Verizon Wireless has leased 4,500 s/f for their new flagship store on the ground floor of JEMB Realty's revitalized Herald Center, a 10-story, 250,000 s/f retail and office property at the southwest corner of 34th St. and Broadway.
Bobby Dweck represented JEMB Realty, while Robert Gibson of JLL and Tom Citron of Newmark (both formerly of Cushman & Wakefield) represented Verizon.
"In less than three years since JEMB unveiled plans to completely renovate and reconfigure the asset, we have moved ASA College into the upper floors, creating a new 160,000 s/f campus with its own entrance. We leased 63,000 s/f of ground floor space to fashion retailer H&M in August, and filled the remaining ground floor space with this new lease to Verizon Wireless. That leaves just 12,000 s/f of lower level retail space remaining at Herald Center, which we will bring to market in the spring," said Dweck. "JEMB has changed the face of the Herald Sq. retail corridor and delivered what the retail market was demanding."
Manhattan, NY AmTrustRE has completed the $211 million acquisition of 260 Madison Ave., a 22-story, 570,000 s/f office building. AmTrustRE was self-represented in the purchase. Darcy Stacom and William Herring
Many investors are in a period of strategic pause as New York City’s mayoral race approaches. A major inflection point came with the Democratic primary victory of Zohran Mamdani, a staunch tenant advocate, with a progressive housing platform which supports rent freezes for rent
Let’s be real: if you’re still only posting photos of properties, you’re missing out. Reels, Stories, and Shorts are where attention lives, and in commercial real estate, attention is currency.
Last month Bisnow scheduled the New York AI & Technology cocktail event on commercial real estate, moderated by Tal Kerret, president, Silverstein Properties, and including tech officers from Rudin Management, Silverstein Properties, structural engineering company Thornton Tomasetti and the founder of Overlay Capital Build,
The state has the authority to seize all or part of privately owned commercial real estate for public use by the power of eminent domain. Although the state is constitutionally required to provide just compensation to the property owner, it frequently fails to account