LOUISVILLE, KY. — A10 Capital has funded a $4.3 million bridge loan for the acquisition of the Shoppes at Forest Green, an unanchored shopping center located at 10001 Forest Green Blvd. in Louisville. The loan is secured by the real estate-owned (REO) property and provided approximately 70 percent leverage. Michael Singh of A10 Capital structured the non-recourse loan on behalf of the borrower, BRAD Management. The loan will be used to fund the acquisition, as well as provide committed funds for a future tenant improvement facility.
Kentucky
FRANKFORT, KY. — Monmouth Real Estate Investment Corp., a public equity REIT, has acquired a newly built, 599,840-square-foot industrial building at 1509 Leestown Road in Frankfort for $28 million. The build-to-suit property is fully leased to Jim Beam Brands Co. for 10 years. The Class A property is situated on approximately 92.2 acres and is expandable by an additional 200,000 square feet.
BOWLING GREEN, KY. — Landmark Commercial Real Estate Services Inc. has brokered the $18.6 million sale of the Shoppes at Gary Farms, a 99,777-square-foot power shopping center in Bowling Green. Built in 2014, the property’s tenant roster includes Dick’s Sporting Goods, Bed Bath & Beyond, PetSmart, Kirkland’s and Lane Bryant. An unnamed, non-traded REIT purchased the property from an unnamed regional developer. Kevin Baker and Daniel Kukes of Landmark represented both the buyer and seller in the transaction.
LOUISVILLE, KY. — First Hospitality Group Inc. and City Properties Group LLC have opened the 162-room Hilton Garden Inn Louisville Downtown. The seven-story, 111,000-square-foot hotel is located at 350 W. Chestnut St. in downtown Louisville’s Clay Commons District. The hotel features a fitness center and a rooftop restaurant/full-service bar known as 8UP. First Hospitality and City Properties co-developed the hotel.
LOUISVILLE, KY. — HFF has arranged a $57.5 million refinance for an eight-property office portfolio in suburban Louisville. The portfolio is comprised of Bluegrass Business Center I and II; Plainview Point I, II and III; Thornton Park Plaza; Atrium Center; Plainview Center; and NTS Center. The approximately 780,000-square-foot portfolio is 86 percent leased. The properties are all located within suburban office submarkets along the I-64 corridor east of Louisville’s central business district. Leasing and property management of the office portfolio is provided by NTS. John Ahmed and Rex Cruz of HFF arranged the floating-rate loan through Prime Finance Partners on behalf of the borrower, Ascent Properties. The loan will recapitalize the current portfolio and provide leasing costs for the ongoing stabilization of the properties. The financing also facilitated the acquisition of one of the buildings.
PRG Investments Brokers Sale-Leaseback of Three Restaurants in Kentucky, South Carolina
by John Nelson
LOUISVILLE, KY. — Louisville-based PRG Investments has brokered the sale of three restaurants in Kentucky and South Carolina. PRG brokered the sale-leaseback of two Raising Cane restaurants in central Kentucky: 551 Keene Center Drive in Nicholasville and 2555 Nicholasville Road in Lexington. Fred Sutterlin and Reed Weinberg of PRG represented the buyer, an individual investor based in Louisville, in the transaction. David Graves of Cypress Property Group represented the seller. Sutterlin also brokered the franchise sale-leaseback of a Dunkin’ Donuts located at 754 Folly Road in Charleston, S.C. on behalf of the buyer, a private investor based in Louisville.
LOUISVILLE, KY. — Marcus & Millichap has arranged the sale of Glenmary Village Apartments, a 272-unit multifamily community located off Bardstown Road at 9606 Clubview Drive in southeast Louisville. Aaron Johnson of Marcus & Millichap’s Louisville office represented the seller in the transaction. The buyer, Utah-based Peak Capital, purchased Glenmary Village for an undisclosed price. Built in 2003 on 22 acres, Glenmary Village Apartments features a large pool and sun deck and an upgraded resort-style clubhouse with veranda, business center, workout facilities and a kitchen area.
NEWPORT, KY. — Inland Real Estate Corp., in a joint venture arrangement with Dutch pension advisor PGGM, has acquired Phase II of Newport Pavilion, a shopping center located in Newport, part of the Cincinnati MSA. Inland and PGGM purchased the 115,000-square-foot asset for $23.6 million. Phase II’s tenant roster includes Dick’s Sporting Goods, T.J. Maxx, Buffalo Wild Wings, Panera Bread, Chipotle Mexican Grill, T-Mobile and Sport Clips. The Inland-PGGM joint venture purchased Phase I of Newport Pavilion earlier this year. The entire 337,300-square-foot power center is currently 96 percent leased.
LOUISVILLE, KY. – Doster Construction Co. has broken ground on the $45 million The Clubhouse Student Apartments in Louisville. The project will be located adjacent to the University of Louisville campus and consists of three five-story wood frame buildings. The new complex will have 758 beds and more than 400,000 square feet of living space. Amenities will include two courtyards, a swimming pool, a club room, fitness area, a theater, computer/study room and a hammock garden. The project also includes a five-and-a-half level parking garage that will accommodate more than 625 spaces. Buck Development Louisville LLC, affiliated with The John Buck Co., is the project’s developer, Doster is the general contractor and Henneman Engineering Inc. is the architect of record. Peak Campus Management will manage the asset.
The trends in Louisville are typical of a market rebounding. According to CBRE Research, the Louisville market is experiencing rent growth, vacancy declines, construction increases and more speculative product hitting the city. Leasing volume is increasing steadily, and investment sales are peaking as well. The Louisville industrial market remains tight even with several recent construction completions. With more than 100 million square feet of industrial space in the area, Louisville is a major player in the Eastern United States distribution market. Despite several lease and sale transactions consummating in the second quarter of 2014, market vacancy increased slightly to 4 percent, which reflects the fact that several large speculative buildings came on line during the period offsetting otherwise net positive absorption. As expected, with existing industrial inventory levels at an all-time low and new building deliveries coming on line and more on the horizon, market vacancies rose to 3.9 percent in the first quarter of 2014, ending a streak of 13 consecutive quarters of declining vacancy. Louisville remains an extremely tight market, even considering the increase in the vacancy rate. In addition, compared to the percentage of total market size in neighboring cities like Columbus, Cincinnati, Indianapolis, Nashville and Memphis, …