Pennsylvania Real Estate Investment Trust is under
agreement to sell the office space it owns in the former Strawbridge &
Clothier building at 801 Market St. in Center City, as the Philadelphia-based
mall developer and operator continues to raise cash to invest in the retail
properties at the core of its business.
Also under contract are PREIT’s Logan Valley Mall in
Altoona and a 4.9-acre land parcel at its Exton Square mall, which is to be
acquired by an apartment or condo developer, the company said in a release
Tuesday. The Exton Square property is across from that mall’s Whole Foods
store, along the new entry from Route 100.
The three transactions are expected to generate $75
million, which will be put toward improvements at the company’s other
properties, PREIT chief executive Joseph F. Coradino said in the release. Those
properties include the former Gallery at Market East shopping mall, attached to
the Strawbridge’s building, which PREIT is redeveloping in partnership
with Macerich of Santa Monica, Calif.
“This is a critical step in the further transformation of
PREIT into a top-tier mall company,” Coradino said. “As the retail industry
evolves, there are many opportunities to improve the shopping environment, and
raising capital through the sale of non-core properties provides the perfect
vehicle for creating value for our shareholders.”
PREIT sold off 16 lower-earning
malls and other non-core assets between the start of 2013 and January, when it
announced that it was marketing the Logan Valley Mall and the Valley View
Mall in LaCrosse, Wis. The two are the worst-performing and
eighth-worst-performing of PREIT’s 22 remaining malls on a
sales-per-square-foot basis, according to its most recent quarterly financial disclosures.
The Strawbridge’s building offices, meanwhile, have been
an outlier among the retail-focused company’s holdings. The sale at
the 1930s structure is to include the building’s third through sixth
floors, encompassing 300,000 square feet of office space, PREIT spokeswoman
Heather Crowell said in an email. Tenants of those floors include the
parent company of the Inquirer, the Philadelphia Daily News, and
Philly.com, as well as local offices of the state Department of Labor
and Industry.
Crowell declined to identify the buyer of the property
before the closing.
PREIT will retain ownership of the Strawbridge’s
building’s lower floors of retail space, including areas occupied by the
Century 21 discount store, Crowell said. Floors seven though 13 of the
building, encompassing 382,800 of offices, were sold in November
as a separate property to New York investment firm Cohen Equities.
Source: Philly.com
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