PARK CITY, UTAH — CBRE Capital Markets’ Debt & Structured Finance has provided $19.3 million in construction and permanent financing for the development of Lincoln Station, a mixed-use community in Kimball Junction area of Park City. Mollie Means of CBRE’s Debt & Structured Finance team in Seattle partnered with Doug Birrell, Bruce Francis, Bob Ybarra, Dana Summers and Shaun Moothart, also of CBRE Debt & Structured Finance, to originate the loan through CBRE’s FHA lending platform on behalf of the borrower, Lincoln Station. The loan is funded through the HUD Section 221(d)4 new construction mortgage insurance program, providing an interest-only construction period of 20 months with a 40-year, non-recourse, fully amortizing permanent loan. Lincoln Station will feature 68 apartments spread across four three-story residential buildings, eight three-story townhomes and one two-story commercial/office building. The non-residential building will contain three office suites with approximately 4,686 square feet of rentable space and 164 square feet reserved for the leasing office. The property’s 76 units will consist of a mix of one- and two-bedroom apartments and three-bedroom townhomes. A total of 52 units will be designated for residents earning 50 percent to 120 percent of the area median income. The remaining units will …
Development
KERNERSVILLE, N.C. — CBRE|Triad has brokered the sale of a 3.3-acre lot at 811 N.C. Highway 66 in Kernersville. The buyer is Lightning McClean Car Wash, an express car wash company with locations in Durham, N.C.; and Lynchburg and Danville, Va. Lightning McClean offers a three-minute car wash and free vacuum use for customers. A timeline for construction was not disclosed. Brian Craven of CBRE|Triad represented the seller, Red Cherry Capital LLC, in the transaction. The seller sold the land for an undisclosed amount.
DALLAS — Austin-based Rastegar Property will develop a 270-unit high-rise apartment community at 1899 McKinney Ave. in Dallas. Units will feature fully equipped kitchens and washers and dryers, and amenities will include storage lockers, a pool, rooftop terrace and common areas on each floor. The property will also feature North America’s tallest living wall with over 40,000 estimated plants making up the structure. Rastegar has tapped San Francisco-based hospitality firm Sonder to operate the property, which is expected to be complete by early 2023.
NEW YORK AND BOSTON — Swedish construction company Skanska has begun a $40 million rehabilitation project for railway company Amtrak. The project will include structural modifications and industrial equipment upgrades for three maintenance facilities located in Boston, New York and Washington D.C. Skanska originally built the facilities 20 years ago and was contracted again to upgrade them to accommodate the upcoming Acela 21 high-speed rail service trains. Construction is slated for completion in the first quarter of 2021, and the new trains will be placed into service late next year.
CHICAGO — The temporary conversion of a portion of Chicago’s McCormick Place Convention Center into an alternate care facility for COVID-19 patients is expected to be complete by Friday, April 24. Walsh Construction, the contractor for the project, completed the first 500 beds earlier this month. The facility will have the capacity to treat up to 3,000 low-to-moderate acuity patients across three of the convention center’s halls. Patients will be separated by the level of care required. The Metropolitan Pier and Exposition Authority and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers are directing the conversion of the temporary field hospital. The project is designed to relieve pressure on the city’s hospital system by freeing up beds for more patients with severe COVID-19 cases in anticipation of a surge in positive diagnoses. Stantec provided design and engineering services for the project.
FLORISSANT, MO. — Tarlton Corp. has completed the conversion of a Quality Inn hotel in Florissant into the state’s first alternate care facility to treat non-acute COVID-19 patients. The facility, if needed, will serve as backup for patients referred by St. Louis-area hospitals. Members of the Missouri National Guard will staff the facility. Tarlton worked with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers on the project, as well as Ross & Baruzzini, Rock Hill Mechanical Corp. and Guarantee Electrical Co. The 4.5-day project yielded more than 100 patient rooms on the four floors of the 130-room hotel. The team built a nurse’s station on each floor and turned the existing phone system into a nurse call system. The project assignment came just hours after Tarlton President Tracy Hart and COO Dirk Elsperman lost their father, Bob Elsperman, to COVID-19. Bob Elsperman led Tarlton from 1972 to1999. He was admitted to a St. Louis-area hospital on March 30 and died eight days later at the age of 83.
WASHINGTON, D.C. — Hines, Urban Atlantic and Triden Development Group, along with joint venture partner Bridge Investment Group, have purchased 1.5 acres at The Parks at Walter Reed in Washington, D.C. to develop The Hartley. Whole Foods Market will anchor the luxury apartment project. Of The Hartley’s 323 units, 32 will be designated as affordable. The Hartley will also include 58,000 square feet of retail space. It is considered the focal point of Town Center, which will feature 100,000 square feet of dining, shopping and entertainment around an active plaza fronting Georgia Avenue. The project is part of the master plan for the redevelopment of the former Walter Reed Army Medical Center. Once complete, The Parks at Walter Reed will include more than 3.1 million square feet of new construction and adaptive reuse of existing structures. The 66-acre project will include a mix of green space, 130,000 square feet of retail, approximately 2,100 residential units, office space, ambulatory care by Howard University and two foreign language charter schools. The Hartley will be the third phase of construction at The Parks at Walter Reed. Previous projects were The Brooks, an 89-unit condo development, and The Vale, a 301-unit apartment project currently …
Eyzenberg & Co. Arranges $21.3M Construction Loan for Mixed-Use Development in Miami
by Alex Tostado
MIAMI — Eyzenberg & Co. has arranged a $21.3 million construction loan for the Towers at Blue Lagoon, a planned mixed-use development featuring a multifamily community and hotel space. The borrower and developer, the Weiss Group of Cos., will build Phase I of the project to include 428 multifamily units across two buildings. The property will offer studio to three-bedroom floor plans. The master plan also includes two hotels. The site is located at 4865 NW 7th St., seven miles west of downtown Miami. Kobi Karp is designing the property’s multifamily component. Robert Ginsberg and David Eyzenberg of Eyzenberg & Co. arranged the loan on behalf of Weiss, which has owned the land since the 1970s.
FRONTENAC, MO. — The Desco Group has completed the development of a 36,000-square-foot office building in Frontenac, about 15 miles west of St. Louis. HDA Architects designed the Class A property, which features an all-brick exterior. The three-story building will include retail space on its first floor. The project is part of a larger $80 million mixed-use development.
LOUISVILLE, KY. — Molto Properties has broken ground on a 324,012-square-foot industrial building within Renaissance South Business Park in Louisville. The new speculative building will be situated on 22.4 acres and will feature 36-foot clear heights, ESFR sprinklers, LED lighting, 2,760 square feet of speculative office space, 234 car parking spaces, 98 trailer park spaces, a loading area with 42 dock-high doors and four drive-in doors. Molto expects to deliver the facility by December. Kevin Grove and Doug Butcher with CBRE will be leading the leasing/selling efforts of this project. Paul Hemmer Co. is serving as the general contractor. Louisville Renaissance Zone Corp. is the main developer of Renaissance South Business Park, a 680-acre business park situated two miles from Louisville Muhammad Ali International Airport.