News: Brokerage

Ferro and Gibbons of Prudential Blake-Atlantic lease 3,500 s/f

Richard Ferro and Julie Gibbons of Prudential Blake-Atlantic, Realtors closed a 3,500 s/f lease wherein the firm represented Verizon Wireless. They will occupy a retail space located at 650 Troy-Schenectady Rd. The length of time between introduction of the site and the receipt of commission payment was four years, eleven months. Beyond the normal site evaluation, letter of intent and lease negotiations, there followed a protracted period without any progress, due to the town's declaration of a building moratorium, two extensions of that moratorium and a lenghty approval cycle, once the floodgates were opened again. Gibbons said, "In a way, it was amazing that Verizon was willing to wait that long for the location and that the developer was able to perform to the original financial parameters when building costs has risen so sharply.  At least the ending was a happy one - the tenant was placed, and the broker was paid."
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Columns and Thought Leadership
Strategic pause - by Shallini Mehra and Chirag Doshi

Strategic pause - by Shallini Mehra and Chirag Doshi

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
AI comes to public relations, but be cautious, experts say - by Harry Zlokower

AI comes to public relations, but be cautious, experts say - by Harry Zlokower

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,
Tri-state capital  migrates nationally amid  regulation pressure - by Reese Weaver

Tri-state capital migrates nationally amid regulation pressure - by Reese Weaver

New York tri-state multifamily investors are increasingly reallocating capital to less-regulated markets across the U.S. as rent control and legislative risk erode returns at home. With over 60% of New York City’s rental housing stock classified as rent-stabilized, the traditional value-add model — buying under-performing buildings,

A fresh start - by Shallini Mehra and Amit Doshi

A fresh start - by Shallini Mehra and Amit Doshi

For the past several years, the New York City multifamily housing market has been defined by disruption. The combined impact of the HSTPA rent laws and a sharply higher interest rate environment has fundamentally reduced