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Re: NY Daily News: Square One, Ground Zero: Port Authority must kill $1 billion WTC bailout plan
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Home away from home
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2006/11/13 18:42 Last Login : 2022/2/28 7:31 From 280 Grove Street
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We all can't be that silly not to understand that they will erect as many office block buildings as they can in NY.
JC's business waterfront was only going to be a temp thing and all those buildings on the waterfront on our side, will eventually be converted into housing. Seriously a JC business address has ftuck all appeal compared to a NY address. Those that bought an apartment on the waterfront better grip themselves for crap returns when they try to sell. We already have floors empty in our office buildings on our side of the river. Watch this space.....but we have a few (3 max) years to go till the transition takes place. Its amazing when you tender for work and see where things are heading !!!!
Posted on: 2010/3/5 20:38
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Re: NY Daily News: Square One, Ground Zero: Port Authority must kill $1 billion WTC bailout plan
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Home away from home
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Does the area even need Towers 2 and 3.
Posted on: 2010/3/5 14:54
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NY Daily News: Square One, Ground Zero: Port Authority must kill $1 billion WTC bailout plan
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Home away from home
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Square One, Ground Zero: Port Authority must kill $1 billion WTC bailout plan
NY Daily News: Sunday, April 19th 2009, 4:00 AM The terrible economic realities spawned by the financial crisis are playing out disastrously in the long-troubled, long-delayed redevelopment of Ground Zero. With the demise or shrinkage of Wall Street giants, there are few, if any, tenants to take space in the five huge towers planned for the site. And the banks that used to lend money for construction, well, they're not making loans the way they used to. No tenants plus no money equals no development. This fact of life is as true at Ground Zero as it is anywhere else - no matter how much the Port Authority, which owns the land, and Larry Silverstein, the builder who holds development rights, might like to defy gravity. Although he has almost $1 billion in reserve from the insurance payment on the toppling of the World Trade Center, Silverstein isn't close to having the resources to complete the single structure he is building now, called Tower 4, let alone the two others he is obligated to erect. Nor does Silverstein have anywhere to turn for private financing. Without leases and with a glut of office space on the market, he has nothing to offer lenders except hope for a miraculous economic recovery. He knows better than to ask. So, paralyzed, Silverstein has turned to the Port Authority to put up billions in public money to guarantee repayment to potential lenders. He would proceed to build Tower 4 and the even larger Tower 2. Properly, the PA told Silverstein to get lost. But it counteroffered with a proposal to bankroll Silverstein to the tune of $1 billion to build Tower 4. This is lunacy. This must stop. The PA must withdraw its offer. Govs. Paterson and Jon Corzine, Mayor Bloomberg and the authority must redraw plans for Ground Zero. The reasons are simple. First, that $1 billion is earmarked for transportation improvements in New York. That is how it must be spent. Second, trying to force development into Ground Zero would be futile and harmful. The authority is considering a $1 billion investment solely out of a desire to maintain progress on the Trade Center site. But as things now stand, the agency would accomplish only the construction of empty offices. Worse, the building would compete against the huge skyscraper, formerly known as the Freedom Tower, that the PA is building across site. For a long time, thanks to the execessively generous terms negotiated by the PA, Silverstein stood to make fabulous sums at Ground Zero while risking none of his own money. That was when times were good. Now they're bad, and he's asking the authority to put more public money at risk so he can stay in the game. But the game is up. =================== WTC towers may be delayed for decades BY AMY WESTFELDT/The Associated Press Saturday, Apr 18, 2009 - 11:31:35 pm CDT NEW YORK ? Construction of several ground zero office towers could be put off for decades because of the failing real estate market, the site?s owners said last week, citing an analysis that projected one skyscraper might not be built and occupied until 35 years after Sept. 11. Developer Larry Silverstein and the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey have been talking on and off for months about rewriting a 3-year-old agreement that gives the developer rights to build three out of five towers planned at the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attack site. Silverstein, unable to obtain financing for all the towers and with only about $1 billion left in insurance money to pay for them, asked the Port Authority last fall to guarantee financing for two of his towers, officials familiar with the negotiations say. The Port Authority agreed to back one tower already under construction, where the government agency has agreed to move once it?s built. Executive Director Chris Ward cited the exodus of major financial firms like Merrill Lynch and AIG from downtown Manhattan as a reason to not flood the market with 10 million square feet of office space at the same time ? about 2013. Ward also said that Silverstein was free to build his three towers on his own. Janno Lieber, who oversees the trade center site for Silverstein, said Thursday that guaranteeing financing for Silverstein?s towers would allow the Port Authority to honor its commitment to rebuild lower Manhattan ? ?a promise that the agency has made many times since 9/11,? he added. The Port Authority is building a 1,776-foot skyscraper, commonly known as the Freedom Tower, that is set to open in 2013. It has no beginning or completion date for a second tower it is responsible for building. Silverstein?s other towers should be built whenever the market improves, Ward said. The Freedom Tower and Silverstein?s three planned towers ? designed by architects like Lord Norman Foster and Richard Rogers ? are all expected to be among the city?s tallest. But an analysis prepared for the Port Authority by the Cushman & Wakefield real estate brokerage projected that while two of Silverstein?s towers could be built by 2013, a third wouldn?t be built until 2030 and fully leased until 2036. A second tower that hasn?t been built yet wouldn?t be fully leased until 2025, the analysis said. A construction union leader appealed to Gov. David Paterson to finance all three towers to keep tens of thousands of workers employed, and ridiculed a proposal to leave two Silverstein towers incomplete by building the first few floors. The lease requires Silverstein to build his three towers by 2013 or forfeit rights to them. Kathryn Wylde, chief executive of the Partnership for New York business group, said the real estate market would likely drive the decision how fast to build back office space. ?If you don?t have commercial tenants demanding the space, I don?t see it being developed,? she said. But she wondered at projections like the 2030 date, saying demand for new office space in lower Manhattan would happen long before that.
Posted on: 2009/4/19 21:00
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