April 28, 2024

Square Feet: A Wounded Wall Street Is Expected to Stay Put

Dozens of office buildings that were flooded by the storm still lack power and are off-limits to tenants, and many streets are a chaotic mess of generators, work crews and pumps.

Still trying to gauge the extent of the damage, many landlords have been vague about when their buildings will reopen. And some tenants, who have been uprooted to tiny conference rooms in New Jersey or industrial spaces in Brooklyn, are weighing whether to come back to the neighborhood at all.

But despite the uncertainty and destruction, many analysts don’t expect the bulk of tenants to pack up and leave for good, nor do they think that future tenants will rule out the neighborhood over fears they might get flooded.

“I don’t think it will become an overriding factor in the location decision,” said John Wheeler, the head downtown broker for Jones Lang LaSalle, echoing other top brokers. “I guess time will tell if I’m being too sanguine about this.”Brokers add that the neighborhood remains a compelling place to locate a business. Even with some train lines hampered by storm damage, it is still amply served by mass transit, with more than a dozen subway lines and ferry service. The new apartments and condos built in recent years, along with new boutiques and restaurants, also mean that many people can now live a few blocks from their office.

Besides, rents are notably competitive with other business districts in Manhattan, at about $40 a square foot in the financial district, compared with $65 in midtown, according to Cassidy Turley, the brokerage, though the downtown figure is expected to climb when the two new World Trade Center buildings come online.

Complicating the prognosis about the neighborhood’s long-term health is the fact that getting an exact handle on the extent of damage has been tricky. Many major landlords have been reluctant to respond to even basic questions about the status of their buildings. And many brokers have refused to discuss individual properties.

And while the city’s Buildings Department declared early last week that nine downtown buildings were completely off-limits, and another 445 were partially habitable, it did not differentiate between commercial and residential structures.

Jones Lang LaSalle has been one of the few brokerages to tackle the issue. It concluded that a hefty 20 percent of all the major office buildings below Canal Street are closed, or 37 out of 183, according to data compiled as of Monday. And those shuttered buildings, most of which are east of Broadway, represent 29.2 million square feet of space, the data shows.

Anecdotal evidence, too, suggests the damage has been severe. Late last week, the Water Street corridor, which runs along the East River, appeared alarmingly hard-hit.

Men in white hazmat outfits pushed garbage bins on streets, which rumbled with the sounds of generators. Several traffic lights were still dark. Clumps of yellow hoses snaked up escalators and through lobbies. And security guards, protecting against looters, were more numerous than people wearing suits.

Among the buildings confirmed closed were: 99 Wall Street, 199 Water Street, One Wall Street Plaza and 180 Maiden Lane. Others that appear to be closed include 55 Water Street, 85 Broad Street, 7 Hanover Square and 10 Hanover Square, among others. Four New York Plaza, where The Daily News is based, could be closed for a year, though One New York Plaza, whose basement shopping center took on 30 feet of water, should reopen in two weeks, according to a spokeswoman for the building’s landlord, Brookfield Office Properties.

Going forward, some tenants are concerned that floods will become a regular occurrence; after all, just 15 months ago, the city was soaked by Tropical Storm Irene. These tenants say their fears were confirmed by comments that Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo made after Hurricane Sandy about how destructive weather events are likely to recur.

“He was like, ‘If you don’t believe in global warming, wake up and see what’s happening here,’ and he was right,” said Andrea Katz, a development director for WBAI, the public radio station, which has a 10,000-square-foot space at 120 Wall Street. The lower floors of the Art Deco building, which is at South Street and owned by Silverstein Properties, were flooded by Hurricane Sandy.

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2012/11/14/realestate/commercial/a-wounded-wall-street-is-expected-to-stay-put.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

Mortgages: Mortgages – Dealing With Delayed Closings After Hurricane Sandy

“If you are in a FEMA-declared disaster area or emergency area,” said Jason Auerbach, a divisional manager for First Choice Loan Services, of Morganville, N.J., “banks are requiring an inspection of the home to affirm whether there was damage done. They are reinspecting properties to make sure it’s still a functional property that can be lived in.”

FEMA has declared disaster areas in much of coastal New York, New Jersey and Connecticut. However, even properties outside these areas may still be subject to another inspection because of agreements with the investors who bought closed loans, noted Joshua Weinberg, the senior vice president for compliance of First Choice.

For properties in areas that didn’t suffer extensive storm damage, the inspection may constitute no more than a drive-by. The delay in such cases may be no more than a few days.

Both buyer and seller may also be required to sign a form attesting that they agree the property suffered no storm-related damage. Regardless, buyers should do a thorough walk-through well before the day of closing, advises Scott Penner, a real estate lawyer in Milford, Conn.

“What we don’t want to have the day of the closing is that they go into the property and see evidence of flood damage,” Mr. Penner said. “Then they’ll want to negotiate at that time, and it creates all sorts of problems.”

So far, lenders appear to be honoring interest-rate guarantees that have expired because the storm delayed the closing.

“What we’ve seen is that lenders have extended the rate locks without cost to the borrower,” Mr. Penner said. “It’s not a requirement, but that’s what they’ve been doing.”

In deals involving storm-damaged properties, negotiations will most likely have to start all over again — provided the buyer still wants the house.

“Under the contract,” Mr. Penner said, “generally the seller is obligated to repair the damage. The question is, can the seller repair it? And is it adequate to the buyer?”

Denise Walsh, a partner in Gigliotti Walsh Fine Properties, which specializes in beach homes in Fairfield, Conn., was negotiating a deal for a waterfront property when the storm hit.

“Don’t you know the buyer got a boat, rowed by the house that he’s negotiating and took photos,” Ms. Walsh said. “He e-mailed me photos of the property and said: ‘Good news! I’m still interested. But what do we do about this?’ So now the negotiation is going to take a different turn.”

In cases in which buyer and seller are able to reach a new agreement, an appraiser will be sent out to verify that the house is back in functional condition after repairs are completed.

One factor that buyers may want to consider in deciding whether to go through with a purchase is the prospect of rising premiums.

“Going forward, a lot of insurance companies may re-evaluate their risk exposures,” noted Greg McBride, a senior financial analyst for Bankrate.com. “In Florida, any year in which they have a bad year of hurricanes, there’s a mass exodus of insurance companies. This can result in higher premiums.”

As to whether the storm’s impact will drive down property values on the coast, Ms. Walsh expects any dip in prices to be short-lived.

“There probably will be some deals,” she said, “because there will be some people who don’t have the cash to make the repairs, and they will just decide to sell. But I would be shocked if the market didn’t go right back to where it was, come the spring.”

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2012/11/11/realestate/mortgages-dealing-with-delayed-closings-after-hurricane-sandy.html?partner=rss&emc=rss