News: Long Island

LIREG discusses retail real estate at networking breakfast on November 28th

Shown (from left) are: Russell Matthews of the Albanese Organization, who introduced the panel; Kimco’s Joshua Weinkrantz; Stanton Eckstut of Perkins Eastman; Avalon Bay’s Matthew Whalen; Eric Rubinstein of Ruskin Moscou Faltischek PC and LIREG co-president Michael Blaymore.

Old Westbury, NY Experts told a meeting of the Long Island Real Estate Group (LIREG) the future of retail real estate in an era of declining brick-and-mortar sales is mixed-use developments.

The experts, Matthew Whalen, senior vice president, Avalon Bay Communities; Stanton Eckstut, principal of Perkins Eastman architects and planners; Joshua Weinkranz, president-Northeast region of Kimco Realty Corp., one of the nation’s largest owner of community shopping centers, spoke before 160 industry executives gathered for a November 28th networking at a breakfast at the Old Westbury Golf and Country Club. The panel was moderated by Eric Rubinstein, partner and real estate co-chair at the Uniondale law firm Ruskin Moscou Faltischek PC.

“Ten years from now retail will look entirely different,” said Kimco’s Weinkrantz, noting that the New Hyde Park-based REIT has a handful of assets it hopes to convert to mixed-use, including a site on Kissena Blvd. in Flushing, where Kimco hopes within five years to add 350 residential units atop 60,000 s/f of existing retail space. But, Weinkrantz also noted that national retail tenants with long terms remaining on their leases can present obstacles to conversions through clauses that dictate such things as parking requirements.

Whalen, noting that Avalon Bay has undertaken mixed-use projects elsewhere in the country, including the Harrison Metro North Station in Westchester, is trying to work with national retail property owners to find suitable sites for redevelopment. He said, “Long Island is slow to move in this direction. Retail mixed-use has to be used at the right place.” Noting there are seven or eight retail centers on Long Island where redevelopment might work, but he said municipal planners have to get behind these projects. “There needs to be some leadership on the land-use side,” he said.

Eckstut told the gathering that there is no one formula for successful redevelopment to mixed use and that the retail leasing portion is the most difficult part of the format. He said the area near Stony Brook University provides a prime opportunity for potential mixed-use retail development.

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