News: Long Island

ABLI and CIBS present awards to NGKF and TRITEC Real Estate at annual gala dinner

The Association for a Better Long Island (ABLI) and the Commercial Industrial Brokers Society (CIBS) presented the Long Island real estate industry's most-prestigious awards. The Most Ingenious Deal of the Year Award was presented to a team of Newmark Grubb Knight Frank brokers for the sale of 600 Community Dr. in Manhasset to a Massachusetts-based real estate developer which then leased the 252,000 s/f office building to North Shore-LIJ Health System. North Shore signed a 32-year lease with Waterstone Development Group for the Manhasset building on nine acres adjacent to its 58-acre North Shore University Hospital. Waterstone purchased the building for about $59 million - a price that is approximately equal to the mortgage debt on the property - from The Carlton Group. As part of the transaction, Waterstone agreed to invest $44 million to upgrade and modernize the building. The NGKF team included vice chairman Brian Waterman, managing director Scott Berfas, managing director Dan Oliver and associate director Jordan Oliver. The Developer of the Year Award was presented to TRITEC Real Estate Co. for its New Village, a mixed-used project, in Patchogue. The awards were awarded on April 16th at the annual gala dinner of the ABLI and CIBS, which brought together hundreds of Long Island regional real estate industry leaders and professionals at Carlyle on the Green in Old Bethpage State Park. TRITEC's $112 million New Village at Patchogue project began with the assemblage of six parcels totaling 3.8 acres at Patchogue's Four Corners in 2007. The developer then worked with village officials to reconfigure a 2-acre municipal parking lot through the use of property swaps and to develop an overlay-zoning district. The developer also received state and county incentives, moved a turn-of-the-century Carnegie Library building by almost half a mile, moved all aboveground utilities below ground and designed, permitted and constructed 291 rental apartments, 45,000 square-feet-of retail space and 18,000 square feet of offices. The project, completed last year, now is 60 percent rented with full occupancy expected this summer. "Four projects were considered for this year's award, however Tritec's Patchogue project was the most transformative," said CIBS president David Chinitz. "It demonstrated how private developers and municipalities are able to work together to get Long Island moving in the right direction." About CIBS CIBS was formed in 1992 out of the shared belief among the region's leading brokers that the region needed a unified voice to advocate on behalf of professionalism, ethics and industry cohesion. Today, CIBS is a leading voice and advocate for commercial development in the Long Island market. Since its formation, CIBS has helped upgrade the industry by offering hundreds of educational programs, seminars and presentations; advocated professional standards and offered grievance resolution; provided informal mentoring relationships; raised tens of thousands of dollars for local charities; and created social settings in which colleagues have become friends, and competitors respected peers. For information about the Commercial Industrial Brokers Society of Long Island www.cibs-li.org ###
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The evolving relationship of environmental  consultants and the lending community - by Chuck Merritt

The evolving relationship of environmental consultants and the lending community - by Chuck Merritt

When Environmental Site Assessments (ESA) were first part of commercial real estate risk management, it was the lenders driving this requirement. When a borrower wanted a loan on a property, banks would utilize a list of “Approved Consultants” to order the report on both refinances and purchases.