ReportWire

Tag: Commercial Real Estate

  • Assisted living senior care site in Los Gatos lands buyer from Chicago

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    LOS GATOS — A senior living community in Los Gatos that opened its doors earlier this year has been bought for more than $50 million by a big-time real estate investor from Chicago.

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    George Avalos

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  • Long-vacant Port Washington theater moving from film to fitness | Long Island Business News

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    The long-vacant Soundview Cinemas in Port Washington will be the new home of a local fitness center. 

    The Training Station Athletic Club has leased the 22,100-square-foot former movie theater space in the Soundview Marketplace shopping center, where it will relocate its current club on Channel Drive. 

    Peter and Susan Karika in their Port Washington club. / Courtesy of Training Station

    The Training Station, owned and operated by the husband-and-wife team of Peter and Susan Karika, opened its first facility on Main Street in Port Washington in 2000 and relocated to the building at 45 Channel Drive about five years later. The Karikas opened their second club in Glen Cove in 2006. 

    The Soundview location meets the Training Station’s requirements. 

    “The ceiling height is great because we need high ceilings, and the amount of space is what I wanted, which was between 20,000 and 25,000 square feet,” Peter Karika told LIBN. “The one problem I have here on Channel Drive is a lack of sufficient parking, and the parking will be great over there as well.” 

    The new space will also be a major investment, as Karika estimates spending between $3 million and $5 million on the new club’s buildout. 

    Besides the personal attention it provides its members, Karika said the Training Station is a cut above other fitness chains. 

    “We’re a full-service facility. We have everything you need as far as and fitness,” he said. “We do every type of class, separate yoga studio, separate spin studio, locker rooms with towel service, steam, sauna and a very large free-weight area for all those guys looking for that. Everything is under one roof with boutique pricing where everything is included.” 

    Monthly memberships currently range from $89 to $99. 

    Since the Training Station’s lease at Channel Drive expires a year from now on Oct. 31, 2026, Karika said the Soundview club will open by Nov. 1, 2026, or sooner. 

    Soundview Marketplace in Port Washington. / Courtesy of and

    Soundview Cinemas opened in May 1990 and after being taken over by Clearview Cinemas in 1998, the six-screen theater closed in 2010. The movie house was reopened by independent operator Soundview Cinemas in April 2013 but fell victim to the COVID-19 pandemic and went dark for good in September 2021. 

    The Training Station is the latest addition to the revitalized 188,109-square-foot Soundview Marketplace, which was only about 50 percent occupied when the center was purchased by a joint venture between Boca Raton, Fla.-based PEBB Enterprises and Manhattan-based Sagamore Hill Partners in Dec. 2020. The new ownership secured an $18.75 million refinancing of the complex two years ago and has been filling the 11-acre property with several new national and regional tenants. 

    With the Training Station lease, the Port Washington shopping center is now nearly fully occupied, with just one 1,810-square-foot space available. The Soundview Marketplace tenant roster includes Target, T.J. Maxx, West Marine, Walgreens, Five Below, Ace Hardware, Starbucks, Just Salad, GNC and many more. 

    Gary Friedman of Schacker Realty represented the Training Station, while Jason Sobel and Jeremy Isaacs of RIPCO Real Estate represented the landlord in the lease transaction. 


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    David Winzelberg

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  • Second Cherry Creek gateway corner sells for $3M

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    Doug McKinnon has sold another of his Cherry Creek gateway corners.

    The owner of real estate firm McKinnon & Associates last week sold 55-65 S. Colorado Blvd., two parcels that form the northwest corner of Colorado and Bayaud Avenue, for $3.2 million, according to public records.

    The undeveloped site is 0.38 acres, so the deal works out to $191 a square foot.

    McKinnon said the local buyer “will be utilizing the G-RO-5 zoning we put in place to develop an office building for his firm’s use on the site.”

    The property was purchased by DEG Realestate LLC, an entity formed by Alla Feldman with an office address corresponding to a home within Cherry Creek Country Club. Reached by phone, Feldman declined to comment on the purchase.

    No development plans have been submitted to Denver for the site.

    The corner lot is one of four on the outskirts of Cherry Creek — all marketed as a redevelopment opportunity — that a McKinnon-led group bought in 2019 for $5.5 million. The other lots were the southwest corner of Colorado and Bayaud and the southwest and northwest corners of Colorado and First Avenue.

    McKinnon got the sites rezoned in 2020 after striking an unusually detailed “good neighbor agreement” with surrounding residents. Then, he put “Cherry Creek Gateway” signage up at each of the properties indicating they were for sale.

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    Thomas Gounley

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  • Faropoint buys Deer Park industrial property for $7.55M | Long Island Business News

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    An industrial property in Deer Park has a new owner. 

    Hoboken, N.J.-based  purchased the fully occupied 40,000-square-foot building on 2.22 acres at 593 Acorn St. in Deer Park for $7.55 million. 

    The sale price equates to a 5.5 percent  

    The Acorn Street property is occupied by , a lighting systems manufacturer, which will remain operating there. Apogee, which uses recycled materials in its manufacturing, specializes in for commercial and public applications.  

    Apogee created the interior lighting structure above the main escalators at 7th Avenue at 32nd Street at Penn Station’s redesigned entrance, constructing the triangular array hanging from the ceiling. Other Apogee flagship jobs include lighting systems for the World Trade Center, Citigroup, One Vanderbilt, LIRR Third Track, many boardrooms around the country and several transit systems. 

    Founded in 2012, Faropoint is a investment firm that focuses on last-mile warehousing and distribution facilities. The company’s portfolio has more than 500 properties totaling over 26 million square feet throughout the U.S.  

    The Acorn Street property is Faropoint’s seventh acquisition on Long Island and second in Deer Park. The company purchased a 40,000-square-foot building at 105 E. Jefryn Blvd. for $8 million last year. Its other Long Island assets are in Bohemia, Farmingdale, Hauppauge and Bohemia. 

    “We’re thrilled to have completed this transaction at 593 Acorn Street in Deer Park,” Matthew Bernstein, Faropoint’s senior associate for acquisitions, told LIBN. “This property offers the ideal combination of location and functionality that aligns perfectly with the current demands of the Long Island industrial market. Apogee Lighting’s long-term commitment demonstrates the strength of this submarket and the quality of the asset.” 

    Faropoint was self-represented, while Bob Desmond of Industry One Realty represented the seller, Richard Nicolai, in the Deer Park sales transaction. 


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    David Winzelberg

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  • Reiffman Group embarks on $8.2M Plainview medical office project | Long Island Business News

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    THE BLUEPRINT:

    • acquired a 33,000-sq-ft medical office building in Plainview for $6.7M

    • $1.5M planned to modernize and reposition facility

    • Upgrades include new facade, ADA access, interiors, and landscaping

    • Part of a $100M initiative across NY metro area

     

    Rockville Centre-based Reiffman Group has acquired a property with plans for major improvements. 

    The company purchased a 33,000-square-foot building on 2 acres at 700 Old Country Road for $6.7 million. Reiffman Group will invest another $1.5 million in a capital improvement program to modernize and reposition the facility aimed at attracting regional healthcare providers, according to the company. The property, which was called Central Park Plaza Medical Arts Center, is currently about 80 percent occupied. 

    The redevelopment project will include a modernized facade with metal panel accents and upgraded glazing; redesigned entryways with new canopies and lighting; and new interiors and common areas with new flooring, wall coverings, lighting, artwork and reimagined lobby and waiting area. 

    Rendering of 700 Old Country Road redevelopment project. / Courtesy of Reiffman Group

    The improvements will also add energy-efficient windows and doors; refreshed landscaping with new plantings, paver walkways and upgraded site lighting; and updated ADA-compliant access points and wayfinding.  

    “This redevelopment reflects our continued commitment to enhancing the quality and design of healthcare real estate across Long Island,” said Ross Reiffman, president and CEO of Reiffman Group. “700 Old Country Road will serve as a best-in-class medical facility designed to meet the operational needs of premier healthcare providers while delivering a superior patient experience.” 

    The Plainview project is part of Reiffman Group’s ongoing $100 million healthcare real estate initiative across the New York metropolitan area. Earlier this year the company acquired a 20,000-square-foot building on 1.45 acres at 99 Smithtown Bypass for $5.3 million and invested an additional $2.5 million to transform the property for use as a diagnostic imaging center.  

    The Hauppauge building, formerly owned and occupied by Capital One Bank, was purchased by Zwanger-Pesiri Radiology in 2023, but the imaging firm didn’t pursue plans for redevelopment. Instead, Zwanger-Pesiri sold the property to Reiffman Group, signed a 15-year lease, and opened the facility last month. 

    Founded in 2023 by Ross Reiffman in collaboration with Mitchell Reiffman of ROCA Management, Reiffman Group specializes in healthcare-focused real estate investment and development. 

    Tom Bigansky of North Village Realty represented Reiffman Group, while Ron Koenigsberg of American Investment Properties represented the seller, Reservoir Associates, in the Plainview sales transaction. 

    Debt financing was arranged by Matthew Tarpley, Michael Fioravanti and Ravi Patel of Fifth Third Securities’ Real Estate Investment Banking team. 

    Reiffman Group is continuing to seek strategic acquisitions of value-add properties and development opportunities in the area’s healthcare real estate market. 


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    David Winzelberg

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  • Why These Small Businesses Are Moving Into Malls

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    For decades, small company owners hoping to move their business or expand it to a mall were confounded by a lack of available space, or prohibitively high rents for empty storefronts. Now, as the number of big box and restaurant chains pulling out of those locations increases, the entrepreneurs that want to set up shop in shopping centers once reserved for giants like JCPenny, Macy’s, and Starbucks are finding mall vacancies in many parts of the U.S. — and at times paying lower per-foot rents than those corporate giants.

    The list of large companies that have gone bankrupt or closed numerous stores in 2025 has been long, and includes craft chain Joann, Party City, Kohl’s, Big Lots, Claire’s, Dick’s Sporting Goods, and many more. While not all the big retailers and food businesses shuttering outlets have been based exclusively in malls, many maintain sizable footprints in U.S. shopping centers — including Starbucks, which last week announced hundreds of location closures. The subsequent slump in occupancy rates at many malls is now allows many smaller businesses to set up shop in them for the first time.

    A recent study by commercial real estate company Cushman & Wakefield estimated the national vacancy rate in malls at 5.8 percent in the second quarter of 2025. While that may not sound high, it represented a 20 basis point increase over Q1, and a 50 point hike since the same period in 2024. That evolution is now leading many owners or managers of underoccupied shopping centers to rethink their earlier aversion to renting to smaller businesses, whose lower cash reserves often prevent them from taking on assured, long-term leases.

    Instead, according to a recent report by CNBC, entrepreneurs are not only finding vacant space in malls available to rent. But they’re often also negotiating considerable deals on rent rates, business set up assistance, continual occupancy services, and shorter lease durations from owners. Some shopping centers set aside space for smaller businesses on more flexible terms, in hopes of converting them to longer-term leases, according to ICSC, a trade association of shopping center owners. Not surprisingly, more entrepreneurs want o seize those opportunities to move into shopping centers.

    “That kind of access wasn’t on the table for startups and small businesses three years ago in most metro areas,” Teresha Aird, co-founder and chief marketing officer of the Offices.net real estate brokerage, told the business news channel. “Now it is, and they’re making the most of it to test physical presence without overextending capital… The result is a more flexible, opportunity-rich environment that can be a lifeline for entrepreneurs navigating tight margins and competitive markets.” 

    The new opportunities for smaller businesses to rent mall space aren’t evenly spread across the country. For example, experts note that availability of nearly any commercial space in the New York City area is so tight that even converted warehouses are tough to lease. But many major U.S. urban centers — especially in medium-sized city centers and inner-ring suburbs of larger cities where big retailers have shut stores — the chances for entrepreneurs to move in on malls are multiplying.

    To be sure, some shopping center owners continue betting they have more to gain by waiting for big box, anchor tenant occupants. Rather than renting to entrepreneurs with smaller budget looking for shorter leases at lower costs, many mall managers hold out for so-called “credit tenants” with large enough reserves to sign 5- to 7-year contracts at full market rates.

    But an increasing number of mall landlords are feeling enough pressure on their vacancy rates and revenue that they’re now looking to rent to small businesses — even some pop-up stores. Many are even adding sweeteners to bring entrepreneurs aboard.

    “In West Des Moines, a family-owned restaurant recently assumed an old chain pizzeria location at a rent of almost 30 percent below the original asking rent,” local real estate broker Jacob Naig told CNBC — adding the owner helped finance the kitchen redesign. “Such a deal wouldn’t have been possible just five years ago.”

    There also may be another factor at work in the small business migration to malls. According to a recent study by location intelligence and foot traffic data company Placer.ai, small and niche retail and food companies are helping transform the entire shopping mall experience.

    That involves giving consumers used to swooping in for fast, targeted buying blasts reasons to stay longer. Former single-store visitors to malls may now also get medical or wellness treatment, go to the gym, see local service providers, take in a spa, and enjoy a fancier meal than typical food court businesses usually offer.

    As part of that, entrepreneurs can take over prime locations that national chains gave up, and add local, quality goods, meals, and services that effectively rebrand some malls. At the same time, they benefit from the work of former corporate occupants, who previously researched and identified those spaces as good for business.

    “These spaces already had a site selection review, foot traffic, and locals are used to seeing activity in the space,” said entrepreneur Andy LaPointe, the owner of Michigan gourmet food company Traverse Bay Farms, who told CNBC he now operates locations in two strip malls. “But the magic happens when a small business brings, not a cookie-cutter replacement, but something unique, a place to linger and a sense of belonging… So when a national chain leaves a space, it isn’t just a gap, it’s a canvas for a small, local business to create something lasting.”

    And that, after all, is what small businesses do best.

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    Bruce Crumley

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  • Capstone taps JLL for Franklin Avenue Plaza leasing | Long Island Business News

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    THE BLUEPRINT:

    • acquired for $41M

    • appointed exclusive leasing agent for 523,758 SF complex

    • Office space available at $36/SF with modern amenities

    • Current tenants include Merrill Lynch, Stifel, and ShelterPoint

     

    The new ownership of a sprawling Garden City office complex has retained JLL as the property’s exclusive leasing agent. 

    Known as Franklin Avenue Plaza, the four-building complex, totaling 523,758 square feet, was acquired by Manhattan-based Capstone Equities. Capstone, led by principals Joshua Zamir and Avi Kollenscher, purchased the properties from The Treeline Companies for about $41 million this summer, according to real estate industry sources. The Treeline Companies acquired Franklin Avenue Plaza in 2007 from Cammeby’s International for about $99 million. 

    The complex includes the three-story 1205 Franklin Ave., the six-story 1225 Franklin Ave., the five-story 1305 Franklin Ave. And the six-story 1325 Franklin Ave. The four office buildings are about 88 percent occupied by a variety of financial and professional services firms, including Merrill Lynch, Stifel, Bessemer Trust, and ShelterPoint Insurance, according to a JLL statement. 

    Amenities at the Garden City office complex include a fitness center, conferencing facility, full-service café, and a dry cleaner. 

    “Franklin Avenue Plaza has a strong legacy as a cornerstone of the Garden City office landscape, and we are excited to build on that foundation at a time when the office market is rapidly evolving,” Zamir said in the statement. “We look forward to collaborating with JLL to support current tenants and welcome new businesses seeking inspiring, high-quality office space in a prime setting.” 

    The JLL team of Joe Lopresti, Kyle Crennan and Brian Weigold are leading the marketing efforts for Franklin Avenue Plaza. 

    “We are thrilled to be partnering with Capstone Equities to reintroduce such a prominent office complex to the market,” Lopresti said in the complex. “With a well-capitalized new owner in place, we will be able to deliver top-quality buildouts, refreshed common areas, and upgraded amenities for tenants. The stage is set for an exciting new chapter at Franklin Avenue Plaza, and we look forward to attracting and retaining leading businesses in the area.” 

    Most of the available office space at Franklin Avenue Plaza is being offered at $36 a square foot. 


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    David Winzelberg

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  • Suffolk OTB expands and relocates in Hauppauge | Long Island Business News

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    Suffolk Regional Off-Track Betting Corporation has a new headquarters. 

    is relocating 90 to 100 of its employees to its new property at 1180 in Hauppauge. 

    The three-story, 37,113-square-foot office building on 2.19 acres was purchased by Suffolk OTB for $6.5 million in Feb. 2022. 

    The property was formerly occupied by the Internal Revenue Service, which moved its personnel to the IRS offices at 5000 Corporate Court in Holtsville. The new headquarters represents an expansion for OTB, as its leased office space on Oser Avenue, where most of its staff is relocating from, is about one-third the size. 

    “While our Suffolk OTB staff had historically been dispersed over multiple buildings in the county, this new corporate headquarters will make our company much more efficient by housing everyone under one roof,” Phil Boyle, Suffolk OTB’s president and CEO, told LIBN. “We are also fortunate that the building is located within minutes of our primary asset, Hotel.” 

    As OTB staff continues to move over to the new , the $210 million expansion and renovation project at Jake’s 58 continues in Islandia. Construction on the new three-and-a-half level, 168,000-square-foot parking garage has been completed and the casino’s new 110,500-square-foot building that will house an additional 1,000 video gaming machines is expected to be finished next summer. 

    The renovations at Jake’s 58 hotel, which include a new 17,500-square-foot VIP lounge and entertainment area, a 3,500-square-foot space for weddings, parties and corporate , a “high-end” restaurant, and renovations to the existing casino, third floor offices and the hotel’s 210 guest rooms, will get underway once the new building opens. 

    John LaRuffa, Nicholas Gallipoli and Frank Frizalone of Cushman & Wakefield brokered the deal and represented the seller, VMH Realty LLC, in the Hauppauge sales transaction.   


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    David Winzelberg

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  • East End restaurant on tap for fast-food transformation | Long Island Business News

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    Papa Joseph’s in Manorville sold for $3.2M to N.J.-based PN Restaurants, with plans to redevelop it into fast-food spot.

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    David Winzelberg

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  • Inked: Long Island retail and industrial real estate deals | Long Island Business News

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    2982 Veterans Memorial Highway, Bohemia

    Riders Choice Supply Limited, which also does business as Riders Choice Saddlery, leased a 1,225-square-foot space at 2982 Veterans Memorial Highway in Bohemia. The new owner of the business, Jaclyn Vecchione, relocated the company from 3333 Veterans Memorial Highway in Ronkonkoma. Jamie Winkler of Winkler Real Estate represented the tenant, as well as the landlord, Ebert Family Trust, in the lease transaction.

     

    1 Saxwood St., Deer Park

    La Nonna’s Pasta, an importer and distributor of Italian food specialties, purchased the 20,000-square-foot building on 1.1 acres at 1 Saxwood St. in Deer Park for $3.9 million, which was $100,000 over the asking price. La Nonna’s, which is relocating from space it leases nearby, will be occupying about half of the building, as the other half is leased by Nutra Solutions, a provider of dietary supplements, nutraceuticals, sports nutrition and functional nutritional products. Built in 1973, the building has 16-foot ceilings, two loading docks and two drive-in doors. Alberto Fiorini of Alliance Real Estate represented the buyer, while Alan Yaffe of United Realty represented the seller, PKL Realty LLC, in the sales transaction.

     

    25 West Sunrise Highway, Freeport

    Version Performance Inc. leased a 5,104-square-foot commercial building on .26 acres at 25 West Sunrise Highway in Freeport. Jesse Jimenez of Primal Property Group represented the tenant, while the landlord, Frontseat LLC, was self-represented in the lease transaction.

     

    15-17 Oak St., Patchogue

    Set Straight Realty, an affiliate of a dental practice, purchased the 9,000-square-foot retail building on .34 acres at 15-17 Oak St. in Patchogue for $1.895 million. The dental office will occupy the ground floor and School of Rock occupies the lower level. Michael Murphy of Douglas Elliman Commercial represented the buyer, as well as the seller, Day For A Daydream LLC, in the sales transaction.

     

    5070 Sunrise Highway, Massapequa

    NY Performance LLC, an automotive diagnostics business, leased a 1,000-square-foot retail building on .25 acres at 5070 Sunrise Highway in Massapequa. Chris Ferencsik of Schacker Realty represented the tenant, as well as the landlord, J.W. Mays Inc., in the lease transaction.

     

    2155 Fifth Ave., Ronkonkoma

    Legacy Lacrosse leased a 16,000-square-foot industrial building on 1.1 acres at 2155 Fifth Ave. in Ronkonkoma. Michael Murphy and Thomas Kelly of Douglas Elliman Commercial represented the tenant, while Gary Pezza of DGNY Commercial represented the landlord, 2155 Fifth Realty, in the lease transaction.

     

    335 Route 25A, Miller Place

    Dollar General leased an 11,679-square-foot retail space in the Miller Place Square shopping center at 335 Route 25A in Miller Place. The space was formerly occupied by Rite Aid. Dennis Gandley of Douglas Elliman Commercial and Jonathan Sussman of JRS Realty Advisors represented the tenant, while Devang Patel of Douglas Elliman Commercial represented the landlord, Pina Construction Corp., in the lease transaction.


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    David Winzelberg

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  • Center Moriches industrial property sells for $4.425M | Long Island Business News

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    Fully leased Center Court Industrial Park in Center Moriches sold for $4.425M.

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    David Winzelberg

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  • Efforts underway to fill empty merchant spaces at Signia hotel in San Jose

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    SAN JOSE — Wide-ranging efforts are underway to find merchants to fill the empty ground-floor spaces along two sides of the Signia by Hilton San Jose, endeavors that could help lift the downtown economy if they succeed.

    Colliers, a commercial real estate firm, has begun to scout for dining establishments and retailers for the hotel tower at 170 South Market St.

    “We are looking to lease about 30,000 square feet of spaces at the Signia,” said Nick Goddard, a senior vice president with Colliers. “We are going to put some high-end restaurants in some of those spaces. These will be very fine, swanky dining establishments.”

    Some of the spaces will be leased to retailers, such as personal salons and spas, according to Goddard.

    “We are already getting inquiries from some top-level restaurants,” Goddard said.

    The spaces are for the sides of the building that front on the Paseo de San Antonio and South First Street, according to Goddard.

    “Marketing efforts are not the problem with filling these spaces, it’s the uncertainty of the time and cost it will take to permit and occupy the spaces,” said Bob Staedler, principal executive with Silicon Valley Synergy, a land-use and planning consultancy.

    Finding more merchants for downtown San Jose is deemed crucial ahead of the potential influx of visitors expected to attend three mega sports events that are slated to occur in the South Bay during 2026.

    “The City of San Jose needs to step up and provide proactive assistance in filling these key spaces,” Staedler said. “The wait-and-see approach has not been working to date. We don’t need to wait until after 2026 to realize that this is a problem.”

    The 541-room, 22-story Signia by Hilton is San Jose’s largest hotel and was seized by its lender, BrightSpire Capital, through a foreclosure on May 12.

    The lender’s foreclosure placed a value of $80 million on the hotel, which was 41% below the $134 million loan for the property.

    During a July conference call with Wall Street analysts to discuss financial results, BrightSpire discussed its plans for the hotel in the wake of the foreclosure.

    “Our intention is to make much-needed and neglected physical and operational improvements to the property ahead of significant events taking place in the Bay Area through mid-2026,” BrightSpire CEO Mike Mazzei told analysts. “We want to do things that we need to do to get that hotel fully operational and in peak condition before those events.”

    The hotel fell into some level of disrepair as the prior ownership group was preoccupied with three court proceedings that were filed in an attempt to retain control of the property, according to BrightSpire.

    “During the protracted foreclosure process, the hotel experienced meaningful deferred maintenance,” Mazzei said. “There was some distress at the asset. There were just basic things like elevators. Some elevators were not operating and offline.”

    BrightSpire has signaled the possibility that it might attempt to sell the hotel after the major sporting events next year.

    San Jose hotel operators hope to capitalize on the Super Bowl, multiple matches for the FIFA World Cup, and several of the games of the men’s college basketball tournament that are being held in the South Bay in 2026.

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    George Avalos

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  • SIOR to host Power Broker Summit in Uniondale | Long Island Business News

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    Commercial real estate pros will be featured at the SIOR Power Broker Summit in Uniondale on Sept. 17.

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    David Winzelberg

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  • Construction firm buys San Jose office complex, eyes unified work hub

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    SAN JOSE — Rosendin Electric, a century-old electrical contractor born out of a San Jose garage in 1919, purchased a San Jose research and office complex known as The Orchards in a deal that enables the firm to gather multiple operations into a unified work hub.

    Barings, a real estate investment firm, was the seller of the 144,900-square-foot two-building property at 3000 and 3030 Orchard Parkway.

    Through the deal, a Barings affiliate was paid $23 million for the buildings and received an additional undisclosed amount paid by two departing tenants to terminate their leases, according to multiple sources familiar with the transaction. The $23 million that Rosendin paid Barings was disclosed in a grant deed filed with the Santa Clara County Recorder’s Office on Aug. 29.

    Newmark commercial real estate brokers Joe Kelly, Jon Mackey, Steven Golubchik and Edmund Najera and Colliers commercial real estate broker Michael Rosendin arranged the transaction.

    The deal is a fresh indicator of heightened interest in purchases or leases of office sites in north San Jose.

    Among the recent deals:

    — In June, E Ink Corp. bought a San Jose office building at 3200 North First St. for $22.7 million in a deal that gives the firm a large space for its operations.

    Vibrant Wellness paid $17.5 million in September for an office building at 3100 North First St. that the biotech company can use for expanded operations.

    — In January, Goodwill of Silicon Valley disclosed it capitalized on a failed property loan to pave the way for its purchase of a new headquarters site at 1600 Technology Dr.

    — Nvidia in April launched improvements on an office building at 300 Holger Way that will allow room for expansion.

    — Archer Aviation in August leased an office building at 10 West Tasman Dr. that had been taken back by a lender through a loan foreclosure.

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    George Avalos

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  • Long-held Valley Stream apartment property has new owner | Long Island Business News

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    Inked: Long Island commercial real estate sales and leases

    Recent Long Island commercial deals include property sales in Oceanside, Babylon, Riverhead, and North Babylon[…]

    August 21, 2025

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    David Winzelberg

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  • Cucina Colore corner in Cherry Creek sells for $10M

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    The Cherry Creek corner that is home to Italian restaurant Cucina Colore has sold, although the buyer has no immediate plans to redevelop it.

    “We’ll probably just land bank it for the time being,” said Kevin Beck.

    Beck and his wife, acting as Phenomena LLC, paid $9.85 million on Friday for the northwest corner of Third Avenue and St. Paul Street, according to public records.

    The building at 3035-3041 E. Third Ave. is about 7,000 square feet and leased to four tenants. Cucina Colore has operated there since 1994 and has multiple years left on its lease, Beck said. The deal also included the parking lot behind the buildings.

    The entire site is 0.43 acre, meaning the deal works out to $525 a square foot based on the land. It’s zoned for up to four stories. For comparison, the same-sized Cherry Creek Dance lot four blocks west sold for $7.8 million in April.

    “We just think it’s a good long-term investment,” Beck said. “We think there’s a redevelopment opportunity over time.”

    Beck, 54, is an executive with Paradice Investment Management, an investment firm that operates in Cherry Creek in a building he and his wife also own. The couple live nearby. Paradice was not involved in last week’s purchase.

    The properties were sold by Beall Group LLC and Green City LLC, which had owned them for decades. Mary Beall signed on behalf of both entities.

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    Thomas Gounley

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  • Wedbush Securities joins downtown L.A. exodus, opting for smaller, more flexible office in Pasadena

    Wedbush Securities joins downtown L.A. exodus, opting for smaller, more flexible office in Pasadena

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    One of downtown Los Angeles’ familar tenants is pulling up stakes as the office rental market continues to contract from shrinking occupancy stoked by the pandemic.

    Financial services firm Wedbush Securities has begun its move from a prominent office tower to Pasadena, where it will occupy much smaller offices meant to accommodate employees who now work remotely much of the time.

    The firm is leaving behind Wedbush Center, which overlooks the Harbor Freeway and sports two signs on top bearing the company name. Wedbush has been headquartered in the Wilshire Boulevard building since 2001 and its lease expires next year.

    “It’s a big deal, a very big decision for the firm,” President Gary Wedbush said of the move. “The pandemic and COVID created a different kind of office for us.”

    With most employees required to be in the office only a third of the time, Wedbush is creating an office oriented toward shared workspaces that can be used as needed by various employees instead of assigned desks, he said.

    The move was also influenced by the changed nature of downtown’s financial district since thousands of office workers departed during the COVID-related shutdown and probably won’t return again in pre-pandemic numbers. Many shops and restaurants remain closed and office tenants have said the streets feel less safe than they used to.

    Although Wedbush said “downtown has been fantastic for us,” other locations have become more attractive. “There are places like Pasadena that seem to have recovered more fully from the pandemic than downtown Los Angeles has. That was a part of the decision-making” to move.

    The firm leases more than 100,000 square feet at Wedbush Center but will occupy about 20,000 square feet in an office complex on Lake Avenue in one of Pasadena’s leading commercial districts.

    “The amenities on Lake Avenue are fantastic,” Wedbush said. “Casual restaurants to really fine dining, fitness centers — it just had everything.”

    Wedbush’s move, which will take place formally in the first half of 2025, reflects a trend that has been affecting downtown and much of Los Angeles County for the last few years, real estate brokerage CBRE said in a recent report on office leasing.

    “The Greater Los Angeles office market continued its search for the bottom” in the third quarter, CBRE said, as both tenants and landlords “navigate the ongoing supply and demand imbalance exacerbated by the shift to hybrid and remote work.”

    Companies adapting to new work models are leaving behind large chunks of office space, and the change is particularly noticeable downtown, where CBRE said overall vacancy is more than 30%, triple the amount considered to be a healthy balance between tenant and landlord interests.

    Wedbush Securities’ shift to hybrid work, with people in the office some days and not others, created the chance to make a different kind of office with a smaller footprint and more shared spaces to collaborate or work away from a traditional desk, Wedbush said.

    About 70% of the office will be considered “hotel” space where employees can choose a workstation on days they are present while the remaining 30% will be offices for financial advisors and others who need privacy to meet with clients.

    A stark difference will be that the shared workstations will be around the windows with views of the city and the offices will be in the center of the building. In the old arrangement, individual offices were much larger and occupied the prime space along the windows, Wedbush said.

    One of the two floors Wedbush Securities leased in Pasadena has a rooftop deck that Wedbush plans to make into an outdoor office space with conference tables, workstations where people can plug in their computers and places to unwind.

    “It’s not just going to be a couple of tables and umbrellas,” he said. “The opportunity to build out this new space was a big driver in us moving out of our building that we’ve loved for so, so many years.”

    Wedbush Securities was co-founded in 1955 by Wedbush’s father, Edward, in Los Angeles and now has close to 900 employees in 28 cities across the country, Wedbush said. “We’re really proud of our Los Angeles legacy.”

    Wedbush’s decision to dramatically shrink its headquarters underscores not only the continued struggles of the office rental market in the wake of the pandemic but broader vulnerabilities in commercial real estate throughout L.A. County.

    A report released by real estate services firm NAI Capital said that in the third quarter of 2024, Los Angeles County’s commercial real estate market experienced a sharp 18.4% year-to-date decline in sales volume and a rise in real estate cap rates, a metric used to estimate an investor’s rate of return based on the income that the property is expected to generate.

    It may be a low point in the real estate cycle for property sales, NAI Capital Chief Executive Chris Jackson said.

    “With cap rates on the rise, California regulations, and high interest rates throughout 2024, the commercial real estate market took a bit of a dip” with office properties “hit particularly hard,” Jackson said. “However, with interest rates expected to decline more substantially in 2025, we anticipate a significant rebound in real estate sales.”

    Sales are being further limited by taxes and government fees, particularly Measure ULA, the property transfer tax in Los Angeles that took effect in 2023, the report said. Dubbed the “mansion tax,” Measure ULA imposed a 4% tax on real estate transactions over $5 million and a 5.5% tax on those exceeding $10 million. In June, those thresholds increased to $5.15 million and $10.3 million.

    The tax has contributed to a nearly 40% year-over-year drop in sales of office, retail, industrial and multifamily properties, or $1.9 billion below last year’s total, the report said.

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    Roger Vincent

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  • Why You Should Consider Commercial Real Estate as Your Next Investment | Entrepreneur

    Why You Should Consider Commercial Real Estate as Your Next Investment | Entrepreneur

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    Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

    Real estate is one of the biggest industries in today’s world. From buying property as an investment to buying your own home, real estate impacts every person’s life in one way or another. Although it’s a beast of an industry, you do not necessarily have to work in real estate to invest in it. In fact, many people buy properties simply to make a passive income with no intention of making it their full-time job.

    Here are some reasons why commercial real estate could be a great investment for you.

    Related: Tap Into the Wealth Potential of Commercial Real Estate With These 5 Tips

    Passive income

    By investing in a property, you are going to be able to make a passive income — a check you don’t have to actively work for. Depending on the property you buy, you can rent out the space to tenants and get paid each month that they occupy the building. In turn, the income can be recycled to pay for the property and its expenses or be used to invest in other properties without having to touch other funds. This is great because this is monthly income that you do not have to actively work for.

    Tax advantages

    By investing in real estate, there are many deductions and breaks that can actually help when it comes to paying your taxes. Also, any money you make on the sale of the property will be seen as capital gains and not an income, therefore lowering the amount of taxes you would have to pay on that money.

    Cash flow

    As you rent out the property and the tenants pay their rent, you will create a steady cash flow for yourself and increase your own income. As the mortgage gets paid, this will also help build your equity, which can help you invest in more properties and build up overall wealth.

    Diversification

    When investing money, it is always good to invest in different types of assets to ensure you have stable and reliable returns. Commercial real estate can diversify a portfolio — and in case of a market crash, properties remain unaffected, whereas stocks and bonds plummet. It’s also a tangible asset that you can touch and feel, unlike other forms of investments. Tangible assets can help minimize the total risk in investments and help you build a profitable portfolio.

    Related: 6 Key Questions You Should Always Ask Before Investing in a Commercial Real-Estate Property

    Leverage

    Most times, buying a piece of real estate requires an initial cash investment. That investment can gain a very high return that can completely cover the debts of the property. For example, if you pay a down payment of 20% and the other 80% is debt, the property only needs to appreciate 20% for the invested equity to be 100%. However, this comes with the risk that if the property does not become profitable, it may have to go into foreclosure if the monthly payments cannot be made.

    Appreciation

    Real estate investments offer a lot of potential growth and appreciation that you may not have in more classic avenues of investing. For example, an investor can choose to buy and develop a property in an area they believe is up-and-coming. In that case, as the popularity of the neighborhood increases, the value of their property significantly rises and can lead to great capital appreciation.

    Inflation hedge

    As the economy grows and inflation rises and falls, commercial real estate doesn’t feel the long-term impacts. Luckily, rents can be adjusted accordingly to the inflation rate and offset the impact. This results in strong rent growth and appreciation for your property, despite any worsening conditions in the economy. With other investments like stocks and bonds, inflation almost always has a negative impact.

    On the flip side…

    Commercial real estate, like any investment, has downsides as well.

    For starters, it’s a time commitment. Investors need to put time into managing and taking care of the property and its tenants. All of the building concerns and problems fall into the lap of the owner, so that aspect needs to be taken into consideration.

    This leads to another downside — managing and taking care of the building usually requires outside help, like property management companies. These companies are not cheap and can be costly. However, this is really the only way to properly run the building and avoid running into issues.

    This leads to the need for cash. Unlike residential real estate, commercial properties need a lot more capital for the initial investment and then cash that needs to be put into the property to maintain it. This makes commercial real estate investing unappealing since there are a lot of costs to carry the property, and it can take time for the revenue to outweigh the costs.

    Related: 5 Proven Steps to Become a Real Estate Millionaire, According to an Investor

    At the end of the day, every investment comes with risks. No investment is guaranteed. However, some may be a little bit more secure than others. Commercial real estate is a great idea if you’re someone looking to diversify your portfolio and find another way to increase your wealth. Although it may be daunting, and the initial investments can be scary, the returns can be very high and worth it!

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    Erica Dushey Sarway

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  • GPI Companies pays nearly $93M for Lofts at NoHo Commons

    GPI Companies pays nearly $93M for Lofts at NoHo Commons

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    GPI Companies paid $92.5 million for the 292-unit Lofts at NoHo Commons, further bolstering the real estate investment firm’s presence in the L.A. market.

    The purchase price, confirmed by an industry source, pencils out to nearly $317,000 per unit for the property at 11179 Weddington Street in North Hollywood.

    The company nabbed a deal on the property. KBS Strategic Opportunity REIT II and MWest Holdings paid $102.5 million for the asset in 2016 before renovating it the following year.

    The property is hard to miss from the street, with the exterior bearing the art of Berlin artist Thierry Noir, who was commissioned by MWest to paint a 15,000-square-foot mural stretching from an alley at 11136 Chandler Boulevard to 11135 Weddington Street. The work, named “Freedom Boulevard Wall,” represents Noir’s largest-ever mural and was unveiled in 2017 as Los Angeles and Berlin rang in their 50th year as sister cities.

    Lofts at NoHo Commons offers studio, one-bedroom and live/work units. Apartments have 11- to 14-foot ceilings, track lighting and in-unit washers and dryers, while community amenities include an Olympic-size pool and screening room.

    The building’s occupancy has averaged 94 percent over the past decade, according to GPI.

    Greystar was tapped to manage the apartment building.

    GPI’s North Hollywood acquisition is the latest move in the area for the Los Angeles-based real estate investment firm.

    The company recently completed its West Hollywood apartment building, called Nine Thousand One, at 9001 Santa Monica Boulevard. GPI’s also in construction on the six-story, 201-unit Overland & Ayres, located at 2455 South Overland Avenue. GPI and Nahla Capital are also developing the upscale Beverly Hills condo project Rosewood Residences.

    Read more

    GPI Companies gets $150M loan on Beverly Hills condos


    A rendering of West End

    GPI scores $120M construction loan for Westside Pavilion


    GPI looks for big return on 110K sf Burbank medical complex


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    Kari Hamanaka

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  • What Chicago’s iconic Marshall Field’s tells us about retail

    What Chicago’s iconic Marshall Field’s tells us about retail

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    The department store’s legacy was a blueprint for modern commerce, and his influence is still alive in almost every retail experience we have today.

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    Allen Buchanan

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