October 03, 2008 05:19PM
By Steve Cutler
Not all the trend-shattering residential projects in New York are
in West Chelsea. The Madison Square Park/Flatiron area, with its
traditional buildings, is an unlikely spot for the iconoclastic Dutch
designer and architectural philosopher Rem Koolhaas to make his New
York City residential debut, but he has done so with a dramatically
cantilevered, steel-and-glass condominium high-rise under construction
at 23 East 22nd Street.
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October 02, 2008 08:49PM
By Gabby Warshawer
Two years ago, Time Out New York named a stretch of South Portland Avenue in Fort Greene the "best block" in New York. Now, while the brownstone market is basically holding its own amidst a sluggish sales climate, developers of a handful of new Fort Greene condos are seeing units languish on the market.
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October 04, 2008 06:28PM
By Alex Ulam
Daniel Baum,
chief executive officer of the Real Estate Group New York, a brokerage,
said the Financial District, which has a number of new condo and
high-end rental projects, could be among the first neighborhoods to see
price drops.
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October 03, 2008 11:56AM
By Abby Luby
Washington Heights -- an old-fashioned, no-frills neighborhood dominated by small buildings and mom-and-pop stores -- is one of the last city neighborhoods for rental bargains, according to brokers.
Suffering a double whammy from the impact of the residential market slowdown and a lingering (some say outdated) reputation for crime, the neighborhood located at the northern tip of Manhattan still attracts priced-out refugees from Greenwich Village, Chelsea and the Upper West Side.
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October 04, 2008 06:36PM
By Lauren Elkies, Jovana Rizzo and Alex Ulam
Financial news headlines about Wall Street's meltdown are ratcheting up the fear factor for buyers and sellers, who are becoming even more cautious about plunging into the real estate market.
Industry experts anticipate price drops across the board. But certain residential neighborhoods will probably be hit harder than others by the chaos on Wall Street.
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October 03, 2008 04:54PM
By Lauren Elkies
President of Warburg Realty Partnership. After starting in the
business as a residential agent in 1980, he worked his way up to
manager at Albert B. Ashforth. In 1991, he bought a majority stake in
the firm's New York residential arm and renamed it Ashforth Warburg
Associates. Twelve years later, he renamed the firm again, this time to
Warburg Realty Partnership. Today Warburg has 150 brokers in five
Manhattan offices, including one in Harlem, where it was the first
large Manhattan firm to open an office.
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October 02, 2008 07:29PM
By Adam Pincus
Layoffs from the bankruptcy of Lehman Brothers, the sale of Merrill
Lynch to Bank of America and the government takeover of American
International Group should create another 3 to 4 million square feet in
availability, said Steven Coutts, senior vice president of national
research services at commercial brokerage Studley.
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October 04, 2008 07:20PM
By Alison Gregor
When the nation's finance sector ended as the world knew it last month, the city's real estate community was left slack-jawed, wondering what it would mean for the commercial and residential markets.
With behemoth investment banks falling like dominoes, New York's brokers and developers started getting used to the fact that the oncoming pain would be far deeper than previously expected. This month, The Real Deal breaks down the Wall Street meltdown by sector in a series of stories that look at the numbers that matter to real estate insiders.
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October 03, 2008 02:14PM
By Lisa Abramowicz
To bring new attention to properties that have lingered for weeks or months without any movement, an increasing number of brokers have pulled apartments off the
market, with the intention of giving them a short hiatus and then
re-listing them.
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October 03, 2008 05:11PM
By David Jones
Industry watchers had hoped the sales of Macklowe's former assets -- which were seized in February by Deutsche Bank after the highly leveraged real estate mogul defaulted on nearly $7 billion in loans -- would revive what had been a dormant commercial real estate market here.
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October 03, 2008 12:31PM
By Jovana Rizzo
Rosario Candela came to America at the age of 19, knowing just a few words
of English. But within a decade, the Italian immigrant was designing some of
the most luxurious buildings Park Avenue had ever seen.
His quick rise from immigrant to famed architect left a permanent imprint on the city's skyline -- so much so that today, two of his buildings are again in the limelight.
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October 03, 2008 04:43PM
By Amir Korangy
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October 03, 2008 04:16PM
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October 02, 2008 06:39PM
By Gabby Warshawer
The fro-yo trend began picking up steam when Pinkberry opened its first
Manhattan store in late 2006; the company, which was started in Los
Angeles in February 2005, was already hugely popular in its hometown.
Pinkberry expanded quickly in New York — within a year, the chain had
eight locations in the city.
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October 03, 2008 05:59PM
By Adam Piore
With hundreds of millions of dollars in short-term debt coming due
in January, Lawlor's private equity firm has emerged as the latest
poster child for overleveraged post-boom distress. Now that Harry
Macklowe's goose has been cooked
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October 03, 2008 04:57PM
By Jen Benepe
The sign on the side of the nearly finished building on West and
Desbrosses streets has drawn attention for prominently displaying the
curious quote from playwright Edward Albee: "You gotta have swine to
show you where the truffles are."
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October 04, 2008 06:50PM
By Gabby Warshawer
Brooklyn developers are trying to woo would-be buyers who may be
indecisive about the market's health with deals that allow them to rent
a unit in a condo while putting their monthly rent checks toward a down
payment.
Other developers are also switching to their back-up plan, changing
buildings from sales to rentals, but not without costs and
complications.
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