Quote:
Originally Posted by biggus diggus
The previous owners bought that building on the courthouse steps knowing that Chase was moving out, hell they even built Chase's new office. They flipped the building to Wentworth about a month later and they bought it with intention of running everyone out and remodeling the building to re-lease and sell. Covid changed the office market. They have a 15K foot floorplate and 8' ceilings. The building is an old dog and the market for a dog office space right now is non-existent. The expectation is for this one to be vacant long term and/or become housing.
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Wentworth bought it and flipped to its current billionaire owner, Vincent Viola.
I have a feeling it's going to be vacant until Viola sells, which may as well be never. People like him are the last types you'd want owning a building like this--I smell this acquisition like whatever eccentric trophy (tallest building in Pheonix!!!1!) the super rich get to diversify their wealth for a long term hold, maybe profiting just a bit from the parking so no motivation to sell. Note that it is not up for lease and the owner has no experience developing property and no known ties to Arizona.
It would take a serious development team to buy it back, realize Viola a profit, and all they'd get would be two hulking concrete blocks needing a massive renovation.
I may be way out of my league here but fortunately the numbers are lining up:
The purchase price for the tower ($150 or so a square foot) plus conversion costs, mayyyybe another $150 square foot (
https://www.stamfordadvocate.com/rea...es-4769682.php) are decently less than, eg Adeline's construction cost of $360/square foot.
The bonus here is in the land of the currently connected garage block, that seems like an easy tear down. It's not ADA compliant so it doesn't properly serve the next building (where's plinko when you need him?), but could be worth $17 - 20 million for the land it's on at pre-COVID rates and from what I remember from structured parking costs make redeveloping it a no-brainer.
The problem is again is that it would take a well-capitalized developer to turn the blocks around and maximize value. I think they'd have to be bigger than anyone else in Phoenix, and that would be a problem attracting that kind of capital.