The Real Deal New York

Posts Tagged ‘140 mayhill’

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    Map of New Jersey
    Though monthly rents still lag behind, New Jersey landlords are catching up to Manhattan and Brooklyn in at least one respect: pet-friendliness. According to the New York Times, more and more Garden State rental developments are allowing in pet owners, albeit usually with an additional deposit fee and small monthly rent for their pets.

    “We found we were having to turn away too many potential tenants,” said Melissa Giarratano, an asset manager of the nine-year-old rental complex owned by the Walters Group in Barnegat, N.J. called Atlantic Heights. There, the required deposit for a pet is $300, and tenants are charged an additional $75 per month for one pet and $100 for two pets. [more]

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  • Nancy Packes, president of her own new development marketing firm, at 316 11th Avenue, where she is the leasing consultant. The building is slated to begin renting units this winter.
    Nancy Packes, president of her own new development marketing firm, at 316 11th Avenue, where she is the leasing consultant. The building is slated to begin renting units this winter.

    From the December issue:
    Once the province of a few niche players, the new development rental
    sector is becoming a hotly contested battleground as brokerages look to
    replace once-lucrative condo deals.
    In the booming economy of the mid-2000s, many new development
    marketing firms focused most of their attention on sales, while a few
    firms had the rental field to themselves. But now, as marketers migrate over from the stagnant condo market,
    newly built rentals are emerging as an increasingly important source of
    revenue. And the sector is only expected to grow more competitive in
    2010. “During the condo boom, they only focused on condos — that’s where
    the money was,” Citi Habitats President Gary Malin said of new
    development marketing firms. “Their condo stuff has slowed down, so
    they’re trying to get in [to the rental market]. They’re looking to
    find other revenue streams,” he added. While the pipeline of condos coming to market is slowing, brokers anticipate a healthy number of new rental buildings in 2010, largely because they have proved easier for developers to finance in the current climate. Some 2,935 rental units have come online in Manhattan so far this year, compared to 1,482 in 2008, according to a market report by Nancy Packes, the president of Brown Harris Stevens Project Marketing and founder of her own new development marketing firm, Nancy Packes, Inc., which does both new development sales and rentals.  More

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