NEW YORK CITY — Realtor Keller Williams has subleased 20,000 square feet of office space at 99 Park Avenue in Manhattan from Gould Paper Corp. Helmsley Spear owns the Class A building, which is located between 39th and 40th streets in the Midtown area. Kent Swig, Andrew Simon and Brett Zelner negotiated the sublease for Helmsley Spear on an internal basis. Edward Kalisvaart represented Keller Williams, also on an internal basis. The sublease term runs through December 2023.
New York
NEW YORK CITY — Insurance giant American International Group (AIG) will relocate its global headquarters to 1271 Avenue of the Americas, a 48-story office building in Manhattan that was recently redeveloped. The move calls for AIG to consolidate its two regional offices at 28 Liberty St. in Manhattan and 30 Hudson St. in nearby Jersey City. The company plans to take occupancy of its new space, which will span eight floors and 325,000 square feet, in 2021. Rockefeller Group owns 1271 Avenue of the Americas.
NEW YORK CITY — Whole Foods Market has opened a 60,245-square-foot store at 450 W. 33rd St. in Manhattan’s 5.4 million-square-foot Hudson Yards mixed-use development. The store offers a cocktail bar that serves to-go drinks, a beauty and body care section and a convenience market at street level for customers needing a grab-and-go meal, snack or beverage. The store is the 14th in New York City for Austin-based Whole Foods.
NEW YORK CITY — Marcus & Millichap Capital Corp. has arranged a $15 million loan for the refinancing of 521-523 W. 48th Street. The 45-unit multifamily property is located in the Hell’s Kitchen neighborhood and was originally built in 1940. Steven Rock and Christopher Marks of Marcus & Millichap arranged the seven-year loan, which carried a 3.1 percent fixed interest rate and a 75 percent loan-to-value ratio, on behalf of the undisclosed borrower.
NEW YORK CITY — A partnership between Australian multinational developer Lendlease and New York-based L+M Development Partners has secured Daiwa House Texas Inc. as a new equity partner for the development team’s 42-story mixed-use tower in Manhattan’s Morningside Heights area. Daiwa House Texas is a U.S. subsidiary of Daiwa House Industry Co., Japan’s largest homebuilder that is pursuing an initiative to expand across the United States. The project, which will be located at 100 Claremont Ave., will feature 165 residential condominiums, 54,000 square feet of academic space for the Union Theological Seminary and 49,000 square feet of faculty housing. Completion is slated for spring 2023.
NEW YORK CITY — Transwestern has negotiated a 14,889-square-foot office lease at 626 Sheepshead Bay Road in Brooklyn. Stephen Powers, Lindsay Ornstein, Thomas Hines and Jake Cinti of Transwestern represented the tenant, Selfhelp Community Services, in the lease negotiations. David Ofman of The Lawrence Group represented the landlord, Cammeby’s International.
13,556-square-foot residential development site at 3602 Holland Ave. in the Williamsburg neighborhood of Brooklyn. The property is zoned for the development of a 20-unit multifamily building. Menachem Babayov of Westbridge Realty represented the buyer, SHG 3602 LLC, and Steven Westreich represented the seller, Chukwuemeka Dike.
NEW YORK CITY — Global One Real Estate Fund II, an affiliate of locally based investment firm Nelson Management Group, has acquired The John Adams, 115-unit apartment building in the Forest Hills neighborhood of Queens. The sales price was $26.5 million. The six-story building offers proximity to several public transit lines and amenities such as bike storage space, package lockers and onsite laundry facilities. The seller was not disclosed.
NEW YORK CITY — Cushman & Wakefield has arranged the sale of a 121,188-square-foot residential development site in the Fieldston neighborhood of The Bronx. The property sold for $7.9 million, or $114 per buildable square foot. The site is zoned for the development of nearly 70,000 square feet of above-grade residential space and roughly 52,000 square feet of space for a community facility and parking garage. Jonathan Squires and Addison Berniker of Cushman & Wakefield represented the undisclosed seller in the transaction.
NEW YORK CITY — RTW Retailwinds Inc. (RTW), parent company of women’s apparel chains New York & Co., Fashion to Figure and Happy x Nature, has filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection along with its subsidiaries. The filing came Monday in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District of New Jersey. The company expects to close a significant portion, if not all, of its 378 brick-and-mortar stores and has launched a store closing and liquidation process. In the near term, however, New York City-based RTW will continue to operate its business and reopen stores that were previously temporarily closed due to the COVID-19 pandemic. As of July 13, 92 percent of its brick-and-mortar retail and outlet locations across 32 states had reopened. RTW, which was first incorporated in 1918, says that the bankruptcy will enable it to maintain operations in the ordinary course of business, including the payment of employee wages and benefits, payment of suppliers and vendors and the use of cash collateral.