Philadelphia developer Carl Dranoff began construction
Friday on a high-rise rental-apartment building across from the New Jersey
Performing Arts Center in Newark, nearly nine years after the project was first
proposed.
John Schreiber, chief executive officer of NJPAC, said
Friday that a series of complex financial arrangements and real estate closings
were completed last week, paving the way for construction of the $116 million,
22-story building -- downtown Newark's first upscale residential project since
1960.
The New Jersey Economic Development Authority provided
$33 million in tax credits for the project.
One Theater Square will have 245 mostly one- and
two-bedroom apartments, but also studios and three-bedroom and three-bedroom
units with dens, ranging in size from 585 to 1,700 square feet. Rents are
expected to start at $1,250 for a studio, $2,000 for one bedroom, $3,150 for two bedrooms, and
$4,500 for three bedrooms.
The project includes 24 affordable-housing units that
will be marketed as artist residences, although they will be available to
anyone who meets the financial criteria, Schreiber said.
On the building's ground floor will be 12,000 square feet
of retail space "designed to reflect the neighborhood and enhance
it," Dranoff said.
A parking garage will provide 285 spaces for renters and
the building's retailers, Dranoff said. The structure is within walking
distance of various corporate headquarters and Newark's Penn Station for a
quick PATH commute to Manhattan.
“This is a bull's-eye location in a rising city,"
Dranoff said. "With NJPAC literally at its doorstep, One Theater Square
will redefine what’s meant by ‘home entertainment.' "
Added Schreiber: “When One Theater Square opens in the
summer of 2018, it will be the hub of a neighborhood that has grown up around
NJPAC, including the Whole Foods market and other residential, educational, and
mixed-use projects.”
Newark Mayor Ras Baraka said, “The pace of change
downtown continues to accelerate as our central business district becomes more
of a residential, artistic, and retail hub in addition to its strength as a
regional business center.”
One Theater Square is part of a downtown Newark revival
envisioned more than a quarter-century ago by performing-arts center founders
including former Gov. Thomas Kean; philanthropist Ray Chambers; and Larry
Goldman, the center's first CEO, Schreiber said.
“This is a transformative moment in a great city’s
advance toward an even greater future,” Schreiber said.
Source: Philly.com
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