Feed

In House

In House

505 Eighth Avenue.

Our Week in Commercial Real Estate: Robert Ivanhoe; Joseph Chetrit; Hines; Harry Gross; Robert Sorin

We unveiled Jean Nouvel’s new MoMA tower plans.

Houston-based Hines cornered Bryant Park.

Governor Cuomo hung a U-turn on congestion pricing.

The financial sector and the office market: how close for how long?

Christine Quinn and Scott Stringer (and a bunch of other pols) wrote the Chelsea Hotel’s tenants. Meanwhile, we had news on Joseph Chetrit’s loan for the big buy and his junior partner in the deal.

A supermajority of New Yorkers now support bike lanes.

We launched our campaign to be C.E.O. of the M.T.A.

W&H’s revamped 112 West 34th nailed two new deals.

A nonprofit decided to grow in Newmark’s 505 Eighth Avenue.

Bike lane advocates had high hopes for Caswell Holloway.

Harry Gross has very big hotel plans on Broadway.

Chris Ward shared the ground zero spotlight.

The East Village stretched to 20th Street and Avenue C.

American Idol‘s producer signed a deal in Trinity’s 435 Hudson.

We saw what is fermenting with Harlem’s first brewery since Prohibition: not a whole lot.

Suggestions were offered for where to reconstruct the Twin Towers.

Jeffrey Margolis had his first installment of the Dirt Dictionary.

Michael Stoler broke down the suburban markets.

Robert Ivanhoe talked about the recovery.

Robert Sorin talked about the big Google HQ buy and other large deals he’s worked on.

And Sam Chandan parsed the jobs report and the downgrade. And found…

tacitelli@observer.com  ::  Follow on Twitter @tacitelli

In House

ppw_bike_lane_1

Our Week in Real Estate: Rachel Uchitel; Stefano Tonchi; Christine Quinn; Chris Ward; Joseph Chetrit

We unveiled Jean Nouvel’s new MoMA tower plans.

Houston-based Hines cornered Bryant Park.

Governor Cuomo hung a U-turn on congestion pricing.

Christine Quinn and Scott Stringer (and a bunch of other pols) wrote the Chelsea Hotel’s tenants. Meanwhile, we had news on Joseph Chetrit’s loan for the big buy and his junior partner in the deal.

A supermajority of New Yorkers now support bike lanes.

The Rockaways, apparently, have been craving gentrification.

Rachel Uchitel went to contract on her place at 77 Park and turned a tidy sum.

We launched our campaign to be C.E.O. of the M.T.A.

Bike lane advocates had high hopes for Caswell Holloway.

Harry Gross has very big hotel plans on Broadway.

W editor Stefano Tonchi sold on West 12th Street.

Chris Ward shared the ground zero spotlight.

We recommended Justin Davidson as an architecture critic.

Dora the Explorer co-creator Eric Weiner sold his Ariel condo.

The East Village stretched to 20th Street and Avenue C.

American Idol‘s producer signed a deal in Trinity’s 435 Hudson.

We saw what is fermenting with Harlem’s first brewery since Prohibition: not a whole lot.

Suggestions were offered for where to reconstruct the Twin Towers.

Big Pharma and bike lanes–we found a connection.

And we trained it out to Childhood, Brooklyn.

tacitelli@observer.com   ::   Follow on Twitter @tacitelli

In House

capitol_building_washington_d_c_-normal

Our Week in Commercial Real Estate: Uptown Development; 1385 Full-Floor Deal; 636 A of A Anchor; St. Vincent’s Breakthrough

Vornado’s would-be Port Authority tower appeared to be running low on gas.

appeared to be running low on gas.

Tom Colicchio has a farm on East 29th, apparently.

We found out the condos coming to the new Brooklyn Bridge Park. There could be some real soon like.

Dan Biederman slammed cabbies and our beloved Steve Cuozzo.

Billy Macklowe and Jones Lang LaSalle turned 636 Avenue of the Americas into the SecondHand Building.

An era ended at the Chelsea Hotel as Joseph Chetrit closed on his buy.

The Landmarks Preservation Commission O.K.’d a new plan for St. Vincent’s.

We had more on that mini-development boom uptown.

The so-called ground zero mosque might, in fact, be five years off.

We wondered where Class A midtown availability was headed.

There was a full-floor deal in 1385 Broadway.

And another one at 561 Seventh.

Sam Chandan breaks down the debt-ceiling deal in D.C. and is not impressed.

We profiled Josh Kuriloff at Cushman & Wakefield. They love him in Chicago.

And we interviewed Shimon Shkury about uptown investment sales.

In House

Slammed.

Our Week in Real Estate: Park Slope Food Co-op; Port Authority Tower; Ground Zero Mosque; Bike Lanes; Brooklyn Bridge Park

Housing Authority Commish John Rhea sold on West End Avenue.

We debated the end of the lawsuits against the Prospect Park West bike lane.

Director Jason Reitman bought a West Chelsea co-op.

Vornado’s would-be Port Authority tower appeared to be running low on gas.

Tom Colicchio has a farm on East 29th, apparently.

We found out the condos coming to the new Brooklyn Bridge Park. There could be some real soon like.

Dan Biederman slammed cabbies and our beloved Steve Cuozzo.

We asked if a boycott of Israeli boycotts could mean the end of the Park Slope Food Co-op.

And we almost blew up the Co-op besides.

Good grief, more Co-op coverage! Walmart went the organic route in its marketing material.

Billy Macklowe and Jones Lang LaSalle turned 636 Avenue of the Americas into the SecondHand Building.

Vincent Gallo’s old place in 173 Perry is flipped.

An era ended at the Chelsea Hotel as Joseph Chetrit closed on his buy.

The Landmarks Preservation Commission O.K.’d a new plan for St. Vincent’s.

We had more on that mini-development boom uptown.

The so-called ground zero mosque might, in fact, be five years off.

Fifty-two years on, Samuel P. Peabody sold his 990 Fifth duplex.

In House

Mr. Riggins in his prime with the `82 Redskins.

Our Week in Real Estate: Jill Abramson; Andrew Cuomo; Jean Nouvel; Chris Vila; John Riggins; [World Famous Artist]

We asked in-depth if Conductor Cuomo can fix the M.T.A. now that Jay Walder’s leaving? It doesn’t look promising right out of the station.

Jean Nouvel’s controversial MoMA tower is back!

Ghurka’s moving its flagship from the Plaza to the Sherry.

The Kress spread at 1020 Fifth traded for the first time since the 1920s…

Was it a good deal back then?

Chris Vila (yeah, Bob’s boy) sold another fixer-upper.

There was a big trade in the Eldorado.

John Riggins—remember that guy?—made a cool $1 million.

Sunnyside and Woodside in Queens got downzoned.

There was major movement on retail at the trade center site.

Balconing is sweeping Europe—could it come to New York? Dear god!

Robert Knakal broke down 2Q investment sales by borough.

The Plaza district office market showed signs of pre-Lehman-ness.

Sam Chandan stayed on top of the European crisis.

Jill Abramson’s publisher expanded at 41 Madison.

A rainbow smiled beatifically on Frenk Gehry in New York.

And a world famous artist did not, in fact, design a bathroom.

And—and!—we introduced our inaugural Friday Mystery Edition of In Deed. Only the lawyers know!

tacitelli@observer.com  ::  Follow on Twitter @tacitelli

In House

Statler-Waldorf-Muppets-Costumes

Our Week in Real Estate: Will Zeckendorf; Deepak Chopra; Darius Kasparaitis; James Murdoch; the Muppets

William Lie Zeckendorf basically flipped Bruce Wasserstein’s old 927 Fifth place.

We gauged the height of the south tower in Related’s Hudson Yards.

Blackstone kingpin Tony James bought Hal Prince’s 834 Prince duplex.

An ex-Deutsche Bank exec clinged to Tribeca.

Ex-New York Ranger captain Darius Kasparaitis was checked on 59th Street.

The wonks—and ourselves a bit—grew immediately wistful for outgoing M.T.A. head Jay Walder.

Getty moved upstairs from New York at Trinity’s One Hudson Square.

Shack Shake pondered a Grand Central location

…While Apple confirmed it would, indeed, open one.

Related drew closer to its first lease at Hudson Yards.

Two artists bought a rather funky-looking place on the Lower East Side.

Deepak Chopra’s personal yoga instructor got a deal on Prince Street.

Robert Knakal analyzed what’s driving the investment sales market now.

Sam Chandan reported from Europe on the Italian financial crisis.

And we wondered aloud about what would become of the Muppet Mansion with James Murdoch so indisposed across the pond.

tacitelli@observer.com   ::   Follow on Twitter @tacitelli

In House

homersimpsonbeer

Our Week in Real Estate: Insurance Lenders; Harlem Brewery; 4 World Trade; Single Women; Windsor Knot

A Sydney investor bought a studio apartment here—sight (site?) unseen.

We learned why the laundromat always wins in housing considerations.

We toured Tower 4 and came back with photos showing the end of ennui over ground zero.

Insurance companies are the big lenders in the commercial marketplace right now, don’t you know?

The world’s largest LGBT synagogue bought its first property.

Paul Glickman filled us in on what he’s been doing since joining Jones Lang LaSalle last winter.

David Winoker talked about what he would do with garment center—and what he is doing.

We implored a thought for the FiDi residents without retail.

Single women are buying more real estate than single men, and brokers are responding sexist-ly in kind.

The real estate party has returned—but hold the Seal.

We learned about how 116 John Street became an apartment building.

Harlem will likely get its first brewery since Prohibition—we can’t believe this hasn’t gotten more pick-up!

There is a mini-development boom set to begin in Washington Heights and Harlem.

Brooklyn apartments in the second quarter: everything you would want to know here and here.

Sam Chandan wrote about the lousy jobs report and its effects on real estate investment.

Robert Knakal went after Albany on rent-regulation changes that aren’t really changes at all.

And we explored Windsor Knot. Read More

In House

Mmm... Bar-be-cue.

Our Week in Real Estate: Joseph Chetrit; Uncle Junior; 100K-Foot Leases; David LaChapelle; Sting; Trophy Tower Rents

We learned a lot about Joseph Chetrit, buyer of the Chelsea Hotel.

Maureen Orth, Vanity Fair writer and mother of Luke Russert, sold an apartment on the Upper West Side.

David LaChapelle sold one on the Lower East Side.

Sting’s kid, Jake Sumner, got a deal on one on Orchard Street, apparently.

Du Ponts swarmed a property on Bleecker (they’re WASPs—”swarm,” get it?)

Mystery maestro Harlan Coben sold his writer’s lair.

A Goldman Sachs VP sold his place in R*ver H*ouse.

The number of 100K-foot office leases has shot up.

As have rents in trophy towers about town.

Brookfield’s Grace Building grabbed one of the biggest law firm leases of `11.

A barbecue joint will join a beer bar in our building.

Manhattan apartment rents just don’t seem to vary that much.

And Uncle Junior got whacked on the Upper East Side. Read More