Harrington of HKS Capital Partners arranges $16.5 million financing
HKS Capital Partners has arranged $16.5 million in financing for a multi-residential property. Jonathan Harrington, a partner and co-founder at HKS, arranged the loan from New York Community Bank on behalf of BRT General Corp with a term of seven years and a 3.5% rate.
The property, Brookview Commons, located at 30 Crosby St., was originally built as student housing for Western Connecticut State University. The borrower will use this transitional loan, Harrington said, to further the process of converting the property from student to free-market housing.
According to Harrington, the university originally wanted to buy the building, but due to the financial crisis, it softened on that idea.
Now the 115-unit,105,000 s/f building's five stories have a mixed tenancy. There are free-market tenants on the top two floors and students on floors one through three. The fact that BRT is well known, with a proven track record in the area, may have contributed to NYCB's willingness to do the non-recourse loan for a building that has a student-housing component.
"There are not very many banks that would do this," said Harrington. BRT's other rental properties include Spring Ridge at 124 Coalpit Hill Rd. and Park Ridge South at 28 Rose Ln.
Lackawanna, NY Agri-Plastics, a global leader in the manufacturing of plastic products for agricultural, industrial, recreational, environmental, and home industries, has signed a 64,000 s/f lease to open a
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.
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
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
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,