The Real Deal New York

Posts Tagged ‘184 kent’

  • 184 Kent now 50 percent leased

    June 28, 2010 10:00AM

    184 Kent

    Williamsburg’s 184 Kent, the 340-unit luxury waterfront rental between North 3rd and North 4th streets, is now 50 percent leased, developer JMH Development and exclusive agent Rose Associates announced today. The seven-story loft building — the renovated former headquarters of Austin, Nichols & Company that was originally conceived as a condo — opened its leasing office in February and has studios, one-, two- and three-bedrooms up for grabs. Prices range from $2,250 per month for a studio to $5,295 per month for a three-bedroom, three-bathroom home. Amenities include a 24-hour doorman, valet, fitness center, 20,000-square-foot interior courtyard and roof deck. TRD

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  • 184 Kent now 50 percent leased

    June 28, 2010 10:00AM

    184 Kent

    Williamsburg’s 184 Kent, the 340-unit luxury waterfront rental between North 3rd and North 4th streets, is now 50 percent leased, developer JMH Development and exclusive agent Rose Associates announced today. The seven-story loft building — the renovated former headquarters of Austin, Nichols & Company that was originally conceived as a condo — opened its leasing office in February and has studios, one-, two- and three-bedrooms up for grabs. Prices range from $2,250 per month for a studio to $5,295 per month for a three-bedroom, three-bathroom home. Amenities include a 24-hour doorman, valet, fitness center, 20,000-square-foot interior courtyard and roof deck. TRD

    [more]


  • Fred Harris, vice president at AvalonBay Communities, which is constructing its first Brooklyn project, a 631-unit tower on Gold Street in Fort Greene.

    From the March issue: A handful of major real estate management and development firms that have long avoided Brooklyn — even as housing prices in the borough shot up and brokerages rushed in — are finally venturing across the river.

    The reasons are twofold. First, new high-rise, high-end construction in Brooklyn fits their business model. And second, values of these new Brooklyn buildings appear to have tumbled further and faster than their Manhattan counterparts, according to brokers and developers. “Developers are looking for opportunities, 100 percent,” said David Maundrell, a Dumbo resident and the president of aptsandlofts.com, a brokerage with a Brooklyn focus. “But they are willing to do that because there is a viable market here. It’s become a destination as opposed to an afterthought for Manhattanites who want a cheaper place.”

    Jamestown Properties is one of the developers that recently upped its bet on the borough. In early 2007, the firm had a 60 percent equity stake in be@Schermerhorn, a troubled condo in Downtown Brooklyn, which was developed by SDS Procida and saw construction and sales suspended last year. But in December, Jamestown bought the balance of the mortgage from a consortium of banks. The consortium had originally lent $100 million to SDS Procida.