Page 2 aPril 2-8, 2015 Tribune/Press Real estate MaRketplace C LO SE D Local Lending... Endless Possibilities... Harlem, Manhattan Multifamily Building D SE LO C C C LO LO SE SE D D $4,750,000 Jamaica, Queens Retail Strip Center Midtown West, Manhattan $5,750,000 Multifamily Building $ 2,3 00,000 Bronx, NY Multifamily Building $3,800,000 Commercial Real Estate... Financing Built on Trust "DRVJTJUJPOBOE3FĕOBODFt.VMUJGBNJMZ.JYFE6TF0ďDFBOE3FUBJM1SPQFSUJFTt6QUP'JOBODJOH"WBJMBCMF Contact our real estate professionals: Lon King Victor Padilla Bryan Lutz George O’Connor (718) 240-4931 (718) 240-4773 (718) 240-4734 (718) 240-4948 www.ridgewoodbank.com Member FDIC EQUAL HOUSING LENDER aPril 2-8, 2015 Page 3 Tribune/Press Real estate MaRketplace On The Rise: “ Families are starting to move into the area on the [LIC] waterfront. I don’t foresee, in the immediate future, [Queens Plaza] being as much of a family area. –Douglas Partrick, a co-owner of Heatherwood Communities 28 on 28th In Long Island City, Queens’ Tallest Residential Tower square-foot lot on Queens Plaza South four years ago, citing the developer-friendly area zoning laws, the growth of the community, the presence of mass transit and the abundance of new jobs that have recently been created in the neighborhood as reasons for the buy. “With all the construction happening on the waterfront, it only seemed like a natural progression to come up [north],” Partrick added. “You have the Citi building that has sat here alone for a long, long time. There were hopes that would be the core and things would be built around the Citi building; it just took a little longer than people anticipated.” Heatherwood Communities broke ground on the project last May and expect to begin occupation of the building in either late 2016 or early 2017. Though the list of amenities at 28 on 28th is tentative, the tower’s design firm, Whitehall Interiors NYC, revealed that it’s expected to feature ” chitecture as bland and uninspired. However, Partrick is pleased with what the Goldstein, Hill & West firm hough favorable have designed for his company’s latrezoning laws and est mega project. incremental econom“It’s a glass tower with some interesting detail on it,” Partrick said. ic healing have paved the “It’s not just a straight glass tower; way for a number of new we have some fritted glass, top to bottom, which is really going to give developments in Long Isit a nice look, not a sterile look.” land City the past few years, About 60 percent of the units 42-12 28th Street will stand in the tower will be one-bedroom apartments, with studios, twoabove them all—literally bedroom flats, and just a handful of and, perhaps, figuratively as three-bedroom homes available for well. rent as well. “Families are starting to move into More affectionately dubbed “28 the area on the [LIC] waterfront,” on 28th”- by the Heatherwood Partrick said. “I don’t foresee, in the Communities development firm, immediate future, [Queens Plaza] the team responsible for the risbeing as much of a family area. With ing glass construct, this building, the waterfront, you have the esplanamed for the street it will rise on, nade, the green areas, all of which will be the tallest residential tower are conducive to taking the kids out in Queens when it opens, stretching with a little less traffic.” 635 feet into the sky `- the second Considering the proximity to tallest building in the Borough after Manhattan, Partrick feels 28 on 28th nearby One Court Square, will attract a more careeralso known as the Citi buildoriented clientele who can ing - and housing 477 luxury certainly appreciate a swift rental apartments. commute. It’s too soon for But for Douglas Partrick, Heatherwood Communities a co-owner of Heatherwood to announce rent rates, but Communities, the goal isn’t Partrick noted that the local to cast a sizable shadow over market is currently creating the rest of the neighbora demand range of $45-$55 hood. per square foot, which would Indicating that he wasn’t mean a typical one-bedroom even aware the project would apartment, like those in the be the tallest residential company’s neighboring 27 building in the Borough unon 27th building, projects til he “read [it] somewhere,” to go for at least $3,200 per Partrick, speaking nonchantmonth. ly in a recent interview near No matter the cost, Parthe construction site, said it trick is confident residents was “just the way the design are going to like what they worked most efficiently” for come home to. Heatherwood Communities. “If you look at the other He added that the project is buildings we’ve done, you’ll focused on providing fresh, see quality,” he said. “We put high-end housing opportua lot of time into the finishnities for Queens. es. I don’t want to be replacHeatherwood Communi- The construction site at 42-12 28th St. where Queens’ tallest residential building ing things in 28 on 28th right ties purchased the 18,000- will rise. away.” By Michael Stahl PHOTO BY JACKIE STRAWBRIDGE T a swimming pool, 50-space parking garage, bicycle storage, additional tenant storage space, a resident’s lounge, fully-equipped fitness center with a spa, a screening room, children’s playroom and gaming lounge. “It’s not going to be about just what goes on in their apartment,” Partrick said. “People want to experience a lifestyle in the [entire] building. That’s what people can look forward to.” Two outdoor spaces - an outdoor deck along with a spacious rooftop terrace and sky lounge on the 56th floor - are also in the plans. Naturally, western-facing units should have some extraordinary city views, with 432 Park Avenue - Manhattan’s tallest residential building prominently on display just across the adjacent Ed Koch Queensboro Bridge. Critics have questioned a number of new high rises across the city, including the pillar-like 432 Park Avenue, often characterizing the ar- Page 4 aPril 2-8, 2015 Tribune/Press Real estate MaRketplace Flushing’s Transformation: close to 461,000-square-feet of office and retail space when complete. Work is also continuing on the Eastern Mirage project, a mixed hotel-medical center that will be Flushing’s tallest building at 42-31 Union St. In addition to those development projects, plans have once again surfaced that look to redevelop the historic RKO Keith’s Theater – a cornerstone of Flushing’s past – for the fourth and possibly final time. In its hey-day, the three-story RKO Keith’s Theater in Flushing was one of the most storied movie palaces in New York City. Erected in 1928, the “atmospheric” venue was known for its stoic Spanish Baroque Revival style interior, which helped earn its ticket lobby and grand foyer the designation of landmark. In 1986, when the theater closed, the new owner Thomas Huang started to demolish the space with plans to turn it into a 350room international hotel. PH OT O BY DA NI EL OF Under Huang’s ownership, FN ER landmarked portions of the theater were demolished, which sparked community activists to petition that the In 2011, developers with ONEX entire structure be granted Real Estate Partners opened the “landmark status.” first of a three phase development Cheshire Frager, a member of the project – to bring 448 condo units Committee to Save the RKO Keith’s and a nearly 800,000 square-foot Theatre of Flushing, said that at the shopping center to the area. time, the committee collected sigAfter completing the first phase, natures more than 3,000 signatures developers now have their sights set from residents who wanted to see on the construction of The Grand at the theater preserved. However, the Sky View Parc, which entails con- petition would fall upon deaf ears, struction of three residential towers as then-Borough President Claire with a combined total of 650 condo- Shulman refused to support landminium units. marking the entire property. Since last summer, when developSince that time, the RKO Keith’s ers first broke ground at the former Theater has been left in its dilapisite of Municipal Lot No. 1, the con- dated state. struction of Flushing Commons – a In 2005, the Board of Standard mixed use residential, commercial, and Appeals approved an applicaretail and community space with a tion to develop a 17-story mixed use 1,600-space public parking garage building with close to 400 rental – has been making major headway. units in downtown Flushing. At the While construction is still ongoing, time plans were presented, Comthe project aims to bring approxi- munity Board 7 Chairman Eugene mately 600 new residential units and Kelty and first Vice President Chuck Apelian voted against it. “That was really going to impact the area,” Kelty said. “I feel more comfortable with where we are now.” A Bedroom Community Turned Commercial Hub BY DANIEL OFFNER Staff Writer O nce a quiet sleepy suburb at the end of the subway, Flushing has boomed in recent decades to become a Queens commercial and residential hub, with its own skyline and even its own word in the language of the immigrant population who spearheaded its renaissance. At the height of the 20th century, Flushing was renowned as a hot-spot for some of the American film industry elite. Over the years it would play host to several vaudeville acts and performances from legendary actors like the Marx Brothers, Bob Hope, among others. But back then, Flushing was mostly a residential community, dotted with private homes and commercial strips like a typical American suburb. That all changed in the mid 20th Century. In the 1970s, the Chinese immigrant population in Flushing began to boom. At the time, many of those moving into the area were former Chinese Nationalists, who fled to Taiwan after losing a civil war to the communist regime. As the Taiwanese population continued to grow, so did Flushing, and by 1990 Asian-Americans represented 41 percent of the population. There is even a word in Chinese for the neighborhood; 法拉盛 or Falasheng. With them came a building boom. Today, Flushing has one of the strongest real estate markets in the five boroughs – with home sales prices appreciating 33.7 percent over the last five years, according to Trulia.com. Some of the biggest development to take place in Flushing in recent years, include: Citi Field – which officially opened its doors to the New York Mets fans in 2009 – the New World Shopping Mall, Sky View Parc, Flushing Commons and several big chain hotels, including the Sheraton on 39th Avenue. The New World Shopping Mall opened in Downtown Flushing in 2011, and is the largest Asian shopping center in New York State. The three-story shopping mall features 108 retail shops, an Asian supermarket on the first and second floor and is home to one of the largest Chinese dim sum restaurants and banquet halls in the Tri-State area. continued on page 9 RENDERING COURTESY JK EQUITIES The RKO Keith’s Theater, closed since 1986, as it would look if redevelopment plans go through. aPril 2-8, 2015 Page 5 Tribune/Press Real estate MaRketplace Interest Rate Hikes are Coming… Eventually BY MICHAEL STAHL L ast December, the Federal Reserve provided the financial world some insight into its plans to “normalize the stance of monetary policy.” It’s hoping to eventually bring interest rates back up to a healthy 3.5 or 4 percent, and indicated that it would be “patient” in doing so. On March 18, after the institution’s monthly gathering, the Fed offered an updated statement about their prospective approach with a most conspicuous deletion of the word “patient,” which prompted a follow up from Chairwoman Janet Yellen. She said in a press confer- ence: “Just because we removed the word ‘patient’ from the statement, doesn’t mean we’re going to be impatient.” Since the global financial crisis hit in 2008, the Fed has attempted to spur the national economy by keeping the Federal funds rate at between zero and one-quarter of one percent, and they haven’t raised rates at all since June 2006. But with the economy recently entering a new phase of recovery, pundits began speculating about the inevitable uptick in interest rates. Yellen’s use of the word “patient” surprised analysts in December, while the omission of it two weeks ago seemingly caught no one off guard. The focus on the question as to when rate hikes would come into effect was feverishly rebooted. Many experts who have painstakingly waded through the edits and double negatives in the Fed’s announcements agree that interest rates may go up sometime between June and September. However, the increase will probably be characterized as more of a hop than a leap. Incremental changes are less likely to harm the economy’s growth, and even the Fed probably doesn’t expect to get rates up to 4 percent until 2018 at the earliest. What does all of this mean for the housing market? In the short term: very little. “People are very slow to listen and respond,” says Ira Schulte, a real estate broker at Citi Habitats with 21 years of experience. “It’s going to take a while before rates go up and affect the marketplace.” Once the banks are hit with higher loan rates from the Fed, typically the increase in cost is passed on to the customer. But Schulte is quick to point out that, historically, when Fed interest rate bumps were more frequent - occurring on a monthly basis during some stretches - they would only measure a quarter of a point or even less. “So, we’re only talking maybe $50 a month more in a mortgage payment for a buyer,” Schulte says of the projected initial increases for 2015. “For most people, that’s not going to dissuade them from purchasing a home.” continued on page 8 The Fed Funds Rate, which peaked at 19 percent in the early 1980s, has been at near zero since the 2009 financial crisis in an effort to spur the struggling economy. Page 6 aPril 2-8, 2015 Tribune/Press Real estate MaRketplace Zoning Could Be Curbing Interest In Parkway By Luis Gronda Staff Writer T he Parkway Hospital site in Forest Hills is back on the market for prospective buyers. The vacant facility adjacent to the Grand Central Parkway, which housed the hospital until its closure in 2008, is available for sale by its owner, Jasper Venture Group. The group’s repeated attempts to flip the property have failed. The building was sold in an auction last year, which was later cancelled after that buyer did not meet the required payment schedule for the property. Jasper is reportedly looking to get about $20 million for the 107,000 square-foot building, located at 7035 113th St. But there may be some limitations as to what a prospective buyer can do with the property, potentially driving down interest in the building. According to one Queens-based developer, who has toured the facility and declined to be named for this story, the building’s current zoning, R1-2A, handcuffs what can be done a zoning change to a higher density, which requires approval by the City. The source said there are additional costs that come with buying the property, including its renovation cost. “The building may need to be torn down completely,” the developer said. Michael Cohen, spokesperson for Councilwoman Karen Koslowitz (D-Forest Hills), said that the Council member would be receptive to the possibility of a high-rise building in that area, provided the developer who buys it met with Koslowitz and the community about what they plan to do at the site and listen to their feedback. Jasper Venture Group referred questions about the property to Avison Young, a Manhattan-based firm who is handling the marketing of the property. Calls and emails made to Avison Young have not been returned as of press time. Reach Luis Gronda at (718) 357-7400, Ext. 127, Zoning regulations may be to blame for the failure to sell and develop the site lgronda@queenstribune. of Parkway Hospital in Forest Hills, which closed in 2009 com, or @luisgronda. with the property if a company decides to buy it. The R1-2A zoning allows for lowdensity, single-family detached homes, similar to the housing stock found in Forest Hills near the hospital site, and in other neighborhoods such as Jamaica Estates. That zoning can be ignored if a developer intends to build a medical or an educational facility, provided it is a community facility, a Depart- ment of City Planning spokesperson said. The R1-2A zoning has a maximum floor area ratio of 0.5, a maximum building height of 35 feet and a maximum perimeter wall of 25 feet, according to City Planning. The developer said prospective buyers may be more interested if they have the option to build a highrise residential facility. For that to be possible there would have to be aPril 2-8, 2015 Page 7 Tribune/Press Real estate MaRketplace RendeRing couRtesy of goldstein, Hill & West ARcHitects A rendering of the proposed development at the Mary Immaculate Hospital site. ‘Immaculate’ Concept For Defunct Hospital By JORDAN GIBBONS Staff Writer A new proposal is in the works for the former Mary Immaculate Hospital building in Downtown Jamaica to revitalize the rundown site, which has remained unused since the facility was closed in 2009. The project, which was revealed by the architect firm Goldstein, Hill & West Architects, LLP, plans to completely rebuild the two main structures of the hospital, located at 150-13 89th Ave., into a new 16-story luxury rental with 324 proposed apartments, replacing its façade with a contemporary metal and glass skin. The original hospital building will have its limestone and brick façade restored according to the description on the architect’s website. A third structure, the Townhouses, is a four-story historic building, which will be converted into 15 apartments. The project could later include four other buildings on the block. There is also an enclosed parking area with 237 spaces in the plans. An application to convert the building into rental apartments was submitted to the Department of Buildings in September, but was disapproved in November for failure to meet code compliance standards, according to a DOB spokesperson. The property, which fell into disrepair over the years, has 117 violations still open under the DOB. The site, which is located directly north of Rufus King Park, is zoned as an R6 residential area, so no commercial space can be built on the land. The 94-ft., seven-story building will become a 196-ft. tower under the current application. When the hospital was shuttered in 2009, Community Board 12 was actively against its closing since it was the only full-service medical facility in the district. Adrienne Adams, chair of CB 12, said that losing that fight was a detriment to the community. “Over the past few years, we hoped that our voices would be heard and that the new owner would at least place another much-needed medical facility in its place,” Adams said. “Today, we are still without a hospital in Community Board 12 and are instead getting luxury apartments in its place. Expensive housing, less resources… we continue to wait for the needs of the community to be met. This is not the answer.” The Chetrit Group, which purchased the property in 2009, and GHWA did not return calls for comment. Reach Jordan Gibbons at (718) 357-7400, Ext. 123, jgibbons@queenspress.com or @jgibbons2. PHoto by JoRdAn gibbons Mary Immaculate Hospital was closed in 2009. Page 8 aPril 2-8, 2015 Ridgewood: Tribune/Press Real estate MaRketplace Williamsburg’s $2.1 million median home listing prices, not to mention the $1.3 million figures found within Ridgewood’s home borough on the border between Long Island City and Astoria. Ridgewood also ranks among the safest neighborhoods in Queens on Trulia.com and greatly outperforms both Bed-Stuy and Bushwick when it comes to crime rates. The median sales price of Ridgewood properties has only recently BY MICHAEL STAHL risen to that of the average Queens transaction, while the average pricever the past two years, there have been reports per-square foot in the neighborand proclamations from a gaggle of publications hood is barely a tick higher than the borough’s average, surpassing that declaring that Ridgewood is the Queens incarnathreshold just six months ago. tion of a fill-in-the-blank neighborhood of Brooklyn. “It’s “The area’s booming,” Hillel says, only one stop outside of Bushwick on the M train.” “Its adding that people are attracted to the public transportation options, prices are rising at a Williamsburg-like pace.” “It’s safer burgeoning retail, the safety of the than Bedford-Stuyvesant.” Though all of these statements neighborhood and, of course, the relatively reasonable prices. “Rents are true, the comparisons between Ridgewood and those are going up, especially over the last Kings County plots aren’t quite justified…yet. two or three years, and we just sold a property on 60th Lane for $21 mil“You’ll get more for your money themselves priced out of what are lion, which was unheard of a few years ago.” here,” says Aaron Hillel, co-founder now high-profile neighborhoods. Trulia.com’s most recent statisHe adds that rates will most cerof the Hillel Realty Group located at the cross section of Myrtle and tics indicate the median home list- tainly continue to rise as new develCypress avenues. “Prices are still ing prices in Ridgewood top out at opments open their doors, includbetter here than East Williamsburg, $549,000 to a low of $309,000. Those ing residential, commercial and Bushwick, even Bedford-Stuyve- numbers pale in comparison to East retail spaces. Matej reports a sant. Ridgewood’s also got dearth of inventory that historic vibe. It’s not as another cause of as commercial or indusraised rates. trial; it’s mostly a residen“There’s not tial neighborhood with a enough,” she says. lot of nice-looking pre-war “A lot of people have buildings.” lived and owned in Lillian Matej of Cooper Ridgewood for 30 or & Katz Real Estate Corp., 40 years and they’re who has 13 years of real esnot as likely to sell tate experience, concurs. just because there’s “There are a lot of people demand. A lot of the who are finding value here sales that we get are in Queens,” she says, pointestates.” ing out that the area is exWhen asked to periencing a “spillover” provide a listing infrom Brooklyn where there are a growing number of For those looking for affordable options close to Man- dicative of what buyers can look for in buyers and renters finding hattan, Ridgewood is still one to look at ...for now. Not the New Williamsburg…Yet O the area, Matej had nothing current to offer, pointing out the furious pace of the market as properties are snatched up after just days of availability. So, the people in Ridgewood are older, the neighborhood is almost completely residential, crime rates are delightfully low and costs are but slightly above borough average—for now. The new Brooklyn? If housing prices keep going up, that’s a possibility down the…err…M train. Featured Ridgewood listings: 64-05 Gates Avenue A two-story, multi-family home with five bedrooms and two bathrooms, this pre-war brick building just hit the market within the past three weeks. There’s approximately 3,300 square feet of living space in the Colonial-style home, a patio, 11 total rooms, hardwood floors, a full basement with a separate entrance, and a private driveway and garage. 17-43 Grove Street A two-family home, which has been converted into a three-family, income-generating building, this property could be a steal. It’s been on the market for nearly five months, possibly because it needs a fair share of work done on it. A buyer with the means though might want to take advantage of its availability. The property is on a beautiful, treelined street close to mass transit, and has a spacious backyard. For more on these listings, visit Trulia.com. The Fed’s Interest Rate Hikes are Coming... Eventually continued from page 5 The fact that 2016 is a presidential election year can also mean stunted growth for maturing interest rates. Though President Obama nominated Yellen for her position as Fed chair, she arguably has closer ties to Hillary Clinton, the Democrats’ 2016 presidential frontrunner. Yellen served as chair of the White House Council of Economic Advisers in the late 1990s under President Bill Clinton. Though Yellen is already guaranteed to hold a position on the Fed’s board through 2024, her political history generates speculation that Obama and Hillary Clinton—should she run for the presidency and win— could both use their influence on the Fed’s chair to keep rates down next year, thus aiding the Democratic Party in their quest to maintain control of the White House. When it comes to real estate transactions, the bottom line, according to Schulte, is that “if someone has the money to [buy property], they should be doing it now.” “Two years from now, prices in Queens are going to be more expensive because that’s what’s happening, and interest rates are going to be higher,” he explained. Schulte advises prospective buyers to educate themselves about finance and if they need to save money for a down payment to start immediately. “In a typical co-op, you’ll need 20 percent down,” he says. “In Queens, a good one-bedroom will cost between 200 and 300 thousand dollars, so the down payment will run 40 to 60 grand.” Schulte adds that oftentimes a bank will want to see a year of mortgage funds in savings as well, which means a hopeful buyer should have 80 thousand dollars or more of disposable income at the ready—if in fact they want to purchase a one-bedroom co-op in a desirable neighborhood and not something more expensive. Still, Schulte points out that Queens remains relatively affordable when compared to the mighty markets of Manhattan and Brooklyn, calling the activity and prices in those boroughs simply “crazy.” Regardless of residency in a particular borough, city, or state, it’s a safe bet that the Federal Reserve will raise their interest rates in the near future and eventually cause an increase in the costs of mortgage loans. So it’s good advice to either buy now or certainly plan on purchasing within the next 12 to 24 months—though, even if the Fed reaches their goal of “normal” 4-percent rates, those will still be microscopic compared to the 19percent historical high witnessed in 1980 and half of what rates were in the late 1980s. aPril 2-8, 2015 Page 9 Tribune/Press Real estate MaRketplace Co-working and the 21st Century By Michael Stoler M ore and more young entrepreneurs are looking to co-working facilities to secure relatively inexpensive desk and office space. In addition to WiFi, conference rooms and kitchen and snack prep areas, these rental business studios offer new companies the opportunity to meet with others in their field of interest, as well a venture capitalist and established business leaders. The co-working space industry is growing by leaps and bounds, especially in New York City. Currently, the biggest player in the co-working universe is WeWork, which launched in New York in 2010 and has brought on 20,000 tenants in less than five years. It already has 13 locations in New York City alone, and is rapidly expanding throughout the U.S. and around the world. Earlier this year, WeWork signed a lease for 240,000square-feet of space at 85 Broad Street in Lower Manhattan. Another leader in the field is AlleyNYC, who recently entered into a ten year lease for 36,000-square-feet at 119-125 West 24th St. With many technology startups operating in Brooklyn, the latest co-working company to capitalize in the hot Borough is CoWork.rs. Earlier this year the company signed a lease for 42,000-square-feet at 92 Third Ave. in the Gowanus section of Brooklyn. Long Island City is the home of QNS Collective, located at 36-27 36th St. Individuals have the opportunity pay $25 a day to work from a communal space. A student with a valid student ID is offered a special price of $99 a month for communal space and meet room access. Similar to other co-working spaces, individuals can rent on a monthly basis, communal and desk space as well as a private office with conference room access with prices starting at $500 per month. Create NY Space is located in the heart of Astoria, at 35-18 37th St., next to the Museum of the Moving Images. The Aurora Gallery, a graffiti art gallery is the creator of this company. The company boasts that their space is a non-tradition co-working space, focusing more on the comfort of the creative mind. They offer a Lab-café with bottomless cups of coffee and several lounge-style seating areas. If desired, a private meeting room is available. This nontraditional co-working company is open fewer hours during the week from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday to Friday, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Friday and Saturday and Sunday by request. In March, Regus, an office suite provider signed a ten year lease for 34,000-square-feet on the third floor of the Falchi Building at 31-00 47th Ave. in Long Island City. This is the company’s first Queens location for the office space provider which has 2000 business centers in 750 cities worldwide. age cost going for anywhere between $400,000 to approximately Flushing’s $2 million for the penthouse. Despite the new plans to build Transformation luxury condos while also preserving continued from page 4 Now, more than ten years since the BSA approved plans, developers are proposing to amend the BSA application to increase the building height by 15-feet, reduce the number of residential units to allow 269 market-rate condos, reduce the number of parking spaces and change the façade along Northern Boulevard. “This is the last piece of the puzzle,” developer Jerry Karlik told the Queens Tribune. “We’re ready to break ground as soon as we get approval.” According to Karlik, the proposed condo units will range from 500 to 1,600 sq. ft., with the aver- the landmarked ticket booth and front lobby, Frager said she is most disappointed with the fact that the developers are proposing to build a tenant-only parking garage where 3,200 patrons used to sit. “Shame on Queens… we could have had a restored theater,” Frager said. “A corrupt Borough Hall sunk the Keith’s.” Kelty said that while he would’ve loved to see the RKO Keith’s restored as a performing arts center, nobody was able to come up with the money. “That was 30 years ago,” Kelty said. “It has been an eyesore… it’s time to move forward.” Reach Daniel Offner at (718) 3577400, Ext. 125, doffner@queenstribune.com, or @DanielOffner. Right photo by Daniel offneR Flushing has changed a lot in recent decades, such as 136-61 Roosevelt Ave. in 1985, left and in 2015, right. AdvErTOrIAL The Joy Of Homeownership Is Still Alive And Well – Online Owning a home is for many an important part of the American dream. However, the process of securing a mortgage and buying that home may seem significantly less dreamy. Responding to this challenge, Ridgewood Savings Bank has developed Joyofhomeowernship. com, a website dedicated to reminding potential home buyers of the joys of homeownership, while also providing answers to top home-buying questions. Designed to be as fun as it is informative, joyofhomeowernship. com provides. Two-minute video answers to many of the most frequently asked mortgage and home-buying process questions such as: • Should I buy now? • What are the types of mortgages? • Do I really need an attorney? Additionally, the site is loaded with other things homebuyers will find useful, such as easy-to-use calculators, current mortgage rates, downloadable FAQs, and a helpful “ask any question” section that promises a response within 24 hours. There’s also a Get Started section, which invites you to sign up to attend a free homebuying seminar, start the mortgage process online and find a local mortgage consultant by just typing in your zip code. Joyofhomeownership.com is tablet and mobile friendly, so you can access the site’s features and information from anywhere, anytime. Considering buying a home? If so, visit joyofhomeowenership. com today and put yourself one step closer to your dream. Ridgewood Savings Bank is dedicated to providing you with the answers and the personal service you’ll need to make the process of homeownership go as smoothly as possible. Equal Housing Lender Page 10 aPril 2-8, 2015 Tribune/Press Real estate MaRketplace Do Your Own Comps: See How a Home’s Worth Using PropertyShark By GeorGiana Mihaila W hether you’re thinking about buying or selling, putting a $ figure next to a home might seem like quite a task. But making sure that a home is priced accordingly is crucial, so here’s a little help on how to do it properly. A home’s value is determined by looking at sale prices of similar properties in the area. Since you can’t go asking neighbors how much they bought their house for, turning to reliable online resources that have access to solid sales data is the obvious choice. Enter PropertyShark, a leading real estate data provider that takes its sales data from hundreds of public and proprietary sources and updates it on a daily basis. PropertyShark offers a superior comparables tool that will do your pricing for you by pulling out prices paid for recently sold homes – similar in size, characteristics and location with the one that interests you – and return the market value of a home. Unlike the automated valuation models you’d normally find on most real estate websites, PropertyShark’s tool allows you to narrow your search down to the finest details, as to include only the most similar homes in your comps search. You can search by neighborhood, zip code, or radius, by property type or building class, add filters like number of rooms, square footage, number of stories, extension or garage, lot square footage, property taxes and much more. And since the tool has been conceived to suit the needs of real estate pros and home buyers alike, here are some of its most specific benefits, based on your own needs: For home buyers and sellers: • search by property type and building class: single family, condos, co-ops, elevator, walk-ups • advanced filters: number of beds, baths, square footage, lot size, number of stories etc. • see the value of a condo by looking only at sales in that particular building For agents and brokers: • advanced search criteria options available, like number of units, block and lot, zoning and more • include only arm’s-length transaction in your comps search • specify exact time and price ranges for the sales For appraisers: • access the FNMA form straight from your Comps search • see aggregate values on the 1004MC form • export data to your Comps Database with WinTotal under the same neighborhood or zip code, you can draw your own area on a map using PropertyShark’s polygon tool. Quick Fact: if you’re interested in a particular area that doesn’t fall Georgiana Mihaila is an associate editor with PropertyShark. In the Works: A Rundown of Recently Conceived Future Constructs in Queens By Michael Stahl Flushing Permits were recently filed with the Department of Buildings by the F & T Group to begin developing the second stage of their Two Fulton Square project located on the site of the now-closed Flushing Mall. This phase of Two Fulton Square is expected to be a 13-story mixed-use building with more than 190,000 square feet of residential and commercial space sitting next to the development’s first stage: another mixed-use, 397-unit building with 752,000 square feet of residential and retail space. Condo buyers can look forward to amenities such as a fitness center, game room, laundry room, and garage parking with shopping opportunities literally steps away. Designed by architect Margulies Hoelzli, known locally for work on the Queens Crossing building and the F & T Group’s sister project One Fulton Square, which is just a block away and had a softopening last fall, the new building will have 192 modern apartments spread throughout the 13 flights. Astoria Treeline, Glenmont Capital Management and B31 Astoria Development LLC are co-developing a new seven-story mixed-use building that will house 114 apartment units and a handful of retail outlets throughout the construct’s 102,060 square feet. There will be a mix of studios, onebedroom, two-bedroom, and threebedroom homes with building amenities including a lounge, gym, and a courtyard/terrace with barbecue grills and a yoga studio. Designed by SLCE Architects, all involved parties hope to begin occupancy in about 18 months, and this building could set the stage for conception of similar developments in the neighborhood. Long Island City SLCE Architects are also apparently having their say at the site of 43-22 Queens St., just off Jackson Avenue, recently posting renderings of this project as well. The Rockrose development group, who purchased the lot in 2012 for $48 million, is putting up a 54-story apartment tower there that will stretch 580 reflective, glassy feet into the sky. Demolition for this project began 8 months ago when portions of the former Eagle Electric warehouse were torn down. There will be a reported 783 apartments available, many of them loftstyle, in the new 587,860-squarefoot building that SLCE Architects have been charged with designing. The Star Tower condominium is expected to see presales begin in spring of 2017. Located at 42-26 28th Street, the 27-story building will contain 182 units, 135 of which will be of the one-bedroom variety, with the remaining apartments featuring two-bedrooms. The lot was purchased by the Hiwin Group and ground was just broken within the past couple weeks. JLS Designs have been named architects, and the building is expected to have a full slate of boutique amenities that will tentatively include an elevator, 24-hour doorman and concierge service, movie theater, fitness center, outdoor lounge, private gardens in select units, and duplex penthouses. College Point New York Yimby reported that a 10-story, mixed-use building is be- ing developed in College Point by Guan Y. Li. The construct will house a 48-room hotel on its top four floors, a community facility space on the third through sixth floors, while a 116-space parking garage will take up the first two above-ground floors along with two more subterranean levels. Noel Wong has been named architect and there is speculation that the project will attract renters from the medical field. Elmhurst Another hotel is expected to be included in an upcoming mixed-use building located at 78-06 Queens Blvd. According to New York Yimby, the 11-story construct will have residential units, a community facility, and parking garage along with the 94-room hotel, which is also projected to feature a restaurant/bar. Kambanis Architects filed the permits with Triple East Queens Tower LLC listed as the developer. The site was purchased for a cool $4.56 million in 2013. It is located adjacent to the Pan American Hotel building, which became a homeless shelter in 2014. aPril 2-8, 2015 Page 11 Tribune/Press Real estate MaRketplace CLASSIFIEDS Houses Wanted Realtor WHAT IS YOUR HOME WORTH? jerry fink real estate 160-10 Crossbay Blvd. Howard Beach, NY 11414 Free, quick over the Net evaluation of your home. Learn about homes that have been sold and are currently listed in your neighborhood. GET THE FACTS WITHOUT THE PRESSURE. Based on this information, you will know what your home is worth. This is a complete confidential market analysis and is absolutely free!! Visit: www.PriceMyHouse.us or call 1-800-882-6030 Ext 607 24/7 FREE Community Service Real Estate CALL: 718-357-7400 e-mail: queenstribuneads@aol.com Listing Special 3% Call for details Office 718-766-9175 Cell 917-774-6121 Email-Jfinkre@yahoo.com Relocating -Buying -Selling Consider Staten Island & Brooklyn Call Claire Bisignano Chesnoff, NYS Licensed Real Estate Broker Claire Properties Direct: 917-974-2238 info@claireproperties.com www.claireproperties.com “Like” us on Facebook Queens Tribune Newspaper Building 4 Sale Beautiful 2 story home sits on 14 Ac, 4BR, 2.5BA, EIK leads to large FR/brick FP, Formal DR off / 2 story entry, Laundry, half Bath from 2 car Gar, 25 x 50 heated ingr pool 8,000 sq ft. paved tiered patio. Office/T.V Rm leads to patio, pool house, privacy fence, stocked trout pond, heat pump, AC, 24KW Generac generator, Much more. Helen Wolfgang - Realtor Centre Street Real Estate 570-590-3446 helencentres1@hotmail.com Apts. For Rent flushing Studios 1 BR 2 BR 3 BR $900/mth $1000 $1500 $1850 Place Your Ad Here Call Broker 718-939-5600 New Jersey Space whse-storage mfg off rte 78 new jersey 3000 To 20,000 Sq Ft Available - Hi Ceilings Heavy Tower - Offices & Lg Apt also available Safe Secure Neighborhood Call for more info For Rent whitestone: Commercial space 500sq. ft. heat incl. New 3BR/2BA 1st flr. H.I. Rare..... $2,200 Stunning 2BR First floor, new kitchen/bath, Backyard priv., includes basement with Washer Dryer....... $2,400 Gorgeous 2BR First Floor, Backyard priv., fresh paint, very large Nice 3BR with back balcony EIK, LV, DR, parking.......................................... $2,275 Fab 2BR/1BA, EIK, Large LR, DR. $1,800 Fresh Meadows: 3BR Duplex, 2BA, EIK, LR/DR combo, newly renovated, private entrance............................ $2,100 Astoria: Commercial Space, great area 1,600, 1,000 and 850 SF avail. 718-767-0080 • 917-821-9518 R .E. Seminar House 4 Sale HOWARD BEACH March 26, 2015 At 7:00PM Call now to register and get additional details. Inviting all Buyers and Sellers. Don’t miss out. Complimentary snacks and refreshments will be served. 718-454-9000 House Wanted houses bought All Cash Any Condition Estate Specialist Out Of State TOMS RIVER NJ An Affordable & Active Adult Community “HOMESTEAD RUN” NEW manufactured HOMES For SALE starting at $54,900 CALL TODAY! 800-275-2911 www.homesteadrun.com The Catskills adrianne realty days 516-946-7771 *FREE REAL ESTATE SEMINAR Claire Properties Direct: 917-974-2238 Office: 718-524-4424 718-217-2000 Beechurst Hi-Ranch, 3BR, 1½ Bth Full Bsmt. 2 Car Gar. $3500/mth. Mariners Harbor, Staten Island, NY Brick & stucco building w/3 residential rentals & one commercial space. Apartments are all electric w/separate thermostats & meters. Warehouse /store front is electric & has gas heat available w/separate meter. Owners meter for common areas. Tenants are N.Y.C.H.A. New roof 2011, new windows 2012 and warehouse has ceilings of 13 feet. Apartments were redone in 2012. $279,900 156-21 96th Street BEAUTIFULLY RENOVATED 1-Family Brick w/2 Units $549K 4 Bedrooms, Private Driveway, Terrace, Backyard & Basement w/ Separate Entrance. CALL JANE COSTAGLIOLA (917) 807 1421 718-388-2188 117. 8 ACRES surveyed off the grid camp w/year around stream and several pond Sites. Near Cannonsville Res. Lake. Asking $300,000 Real Estate Broker Owned 607-865-5357 Todd Ogden dtodd79@yahoo.com D. T. Ogden Real Estate Unfernished Apt. flushing 158th st. Near Northern Blvd. & LIRR. New 1 BR - $1,275 4th flr. walkup. No Pets. No brokers. No Fee 718-358-3564 718-575-9600 LYNBROOK, NY 22 Washington Ave. Professionally redone 50x100 side hall Queens Anne. New home w/o new home price, New concrete. Priced to sell. SD 12, Taxes: 13,900. 20% approved reduction. Principles only 516-526-0571 $409,900 SPRINGFIELD GARDEN 2 Family Fully Renovated 6BR 5 Full Bath Fin Bsmt - Garage W/DW Big Back Yard No CC Low DP Asking 449K 917-957-9969 Heating Oil 7 UNIT INVESTMENT PROPERTY In Ozone Park, Rental 120K 2 Family Custom Built New House In Wakefield $799K Contact Raj 917-957-9969
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