Submitted by felsonj t3_11pra9x in Newark

According to a sign posted on 707 Broad Street, Hanini Group and partners are proposing to add two additional floors of office space (50K square feet) to the 10-story 1926 building. The floor plates on this elegant building are about 50K each, so these new floors, if built, will cover only about half the space above.

Strange to see new office construction proposed when 19% of the office space in downtown Newark is vacant, and absorption was about -600K square feet last year.

Although the sign indicates that the proposal is scheduled to be heard at the March 13 meeting, as of now there's no documentation of this in the Planning Board's Google Drive account online.

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Juicey_J_Hammerman t1_jbzht9k wrote

Could be it’s for a specific purpose or use to cater to certain types of commercial tenants, or space to offer additional amenities to attract new leases.

Not all office space is created equal either - theres decent variance between different office spaces depending on space class (A, B, etc), amenities/services offered, targeted, clientele , and of course location.

This building is also in a pretty good location for office space too: right on broad street in the heart of downtown near a subway/light rail entrance, still walkable to/from the train station, across from Military park, and plenty of services and other businesses nearby within walking distance to cater to office and employee needs.

Hanani may be under the impression it’s better to invest in adding on top of an existing asset vs buying a more vacant building.

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g11235p t1_jbzxg8w wrote

I’m so confused about what all the downtown development actually is. None of these places ever seem to get built, even though the planning board seems to work overtime to approve all of it. Is it just that all this shit is going to happen eventually, or do the developers somehow make money off of getting the approvals and never doing anything?

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Ironboundian t1_jbzzy8u wrote

yes they do. I don't think it applies to this particular Hanini project....but especially the big towers with hundred and hundreds of residential units....if a developer gets a large project approved, even without building it they are likely making money (getting a new appraisal, and refinancing out some money from the higher valuation).

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SkyeMreddit t1_jc2ljs9 wrote

Some get built eventually but it can take several years between planning board approvals and construction financing and permits. Especially if they redesign it again. Those eventually happen, but COVID messed things up.

For others, yes they are scheming to get wealthy without having any actual plans to build. Buy a forgotten site for like $250K, put together plans and get planning/zoning approval for a big tower, and then sell it for $5 Million saying “Fully Approved for a 25 story tower”

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SkyeMreddit t1_jc2lp8h wrote

Are they still going ahead with the rooftop bar and glass elevator on that building?

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Newarkguy1836 t1_jc4wozk wrote

You figured it all out at the end of your post. A lot of these developers are scum with no intention of building anything. You buy a plot of land for a million dollars in downtown, propose a 50 story Skyscraper the city can only dream of. The city enthusiastically approves the project. Now the land explodes in value at the very least because of the potential. Now they sell the land for many millions more based on the new speculative value of what has been approved.

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Newarkguy1836 t1_jc4y8z0 wrote

The bottom floor used to be a beautiful 2 story & basement Store known as Kresge's . Just like McCrory's across Cedar Ave, it had it's on subway station on the eastbound side. Eventually the larger Kresge went on to become Kresge Mart/ later Kmart. The Newark Kresge morphed into the two guys department store chain.

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