North Carolina

Woodland Terrace Cary

CARY, N.C. — Grandbridge Real Estate Capital’s seniors housing and healthcare finance team based in Atlanta has arranged a $30 million refinance loan for Woodland Terrace of Cary. The 176-unit, 184-bed seniors housing community is located in Cary, about 12 miles west of Raleigh. The property features a four-story independent living building, a one-story Alzheimer’s/memory care building and 11 independent living duplex cottages. Woodland Terrace’s common areas include a lobby, main dining room, private dining room, craft/exercise room, library, small guest apartment, card room, billiards area, chapel, TV room, beauty/barber shop and six laundry rooms. The property was 98 percent occupied at the time of sale. Richard Thomas of Grandbridge originated the five-year, interest-only loan with a 30-year amortization schedule through Freddie Mac.

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1616 Center

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Beacon Partners has broken ground on a new five-story, Class A office building located at 1616 Camden Road at the corner of Camden Road and Kingston Avenue in Charlotte’s South End submarket. The property, known as 1616 Center, will feature 10,000 square feet of retail space on the ground floor and 65,000 square feet of office space on the four floors above. Construction began on Oct. 14, which included the demolition of two existing buildings on the site. The project’s construction is estimated to wrap up in the third quarter of 2015. Architect David Furman of Centro Cityworks designed the property to feature a fitness center, locker rooms, a pedestrian plaza, patio space for the restaurants and retail space on the ground floor and an executive conference room overlooking the East/West Lynx Light Rail line. Boatsman Gillmore Wagner has signed a 12,000-square-foot lease at 1616 Center. The design team includes general contractor Edifice and architect Axiom. Charles Swanson and Kristy Venning of Beacon Partners will handle leasing 1616 Center’s office space, and Aaron Ligon of Ligon Commercial Real Estate will handle leasing the project’s retail space.

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Colonia Plaza

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — NorthMarq Capital has arranged $18.8 million in acquisition financing for Colonial Plaza, a 202,810-square-foot, Class A suburban office building in Charlotte. Colonial Plaza is located at 2101 Rexford Road in Charlotte’s SouthPark submarket. Keith Braddish of NorthMarq Capital’s New York metro office arranged the balance sheet loan through GE Capital on behalf of the borrower, a joint venture between Highbrook Investment Management LLC and LRC Properties LLC.

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400 South Tryon

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Trinity Capital Advisors and joint venture partner DRA Advisors LLC, has acquired a 33-story, 584,315-square-foot office building located at 400 S. Tryon St. in downtown Charlotte for an undisclosed price. The building is 92 percent leased, with Duke Energy as its anchor tenant. Rob Cochran, Bill Collins, Jud Ryan and Craig Evans of Cassidy Turley represented the undisclosed seller in the transaction. Trinity Partners has been hired to lease and manage the asset.

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The Gibson

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Batson-Cook Construction breaks ground on The Gibson, a 250-unit apartment community located at 1000 Central Ave. in Charlotte. The developer on the $25 million project is Pollack Shores Real Estate Group and the architect is Poole and Poole Architects. The apartment development will neighbor the historic Plaza Midwood and Elizabeth neighborhoods. Batson-Cook expects to deliver the mid-rise, infill apartment community in the fourth quarter of 2015.

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1000 South Tryon

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Trinity Capital Advisors plans to develop 1000 S. Tryon St., a new 300,000-square-foot, Class A office building in Charlotte’s South End submarket. The 14-story building will be located on the gateway corner of Tryon and Morehead streets. The office building will feature retail space on the ground floor and a multifamily façade is planned for the side of the parking deck fronting Morehead Street. The project is a joint venture between Trinity Capital Advisors and Honey Properties, the long-time owner of the site. Once the asset has a committed anchor, Trinity Capital Advisors will break ground on the property with a 15-month construction schedule, according to Gary Chesson, founding partner of Trinity Capital Advisors.

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Toringdon

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Trinity Capital Advisors, owner of the six-building Toringdon Office Park in Charlotte’s Ballantyne submarket, has struck a deal to bring a new Hampton Inn and Suites to one of the office park’s outparcels. The 120-room, six-story hotel will feature a fitness center, indoor/outdoor pool and meeting space. The new hotel will be Beacon IMG’s fourth hotel in the greater Charlotte area. Construction will begin in the fall and wrap up in late 2015 or early 2016. Trinity Capital Advisors has also signed TIAA-CREF to a 24,190-square-foot lease in the Toringdon 4 building. TIAA-CREF will have signage on the exterior of the building that is visible from nearby Interstate 485, as per the lease agreement. Josh Lebowitz and Rob Hinton of CBRE represented TIAA-CREF in the lease transaction. Rhea Greene and Jennifer Kurz represented Trinity Capital Advisors internally.

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The Gramercy

RALEIGH, N.C. — Lowe Enterprises Investors (LEI) has teamed up with Blue Ridge Realty to develop The Gramercy, a 203-unit multifamily property located at 401 Glenwood Ave. in Raleigh’s Glenwood South neighborhood. The community will sit atop 6,900 square feet of ground-floor retail space and a 260-space parking garage. Wells Fargo provided a $26 million construction loan, which was arranged by Howard Brooks of Medalist Capital. The six-story building will offer studio, one- and two-bedroom apartments with granite countertops, stainless steel appliances, nine-foot ceilings and individual balconies. Amenities include a clubhouse with a kitchen and lounge area, resort-style pool and a business center. The design team includes architect J. Davis and general contractor Choate Construction. Construction of the project has begun this week.

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The Raleigh/Durham/Chapel Hill Triangle has captured national attention as a powerhouse of innovation and economic growth for many years, winning a steady stream of accolades for growth, technology, entrepreneurial drive and quality of life. So it comes as no surprise that while some parts of the country are still limping along in what has been the longest and most tepid recovery in recent memory, the Triangle is booming. Indeed, it’s hard to find a metric that shows the region as anything less than thriving. The unemployment rate declined sharply over the past year, down over 2 percentage points from the first quarter of 2013 to 5.1 percent in April 2014, and the region has been adding jobs — more than 26,000 nonfarm jobs in the past four quarters and 7,700 in March 2014 alone. As a result, the region’s industrial market is rapidly accelerating. Raleigh-Durham has consistently placed in the top 10 fastest growing MSAs since 1980, and the Triangle’s industrial market is primarily geared toward providing goods and services for the burgeoning local population, ensuring that demand for institutional-grade industrial product remains strong. This dynamic has also created a tendency toward a high degree of diversification, and both factors …

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As the first quarter of 2014 comes to a close, the biggest question mark facing the Charlotte market is whether or not it can handle the historically high supply levels. Despite nearly 3,500 units delivered over the past 12 months, vacancy has held steady, and rents have continued to grow by 2 to 3 percent. But with another 10,000 units under construction, Charlotte is at a critical juncture. With the pipeline at an all-time high and new projects being announced seemingly every week, will there be enough continued demand to absorb the next wave of deliveries? The ability to absorb the pending supply is largely based on the area’s favorable demographic trends and potential job growth. Between 2000 and 2010, Mecklenburg County’s population grew by 32 percent, over three times the national average, and that trend has continued with more than 7 percent growth since 2010, including the second-highest growth rate in the state from 2012 to 2013. Moreover, since 2010, Mecklenburg and Wake (Raleigh/Durham) counties have accounted for nearly half of the state’s overall population increase. That pattern mirrors a national trend of a growing desire to live in an urban environment. That paradigm shift is largely based on …

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