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Brooklyn Navy Yard refinances $60M EB-5 loans

Sterling National and Symetra issue new financing

Brooklyn Navy Yard
Brooklyn Navy Yard

The Brooklyn Navy Yard landed two loans from Sterling National Bank and Symetra Life Insurance Company to refinance $60 million in EB-5 debt.

The $30.75 million loan from Sterling carries a 15-year term, and the $31.68 million Symetra loan has a 21.5-year term. The two loans replace EB-5 debt the Navy Yard took out in 2009 – the first of three EB-5 loans taken out by the Yard through the New York City Regional Center. The Singer & Bassuk Organization brokered the loan.

“These loans demonstrate the financial health of the Brooklyn Navy Yard and place the Yard on strong financial footing as we undergo our largest expansion in 50 years,” David Ehrenberg, head of the Brooklyn Navy Yard Development Corporation, said in a statement. The Corporation manages the city-owned industrial hub, which is home to 300 firms and 7,000 employees.

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According to a 2012 Crain’s article, the Navy Yard used the EB-5 money to fund part of the construction of a new, 89,000 industrial building and the expansion of an existing manufacturing center, as well as infrastructure work.  The Yard’s head at the time, Andrew Kimball, described the money as “like a gift from the gods.”

“At first, we were sort of scratching our heads, thinking, is this real?” he told Crain’s. “The next thing we knew, we were falling out of our chairs.”

The EB-5 program, which offers foreigners green cards in return for job-creating investments in the U.S., has become a popular source of financing for New York’s developers. But it faces an uncertain future as federal lawmakers debate its merits: it is set to expire in April. — Konrad Putzier

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