December 10, 2018
The Real Deal

L&L MAG’s first development will be a 460-unit resi building in Chelsea

MaryAnne Gilmartin’s L&L MAG has inked a 99-year ground lease for Edison Properties’ 241 West 28th Street for about $7 million per year with gradual increases, according to sources familiar with the deal. This puts the total value of the deal in the range of $150 to $170 million, depending on the cap rate.

L&L is planning to build a 22-story, 460-unit residential project on the lot that will span roughly 372,000 square feet, Gilmartin said. The building will be split between 70 percent market-rate units and 30 percent affordable units and be developed through the Affordable New York program. It will include retail space on the ground floor and parking on the lower level, and COOKFOX will design it.

Gilmartin expects to have the building designed within a year and have the site ready for construction by the end of next year. Aaron Weaver of Level Investments brokered the deal for the developer.

This marks the first major deal for L&L MAG, which Gilmartin launched earlier this year with L&L partners David Levinson and Robert Lapidus after spending 23 years at Forest City. She has brought on Atalaya Capital Management and the Australian firm Qualitas as investment partners.

“For me, it became an opportunity to convince Edison that we were the best team, that we would produce a building of beauty and value,” Gilmartin said.

Young Kwon, managing director of Atalaya, said his company was interested in this project because of the location, the business partners and the chance to develop a multifamily building, noting that the deal “checked all our boxes.”

A Cushman & Wakefield team of Steve Kohn, Alex Hernandez and Alex Lapidus represented L&L MAG in bringing Atalaya and Qualitas on board.

Edison Properties had previously filed plans in 2014 to develop a 15-story residential building with 323 units on the site. The firm had purchased four properties on West 28th Street to create a 30,000-square-foot lot between 28th and 29th streets and Seventh and Eighth avenues.

Robert Scharf, executive vice president of real estate at Edison Properties, said in a statement that while L&L MAG wasn’t the highest bidder, the company’s project was still the best fit for the site.

“Although we received several higher offers, we chose to ground lease the property to L&L MAG because of the wonderful team that they have put together,” he said. “They have extensive experience developing some of the most outstanding and transformative projects in NYC.”

Edison Properties is based in New Jersey and is betting big on Newark with its Ironside project near the city’s Penn Station. The mixed-use building will have 290,000 square feet of workspaces and grabbed its first big tenant in the spring: Mars Wrigley Confectionery, which will relocate its headquarters from Chicago and take 150,000 square feet in the property.

L&L Holding made its own massive purchase in Chelsea recently with Normandy Real Estate, paying about $900 million for the neighborhood’s Terminal Stores warehouse in October. They are planning to turn the building into a property worth $1.8 billion, and are reportedly in talks to bring Allianz Real Estate of America into their partnership.



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June 15, 2018
Bisnow

New York Power Women 2018: MaryAnne Gilmartin, Founder & CEO, L&L MAG

Bisnow: What keeps you in commercial real estate and what makes you want to come to work each day?

MaryAnne Gilmartin: First, I am a hopeless developer and it’s all I know! I have deep passion, curiosity and passion for the urban fabric, the built environment and communities — making it easy to come to work every day.

Bisnow: Have you had mentors over your career? Who are they and what influence did they have?

Mentoring has played an outsized role in my professional evolution. The role of mentor or mentee is critical to the career development of the women in our field. My two most influential mentors have been Bruce Ratner and Mary Ann Tighe. With both of them in my corner, I hit the career lottery. Because of the profound impact mentoring has had on my career, I have vowed to always be a mentor to others. It’s a pay forward.

Bisnow: What’s the one thing you would change about the industry and why?

The real estate industry needs greater disruption in the innovation economy. This disruption needs to take place on both the talent and technology fronts. Demanding the best of the best (man or woman); demanding our industry be more inclusive, democratic and merit-based to ensure we look like the communities within which we invest, transit and build (easy peasy, right).



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