The Real Deal New York

Posts Tagged ‘cast iron real estate’

  • src="http://s3.amazonaws.com/trd_three/images/259304/50-greene-520.jpg" style="border: 1px solid black; alt="alternate text">
    Ter Et Bantine models on the runway and 50 Greene Street (building photo source: PropertyShark)

    Italian fashion house Ter Et Bantine is expanding in Soho, moving its showroom one block south to a second-floor loft at Zar Property’s 50 Greene Street that’s more than double the size.

    The label, which only just opened its 1,076-square-foot 76 Greene Street showroom last February, signed a long-term lease this week for its new, 3,500-square-foot space, David Zar, a principal at his family’s firm, told The Real Deal. The asking rent was $45 per square foot.

    Cast Iron Real Estate represented Ter Et Bantine, while the landlord was represented in-house.

    Meanwhile, Zar is still looking for a new tenant at its corner, multi-level retail space down the street, at 38 Greene, which hit the market in the fall. [more]

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  • Two Birds Bridesmaid, a clothing retailer specializing in bridesmaid dresses, inked a five-year lease for a 1,500-square-foot office in the third-floor loft at 166 Mercer Street. The taking rent was not available, but the asking rent was $45 per square foot. The three-story Soho building has two floors of offices sitting atop a Victoria’s Secret retail space. Brokers Kim Skarvelis and David Barreto of Cast Iron Real Estate represented the landlord in the deal, while Andrew Epstein of Easy Street Properties brokered the lease for Two Birds.TRD [more]

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  • As large, national chains that can no longer afford high rents are
    vacating prime retail space, smaller chains and restaurants are taking
    advantage of lower rents and opening up in locations that were once
    reserved for national retailers. As landlords look to rent space out to
    smaller businesses that are seeking to expand or open a first location
    and that have expendable cash, neighborhoods such as heavily trafficked
    Soho, where rents last year surged beyond $125 per square foot, are now
    offering rents below $100 per square foot. In Tribeca, where rents have
    fallen an average of 30 percent, property owners are also offering
    several incentives, such as months of free occupancy and early
    termination clauses, which allow tenants to test certain locations.
    David Barreto, a retail broker at Cast Iron Real Estate, said that in
    today’s market, landlords care more about solid tenants than about
    getting the highest profit. [more]

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