Sunday, July 27, 2008

Whose Block Is It Anyway?

Tenants vs. landlords, buyers vs. residents, developers vs. community boards: The six nastiest real-estate battles in town, and who’s likely to come out ahead.

By S.Jhoanna Robledo, New York Magazine
Published Jul 20, 2008

201 WEST 92ND ST./200 WEST 93RD ST.

The Battle
Developer Kent Swig bought these tenement-style rentals full of stabilized tenants in 2005, planning to add nine stories atop the six already there. The agitated residents recruited politicians and local activists, and though prep work did begin, construction was stopped by the Department of Buildings after residents worried loudly about all that was going on above their heads.

Who’s Winning?
The little guys—for now. Swig never added the extra floors, and he sold the buildings three weeks ago for $61 million, reportedly at a loss, to an investment group. (A spokesperson for Swig Equities says, “We are a private company and do not disclose our profits.”) “We won round one,” says a concerned resident. “Swig’s a major player, and he couldn’t make a go of it—how will this guy?”

THE APTHORP

The Battle
Last year, diamond mogul Lev Leviev paid $426 million for 50 percent of this West Side landmark. (Mann Realty owns the rest.) Condo conversion was approved soon after, at prices—$3,000 a square foot?!—that the tenants found staggering. Particularly the ones who’d been dealing with bad plumbing and indifferent maintenance for decades.

Who’s Winning?
The landlord, probably. Even at those steep prices, and even though it’s not on the park, “it’s a fabulous building. People will want it,” says Stribling’s Kirk Henckels. As for the oldsters, “they’re protected by rent regulation,” says Jon Herbitter, president of Mann. “We haven’t tried to get rid of them if they’re legitimate. They’re welcome to buy”—at the going rates—“and they’re welcome to stay.”

STUYVESANT TOWN/PETER COOPER VILLAGE

The Battle
More anxiety than actual fighting, ever since the complexes went market-rate and were sold to Tishman Speyer in 2006. Though Tishman insists that it has no plans (and no legal way) to toss out the old-timers, there’s a certain amount of fear among them. There’s also a culture clash between the very stable regulated tenants and the transient newbies, many of them NYU kids.

Who’s Winning?
The apartments are renting well (the complex had its “busiest leasing months ever over the course of the spring and into this summer,” says a spokesperson for Tishman Speyer), and a landscaping project, free yoga classes, a new fitness center, and a screening room will benefit tenants old and new. But many older residents feel deeply alienated by the slickness appearing around them.

MANHATTAN HOUSE

The Battle
Bought in 2005 by Richard Kalikow and Jeremiah O’Connor, the original East Side white-brick is going condo, and tenants contended that their offers to buy were rebuffed. (They had wanted major price breaks.) The current gripes center on disruptions from renovations. “They’re making life so unbearable!” says writer-producer Pat Lynch. “I work in my apartment, and I can’t get anything done.”

Who’s Winning?
A legal salvo on the part of the tenants—“They made some mistakes on the offering plan,” says tenants-association head Rafael Urquia—foundered in the lower courts, but they’re considering an appeal. Meanwhile, according to StreetEasy.com, 85 of the 500 or so apartments have found buyers. O’Connor and Kalikow have also bickered, and Kalikow’s no longer involved.

COLUMBUS VILLAGE/PARK WEST VILLAGE

The Battle
The complex from 97th Street to 100th Street on Columbus Avenue is being expanded, and the Chetrit Group and Stellar Management wantto lure big retailers. (T.J. Maxx and Whole Foods are signed, says The Real Deal.) “The public has been excluded from the planning process, which is contrary to the law,” says Paul Bunten, whose group is taking the Department of Buildings and the owners to court.

Who’s Winning?
Hard to call. “We intend to take this show on the road to work with other neighborhoods,” says Bunten. But Chetrit has been making nice: Since the collapse, it’s held monthly meetings to address community issues. “It’s difficult anytime you’re building a big project in New York,” says Chetrit’s Jeff Gdanski, “but we’re confident everyone will be happy once we’re finished.”

ST. VINCENT CATHOLIC MEDICAL CENTERS

The Battle
The hospital’s plan to raze several low-scale buildings and build upward has incurred the wrath of Greenwich Village’s legendarily cranky NIMBYs. They’re hoping the Landmarks Preservation Commission won’t okay the project, which falls in a historic neighborhood. Complicating things, the hospital is in a financial crunch, and nobody wants to see cuts in patient care.

Who’s Winning?
The proposal has been revised a few times—now only five buildings have to be razed as opposed to the original nine, and the developer, Rudin Management, has shrewdly agreed to add a badly needed public school. “It feels like we’ve really listened to the community,” says COO John Gilbert. Said community remains suspicious, but some version of the project is clearly going to happen.

Friday, March 14, 2008

Manhattan House goes retail

Crain's New York Business
by Kira Bindrim
March 11, 2008

The Manhattan House is hoping to charge $100 million, but not for a condominium.

Jeremiah O’Connor, owner of O’Connor Capital Partners and the swanky Manhattan House, is pursuing a $100 million sale of the building’s retail, office and park spaces, according to The Real Deal.

Mr. O’Connor has hired Eastdil Secured to find a buyer for the space, on 200 East 66th Street, which includes 25,000 square feet of retail, 7,350 square feet of office spate and a 225-car garage.

High-end condominiums may draw high-end retailers. The area already houses luxury shops like Club Monaco, and the conversion could draw other stores looking to cash in on residents’ deep pockets. According to the Real Deal, both Brooks Brothers and White House Black Market (which sells only black and white clothing and accessories) are potential tenants. Asking rents for the space, between Second and Third Aves., range between $200 and $350 per square foot.

That’s a far cry from the building’s humble origins. Similar to the Peter Cooper Village and Stuyvesant Town complexes, Manhattan House was commissioned by New York Life Insurance Co. as an affordable-housing building for middle-class New Yorkers. Close to 250 of the building’s 583 apartments remain rent-stabilized

But unlike other white-brick buildings, Manhattan House will be around for awhile: The city declared the rags-to-riches site a landmark last year.

With the public eye trained on celebrities’ real estate moves, Mr. O’Connor has already marketed the Manhattan House as the former home of Grace Kelly. But between the litigation-filled condo conversion, and a credit crunch that has fewer people looking to shell out $14 million for an apartment, snagging high-end retailers might be his latest effort to meet deadlines: the developer must sell 15% of its apartments by June 1 in order to receive full financing for the conversion.

Manhattan House looks to cash in on selling retail space

The Real Deal
Author: David Jones
March 11, 2008

The owner of the Manhattan House is pursuing a $100 million sale of the building's retail, office and parking space, a move that observers say could bring several major apparel retailers to the Upper East Side apartment complex, including Brooks Brothers Inc.

Jeremiah O'Connor, owner of O'Connor Capital Partners, has hired Eastdil Secured to find a buyer for the space, which includes 25,000 square feet of retail, 7,350 square feet of office space as well as a 225-car garage. O'Connor is converting the 200 East 66th Street complex into condominiums.

Manhattan House, which takes up an entire block from Second to Third Avenues, already includes a mix of service-oriented stores and apparel chains, including Club Monaco and a new entry from Canadian athletic-wear maker Lululemon Athletica.

"We've had a number of national tenants that have come to look at this space," said Gary Trock, senior vice president of the retail group at CB Richard Ellis, which is marketing the Manhattan House space.

Along with Brooks Brothers, another potential tenant is White House Black Market, which sells clothing and accessories only in shades of black and white.

Trock declined to comment on any specific tenants, but said that Manhattan House has some vacant retail spaces and other leases that are coming up for renewal. He said some retailers are being moved around within the Manhattan House complex to open up potential space for others.

Asking rents range from $200 a square foot on Second Avenue to $350 a square foot on Third Avenue.

Brokers said the value of the Manhattan House properties would depend on when the existing leases roll over and what type of retailers a new owner could bring into the complex.

"There are a lot of tenants in the apparel business that do not have a store up here yet that need to be there," said Ariel Schuster, senior vice president at Robert K. Futterman & Associates.

In 2007, Schuster negotiated a 20-year lease to put the 14,000 square foot flagship store for women's retailer Coldwater Creek at 1172 Third Avenue, which is two blocks north of Manhattan House.

Analysts say that a number of European investors have been trolling the area looking for retail deals, including more than one Spanish firm.

Eastdil representatives would not comment beyond confirming that the properties were up for sale. O'Connor Capital Partners also declined comment.

Club Monaco representatives declined to comment, and Lululemon Athletica officials were not immediately available for comment.

Brooks Brothers has an Upper West Side location at 1934 Broadway. A Brooks Brothers spokesperson said the retailer was always looking for new locations in Manhattan, but did not have any comment on Manhattan House.
Representatives from White House Black Market, which operates a store at 136 Fifth Avenue in the Flatiron district, were not immediately available for comment.

Analysts said the sale of the Manhattan House's commercial space has not been affected by any problems related to the building's condo conversion, detailed in this month's issue of The Real Deal. O'Connor, while settling a prolonged legal battle with former development partner Richard Kalikow, has faced off against a group of tenants opposed to the conversion. The teants claim that they have been harassed into abandoning their apartments.

O'Connor in February posted a new update on condominium sales in the building's lobby, showing that 39 of the building's 583 units had been sold, with only four of them going to residents. The Manhattan House faces a June 1 deadline to sell 15 percent of its apartments, under the terms of its financing from Nordbank, which wants to see progress before it puts more money into the conversion.

Kips Bay Goes White-Brick

The New York Times
March 9, 2008

By Josh Barbanel

You can dress it up in beaver rugs and silk taffeta, crown moldings and chandeliers, but can you sell it?

Manhattan House, the huge $1 billion condominium conversion project at East 66th Street and Second Avenue, faces a state deadline of June 30.

By then, the developers have to obtain signed contracts for 87 of the original 583 apartments (some have since been combined) or the plan will be considered abandoned. And to push the project forward, the developers have negotiated an unusual promotion for the complex, which has five 20-story towers in a postwar modernist style. In April, it will be the site of the 2008 Kips Bay Decorator Show House.

For most of its 36 years, the event has used a Manhattan town house (usually one that is about to go on the market) to provide a showcase for designers, who redesign rooms, usually luxuriously, and charge admission to benefit the Kips Bay Boys and Girls Club, an organization that provides services to children in the Bronx.

But this year, the show house will take over six apartments, including two penthouses, on two floors at Manhattan House and turn them over to 19 designers. A rooftop lounge will be used to house a furniture retrospective by Vladimir Kagan. Some of the show apartments have been renovated, others have been left exactly as they were when the last tenant moved out, and some have been stripped down to concrete floors and exposed pipes.

“We can bring all the fantasy that people associate with the show to apartment living,” said Jennifer Skoda, the director of special events for the Kips Bay Boys and Girls Club. The show is set to open to the public on April 24.

Ms. Skoda said the show would provide a challenge for designers, who must cope with a design problem common to white-brick buildings: though recognized as the first and perhaps greatest white-brick complex on the Upper East Side, with a curved drive and a private garden, it has relatively low apartment ceilings.

Developers bought Manhattan House from the New York Life Insurance Company in 2005 for $623 million, and the project has been caught up in a series of battles, some involving partners in the deal and others involving the sponsors and hundreds of market-rate and rent-stabilized tenants in the building.

Tenants sued to stop the conversion but have so far been rebuffed in State Supreme Court in Manhattan. After the ruling, the sponsors threatened to sue the tenants and a tenant Web site for defamation. In a letter in January, lawyers for the sponsor complained that the tenants “have printed T-shirts with wording about asbestos and leaky pipes for the intent of disrupting sales.”

But in the last few months, after a development team — headed by Jeremiah W. O’Connor Jr. — brought in designers to create model apartments (and after the insider discount was increased to 25 percent below the asking price), sales began to take off.

Dolly Lenz, a Prudential Douglas Elliman broker who is leading the sales team, said that so far 53 apartments were in contract, including nine sold to insiders, and 20 more deals were nearly complete.

Rafael Urquia II, a lawyer and president of a tenants group, said tenants were prepared to meet with the developers about their complaints and perhaps a further reduction in sales prices, especially in view of the June deadline.

Yet at Manhattan House last week, as work crews knocked down a cinder-block wall in a $6 million penthouse to give Larry Laslo, a Kips Bay designer, a blank canvas with a larger entryway to work with, a stream of brokers, with clients in tow, wandered through the sponsor’s model apartments.

HSH Nordbank Reassigns US Loan Chief

Commercial Mortgage Alert
March 7, 2008

James Fitzgerald, head of North American lending for HSH Nordbank since June 2004, was reassigned as part of a corporate shakeup in the German lender’s home office.

Fitzgerald was replaced late last week by senior vice president Greg Allen, previously head of U.S. originations under Fitzgerald. Allen, in turn, was replaced by senior vice president Michael Carter, formerly senior relationship manager. A bank spokesman said Fitzgerald remains with HSH as a consultant, scouting out investment opportunities for the bank.

The turnover reflects turmoil at the lender’s Hamburg headquarters. Like many German banks, HSH suffered heavy losses from the U.S. subprime-mortgage meltdown. The stateowned bank has had to postpone an IPO, in the works since late 2005, until next year.

Claudio Lagemann, global head of real estate and Fitzgerald’s immediate superior in Hamburg, left the bank late in January. Allen reports to Peter Axmann, deputy head of global real estate, while the bank decides on its next move. Allen and Carter both joined HSH in 2006 from Aareal Financial Services. Allen oversaw Aareal’s commercial real estate operation. Carter was a managing director and loan originator.

Fitzgerald headed the New York office of Paris-based Credit Lyonnais before jumping to HSH in 2004. HSH then embarked on an ambitious expansion plan, opening a branch office in San Francisco and competing aggressively for a bigger share of the U.S. commercial lending market. Last April it launched HSH N Residual Value, a Bermuda-based provider of residual value insurance on commercial real estate, administered by CRCapital Advisors of Stamford, Conn.

Among HSH’s competitors, the ramped-up lending was seen as part of a drive to boost the bank’s profile in anticipation of the IPO. But the aggressive pricing strategies put the bank in a tight spot late last year when it found itself with an overhang of some $3 billion of commercial mortgages in need of syndication, leading to a suspension of lending. Company executives said lending would resume in a few weeks.

One of the bank’s biggest headaches was syndicating the $400 million senior portion of a $750 million floater that it originated last August on the Manhattan House condo-conversion project. The syndicate, which closed in December, includes Emigrant Savings, Bank of America, Bank of New York Mellon, HSBC, ING, M&T Bank and Wells Fargo. HSH retained the $350 million B-note.

HSH is embroiled in litigation with UBS over losses from a synthetic CDO (North Street, 2002-4) that UBS underwrote in March 2002. In a suit filed last month, HSH is seeking roughly $275 million in damages due to losses in the pool, which was tied to the U.S. mortgage market.

Divorce, developer style

The Real Deal
Author: Adam Piore
March 6, 2008

It was supposed to be a day of triumph for real estate mogul Richard Kalikow and his staff overseeing the conversion of the 583-unit Manhattan House into luxury condos.

Less than a week before, on March 30, 2007, New York State's Attorney General had signed off on the $1.1 billion condo conversion plan for the storied East Side property, on 65th between Second and Third avenues. That afternoon, Kalikow staffers had mailed the last of the sales offerings out to the building's tenants, a benchmark that took 18 months to reach.

But there would be no congratulatory messages from majority partner Jeremiah O'Connor that day. Instead, he served Kalikow with a legal notice demanding the commercial version of a divorce.

The pair's companies "have had numerous disagreements," O'Connor's lawyers would later state in a lawsuit. And they have been "unable to resolve their disagreements" (a point Kalikow denied).

Many of those differences, apparently, went to the heart of the project itself: What kind of apartments would sell — big ones or smaller ones? How much renovation did the building need? How should the project be marketed?

The breakup was sealed when a judge ordered one party to buy out the other.

Now, nearly five months since Kalikow finally agreed to sell his share of the massive property — reluctantly and under court order — to O'Connor, the imprint of Kalikow and his staff have largely faded from the project.

Today, the branding effort is in full bloom: plastering ads in magazines and newspapers featuring Grace Kelly, a former resident of the landmarked building, alongside the project's broker, Dolly Lenz, the vice chair of Prudential Douglas Elliman and widely regarded as the top agent in the city. House Beautiful has an eight-page spread profiling one of the model units designed by interior designer Jamie Drake in its March issue.

Beyond the polished surfaces, the developer has been busy putting in some 6,500 new windows, installing a new central air conditioning system and completing an upgrade of the electrical and plumbing systems. O'Connor has renovated 40 apartments and aims to complete an additional 180 apartments by year's end. (They currently have about 335 vacant apartments.)

About 51 condominiums are under contract with agreed deals on another 20 units, the developer said. Units sold range from studios to four-plus bedrooms ranging from $1,200 to $2,400 a square foot.

But before the luxury condos — with their wood-burning fireplaces, mahogany doors, sun-drenched living rooms and capacious balconies — were fodder for the pages of glossy real estate catalogues, the classic white brick complex was a cautionary tale for bad real estate marriages.


A record amount

The causes of the dispute over the costly condo conversion — the developers paid $623 million for the building, or a record of more than $1 million per apartment, at the height of the market — have remained largely a mystery, overshadowed in part by a parallel lawsuit launched by tenants against both developers.

Today, both partners are bound by confidentiality agreements not to discuss the matter, and the true story of what happened behind closed meeting doors may never be known.

Still, court documents and interviews with some of those caught in the middle suggest an outline of what went wrong, and offer a behind-the-scenes glimpse into a real estate feud that one contractor involved crowned "one of the most unpleasant experiences of my life."


Optimistic start

It began, like most marriages, with high hopes for the future. And in real estate circles, the two partners were the equivalent of a power couple.

Jeremiah W. O'Connor Jr., known to many as Jerry, had acquired and developed more than 10 million square feet of regional shopping malls in the 1980s, and has been managing private equity funds since 1994. Richard Kalikow, scion to a powerful real estate family and the cousin of former MTA chairman Peter Kalikow, had a track record for high-flying deals. In the 1980s, he'd converted more than 7,000 apartments to condos.

In the 1990s, he founded Max Capital Management Corp. with Adam Hochfelder. At its peak, Max Capital owned and managed 8 million square feet of office space worth $2.7 billion, including 230 Park Avenue, the Condé Nast Building and the Associated Press headquarters at 450 West 33rd Street.

On a side note, Kalikow and Hochfelder later suffered a nasty split detailed in a number of press accounts and a lawsuit of their own. After Kalikow sold his 60 percent share of the business to Hochfelder, he sued and accused him of withholding information that resulted in an unfair buyout price — an allegation that Hochfelder denied.

But back to our power couple: One source familiar with the project's origin said that the matchmaker of the Kalikow-O'Connor pairing was Howard Michaels, chairman and chief executive officer of the Carlton Group, the real estate investment banking firm that eventually arranged an $840 million equity and condo conversion financing package for the joint venture.

He put them together, the story goes, after they came in individually as top bidders in earlier rounds held by New York Life Insurance Company to sell the property. (Michaels did not return calls seeking comment, and neither partner would discuss how their courtship began.)

On its face, the pairing made sense — Kalikow had a history of managing high-class properties, O'Connor of investing in them. Under the terms of the deal, Kalikow and his ownership entity, Alpha Manhattan LLC, was the operating partner, running the day-to-day operations, while O'Connor's ownership interest, ONA Manhattan House LLC, held the majority share.


Winning bidders

Together, Kalikow and O'Connor outbid some of New York's biggest real estate names to win the right to buy the Manhattan House for $623 million. The vanquished back in October 2005 included Jerry Speyer, Aby Rosen, the Zeckendorfs and Dune Capital, among others.

"It's location, location, location," O'Connor crowed to a reporter at the time. "It's quality, quality, quality."

The deal set a national record, as the highest per-unit price paid for a single residential building slated for condo conversion. (The sale would later be eclipsed in total dollar value by deals like the purchase of Stuyvesant Town.)

In retrospect, the seeds of the nasty divorce may well have been present even on the day of the big purchase: In the overheated real estate market of the time — where the speed and audacity of the bid won the day — the newly paired moguls couldn't have had much time to discuss their respective "visions" for the property, before throwing their chips into the bidding pool and hoping to emerge victorious. The high price, with its resultingly small cap rate, left "that much less margin for error," noted one observer at the time.

Still, both partners clearly had high hopes for the property. An initial report filed with the state attorney general's office estimated that the project would eventually be worth $1.1 billion.

"I toured the property personally with Jerry when it was on the market," said Brett Buehrer, a principal at O'Connor Capital Partners and one of the partners involved with the project. "Jerry has always had a love for the building. It's a great building in a great location, with quality of construction. It's an irreplaceable asset."


Modern revolution

Originally built in 1951, Manhattan House was considered revolutionary when it opened. Designed by Gordon Bunshaft, who also designed Lever House, the humongous complex had a spare frame with Bauhaus-style balconies, a white-bricked façade, glass-walled lobbies and a sloping driveway.

With some 583 units, ranging from studios to five-bedrooms and rising some 22 stories, the monolithic structure that runs between 65th and 66th streets, bordered by Second and Third avenues, is fronted by a rare two-lane east-west boulevard.

The recent landmarking of the building may seem odd to those who don't think of white brick as being architecturally important, but the building's construction signified a departure — one of the first of its kind — from the more ornate architecture built in previous decades.

Most revolutionary, though, was the size of the apartments. The hard depression, war, and postwar years had convinced many developers to shrink the size of apartments. But the Manhattan House was based on the idea that people would pay for bigger ones. By buying up an entire city block, the architects were able to give each apartment at least two exposures to light and air. The building was constructed around a private park (the city's second largest, next to Gramercy) so that each apartment looked out on a garden or the street, avoiding alley views.

In today's market, with land prices and construction costs as they are, "you wouldn't be able to amass a whole block to build like this," Buehrer said. "The only thing you could do is build a 50-story tower. But this is built to the scale of the neighborhood."

The building soon attracted luminaries as residents: In addition to Grace Kelly, Benny Goodman and Jackie Robinson, Bunshaft moved in himself. The Manhattan House was one of the few private apartment buildings where you had to pass an interview just to become a renter, and the waiting list was sometimes years long.


Tenant battle

By the time of the conversion, many of those tenants were elderly and were reluctant to move. According to press accounts, some 250 of the units were rent-stabilized.

The tenants began causing the developers headaches immediately.

By spring of 2006, some six months after the deal closed, more than 60 tenants had packed up and left. But others bitterly complained they were being harassed, and forced out with no place to go. Several hundred ponied up for a legal defense fund, and hired tenant lawyer David Rozenholc to fight the plan.

Rozenholc, an experienced litigator, had fought Donald Trump to a standstill at 100 Central Park South, when the developer wanted to evict long-time, rent-controlled and stabilized tenants, gut the building and combine it with the Barbizon Hotel. At one point, he represented the tenants of the Ansonia in their battle against that building's new owners — one of the longest court battles in New York City's history.

Negative stories began appearing in local papers, describing elderly tenants squaring off with rapacious developers. The situation reached epic proportions by the following November, when a 97-year-old tenant named Martin Burwick died of pneumonia within days of moving out. (His lease was due up in April 2000.) Tenants blamed the death on the stress of eviction and construction at the site, which spewed fumes, dust, debris and, according to some claims, asbestos. Representatives for the developers denied responsibility, but the story didn't play well.

"A man is dead, and it's from the conditions in the building," one tenant told the New York Post.

The media jumped on the developers versus tenants battle — it got mentions in the New York Times, New York magazine and many other publications. But behind the scenes, a different kind of battle was brewing between the developers themselves, and this one would have a much bigger impact on the pace of the development itself.


Different views

The lawsuits the two moguls filed against one another last spring tell starkly different versions of the events. Indeed, Kalikow's lawyers claimed O'Connor concocted the disputes as an excuse to kick him off the project, and prevent him from receiving his fair share of the conversion profits. They claimed the disagreements were in the process of being worked out.

Whether that's true is difficult to determine. But it seems clear from talking to independent entities involved with the project that Kalikow and O'Connor had starkly different ideas for the property. To hear some involved tell it, the disputes began almost immediately.

"We became aware of different views in very early meetings," said one contractor. What followed was "one of the most unpleasant experiences of my life."

"The O'Connor people," said one person involved, "had a very different vision for the project than Richard did. They had a much more extensive renovation in mind. I think there was just differing views on what would sell, and what the market would support."

Though barred from speaking about anything having to do with the project before the October settlement, O'Connor principal Buehrer and the main broker on the project, Dolly Lenz, were eager to share their vision for the property, and offered a tour of the current apartments on the market.

Overall, the current plan calls for a $150 million renovation of the building. Most changes are slated for completion by June. The designers are the big names of the day: Sasaki Associates, the firm that designed the 2008 Beijing Olympic Green, is redesigning the grounds, porte-cochère entries and driveways. The original builders, Skidmore, Owings & Merrill, are redoing the lobby. Randall Ridless, who designed the Burberry prototype store in London, has redone the rooftop area with a private lounge, bar and party area. The Roto Group, which designed the Children's Museum of Manhattan, is creating the children's play area. Exhale Spa and fitness center will open a resident-only gym, yoga center and spa in the building this spring.

"We wanted to create the premier condominium on the Upper East Side," Buehrer said. "It's a building with all the modern amenities, built to prewar standards."

It's unclear how much of this plan Kalikow signed off on. But by all accounts, it appears his vision called, at the very least, for a smaller price tag.

For instance, Buehrer said that the property had great location, and "great features with a great architectural pedigree. But we needed infrastructure in place to bring it to current standards. We needed to completely remodel the apartments — gut renovations."

But Jin Lee, chief financial officer for Kalikow's company Manchester Real Estate, told The Real Deal explicitly last winter that: "It's not a gut renovation. It has the same layouts with expensive finishes."

According to Buehrer, "to bring the building up to current standards, obviously, we thought we needed central air conditioning."

With many of the apartments still occupied and not slated for renovation until current tenants moved out, that meant installing a chiller and running central piping to each door, so it could be installed in each redone apartment.

But according to one contractor, Kalikow fought against the plan, pushing for a much cheaper solution: individual window and wall units.

The battle may even have extended to the marketing materials, a tussle some claim rose to a level of vitriol behind the scenes in November 2006, at the same time that press accounts were focused on the battle with the tenants and the death of Burwick.

O'Connor's lawyers claimed in the court documents that they informed Kalikow's people that the marketing materials "were not of appropriate quality for the project."

Rather than change the materials substantially, O'Connor claimed, Kalikow's people hired the same company to design an inferior Web site, according to O'Connor's legal claims. And when they showed O'Connor's staff new versions of the marketing materials, his side claimed, they were essentially unchanged.

Perhaps most significantly, the developers apparently disagreed on the right mix of apartment sizes. In the court documents, O'Connor's lawyers played up the differences, and accused Kalikow of making unilateral decisions and continually ignoring their input.

Kalikow's "proposed renovations would create an initial inventory of 66 units, of which nearly 50 percent would be studio and one-bedroom apartments, and would include a number of contiguous apartments that could have been — but were not — included in combined units."

That plan represented "a significant departure from the strategy of seeking to maximize the number of larger combination units because they sell at a significantly higher price per square foot than smaller units," the lawsuit claimed.

Kalikow "never consulted" O'Connor "concerning this unilateral, significant and improper deviation from the strategy of maximizing the number of larger combination units," the lawsuit contended.

In her affidavit, Jin Lee claimed that she sent O'Connor's people revised marketing materials and a new proposal for apartment renovations just weeks before they demanded a split, and that the differences could be worked out.

But when read portions of the complaint by The Real Deal, Jonathan Miller, executive vice president and director of research for Radar Logic, which is not involved in the case, said the two sides appeared to be arguing for "two completely different philosophies," and a legitimate argument could be made for both approaches. One approach calls for a more superficial renovation with more small apartments and selling them quickly; the other approach would invest more money in renovations, take more time and maximize the cost per square foot.

Because studios and one-bedrooms represent 40 percent of the market, they would likely sell faster than three-bedrooms, which during most quarters represents only about 5 percent of the market, a "smaller niche," Miller said.

On the other hand, he noted the "axiom in Manhattan real estate is that larger contiguous space commands a higher cost per square foot."

"One plus one equals two and half, so there is an argument you have the potential to achieve a premium simply by creating larger space," Miller said.

As for market trends, at the time of the Manhattan House purchase, Miller said, there was some statistical evidence to suggest that units sold were "trending down in size."

He added, "Overall average size of apartments that are selling are trending downwards slightly, but that's not to suggest studios are selling and three-bedrooms aren't."


Liquidity in jeopardy

Whatever the cause of the disagreements, it began to affect the liquidity of the project.

For months, the partners funded the construction with "capital calls," essentially their own money, because they couldn't agree on the wording of a $30 million letter of credit demanded by the bank before it would release funds, according to the court documents. One person on the project suggested that since O'Connor's plan called for a much more extensive renovation than Kalikow wanted, and required large amounts of capital, Kalikow had no incentive to expedite the arrival of bank funds.

It's also unclear from the lawsuit whether both partners, Kalikow or O'Connor put up the additional funds. But by the time the partners finally split, O'Connor had put up a total of $119 million of his own money versus Kalikow's $31 million, according to the court papers.

One thing that is beyond dispute is that the contractors on the project got caught in the middle.

The first to go was the renowned architect Annabelle Seldorf, who was brought in by O'Connor and fired by Kalikow, sources on the project said.

Also caught in the middle: Douglas Elliman, which Kalikow would eventually accuse of "colluding" with O'Connor to wrest control from him and sabotage the project. On May 12, 2006, O'Connor sent Kalikow a letter strongly objecting to "sending a default letter to Douglas Elliman."

"You have never discussed the issue with us," he wrote. "Under the terms of our joint venture agreement, taking any action that could result in termination of the Douglas Elliman agreement and assertion of any claim that Douglas Elliman is in default are major decisions that require our consent, and we will hold you accountable if you proceed without it."

Kalikow replied: "In response to our default letter to Douglas Elliman, Howard Lorber [the chairman] contacted me yesterday and has agreed to resolve this problem … by dedicating certain professionals from Douglas Elliman to act as our contacts and give us direct access to their resources …. We disagree with you that sending a default letter to Douglas Elliman to get their attention is a major decision."

In a letter dated November 2006, Kalikow's representative Jin Lee accused Skidmore, Owing & Merrill of falling behind schedule, creating delays and at one point "wrongfully withholding its basic services. In her letter, Lee threatened to "seek compensation for any project delays."

Exhale Enterprises landed in the crosshairs in early 2007. The high-end company has opened a number of trendy gyms offering yoga, workouts, massage and other spa services in the Hamptons, the Upper East Side and Los Angeles. It was a pet project of sorts for some on the renovation, who touted it along with plans for a rooftop lounge as essential to the high-end branding of modern "amenities," so crucial to O'Connor's vision.

In January 2007, Jin Lee terminated Exhale Spa, accusing it of being $50,000 over budget. "All along," O'Connor's staff wrote in a letter, O'Connor Capital Partners had told Manchester that "it viewed Exhale Spa as integral to Manhattan House's image and had pressed Alpha to work with Exhale Spa to resolve any issues."

O'Connor's company was involved in the process of selecting building manager Kerry Smith, but was not consulted on his termination or the selection of Carl Reinlib as building manager, Brett Buehrer said in his affidavit.

A source close to the project who requested anonymity claimed, "In order to punish Jerry, I think Kalikow threatened to fire every single person, just to kind of put a halt to the project to get attention to himself, to make his position stronger. Everybody on the same day."

By March, it seemed clear that communication between the two developers had almost completely broken down.

The interior design company Randall Ridless wrote to Jin Lee that on March 23, 2007, "we were met by Brett and Andy from the O'Connor group along with Howard Lorber and a group of people who appeared to be from Douglas Elliman. The tone of the entire group was hostile. To our surprise, they appeared completely unfamiliar with the existing space, its relationship/distance to the apartment building, and the evolution of the design to its current point."


Signing the divorce papers

On April 5, 2007, O'Connor sent Kalikow a notice of intent to dissolve their partnership, the real estate version of divorce papers. The papers notified Kalikow that his company was in default under their limited liability contract, and that O'Connor was invoking his right to buy or be bought out under the terms of their contract.

O'Connor cited breaches of the contract — the dispute over the marketing materials, problems with financing, and the change in the mix of apartments among them. Finally, his attorneys complained that the monthly progress reports they had been getting were "unsatisfactory," that they had repeatedly tried to get more information and that Kalikow had failed to address that concern.

O'Connor's lawyers blamed Kalikow for months of delays in renovations and accused his staff of mismanaging the project, noting that "it cannot be known how many sales and how much revenue have been and will continue to be lost as a result."

But Kalikow's lawyers claimed the issues in dispute were many months old and in the process of being resolved.

"The type of project contemplated by the agreement is multi-faceted and involves many elements of decision making that require constant, ongoing negotiations with regard to details and particulars," Jin Lee said in her affidavit. "This type of constant, ongoing negotiating has characterized the interactions between Alpha and ONA during the past 18 months."

The issues cited in the notice of intent "have been steadily progressing toward resolution," she stated. Lee claimed that she had sent O'Connor's people revised marketing materials and a new proposal for apartment renovations just weeks before the letter of intent and had been waiting for a response, and that they were in the final stages of coming up with the wording for a letter of credit that would have allowed them to avoid using capital calls.

She noted that the letter of intent coincided to the day with the completion of the mailing of the sales offering plan to all tenants at Manhattan House. That milestone brought Kalikow closer to reaching incentives that "ultimately may be as much as 40 percent of the company's distributions to the Members, rather than Alpha's percentage interest: 20.1 percent."

Lee claimed that the black book approval allowed the partnership to move into the "profit-making phase" of the project. The contract gave Kalikow's Alpha "an incentive to increase the value of the company's property, an increasingly and disproportionately large profit percentage at certain levels of profitability."

Each of the partners was to receive distributions from revenues proportional to their percentage interest in the company. But once each part received a certain level of return on their investments, Alpha's share of the profits would begin to increase — eventually almost more than doubling from 20.1 to as high as 40 percent.

O'Connor thus "has a tremendous incentive to invoke the buy-sell procedure at this juncture to eliminate Alpha," Lee contended.


Buyout ruling

In June, Justice Bernard J. Fried of New York State Supreme Court in Manhattan ordered that one partner buy the other out. The new owner wasn't mandated, so the decision gave Kalikow the choice of buying out O'Connor within 30 days, or allowing O'Connor to buy him out.

On July 18, Rubenstein Associates issued a press release announcing that Kalikow had received financing from UBS to buy out O'Connor. But two weeks later, Kalikow issued a second release stating, "Alpha will not become the purchasing member pursuant to the Buy-Sell notice …. Alpha confirms that ONA will close the acquisition of Alpha's interest in Manhattan Partners LLC no later [than] August 31, 2007." Kalikow later claimed that O'Connor had scared away his backers by threatening to escalate the legal dispute.

There would be one more legal fusillade. In late August, Kalikow accused Douglas Elliman of colluding with O'Connor to wrest control from him and sabotage the project. He said that he had discovered that Lenz and other Elliman staff members held a number of secret weekly meetings with O'Connor's team, revising plans and making decisions without him. He asked the Supreme Court to allow him to amend his complaint against O'Connor to include Prudential Douglas Elliman and to seek $75 million in damages as well as punitive damages against the company.

But Lenz said she is not aware of such a complaint ever having been filed against Elliman — or even of Kalikow's request to do so.

It was not until Oct. 9 of last year that the case was finally resolved. O'Connor obtained $750 million in financing from a German bank, HSH Nordbank AG, and took over the project.

The sales office opened up immediately. O'Connor held a party on the roof of a newly built Manhattan club. And the outlook for future sales? One hundred thirteen potential buyers toured available apartments in one weekend alone, a fraction of the thousands who have walked the halls since October.


The divorce timeline

October 2005: Kalikow and O'Connor win bid for Manhattan House with $623 million offer.

Spring 2006: Several hundred Manhattan House tenants hire lawyer David Rozenholc to fight the Kalikow-O'Connor conversion plans.

May 2006: O'Connor complains to Kalikow for sending a "default letter" to Douglas Elliman without consulting him.

August 2006: Rozenholc sends letter to the attorney general's office requesting an investigation into the conduct of the building's owners and their lenders, regarding their conversion plans.

November 2006: Martin Burwick, 97, dies of pneumonia days after moving out of the Manhattan House. Tenants blame his death on stress of eviction and unhealthy conditions in the building during renovations.

January 2007: Kalikow's company, Manchester Real Estate, terminates Exhale Spa, which was brought on to run a gym and yoga center in the building. Manchester CFO says Exhale was $50,000 over budget.

March 30, 2007: Attorney general's office approves the building's $1.1 billion condo conversion plan.

April 5, 2007: O'Connor sends Kalikow notice of intent to dissolve their
partnership. On the same day, the sales offering plan for the newly converted condo is mailed to all building tenants.

June 2007: State Supreme Court Justice Bernard J. Fried orders one partner to buy the other one out within 30 days.

August 1, 2007: Kalikow announces that O'Connor will purchase his interest.

Mid-August 2007: Kalikow seeks permission in court to amend the lawsuit to accuse Elliman of colluding with O'Connor and to seek damages.

October 2007: O'Connor borrows $750 million from German bank HSH Nordbank AG to purchase Kalikow's stake in the building; he opens the sales office immediately.

Thursday, February 28, 2008

Asbestos Removal Problem Fixed

The tenants who reported asbestos removal problems on January 17 now
reports that the issue has been satisfactorily addressed and resolved by
the owners.

Thursday, January 17, 2008

Unsafe Asbestos Procedures Found at Manhattan House

Check out these photos of a riser taken earlier this week at Manhattan House. The door to this apartment, which is currently being renovated, was left open and a resident took the pictures. The asbestos surrounding the pipe is clearly visible!

This is inexcusable. Families with children live on this floor. Workers handling the asbestos are not being given proper safeguards.

View photo #1

View photo #2

Monday, January 07, 2008

Manhattan House headache

Excerpted from "Playing by a new set of rules for condo conversions"
The Real Deal, January 2008, by David Jones


After settling a bitter legal dispute with former co-owner Richard Kalikow, developer Jerry O’Connor put together an ambitious plan to convert Manhattan House into a hotel-quality luxury residence, with spa facilities, a resident manager with 65 on-site concierge staff, valet parking, a children’s play center and a 10,000-square-foot rooftop lounge.


But that conversion isn’t moving as smoothly as the developer would like, due in part to tenant complaints. Manhattan House tenants complain that the building suffers from extensive flooding, asbestos contamination, rodents and other problems that the management is trying to cover up.


In an amended filing, Manhattan House officials boosted the insider discount to tenants by 10 points to 25 percent. Only three of the first 15 sales came from insiders, according to the tenants’ group.


Read the full article here

Article 78 ruling

Judge Lewis Bart Stone has ruled Manhattan House tenants have no legal standing to file an Article 78 proceeding to halt the owner's condominium plan.


David Rozenholc, attorney for the Manhattan House Tenants Group, said the decision is wrong and contrary to New York State law decided in 1975. The decision will be appealed.


Read the decision here

Thursday, December 27, 2007

Manhattan House Infrastructure Problems

The Manhattan House Tenants Group, Inc. has concluded that the amount the Sponsor is contributing to the reserve fund is likely to be "woefully inadequate" to cover the numerous infrastructure problems in the building.

Read the full report here

Tuesday, December 04, 2007

Manhattan House evictions dismissed

December 3, 5:20 pm
David Jones, The Real Deal

A housing court judge has dismissed eviction proceedings against a group of tenants at the famed Manhattan House building on the Upper East Side, a decision that could set back one of the biggest condo conversions in the city's history.

Manhattan House tenants had argued that after the new owners bought the luxury rental complex for a record $625 million in 2005, they failed to renew the leases of hundreds of tenants. Lawyers also argued that the new owners offered bogus renewal leases for at least 11 tenants by asking for excessive rent hikes or lease terms of less than six months.

"The lease offerings were at exorbitant rates that were designed to intimidate and demean us," said Dr. Douglas Altchek, a long-time Manhattan House resident and a plaintiff in the case. "I was never offered a lease, but was told to get out 12 days after my lease expired."

In late October, Manhattan House put more than 70 apartments on sale, with some listing for more than $6 million. The building has 196 rent-stabilized tenants, 58 market rate tenants, 327 vacant apartments and a resident manager, according to the Manhattan House Tenants Group. A total of 31 units have been renovated.

Judge David Cohen ruled on Nov. 28 that the 31 market-rate tenants at the landmark apartment complex were protected from eviction under the Martin Act, a state law that regulates the conversion of residential rental buildings into condominiums. The tenants' attorneys learned of the decision today.

Manhattan House officials declined comment.
According to court records, the owners submitted a non-eviction offering plan to state Attorney General Andrew Cuomo in February 2006. Under a non-eviction plan, tenants cannot be evicted for failure to buy their apartments, and must be allowed to continue as rent-paying tenants, according to the attorney general's website.

Judge Marc Finkelstein denied a motion to dismiss the case on March 23. By the end of March, Cuomo's office approved the non-eviction plan to convert Manhattan House from a rental building to a condominium.

However, a long-running dispute between the owners Jeremiah O'Connor and Richard Kalikow delayed the conversion until October, when O'Connor bought out Kalikow and secured $750 million in financing from Germany-based HSH Nordbank AG to continue the conversion.

Cohen ruled that the landlord could not justify an eviction because there were no other qualifying causes, such as failure to pay rent or failure to grant access to the apartment.

"Here, the only basis for the eviction of these tenants is the fact that their lease terms have expired and have not been renewed," Cohen wrote. "Consequently, respondents are protected from 'no cause' holdover eviction proceedings by the Martin Act."

The ruling echoes a similar decision by Cohen in March, when he dismissed eviction proceedings against 23-market rate tenants at Sheffield57 (formerly The Sheffield), on West 57th Street.

"If it's upheld by the appellate court, it certainly will have a significant impact on the rights of landlords to come into a building with a significant amount of market-rate tenants and simply clear the building out and evict them," said Kevin McConnell, the lawyer for tenants in both the Manhattan House and Sheffield cases.

Monday, December 03, 2007

Judge rules in favor of Manhattan House market tenants

Judge Cohen by decision dated November 28, 2007 dismissed the holdover proceedings against the tenants.

Read the full decision here

Tuesday, October 30, 2007

Manhattan House Landmarked Today

The Landmarks Preservation Commission voted today to landmark Manhattan House at 200 East 66th Street. An excerpt from the Commission's statement is below:

Manhattan House, 200 East 66 Street
Manhattan House, the sprawling full-block, modernist white-brick icon on Manhattan’s Upper East Side, attracted such renowned tenants as actress Grace Kelly and jazz clarinetist Benny Goodman. Set between a block-long garden and two driveways, the 21-story, 10-tower structure elevated white brick as a fashionable building material and popularized balconies, green spaces and driveways in many new residential high rises constructed in New York City after World War II.

“Manhattan House set a new standard for apartment construction in New York City and gave modernism a strong foothold here,” said Commissioner Tierney. “Although Manhattan House inspired many new architectural imitators, very few came close to what it achieved. It joins a growing list of modern landmarks we’ve designated since 2002, such as the Summit Hotel and Socony-Mobil building.”

The New York Life Insurance Company commissioned the New York office of Skidmore, Owings & Merrill, the Chicago-based firm that was at the forefront of the development of modern architecture in the United States, to design Manhattan House. Completed in 1951 and occupying a block between 65th and 66th streets and Second and Third avenues, the building reflects the theories of Le Corbusier, the renowned 20th century French architect who was known for setting enormous, slab-like apartment buildings in open spaces.

In addition to Grace Kelly and Benny Goodman, some of the Manhattan House’s tenants included such design luminaries as George Bunshaft, the lead architect of the building for Skidmore, Owings &Merrill; Elizabeth Potts, founder of the American Institute of Interior Designers; and furniture designer Florence Knoll. Actress Grace Kelly lived there for a brief period in the early 1950s, as did jazz clarinetist Benny Goodman, who died in his apartment in 1986. Former New York State Governor Hugh Carey and Frank Hardart, co-founder of the Automat restaurant chain, also lived in Manhattan House.

The Kelly Connection

October 28, 2007
Big Deal, Josh Barbanel, New York Times

IS the story of Grace Kelly, the future princess, at the Manhattan House, a quintessential Manhattan real estate story?

That is the question that Dr. Jim Sperber, an internist in San Juan Capistrano, Calif., who is also a Grace Kelly fan and the son of a Prudential Douglas Elliman broker, raised in an e-mail message about her stay in the early 1950s at Manhattan House, the first and perhaps grandest white-brick apartment complex on the Upper East Side.

Now that Manhattan House — with 584 apartments, many with balconies, spread across five 20-story towers — is in the midst of a condominium conversion, the sponsors are celebrating Grace Kelly’s years there and have signed an agreement with the Princess Grace Foundation, to permit the use of her image in promotional materials.

But after learning of this development, Dr. Sperber, who has many interests, including providing medical care to an 8-foot 4-inch farmer in Ukraine, went through his collection of Grace Kelly books — assembled from garage sales — and pointed out that Miss Kelly’s father, John B. Kelly Sr., a three-time American gold medalist rower, helped build the Manhattan House.

Mr. Kelly, a wealthy Philadelphia contractor from an Irish family, who ran an unsuccessful campaign for mayor of Philadelphia in the 1930s, founded Kelly for Brickwork, which was a subcontractor on the project. Many Manhattan House residents believe that his company manufactured the distinctive white bricks used on the building, but Toby E. Boshak, the executive director of the Princess Grace Foundation, said that his firm was hired as a construction contractor to do the brick work and put up the distinctive white walls of the project.

As for the notion that he used his pull, as any father might, to get his daughter into a coveted apartment in the building, the evidence is far from certain. On the one hand, biographies detail a difficult relationship that Grace Kelly had with her father, and she yearned for financial independence from her family. On the other hand, family background was carefully reviewed at the Manhattan House and other prominent buildings in Manhattan.

Patricia Lynch, a former television news investigative producer for NBC Nightly News, who has lived in Manhattan House since 1975, said that when she applied for admission 25 years after Grace Kelly moved in, the building had a long waiting list and connections were needed to get to the top of the list. She said that she wore white gloves for an interview in which the building manager queried her about her parents and her family background, even though she had written two books and was financially independent at the time.

One biography, “Grace,” by Robert Lacey (Putnam Adult, 1994), said that Miss Kelly, who was in her early 20s, was “installed” there by her father in an apartment that her mother decorated. Another book, “The Bridesmaids,” by Judith Balaban Quine (Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 1989), who was a bridesmaid at her wedding to Prince Rainier in Monaco, said that the Kellys had given their daughter “permission” to leave the Barbizon Hotel and move into Manhattan House, but wanted her to find a roommate. The book also suggested that the apartment was decorated to the taste of Miss Kelly’s mother, Margaret.

In an interview, her first Manhattan House roommate and another bridesmaid, Sally Parrish Richardson, said that she moved in after Miss Kelly and did not know how she got the apartment.

The Manhattan House sponsors have commissioned four designers to create model apartments “with the spirit of Princess Grace,” bringing their “unique vision of grand, high-style living at Manhattan House.”

But by some accounts, despite her increasingly glamorous life, Grace Kelly’s furnishings at Manhattan House were, alas, quite plain. “The living room was without charm, character or gender,” Ms. Quine wrote. “It wasn’t ugly; it was utterly bland. Furniture, fabrics and colors alike were all resolutely practical. Everything seemed brown.”

Saturday, October 20, 2007

Evoking the Memory of a Style Icon

October 21, 2007
By Josh Barbanel, Big Deal, New York Times

What comes to mind when you think of the Manhattan House, the first and perhaps the grandest postwar white-brick apartment house in Manhattan? The magic of Grace Kelly, maybe? Or a brutish battle over a condominium conversion, with tenants warring with the sponsors and the sponsors fighting with each other?

But now the dispute between the building owners has been settled; the project has been refinanced; and prices on many apartments, especially those of existing tenants, have been cut. A new marketing campaign is trying to shift attention to glamour and to Grace Kelly, who lived there in the early 1950s.

Manhattan House, built in 1950, fills a full city block at 66th Street and Third Avenue, with five 20-story towers, 584 units and large gardens. It also has several hundred tenants, some of whom have been fighting the conversion in state court and others complaining that elderly market-rate tenants were being forced out.

The project, which would be the largest Manhattan condo conversion ever, valued at more than $1.1 billion if completed, faced extensive delays, expiring financing and a dispute between two partners: Jeremiah W. O’Connor Jr., who provided most of the capital, and N. Richard Kalikow, who managed the project.

But two weeks ago, Mr. O’Connor settled the lawsuit, obtained full control of the project and signed up for new financing, an amendment to the offering plan said. Court records did not indicate the terms of the settlement, and neither Mr. O’Connor nor Mr. Kalikow would discuss them.

Under the conditions set in his financing, Mr. O’Connor promised to find buyers for 15 percent, or about 88, of the 584 apartments, and obtain the approval of the attorney general to put the plan into effect by next June 1.

Within days of taking control, Mr. O’Connor held a party in a newly renovated rooftop library and club space; several hundred tenants attended. He announced that the insider discount for tenants had been doubled, to 15 percent, for those who buy within 30 days. Prices were cut by 6.6 percent over all, according to the amendment. But Brett Buehrer, a vice president at O’Connor Capital Partners, said that the decreases were aimed mainly at occupied apartments.

Grace Kelly, who become Princess Grace of Monaco, lived at the Manhattan House while pursuing an acting career. She also lived at the Barbizon Hotel, which was recently converted into a condominium, Barbizon/63, with a marking campaign that also mentioned her, along with other notable actresses who lived there.

At the Manhattan House, the developers are a sponsor of an ongoing exhibit of Grace Kelly memorabilia. It was timed to the 25th anniversary of her death, on Sept. 14, 1982, and an auction of a gown and a dress suit worn by Ms. Kelly will be held to raise money for the Princess Grace Foundation.

Dolly Lenz, a broker at Prudential Douglas Elliman who is heading marketing at the project, said that four designers had been commissioned to create apartments “inspired by Princess Grace.” They are Alexa Hampton, Jamie Drake, Campion Platt and Maureen Footer.

Asking prices on one-bedrooms with terraces start just over $1 million. A tenant lawsuit seeking to stop the conversion is still pending, but the court allowed the sponsor to continue its sales program.

Monday, October 15, 2007

June 1, 2008 Deadline for Manhattan House, O'Connor

The terms of O'Connor's loan to purchase Manhattan House give him only until June 1, 2008 to sell 15% of the units in the building, according to a filing last week with the New York State Attorney General's office.

The Second Amendment to the Manhattan House Condominium Offering Plan was filed October 11, 2007.

With Financing Completed, $1B Condo Conversion to Move Forward in NYC

By Kelly Sheehan, Online News Editor
Multi-Housing News
October 12, 2007

New York—O’Connor Capital Partners, a privately held real estate investment and development firm, has closed on $750 million of senior financing from HSH Nordbank AG, a commercial bank headquartered in Hamburg/Kiel, Germany. The firm will use the money for a luxury condo conversion project in New York City.

The financing follows a decision by O’Connor to buy out its previous partner and assume full control. The complex was purchased last year for $620 million--the largest residential sale in history, only behind Stuyvesant Town and Peter Cooper Village.

O’Connor plans to invest a total of $1 billion converting Manhattan House, previously an apartment community, into a condo complex. The building is famous for its light-colored façade, thought to be the building that started the craze of white-brick buildings in the city. At one time, actress Grace Kelly also rented an apartment at Manhattan House, which is located at 200 East 66t St. on the city’s Upper East Side.

Jerry O’Connor, managing partner of O’Connor Capital Partners, says that Manhattan House will feature the amenities of new construction with the charm of the building’s original architecture. Originally designed by Gordon Bunshaft of Skidmore, Owings & Merill in 1952, the building will be restored by SOM and Randall Ridless.

O’Connor Capital Partners’ capital improvements to the property will include common amenities such as a rooftop club with Sasaki-designed garden, spa and fitness center; indoor playroom and outdoor play area designed by Roto Studio; concierge services; and valet parking services.

Friday, September 28, 2007

Manhattan House condo loan meets market resistance

Syndication of Condo-Conversion Loan Lags
Commercial Mortgage Alert
September 28, 2007

HSH Nordbank is struggling to syndicate a $700 million floating-rate loan it originated for the recapitalization of the troubled Manhattan House condo-conversion project.

The German bank plans to retain the roughly $300 million subordinate portion and sell the rest, according to market players. But while Bank of America has agreed to take down $100 million of the senior portion, HSH has not yet been able to place the balance.

Some lenders, like Metropolitan Life, are still studying the loan. Others, like Calyon, have decided to bypass it, put off by a legal dispute between the owners, opposition from angry tenants and the general market uncertainty.

"I actually like the property," said one lender. "It’s got great potential. But with everything else hanging over it, I don’t know."

"This is a very illiquid environment," another banker said. "It’s a tough time to be in the market with something like this."

HSH’s loan was part of a restructuring last month that allowed Jeremiah O’Connor of O’Connor Capital Partners to buy out his partner, New York developer Richard Kalikow.

The duo purchased the tony property in 2005 from New York Life for $625 million, with the goal of converting the 583 apartments into condominiums.

But O’Connor and Kalikow fought over the management of the conversion, leading to a lawsuit. In June, a New York State Supreme Court judge ruled that one partner would have to buy the other out to resolve the dispute.

At first, Kalikow agreed to buy out O’Connor. But then, on Aug. 1, Kalikow announced that O’Connor would buy him out instead. Last month, Kalikow filed a lawsuit accusing O’Connor and condominium-sales broker Prudential Douglas Elliman of colluding to undermine his position in the deal and seize control of the project.

The Manhattan House complex consists of five linked towers, each with its own elevator bank, driveway and private street-level gardens. The property sits on a full block between East 65th and East 66th Streets, stretching from Second to Third Avenues.

Kalikow and O’Connor financed their acquisition and part of the conversion with a $672 million loan from Credit Suisse and Lehman Brothers. The $450 million senior portion was securitized via a $2 billion pooled offering (Credit Suisse First Boston Mortgage Securities Corp., 2005-CND2) that was one of the first CMBS issues backed solely by condo-conversion loans.

Tenants attempting to block the conversion last year complained to the state attorney general that the information disclosed to investors in the securitization should have been withheld until the release of a preliminary prospectus for the condo sales. They have also accused the owners of harassing tenants in the approximately 250 rent-stabilized units.

Renovations to the first 30 units began earlier this year. The conversion will encompass everything from studios to four- and possibly five-bedroom condos, with the top-floor units reserved as penthouses.

Units will range in size from 600 sf to 2,400 sf. In response to demand for larger units, some apartments could be combined to create units of up to 3,600 sf.

Friday, August 24, 2007

Manhattan House Fight Escalates

By Josh Barbanel
August 26, 2007, New York Times

The huge $1.1 billion redevelopment of the Manhattan House on East 66th Street was to be the biggest condo conversion deal ever for Prudential Douglas Elliman and its best-selling broker, Dolly Lenz.

But with the project stalled by a tenant lawsuit and a fight for control between the sponsors, it may soon become a potential liability for Prudential Douglas Elliman, Manhattan’s largest brokerage.

In a court filing last week, N. Richard Kalikow, a developer who is the project’s managing partner, accused Douglas Elliman of colluding with his financial partner, Jeremiah W. O’Connor Jr., to wrest control away from him, sabotaging the project. Ms. Lenz was the lead broker in the deal.

In the filing last week in State Supreme Court in Manhattan, Mr. Kalikow asked the court to allow him to amend his complaint to include Prudential Douglas Elliman as a defendant in the case and to seek $75 million in damages as well as punitive damages against the company.

Mr. Kalikow said in the filing that he had discovered that although he was in charge of day-to-day operations, Ms. Lenz and other Douglas Elliman staff members held a series of secret weekly meetings with Mr. O’Connor’s team, reviewing plans and making decisions behind his back.

Stanley S. Arkin, a partner in Arkin Kaplan Rice, the law firm that represents Douglas Elliman, said the filing was an “unjustified, dishonest lawsuit, a shakedown designed to bring some kind of pressure to bear.”

He said that the meetings were “not clandestine” and that they were held because Mr. Kalikow “was not performing well” and Mr. O’Connor was “probably complaining.”

The dispute led to what seemed to be a showdown between the partners earlier this spring, soon after the attorney general approved the project’s offering plan. Under their agreement, Mr. O’Connor set a price for the project and gave Mr. Kalikow a chance to buy him out or be bought out.

Mr. Kalikow tried to put together a financing package to buy out Mr. O’Connor but was unable to complete the purchase. He contended that Mr. O’Connor scared away his financial backers by threatening an escalation of the legal dispute. Now Mr. O’Connor is asking the court to let him complete the purchase, while Mr. Kalikow is raising new legal issues.