Quote:
Originally Posted by officedweller
- they could just enter into a Ground Lease for the site and development control would stay with the Port under the terms of the lease; or
- or they could encumber the site with a Restrictive Covenant that only allows permitted stadium-related uses with ancillary commercial space (so that they can't cash in and build an office tower on the site (like @ GM Place) or sell it to condo developers if the Caps go belly-up).
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these are good ideas, and i'm thinking a lease with covenant is probably the only way this deal gets done, but we'd still have to solve two issues:
1) i suspect the whitecaps will want to leverage the aerial development rights (for which they paid handsomely) as part of any deal... after all of this, the value of those rights will certainly be lower in the near term than when kerfoot snapped them up. how do those rights get leveraged in a swapout for a leasehold?
2) the vpa will doubtless want a very nice chunk of change for the land rights, and though i don't know him or his team or what they're thinking or how bad they want it, experience and common sense tell me that kerfoot won't be tossing in another xxx million dollars for another set of development rights.
here are my questions:
1. is it likely that political pressure gets this moving a bit quicker? (i suspect kerfoot and the gang are already making discreet inquiries here and there)
2. would the whitecaps hold on to the aerial rights AND payout for the waterfront leasehold? (this is what i would do in that situation, because man, those rights are going to be very very valuable in a few years!) if so, it would make them a power player in the area... or there could be some kind of arrangement with the city...
3. is it likely anything happens on this before march 2010? (i suspect so.)