Moves to remake the dilapidated Gallery at Market East
into a high-end outlet mall are expected to give area property values a lift.
Among the beneficiaries of that boost: the developers
behind the Gallery's redevelopment effort.
As their proposal for the Fashion Outlets of Philadelphia
was coming together, Pennsylvania Real Estate Investment Trust (PREIT) and
Macerich Co. were quietly buying up property across the street.
The acquisition of three buildings on the 1000 block of
Market Street shows the developers' bullishness on the area's resurgence, which
the $325 million Gallery project aims to fuel.
"We bought them because we think we're going to
create significant value at the Gallery," PREIT chief executive Joseph
Coradino said. "That's sort of the first thing in real estate: Try to buy
the properties around the big project you're developing."
Coradino confirmed the purchases after an Inquirer
analysis of area transactions linked the buildings' buyers to the
Philadelphia-based mall developer.
The properties line the south side of Market Street
between the Marshalls and Freire Charter School building at 10th Street and the
Rite Aid at 11th Street, and include the former Robinson's department store.
Among the buildings' current occupants are a branch of
the City Blue sportswear chain, two cash-for-gold shops, and the Funkomatic
electronics store. Other storefronts are vacant.
PREIT and Santa Monica, Calif.-based Macerich plan to
find new tenants for the properties after the redeveloped mall's occupants are
selected, Coradino said.
Likely candidates are retailers that want to be in the
area but are not a good match for the mall, which hopes to feature discount
versions of designer-label stores and crowd-drawing restaurants.
The developers may want to use the properties to coax
current Gallery tenants that are inconsistent with the Fashion Outlets concept
but have long-term leases for their space, said Tom Londres, president of
retail brokerage Metro Commercial Real Estate Inc.
Burlington Coat Factory, for example, likely had a long
lease with options to renew when it opened as an Gallery anchor in 2003.
"There could be tenants that don't fit the tenant
mix that's envisioned for the Gallery that are there today," Londres said.
"This could be a satisfactory relocation for those tenants."
PREIT and Macerich used "straw," or surrogate,
buyers to complete the three transactions, which closed in October and November
2014, Coradino said.
Such a practice could be used to gain better pricing from
sellers unaware of an actual purchaser's larger plans or deeper pockets. The
purchases totaled $17.4 million, according to records filed with the city.
The companies are now openly seeking additional nearby
properties to the Gallery's north and south, Coradino said.
Their confidence comes despite acknowledgment this week
that the mall's redevelopment may not be complete until late 2018 or early
2019, more than a year later than previously anticipated.
"Everything along there is of interest to us,"
he said.
It's not unusual for developers to make acquisitions
around their development sites to cash in on the property values their projects
help accelerate.
Radnor-based Brandywine Realty Trust, for one, began
eyeing more land around 30th Street Station while working on its Cira Centre
tower in the area.
Liberty Property Trust of Malvern, meanwhile, has teamed
with Comcast Corp. to buy land diagonally across the street from the cable
giant's second Center City high-rise, which is currently under construction.
"What they're doing is not unlike what any smart
developer would do," Londres said of PREIT and Macerich. "Why let
someone else capitalize on what the biggest investor is doing?"
The Market Street parcels are not the only places where
PREIT and Macerich might be able to capitalize on their Fashion Outlets
efforts. There are also three development "pads" on the Gallery's
roof, each of which accommodates a 15- to 20-story tower.
Plans for those sites - which could include apartment
buildings or a hotel - will be solidified once the outlet mall's development is
further along, Coradino said.
"Their value is enhanced once we're able to say,
'Here's the project we're doing, and here are the tenants we have,' " he
said.
Source: Philly.com
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