Pennsylvania Real Estate Investment Trust, owner of Exton
Square Mall in Chester County, plans to demolish the site's Kmart building and
replace it with a large-format organic grocery store.
PREIT chief executive Joseph Coradino told analysts in a
conference call Wednesday that the grocer would be named in the coming days. A
lease for 55,000 square feet has been executed, he said.
Philadelphia-based PREIT also has identified a dine-in
movie theater and a bowling-and-entertainment center as prospective tenants for
the former site of a 118,000-square-foot J.C. Penney Co. store at Exton Square,
Coradino said.
The moves come as PREIT - owner of the Gallery at Market
East in Center City and Cherry Hill and Willow Grove Park malls, among others
in the region and nationally - pursues a strategy of upgrading its
top-performing properties in high-density areas while shedding farther-flung
assets.
In a release Tuesday, PREIT said it would soon close on
its sale of Uniontown Mall in Southwestern Pennsylvania for $23 million. The
buyer, who was not identified, will separately acquire ownership of the land on
which the mall is built, the company said.
PREIT also has entered into an agreement to sell Gadsden
Mall in Gadsden, Ala., Wiregrass Commons Mall in Dothan, Ala., and New River
Valley Mall in Christiansburg, Va., to an institutional buyer for $95.4
million.
The transactions would make up a total of 10 malls sold
under the company's disposition program, PREIT said. Total funds raised through
the sale of those malls and other assets would total more than $560 million, it
said.
PREIT is negotiating agreements of sale on two more
"non-core" malls, which it said it hopes to execute within the next
several weeks.
On the call with analysts Wednesday, Coradino said PREIT
is unable to release a development schedule for its planned $325 million revamp
of the Gallery because it has yet to secure some state support for the project.
He blamed the delay on the ongoing discord between the
Democratic administration of Gov. Wolf and the Republican-led legislature.
PREIT and its partner in the Gallery, Macerich Co., have
been awarded $14.5 million in state grants for the project, but have applied
for $20 million more.
"There's a lot of tension in Harrisburg right now
with our new governor, so we didn't get it done as quickly as we'd like
to," Coradino told analysts. "That's why you're not getting the full
story on the Gallery."
Source: Philly.com
No comments:
Post a Comment