Morgan Stanley fund pays $47M for easement rights to Con Ed substation

The site is connected to a New Jersey facility that the fund recently acquired for $900M

Morgan Stanley's Markus Hottenrott and the site at 109 25th Street in Brooklyn (Credit: Morgan Stanley and Google Maps)
Morgan Stanley's Markus Hottenrott and the site at 109 25th Street in Brooklyn (Credit: Morgan Stanley and Google Maps)

Morgan Stanley Infrastructure paid nearly $47 million to gain easement rights to a Consolidated Edison substation in Brooklyn, according to records filed with the city today.

The property, with the address of 109 25th Street, occupies a 38-acre portion of the Gowanus waterfront. The site stretches from 25th to 28th streets, east of Gowanus Bay and west of Third Avenue and the Gowanus Expressway, according to a filing with the Environmental Protection Agency.

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The owner of the site is Australian firm Macquarie Infrastructure Corporation. Portions of the site were previously condemned and claimed by the city through eminent domain in the mid-1960s. By the 1980s, parts of the site were used as a loading dock and equipment storage space for defunct shipping company Moore McCormack Lines. Macquarie did not respond to requests for comment.

The transaction is connected to a larger sale across the Hudson River. Last August, Macquarie sold the Bayonne Energy Center, a power generation facility in Bayonne, New Jersey that powers about half a million homes in Manhattan, Brooklyn, Queens and Staten Island. Morgan Stanley bought the property for $900 million in cash and assumed debt. The Bayonne facility is connected to the Gowanus site through a 6.75-mile-long high-voltage cable, according to a petition filed with the State of New York Public Service Commission.

Morgan Stanley previously raised $3.6 billion to fund investments in the infrastructure sector. The firm did not respond to requests for comment.