Camp Hill, Pennsylvania
by Alex Patton
CAMP HILL, PA. — Marcus & Millichap has negotiated the sale of a 26,541-square-foot office property in Camp Hill, Pennsylvania. The property is located at 355 N. 21st St and Cumberland Blvd. The sales price was $3.9 million. The building offers 16 office suites leased to tenants in an array of industries, including medicine, finance and law. Craig Dunkle of Marcus & Millichap’s Philadelphia office represented the seller, 355 N. 21st Camp Hill Associates, as well as the buyer, Thank You Hashem, in the transaction.
WASHINGTON, D.C. — Akridge and Alcion Partners have sold 1701 Rhode Island Ave., a seven-story, 103,908-square-foot office building in downtown Washington, D.C., for $119 million. The partnership acquired the then-YMCA in March 2016 before repositioning the asset into an office building fully leased to WeWork. WeWork has occupied the space since February. Design firm Hickok Cole Architects and general contractor Whiting-Turner Contracting Co. led the redevelopment of 1701 Rhode Island to include a two-story lobby, pocket park, rooftop decks on the penthouse and seventh floor and a landscaped rooftop terrace. An affiliate of EXAN Capital acquired 1701 Rhode Island. Collins Ege, Sean McDermott, Nicholas Pappas and Nick Carpenter of Eastdil Secured represented the sellers in the transaction. EXAN Capital will remain as the asset manager.
CHARLOTTE, N.C. — MLA Properties and Pearlmark have acquired Pavilion Village, a 294-unit apartment complex in Charlotte, for $44 million. The property is located three miles from the University of North Carolina-Charlotte and 13 miles from Uptown Charlotte. Pavilion Village was 93 percent occupied at the time of sale. The new owners plan to renovate and upgrade interior units and communal amenities. Details of the renovations were not disclosed. MLA and Pearlmark have hired Drucker + Faulk to handle leasing efforts for the property.
DALLAS, FORT WORTH AND GRAND PRAIRIE, TEXAS — Locally based private equity investment firm MoxieBridge has acquired a 168,600-square-foot industrial portfolio in the Dallas-Fort Worth (DFW) metroplex. The portfolio, which was fully leased at the time of sale, spans seven buildings in Dallas, Fort Worth and Grand Prairie that were built between 2006 and 2009. Combined, the properties offer 560 trailer parking spaces and 34 tenant suites. With this acquisition, MoxieBridge now owns more than 1.3 million square feet of commercial and residential space in Dallas and Houston.