REISTERSTOWN, MD. — Greenberg Gibbons has purchased Reisterstown Shopping Center, a 167,212-square-foot shopping center in Reisterstown, for $34.5 million. The property’s tenant roster includes Mars Supermarket, Planet Fitness and a mix of national and regional stores and restaurants. Greenberg Gibbons purchased the center from a partnership including Chesapeake Realty Partners for an undisclosed price. Greenberg Gibbons plans to remerchandise the property and bring new stores and restaurants to the retail lineup.
Southeast
MEMPHIS, TENN. — KeyBank Real Estate Capital has provided two loans totaling $20 million for the acquisition of two affordable housing apartment communities in metro Memphis. The financing included a $4.1 million loan for Pinebrook Pointe Apartment Homes in Memphis and a $15.9 million loan for Angelo’s Grove Apartments in Marion, Ark., a suburb of Memphis. These communities are two of the five properties that the borrower, Peak Capital Partners LLC, is planning to buy in the Memphis area. Irena Edwards and Alex Buecking of KeyBank’s community development lending division arranged the financing.
GALLATIN, TENN. — BC Wood Properties has sold Gallatin Center, a 138,238-square-foot shopping center located in Gallatin, for $9 million. The center’s tenant roster includes Burke’s Outlet, Ollie’s, Tractor Supply, Hibbett Sports and Goodwill. BC Wood increased the property’s occupancy from 80 percent to 99 percent during the life of its ownership of the center. The Lexington, Ky.-based shopping center owner and manager sold Gallatin Center through BC Wood Properties Fund I, an investment vehicle that BC Wood launched in 2013.
Campus Evolution Villages Refinances Student Housing Asset Near West Virginia University
by John Nelson
MORGANTOWN, W.VA. — Campus Evolution Villages has refinanced Campus Evolution Villages Morgantown, a 924-bed, 280-unit student housing property located minutes away from West Virginia University. Each unit is fully furnished and features private bedrooms and bathrooms for each resident. Amenities at the center include a newly renovated clubhouse with a 24-hour fitness center, resort-style pool with hot tub, volleyball court, sun deck, basketball court, 24-hour computer lounge, tanning beds and a free shuttle bus service to West Virginia University’s downtown, Evansdale and Health Sciences campuses. Steven Vornea with JL Hunter arranged the financing for CEV.
ATLANTA — China’s “sloppy” attempt to manage the devaluation of its currency, the renminbi, and the declining demand for Chinese products from the United States and Europe are the main culprits behind the stock market’s woes, says economist Dr. Rajeev Dhawan of Georgia State University (GSU). “Who got to the stock market bull?” asked Dhawan during the quarterly forecast conference held at GSU on Wed., Feb 24. “Just like in old Chuck Norris movies, the chief villain is the Chinese economy.” For the second time in six months, China’s attempt to manage the devaluation of its currency sent shockwaves through global equity markets. Year-to-date through Feb. 24, the Dow Jones industrial average was down 940 points, or 5.4 percent. What would lead China to devalue its currency? Dhawan says that China could be attempting to impress the United Nation’s International Monetary Fund (IMF) with the currency manipulation. Countries try to devalue their currencies in order to combat trade imbalances, point out industry experts. A weaker currency could help a country like China to boost trade exports, shrink trade deficits and reduce sovereign debt burdens, since a “weaker currency makes debt payments effectively less expensive over time,” according to Investopedia. Whatever …
DANIEL ISLAND, S.C. — Crossman & Co. has brokered the sale of Daniel Island Town Center, a Publix-anchored, 68,688-square-foot shopping center located on Seven Farms Drive in Daniel Island in metro Charleston. The property was 98 percent occupied at the time of sale. Publix Super Markets Inc. purchased the shopping center from an unnamed institutional group based in the Northeast for nearly $14 million.
SLIDELL, LA. — Stirling Properties and CBL & Associates Properties Inc. have added four new retailers to Phase II of Fremaux Town Center, a regional shopping and entertainment destination totaling more than 630,000 square feet in Slidell, a suburb of New Orleans. The project is located on more than 80 acres at the southwest corner of I-10 and Fremaux Avenue. The new tenants joining Fremaux this spring include Books-A-Million (7,500 square feet), Allure Nail Spa (1,944 square feet), LensCrafters (3,830 square feet) and 5 Below (8,024 square feet). Additionally, Springs at Fremaux Town Center, a 296-unit apartment complex, is expected to deliver in March. Other previously announced tenants joining this year include Pier 1 Imports, Capital One, Aveda, Goodyear and Chico’s. Tesla Motors has also completed installing eight charging stations at the development. Existing tenants of Phase II include Red Robin, Zales, Francesca’s, Off Broadway Shoe Warehouse, Victoria’s Secret, Buckle, Charlotte Russe, LOFT, Bath & Body Works, Journeys, Claire’s and Which Wich.
JACKSON, MISS. — Capital One has provided an $11.8 million, fixed-rate Freddie Mac loan for the acquisition of Tracewood Apartments, a 280-unit apartment community in Jackson. Chad Thomas Hagwood of Capital One Multifamily’s Southeast office arranged the 10-year, fixed-rate loan on behalf of the borrower, StoneRiver Co. Brandon Pate of Capital One’s Birmingham office managed the deal on behalf of Capital One. The loan structure includes two years of interest-only payments followed by a 30-year amortization schedule.
GROVELAND, FLA. — CBRE has arranged a 144,000-square-foot industrial lease at 19925 Independence Blvd. in Groveland. The space is located within the former Circuit City distribution building that totals 706,500 square feet. David Murphy and Monica Perez Wonus of CBRE represented the landlord, Real Capital Solutions, in the lease transaction. Cameron Maness of Transwestern represented the tenant, Pathmark Transportation.
FORT MYERS, FLA. — Colliers International has brokered the sale of the 20,632-square-foot Shops at Jamaica Bay in Fort Myers. Central Line Properties purchased the center from New York-based Orbis Properties for $4.2 million. The property’s tenant roster includes AT&T, Allstate, Provident Jewelry, Zoom Tan, Rosati’s Pizza and Sports Bar, Merle Norman Cosmetics and Touch Salon. Built in 2007, the shopping center is located at the intersection of Tamiami Trail and Jamaica Bay Boulevard at 15245 Tamiami Trail.