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Manocherian family picks up UES rental for $90M

Pan Am Equities buys 50-unit 103 East 86th Street from Stonehenge Partners

From left: Scott Solomon, Ofer Yardeni and 103 East 86th Street (Credit: Samuel Waxman Cancer Research Foundation and Google Maps)
From left: Scott Solomon, Ofer Yardeni and 103 East 86th Street (Credit: Samuel Waxman Cancer Research Foundation and Google Maps)

The Manocherian family is adding to its vast multifamily empire with a $90 million rental building on the Upper East Side.

The family’s Pan Am Equities bought the 50-unit Stonehenge 86 building at 103 East 86th Street from Ofer Yardeni’s Stonehenge Partners, sources told The Real Deal.

The purchase price works out to $1.8 million per unit.

Representatives for Pan Am and Stonehenge could not be immediately reached for comment.

Stonehenge bought the 13-story pre-war building, built in 1914, for $76 million in late 2012 from Richard Scharf’s Abro Management, property records show.

Under Stonehenge’s ownership, the number of rent-stabilized apartments in the building decreased from 20 to 13 units, records with the city’s Department of Finance show.

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The deal is the latest sale for Yardeni’s Stonehenge, which has been quiet on the buy side in the past few years.

In April, Stonehenge sold a three-building, 420-unit rental complex on the Upper West Side known as Stonehenge Village to A&E Real Estate Holdings for $287 million. And earlier in the year the company sold a six-story, 54-unit property in Harlem for $44 million to Akelius Real Estate Management.

Stonehenge last year also refinanced a trio of luxury rental buildings in Manhattan to the tune of $132 million.

In 2014, SL Green bought out Yardeni’s former partner, Joel Seiden, and picked up his 49-percent stake in Stonehenge’s 23-building portfolio. But supplemental materials from SL Green’s third-quarter earnings presentation show the real estate investment trust owns only a 1 percent interest in the Stonehenge 86 Property.

Pan Am Equities, meanwhile, adds to a multifamily portfolio that the family – which is one of the Persian families such as the Elghanayans and the Kalimians that rose to prominence in New York real estate in the 1970s – has been growing for decades.

Late last year the company, headed by CEO Scott Solomon, refinanced a Manhattan portfolio for $60.6 million.

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