LATEST NEWS
Professional Services | Building Envelope | Heavy Equipment | Green Building
July 2, 2009
Financing a go for Bank of America tower in New York
NEW YORK
Developers of one of the city’s tallest new skyscrapers says they have lined up a nearly US$1.3 billion loan, sealing what experts called one of the biggest real estate financing deals since the economic crisis began last fall.
Coming amid the worst commercial real estate market in decades, the refinancing package for the Bank of America tower drew congratulations from Mayor Michael Bloomberg and Gov. David Paterson. Real estate experts hailed the deal as a sign that the moribund market might be reviving.
“When you have a transaction that has this many zeroes after it, people take notice,” said Dennis M. Sughrue, a real estate attorney with Herrick, Feinstein LLP, which wasn’t involved in the deal. “It’s a singular building and a singular transaction, but it is a note of hope for a real estate market which is flat on its back.”
The 945-foot-tall tower in midtown Manhattan is partially occupied and is set to be finished next year. The glass-covered skyscraper boasts a prominent location off Bryant Park and a roster of green features that drew Al Gore’s environmentally friendly investment firm.
The building’s developer, The Durst Organization, says 98 percent of it has been leased — about 80 per cent to Bank of America Corp.
Despite those attributes, it took about nine months to line up the new financing, Durst spokesman Jordan Barowitz said. The money will pay off a construction loan that came due last month and finance the remaining work, among other things, he said.
The refinancing lag didn’t affect construction of the 55-floor building, formally known as 1 Bryant Park, he said.
To real estate watchers, lenders’ reluctance to refinance the project symbolized how paralyzed the market had become.
“This is the kind of deal that would be done in a week at the height of the market,” said Dan Fasulo, a managing director at Real Capital Analytics, a real estate research and consulting firm that wasn’t involved in the deal.
Since the economy soured, some building owners around the country have fallen behind on mortgage payments after tenants left or went out of business.
Unable to refinance, some owners have sold marquee skyscrapers at cut-rate auctions. Boston’s tallest skyscraper, the John Hancock Tower, sold at auction in March for just over US$20 million, with the buyers agreeing to take on US$640 million in debt.
About half the new loan for the Bank of America tower comes from the bank itself, Barowitz said.
The project’s original financing included $650 million in tax-exempt bonds intended to help spur construction in lower Manhattan after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center.
Construction began in 2004 and has involved a number of accidents. In October 2007, a crane’s bucket toppled off the building and broke windows; eight people were slightly hurt as glass rained down.
Associated Press
| MOST POPULAR STORIES |
- Pursuit of LEED could result in professional negligence, insurance executive warns
- Construction moving forward on Ho Chi Minh City tunnel
- Deaths of five immigrant workers changed jobsites forever
- SNC-Lavalin subsidiary Profac under scrutiny over federal contract billing
- St. Marys Cement plant workers go on strike in Bowmanville, Ontario
- 20 Most Popular Stories
| TODAY’S TOP CONSTRUCTION PROJECTS |
These projects have been selected from 313 projects with a total value of $3,164,198,755 that Reed Construction Data Building Reports reported on yesterday.
$400,000,000 Windsor ON Prebid
$300,000,000 Toronto ON Negotiated
RESIDENTIAL, COMMERCIAL DEVELOPMENT
$250,000,000 Etobicoke ON Negotiated
| CURRENT STORIES |
- Pride, sadness as Hogg's Hollow memorial unveiled
- Despite safety improvements, underground dangers still exist
- ‘Sandhogs’ who perished had diverse personal stories
- Commemorative quilt also a story of victims’ families
- Filling labour gap a top priority for incoming Canadian Construction Association chair
- Niagara Construction Association president worked her way up
- Pursuit of LEED could result in professional negligence, insurance executive warns
- Nova Scotia officials ‘comfortable’ covering cost of $60-million wind plant
- New Brunswick plans to install wildlife fencing for construction season
- Venues decommissioned in Olympic afterglow
- Canadian Construction Association chair bids farewell
- Hogg’s Hollow tragedy changed Ontario’s construction industry
- Wood being considered as preferred building material for federal projects
- Grizzly Oil Sands seeks approval for project near Fort McMurray
- Search continues for sustainable architecture
- Seven British Columbia communities sign Wood First agreements
- U.S. construction employment declines in January
- Ottawa unveils plan to cut red tape
| ALEX’S ECONOMICS BLOG |

Reed Construction Data Chief Economist Alex Carrick discusses current developments in the North American economic environment with emphasis on the construction industry.
- Sub-sector investment spending intentions from Statistics Canada’s latest survey (March 17, 2010)
- A dozen incredible measurement sets on Canada’s changing ethnic mix (March 9, 2010)
- How fragile is recovery around the world? (March 3, 2010)
- More







