Fifth Avenue
CBRE, Cushman Agree: Fifth Avenue Really Expensive for Retailers
Yesterday, CB Richard Ellis declared Fifth Avenue the world's most expensive stretch of retail based on the rents merchants have to pay. Today, it's Cushman & Wakefield's turn.
From that release: "New York’s Fifth Avenue is once again the world’s most expensive shopping street where retailers can now expect to pay rents of $1,850 per square foot per annum, an increase of 23 percent on 2007."
Fifth Avenue shares the Top 5 with streets in Hong Kong, Paris, Milan and Dublin. read more »
CBRE: Fifth Avenue Still World's Priciest Retail Spot
Be generous to those Fifth Avenue merchants this holiday shopping season: They've got a helluva rent to pay. According to a new CB Richard Ellis report, Fifth Avenue remains the world's most expensive retail destination, with rents reaching $2,200 a square foot annually, more than 75 percent higher than in Hong Kong, the second most expensive. read more »
Fifth Avenue World's Third Most Expensive Residential Street
With apartments fetching an average price of $7,500 per square foot, Fifth Avenue ranked third place in a new survey of the top 10 most expensive residential streets in the world from Barclay’s Wealth Bulletin. But if you thought top-tier residential prices in Manhattan were stratospheric, take a look at the two most expensive streets on the survey.
Avenue Princess Grace in Monaco ranked No. 1 in the survey with homes fetching an average of $17,750 a foot.
“Properties on the avenue change hands for up to $41 million – and many of them are fairly modest four-bedroom apartments,” the report said. read more »
Report: Fifth Avenue No Bargain Globally
The falling dollar can’t stop Fifth Avenue, so it seems.
The midtown retail strip once again tops a list of the world’s most expensive shopping strips, according to a report by brokerage Cushman & Wakefield. It beat out Hong Kong’s Causeway Bay, the Avenue des Champs Elysées in Paris, and New Bond Street in London.
Rent on Fifth between 49th and 59th streets costs stores about $1.5 million a year, the report found, with average rents hitting $1,500 a square foot, up 11 percent from a year earlier. read more »
Let's See George Bush Try That
Bloomberg explained that if, say, he wanted to change the direction of traffic on Fifth Avenue, “it may be a dumb idea, but tomorrow morning, there’d be a cop on every corner. Every sign would be changed. I mean, it would go northbound.” After some laughter from the audience, he said, “Presidents can’t do that.”
Forbes to Announce Sale of 60 Fifth Avenue
Gawker reports that Forbes will announce it's selling its headquarters at 60 Fifth Avenue and is in talks to build a new headquarters in the city.
An anonymous tipster on Gawker said: read more »
Moinian Closes on 417 Fifth Avenue for $125 M.
Joseph Moinian has officially closed on 417 Fifth Avenue.
The developer dropped $125 million for the 11-story, 392,000-square-foot building, according to city records.
The Observer reported way back in February when this deal went to contract. The building sits on the corner of 38th Street and some of its main tenants are a 10-year-old boy’s dream come true: Atari and Marvel Entertainment. read more »
Madison Catches Fifth in Retail Rents (Well, Almost)
Fifth Avenue in midtown remains the most expensive corridor on Earth for retailers to rent along, but Madison Avenue, for the first time, isn't too far behind. A recent report from brokerage Cushman & Wakefield said the average asking rent for retail space on Madison Avenue in midtown was $1,019 a square foot annually by the middle of 2007. That's the first time the average has passed the $1,000 mark, and is a $134 increase from mid-2006. read more »
If You Tour 995 Fifth, You Will Buy
If you tour the model residences of 995 Fifth Avenue, chances are you will buy a unit in the building, according to Extell’s Gary Barnett.
Maybe he’s right.
Over half of the 26 units in the Upper East Side development have sold, according to a press release. In just 30 days, over $100 million in sales have been recorded.
The residences, which start out at $12 million, range in size from 4,100 to 8,400 square feet and there is a 7,000-square-foot penthouse with a 5,000-square-foot outdoor terrace.
Occupancy is scheduled for 2008. read more »
Finally! The Plaza Records Its First Condo Sale
A condo has finally and officially sold in the renovated Plaza Hotel. While many units are under contract in the refurbished hotel, this is the first sale that has officially closed.
The sale appeared in city records on June 21 for $11.2 million. The buyer is listed as Hampshire Industries. read more »
Saks PR Goes Postal: New Shoe Floor Gets Own Zip Code
Sorry, evening wear: you've just been trampled by an onslaught of designer pumps!
The extended footwear selection, set to debut in August, will be sooo huge that it will have its own zip code, 10022-SHOE -- "the first floor to be granted its own designated zip code by the United States Post Office," according to a press release; yet a Saks spokesperson admitted that it might not be the biggest shoe floor in the city. read more »
$50 M. Plaza Condo Sale: City's Most Expensive
Geffen Duplex Gets $37.5 M., a Tad More Than Expected
College dropout David Geffen already has $4.6 billion (plus a song penned for him by Joni Mitchell). And, according to deeds filed today, he now has $37.5 million from alliterative Blackstone Group co-founder Pete Peterson.
The deal represents the second-biggest co-op sale in New York City history, behind only Rupert Murdoch's $44 million buy at 834 Fifth.
In exchange, Mr. Peterson has the 12-room duplex penthouse at 810 Fifth Avenue, which fickle Mr. Geffen bought just last year for $31.5 million. Most recently, in an article last week in the NY Sun, Mr. Geffen was said to be selling for only $34 million. Such chump change!
Despite his steep price, this buyer belongs in the building. As New York magazine pointed out when the deal was first rumored, the co-op building used to house Richard Nixon, the Blackstone man’s boss when he was the Secretary of Commerce.
Fittingly, Governor Nelson Rockefeller was once in the penthouse: Nelson’s little brother David preceded Mr. Peterson as a chairman of the Council on Foreign Relations; and older brother John III was a pal of the Blackstone boy’s too.















