For
sale: a major stake in what may be central Philadelphia’s next big real-estate
hot spot.
Property
investor Mark Rubin is selling a portfolio of aged industrial and office
buildings covering 7.75 acres — an area bigger than Rittenhouse Square —
north of eastern Center City, situated between the booming neighborhoods of Old
City and Northern Liberties.
The
eight-property assemblage, which sprawls east of Ninth Street along Callowhill
and Spring Garden Streets, includes a large tract that already has zoning
permissions for a pair of residential high-rises
designed by architect Cecil Baker and a historic former bank building that was
home to one of restaurateur Stephen Starr’s earlier ventures.
Whoever
snaps up these properties will lead development in a section of the city that’s
ripe for revitalization, said Michael Barmash, who is marketing them as a
senior managing director at Colliers International in Philadelphia.
“You
have a hole between Northern Liberties and Old City,” Barmash said in an
interview. “This is an opportunity to control a neighborhood.”
An Eight-Property Portfolio for Sale
Rubin’s
properties, which Barmash said could fetch as much as $80 million, are hitting
the market amid a gradual uptick in activity in and around what is now a
district dominated by parking lots, industrial buildings, and strip-center
retail.
At
Fifth and Spring Garden Streets, Bryn Mawr-based investment company Alliance
Partners HSP LLC is converting Destination Maternity Corp.’s former
headquarters warehouse into a retail, light-industrial and office complex
to be anchored by Yards Brewing Co.
Clustered
around Ninth and 10th Streets, just to the west of Rubin’s properties,
development group Arts & Crafts Holdings has been buying
up aged commercial properties for conversion into workshops
for craftspeople and loft-style offices.
Another
prominent area property that has come up for sale is the 188,000-square-foot
former industrial building near Seventh and Callowhill Streets that is home to
the Electric Factory concert venue, the Philadelphia Business Journal has
reported.
“It’s
really a seller’s market in disposing of many of these assets,” said Michael
Silverman, a managing director at Integra Realty Resources in Philadelphia, who
estimated that property values have more than doubled in the area over the last
10 to 15 years. “The market is certainly frothy.”
Rubin’s
assemblage of properties started coming together in the 1960s, when his father,
Seymore Rubin, began running a furniture business out of a building at 444 N.
Third St. that has since become offices.
Over
the years, the family acquired other area properties as they became available,
eventually becoming full-time landlords. Holdings in the neighborhood, all of
which are part of the for-sale portfolio, also include a warehouse structure
near the Market-Frankford Line stop at 200 Spring Garden St. that is home to a
City Fitness gym and the Sherwin-Williams Co. paint store at 827 Spring Garden
St.
It
was in another of Rubin's properties, the Frank Furness-designed Northern
Saving Fund & Safe Deposit Co. building at
600 Spring Garden St., that Stephen Starr operated his nightclub the Bank in
the late 1980s and 1990s. Starr closed the business after tiring of the
punishing late-night hours, Rubin said in an interview.
For
the 2.6-acre parcel that accommodates the building at 444 N. Third St., Rubin
commissioned architect Baker to design a residential project that takes
near-maximum advantage of a late-2015 zoning change permitting big mixed-use
projects in the previously industrial-only district.
The
plan, calling for 24- and 27-story residential towers over ground-floor retail
and three largely concealed levels of parking, passed through the city’s
design-review process in October, meaning that a new owner could begin work on
the project after obtaining building permits.
Rubin’s
own offices are in a nearby two-story building that is also part of the
for-sale assemblage. That building sits on 11,000 square feet that could be
“developable to 31 stories” under the new zoning, according to a Colliers
brochure marketing the portfolio.
But
Rubin, 60, who also owns properties in University City, Germantown, South
Jersey, and other areas, said he hopes to find a way to stay in the
neighborhood.
“I
want to hang around and watch what goes on,” he said.
Source: Philly.com
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