logo
#

Latest news with #Brookfield-owned

Does new S.F. skyscraper proposal signal a timeline for the city's comeback?
Does new S.F. skyscraper proposal signal a timeline for the city's comeback?

San Francisco Chronicle​

time4 days ago

  • Business
  • San Francisco Chronicle​

Does new S.F. skyscraper proposal signal a timeline for the city's comeback?

San Francisco was challenged. The city's weakened economy, still recovering from financial catastrophe and political uncertainty, was at a crossroads when developer Hines pitched what would be the city's tallest building. The year was 2012. Thirteen years later, the same company is looking to do it again, with a new skyscraper proposal on Friday at the former PG&E headquarters that would be even taller than Salesforce Tower. But times are so different than they were in 2012. San Francisco is now beset by an even deeper office market slump than the wake of the 2008 Great Recession. Pandemic-fueled remote work habits pushed the vacancy rate above 30%. And the city budget faces a record-high deficit that could reach $1 billion, with declines in property taxes and the threat of federal aid being choked off by President Donald Trump Hines is betting that the second half of the 2020s will echo the late 2010s tech boom, with office demand overcoming the post-COVID hangover. But there are many hurdles and a long path ahead: Hines' new proposal, if it moves forward, will require years of approval, financing and construction. Hines already paid PG&E $800 million for the property and construction costs of other supertall buildings have topped $1 billion. Salesforce Tower took about a decade to conceive and complete. And forecasts for when the city's core will reach a pre-pandemic sense of normalcy have been varied and without consensus. Stanford professor and remote work expert Nicholas Bloom last fall said San Francisco's recovery was five years away. Months earlier a report from real estate firm Avison Young suggested San Francisco won't fully recover until 2042. Real estate experts have said this year that the comeback has started, thanks to the surge in artificial intelligence companies leasing swaths of office space and the vacancy rate falling in the second quarter. But downtown will need more to recapture the heady days of 2018, when tech giants gobbled up almost every vacant listing, they said. 'First and foremost, San Francisco is notorious for being a boom and bust market and 2030 could look very different than today — especially if we can create a more mixed-use environment downtown,' said Robert Sammons, senior research director at real estate brokerage Cushman & Wakefield. Making downtown more attractive could mean more housing — Hines' plan calls for 120 new homes in what's now an office building at 25 Beale St. — as well as more events, restaurants and reasons to come outside the workday. City efforts like making Front Street an outdoor-drinking 'entertainment zone' and hosting parties on the Embarcadero are helping draw thousands to downtown and boosting bars and restaurants. Still, completing a skyscraper of any size has eluded almost every developer since the pandemic. The 395-foot 415 Natoma St., the city's tallest building completed since the pandemic, is 97% vacant. (The Brookfield-owned building is part of the 5M project and Brookfield's partner is Chronicle owner Hearst.) Some new office and residential buildings at Mission Rock have filled up, in one of the city's post-pandemic success stories. Hines' own Parcel F project has been stalled for years since its approval, after Salesforce cancelled a lease in 2021. And nearby Oceanwide Center, which began construction in 2017 with approval to be San Francisco's second-tallest tower, is frozen after its Chinese developer collapsed. One of Hines' best assets is location, real estate experts said. The PG&E site is on one of the only development sites on Market Street, adjacent to BART and a few blocks from the waterfront. 'You could call this arguably the best office development site in the city. It's just a fantastic location,' said Derek Daniels, Bay Area research director at real estate brokerage Colliers. And while the citywide office vacancy rate is around 30%, Daniels notes that the category of the highest-quality highrise space with great views has a rate that's under 10%. Rents in premium towers, like the Transamerica Pyramid, can exceed $200 per square foot annually, some of the highest rents in the country. It remains to be seen what form the proposed Hines tower will take, without a design firm attached to the project. But it will likely be built for top quality, or Class A, office space, similar to nearby Salesforce Tower and 181 Fremont. 'We are definitely seeing an interest for those (great) view, high-quality assets,' said Alexander Quinn, Northern California senior director of research at brokerage JLL. 'There is more scarcity.' In contrast, South of Market condo prices remain below 2020 levels, according to residential brokerage Compass. An earlier, shorter tower plan by Hines at the same PG&E site had called for more housing, but the current plan is primarily office, with a massive 1.6 million square feet that would be 200,000 square feet more than Salesforce Tower. Though the office market still has plenty of struggles, Daniels believes that vacancy has already peaked and the city is on the path to recovery. Colliers tracked 3.2 million square feet of new and renewed leases in the second quarter, the highest level in the city since mid-2019, he said. Notably, the crypto company Coinbase leased 150,000 square feet at Mission Rock, a reversal of its exit from San Francisco during the pandemic. Mayor Daniel Lurie was eager to highlight Hines' tower project. In an Instagram video, he stood in front of the former PG&E site. 'This is going to be a neighborhood that has got live, work and play opportunities,' he said. 'It is a signal to the world that San Francisco is on the rise.'

Scape signs biggest-ever direct real estate deal; buys Aveo for $3.85b
Scape signs biggest-ever direct real estate deal; buys Aveo for $3.85b

AU Financial Review

time24-06-2025

  • Business
  • AU Financial Review

Scape signs biggest-ever direct real estate deal; buys Aveo for $3.85b

Craig Carracher and Stephen Gaitanos' Scape will sign a company-transforming deal to buy Brookfield-owned retirement living operator Aveo on Tuesday, marking one of Australia's largest-ever direct real estate transaction. Street Talk can reveal Scape, and co-investor South Korea's National Pension Service, have agreed to pay $3.85 billion on an enterprise valuation basis. As part of the deal, Scape will bring all its assets – including student living, build-to-rent and retirement living – under the combined brand The Living Company.

Scape to pay $3.7b for retirement living biz Aveo; NPS to-co-invest
Scape to pay $3.7b for retirement living biz Aveo; NPS to-co-invest

AU Financial Review

time24-06-2025

  • Business
  • AU Financial Review

Scape to pay $3.7b for retirement living biz Aveo; NPS to-co-invest

Craig Carracher and Stephen Gaitanos' Scape will sign a company-transforming deal to buy Brookfield-owned retirement living operator Aveo on Tuesday, marking Australia's largest-ever direct real estate transaction. Street Talk can reveal Scape, and co-investor South Korea's National Pension Service, have agreed to pay between $3.7 billion and $3.8 billion on an enterprise valuation basis. As part of the deal, Scape will bring all its assets – including student living, build-to-rent and retirement living – under the combined brand The Living Company.

Brookfield office tower in Los Angeles sells for 42% less than 2005 price
Brookfield office tower in Los Angeles sells for 42% less than 2005 price

Business Times

time05-06-2025

  • Business
  • Business Times

Brookfield office tower in Los Angeles sells for 42% less than 2005 price

[LOS ANGELES] A unit of Brookfield sold an office tower in downtown Los Angeles (LA) for US$210 million, 42 per cent less than its purchase price in 2005. While the deal was at a deep discount, the price-per-square foot – about US$201 – topped other recent office sales downtown, according to Kevin Shannon, the Newmark Group broker who represented Brookfield. Those prices have been around US$150 or less per square foot, he said. 'I think the worst is behind us in downtown LA,' Shannon said. 'Going for over US$200 a foot is a step in the right direction.' The sale of 601 S Figueroa marks a continued exodus from downtown LA by Brookfield, which was the largest office landlord in the city centre until vacancies and defaults soared and prices plunged after the pandemic and the 2022 surge in interest rates. Colliers represented the buyer, Uncommon Developers, a closely held Los Angeles-based real estate investing firm that focuses on apartments and offices. The 52-storey building is 73 per cent leased. The total availability rate for downtown LA offices was 37.2 per cent in the first quarter, counting space currently for lease or sublease or with upcoming lease expirations, one of the highest rates of any US city centre, according to CBRE Group. The Brookfield-owned Bank of America Plaza in downtown Los Angeles was appraised at US$212.5 million last year, down 65 per cent from its 2014 valuation. The Gas Company Tower, another former Brookfield property, sold for US$200 million last year, down from a one-time US$630 million value. Brookfield bought 601 S Figueroa, also known as Figueroa at Wilshire, for US$360 million in 2005, data from CoStar Group show. Brookfield representatives did not immediately respond to a request for comment. BLOOMBERG

The Leela IPO: The Leela Raises ₹1,575 Crore from Anchor Investors Ahead of IPO Launch, ET TravelWorld
The Leela IPO: The Leela Raises ₹1,575 Crore from Anchor Investors Ahead of IPO Launch, ET TravelWorld

Time of India

time26-05-2025

  • Business
  • Time of India

The Leela IPO: The Leela Raises ₹1,575 Crore from Anchor Investors Ahead of IPO Launch, ET TravelWorld

Advt By , ETTravelWorld Join the community of 2M+ industry professionals Subscribe to our newsletter to get latest insights & analysis. Download ETTravelWorld App Get Realtime updates Save your favourite articles Scan to download App Brookfield-owned The Leela Palaces, Hotels & Resorts (Schloss Bangalore Limited) has mobilised INR 1,575 crore ahead of its forthcoming initial public offering through an anchor allotment to 47 institutional investors. The shares were priced at INR 435 apiece, the upper end of the IPO's price band of INR 413– INR 435 per equity share.A total of 36,206,896 equity shares were allotted under the anchor book, which saw broad-based participation from domestic and international investors . Of this, 14,252,970 shares were allocated to nine domestic mutual funds across 20 schemes. Major participants included HDFC Mutual Fund , ICICI Prudential, Nippon India, Mirae and Invesco. Domestic insurance players such as Max Life and Birla Life also featured among the demand was equally strong, with participation from global institutions such as Norges Bank, Fidelity, Think Invest, Whiteoak, TT International, UC Regents, Ward Ferry and Lunate, reflecting continued global investor interest in India's premium hospitality sector The public issue is scheduled to open on 26 May and close on 28 May 2025. It comprises a fresh issue of equity shares amounting to INR 2,500 crore and an offer for sale of up to INR 1,000 crore by Brookfield-owned Project Ballet Bangalore Holdings (DIFC) Pvt. from the fresh issue are intended to be used for the repayment or prepayment of certain borrowings, including associated interest and penalties, for the company and its subsidiaries. Remaining funds will be allocated for general corporate running lead managers to the offer include JM Financial, Kotak Mahindra Capital, Morgan Stanley India, BofA Securities, J.P. Morgan India, Axis Capital, Citi, IIFL Capital, ICICI Securities, Motilal Oswal Investment Advisors and SBI Capital move marks a significant step forward in The Leela's capital restructuring and growth trajectory under Brookfield 's stewardship.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store