NEW YORK CITY — Cushman & Wakefield has brokered the sale of the residential condominium portion of 92 Pinehurst Ave. in Manhattan’s Hudson Heights neighborhood. Pinehurst Partners LP sold the residential portion of the property for $25.5 million, or $350 per square foot. The residential portion of the elevator-serviced, 72-unit building contains 72,896 square feet above grade of which the usable residential area is approximately 60,000 square feet. James Nelson and Mitchell Levine of Cushman & Wakefield handled the transaction.
Multifamily
SUNNYSIDE, N.Y. — Marcus & Millichap has arranged the sale of Sunnyside Gardens, an apartment building located at 41-05 Skillman Ave. in Sunnyside. A limited liability company acquired the 16-unit apartment building for $4.3 million. Shaun Riney and Michael Salvatico of Marcus & Millichap’s Brooklyn office represented the seller, a limited liability company, in the transaction.
CHICAGO — Associated Bank, serving as lead arranger, has provided a $45.8 million construction loan for the development of a multifamily property in the Logan Square neighborhood of Chicago. Henry Street Partners and 2293 NMA LLC were the borrowers. The transit-oriented development, to be located at 2293 N. Milwaukee Ave., will consist of two buildings that will be 11 and 12 stories. The 217-unit project will also include 8,373 square feet of ground floor retail. Krista Casper of Associated Bank arranged the loan.
CEDAR CITY AND ST. GEORGE, UTAH, AND PARKER, COLO. — Senior Living Investment Brokerage Inc. has arranged the sale of three skilled nursing facilities — Crown Crest of Parker in the Denver suburb of Parker, Kolob Regional Care in Cedar City and Rehab and Kolob Care in St. George — for $31.8 million. Both Utah facilities are located in the southwest corner of the state near the Nevada and Arizona borders. The portfolio totals 454 beds, representing a price per bed of $70,000. The purchase represents a capitalization rate of 8.7 percent. The buyer is a real estate investor in the Midwest that leased the communities to local operators. The seller is a private owner based in Illinois looking to exit the seniors housing sector. Ryan Saul and Patrick Burke of Senior Living Investment Brokerage led the transaction.
AUSTIN, TEXAS — CBRE Global Investors’ U.S. Managed Accounts Group has acquired The Mosaic at Mueller, a Class A, 441-unit apartment community in Austin, on behalf of Allstate. The Mosaic was 96 percent occupied at the time of sale. The community is located at 4600 Mueller Road in East Austin, a residential area two miles from the University of Texas and four miles from Austin’s central business district. Mosaic is part of the 711-acre mixed-use Mueller Redevelopment. When completed, Mueller Redevelopment will consist of more than 4 million square feet of office and retail, 5,700 residences and 140 acres of recreational amenities. The Mosaic at Mueller’s interiors include granite countertops, stainless steel appliances, faux wood flooring and tile backsplashes. Property amenities include an 1,800-square-foot fitness center, two pools, five courtyards with grilling areas, garage parking and 8,669 square feet of fully leased ground-floor retail. Minor cosmetic updates are planned for the common areas.
PLANO, TEXAS — Mainstreet, a skilled nursing developer based in Indiana, has opened The Healthcare Resort of Plano, a 100-bed skilled nursing and rehabilitation facility in the Dallas suburb of Plano. Construction started in March 2014. Mainstreet developed the property and The Ensign Group Inc. will operate it. The 68,203-square-foot project costed $16 million to develop.
HAYWARD, CALIF. — Meta Housing Corp. has broken ground on the Downtown Hayward Senior Apartments, a 60-unit affordable seniors housing development in Hayward, 15 miles southeast of Oakland. The new development will include approximately 6,000 square feet of retail space on a nearly one-acre lot in the city’s downtown. Development costs are estimated at $26 million. Meta will develop the new apartment community in partnership with Community Home Builders and Associates. Redstone Equity Partners, Enterprise Community Partners Inc., Citibank, CalHFA, Federal Home Loan Bank of San Francisco, the State of California Department of Housing and Community Development (HCD), Alameda County Housing and Community Development Department, California Community Reinvestment Corporation, and the California Tax Credit Allocation Committee all provided financing for the project. Meta is a multifamily developer based in California that has developed more than 6,000 units.
LITTLETON, COLO. — An unidentified, out-of-state buyer has purchased the 54-unit Broadridge Apartments in Littleton for $8.3 million. The community is located at 6900 S. Bannock St. It was built in 1965. Jeff Johnson and Matt Ritter of Pinnacle’s Johnson Ritter Team represented the buyer, while the firm’s Josh Newell represented the seller in this transaction.
LOS ANGELES — Timberlane Partners has acquired a 24-unit apartment building in Los Angeles for $6.4 million. The vintage, 1920’s community is located at 425 S. Detroit St., in the Miracle Mile area of Mid-Wilshire. Ron Harris, Paul Darrow and Michael DiSimone of Marcus & Millichap’s Los Angeles office represented both the buyer and seller, a private investor, in this transaction.
LOUISVILLE, KY. — Cain Brothers, an investment bank based in New York City, has arranged $49.9 million in bond financing for Christian Care Communities (CCC), a faith-based, nonprofit operator based in Louisville. CCC operates seniors housing communities in 11 cities in Kentucky, providing services including assisted living, independent living, skilled nursing, memory care, short-term rehabilitation, home healthcare and adult daycare. The Series 2016 bond financing consists of $36.7 million of tax-exempt direct purchase bonds and $13.2 million of taxable term loans, plus a $1.5 million line of credit. Two commercial banks purchased and provided all debt. Proceeds from the financing were primarily used to refinance all of CCC’s outstanding debt, including four series of public bonds, 12 capital leases and five lines of credit. The financing also funded $1.8 million of renovation projects, $3 million of reimbursement for prior capital expenditures and $4 million of working capital funds.