Taconic Partners launches life sciences subsidiary

 
 
 

By: Leonard A. Robinson – Staff Reporter, New York Business Journal Jun 21, 2022

Taconic Partners has launched Elevate Research Properties, a life sciences subsidiary designed to manage the developer’s growing life sciences portfolio.

“We are excited to announce this new platform which will leverage the scale and quality of our existing life sciences portfolio with an experienced team that knows and understands the needs of research tenants,” Taconic’s co-CEO Paul Pariser said.

Matthew Weir will serve as Elevate Research’s president in addition to his current role as Taconic’s executive vice president.

Matthew Malone was recently hired as Elevate Research’s senior vice president. Malone was previously a principal at Perkins & Will, an architecture firm, where he led laboratory planning and design efforts.

“Taconic Partners recognizes the enormous opportunity that comes from our city’s growing life sciences sector,” Malone told the New York Business Journal. “I’m excited to be able to begin interfacing with these brilliant research scientists to discover how we can best serve them and allow them to utilize our buildings.”

Elevate Research Properties currently has more than one million square feet of real estate worth nearly $2 billion, Taconic Partners says.

Elevate currently has two active lab development on the west side of Manhattan. The Hudson Research Center, a 320,000-square-foot building, currently boasts numerous research tenants, including New York Stem Cell Foundation, Hibercell, c16 Biosciences and Renselaer Polytechnic Institute.

Elevate’s 400,000-square-foot project at 125 West End Avenue with a $600 million price tag is currently under development and expected to be open by the second quarter of 2023.

Plans for 309 E. 94th St., a 200,000-square-foot Class A-research lab project are expected to be unveiled in the coming weeks. Demolition and construction of the $325 million project is slated to commence later this year.

Pilot program gives students in public housing a primer in real estate industry

Click here for link to video:

https://www.ny1.com/nyc/all-boroughs/news/2022/05/20/students-in-public-housing-introduced-to-real-estate-industry#

BY LORI CHUNG NEW YORK CITY PUBLISHED 5:37 PM ET MAY. 20, 2022

He may seem quiet at first, but Mohamed Adula has big ambitions.

“I always thought about being a landlord, like owning properties and renting them out to people.  That’s kind of like how I first learned about real estate, from YouTube,” said Adula, 17.

Going on a tour of the Essex Crossing development on the Lower East Side is a step up from social media, and an up-close look at the real estate industry.  The high school junior is part of a program teaching high school students who live in public housing how to see sites like Essex Crossing and the Market Line through the eyes of a developer.

What You Need To Know
-A pilot program is teaching some high school students who live in public housing to see the city like a real estate developer
-The program aims to inform and inspire young people as to how to create wealth and to create investments that work for their neighborhoods
-It’s an eight-week program hosted by NYU’s School of Professional Studies, Taconic Partners and the Fund for Public Housing

“There’s so much more than just having property and selling it to somebody” said Adula, a resident of the St. Nicholas Houses in Harlem.

It’s an eight-week pilot program between NYU’s School of Professional Studies, Taconic Partners and the Fund for Public Housing.

“This is exposure to how to create wealth, how to invest in real estate, but how to create investments that are good for your neighborhood,” said Brian Schwagerl, a real estate professor.

The goal is to increase diversity in the industry, which remains overwhelmingly white and male. Ben Baccash, Taconic’s vice president of development, says it’s hard for kids to aspire to a field without knowing what’s possible.

“There’s a million different job paths in it, and every part of it is really important, from folks that work on the operational side of the business, managing buildings, to those that are involved in designing buildings,” said Baccash.

Adula’s eyes are opened.

“It just shows us that there are different kinds of work rather than your typical 9-5 job,” said Adula, who’s getting an important glimpse into the business and hoping it will have a lasting impact for him and his family.

“If things go right, I might be the first one to do something big,” said Adula. “I think that if I keep going hard, then I can be on top.”

Taconic Makes Industrial Market Debut With Nuveen in $55M All-Cash Deal in New Jersey

By: Cathy Cunningham December 23, 2021

The new year is fast approaching, but it’s never too late for firsts.

Taconic Partners and Nuveen Real Estate just acquired 1 Cory Road, a warehouse and distribution facility in Morristown, N.J., Commercial Observer can first report. 

The joint venture paid $55 million for the 296,000-square-foot asset, and the transaction marks Taconic’s first foray into the industrial sector.

“Taconic is very pleased to have made its first industrial investment, which provides our portfolio with risk, product type and geographic diversification,” Chris Balestra, president and CIO of Taconic Partners, said. 

Located less than a mile from downtown Morristown, the property encompasses a 17.9-acre site and includes a 6.5-acre parking area plus a rooftop solar system. The asset was built in 1986 and today is 100 percent leased to a mix of third-party logistics companies.  

“We have been canvassing the MSA for the last couple years —  but really in earnest over the last 12 months or so — looking for an industrial deal,” Balestra told CO.  “So, when this opportunity was put onto our radar, we jumped on it.” 

A Cushman & Wakefield team arranged the sale. 

Long-time partners Nuveen and Taconic have invested more than $1.5 billion across over 2 million square feet in the New York area. Earlier this month, the partnership joined forces to acquire the office building at 309 East 94th Street for $70 million and, in July, closed a $260 million fundraising round for its jointly-sponsored value-add fund, New York City Property Fund II. This new industrial deal brings diversification to that fund, which has more than $1 billion in buying power. 

“The vehicle will have several heavy, large development deals in it, so when we were looking at portfolio construction, we thought it would be a good idea to bring in something a little less risky, with cash flow out of the gate, to diversify the portfolio,” Balestra said. “We’re happy to be able to bring in a new asset class, and a new geography, for that diversification.” 

Not that it was easy, with competition for industrial deals hotter than ever. “We chased many deals in 2021 in the industrial space — and in New Jersey — where we weren’t the winner, so it’s great to pick one up,” Balestra said.  “I think one differentiating factor was that we were able to close in all cash, and before the end of the year.” 

Nadir Settles, ​​managing director and New York regional head at Nuveen, agreed the partnership’s quick execution in cash was key, “but I also think it was our breadth and depth of experience,” he said. “The Cushman & Wakefield team has a long relationship with us on a domestic basis and the fact you had these combined sponsors coming together and closing in cash gave the seller great certainty. I think that gave us a big competitive advantage versus us being some other institutional buyer that’s not deep in the space.” 

Nuveen has amassed a significant industrial portfolio over the years, managing institutional-quality industrial and logistic assets in major distribution markets across the U.S. as well as Europe. 

Settles described the industrial sector as having “strong tailwinds” and said the 1 Cory Road deal represented a great diversification play in terms of the Nuveen-Taconic partnership. “This is Taconic’s first industrial foray but it’s not ours; we have deep experience, so that’s why we were very comfortable moving forward with it. This transaction was a diversification in terms of the opportunities that we normally look at together, which is life sciences and high-end development or repositioning of offices. Then, we predominantly buy in New York City, so this is also a diversification to that. The diversification is multifaceted — and it’s diversification to the positive.” 

While 1 Cory Road may be Taconic and Nuveen’s first industrial deal together, it won’t be the last. 

“I can certainly see us deepening our concentration as more deals become available,” Settles said, while Balestra added: “We will continue to look for additional industrial deals. It’s an asset class that we think has a lot of runway, and is only going to expand in the future.” 

Verizon moving hundreds of NYC employees to a new tower on the Lower East Side

By Lois Weiss October 28, 2021

Verizon is making a pioneering move to the Lower East Side, with plans to move hundreds of staffers to the trendy neighborhood’s new Essex Crossing development — and out of its historic city offices at 140 West St. 

The initial lease signed Thursday calls for the telecom giant to occupy nearly 143,000 square feet on the third, fourth and fifth floors of 155 Delancey St., in the wider base of the new rental-apartment tower called The Artisan, along with branding and signage on the commercial facade of the building.

“It’s a real boon to the Lower East Side and it harkens back to the beginning of commerce in New York City — and Verizon recognized the significance of that,” said Charles Bendit of Taconic Partners, one of the developers.

The parties declined to comment on terms of the long-term deal but other real estate sources pegged the cost of the 20-year lease at roughly $80 per foot with over $130 per foot towards work in Verizon’s space.

Verizon has an option until late next year to lease the remainder of the 350,000 square-foot office campus, which would include the 35,031 square-foot second floor of 155 Delancey as well as the 174,623 square-feet in the five-story base of 145 Delancey St., right across Suffolk Street.––

“We structured it this way to make this campus a home for them,” Bendit added. 

rendering of interior featuring seating and tables with floor to ceiling windows at 155 Delancey St.
Verizon will occupy nearly 143,000 square feet on the third, fourth and fifth floors of The Artisan tower at Essex Crossing located at 155 Delancey St.

Employees, many of whom will work in Verizon’s marketing department, will have 3,456 square-feet of outdoor space on the sixth floor plus direct access to the sprawling three-block-long underground Market Line food hall, as well as bike lockers and showers, making that trip across the nearby Williamsburg Bridge from Brooklyn a breeze.

The company also has the ability to use the project’s Regal cinema for meetings and events. 

Taconic Partners is developing Essex Crossing along with L+M Development Partners, BFC Partners, Goldman Sachs’s Urban Investment Group and The Prusik Group on land previously owned by the city. 

Josh Kuriloff, Andrew Braver and Peyton Horn of Cushman & Wakefield represented Verizon in this transaction which was negotiated over the last two years.

“This deal continues to show the flight to new construction,” Kuriloff said.

Verizon’s landmarked, Art Deco building at 140 West St. was designed by Ralph Walker as the headquarters for the New York Telephone Company, a predecessor to Verizon. The company sold the top 22 floors for $274 million to Ben Shaoul’s Magnum Real Estate who developed them into large residential condominiums.  

It is unclear if Shaoul will buy the remaining office floors to add to the condominium, or if it will remain offices. Shaoul did not return requests for comment.

rendering of Essex Crossing showing Market Line food hall signage
Verizon staffers, many of whom will work in the telecom giant’s marketing department, will have direct access to the sprawling three-block-long underground Market Line food hall at Essex Crossing.

Verizon still has the second through 10th floor plus four sub-floors, or 565,800 square feet, for specialized switching equipment, some of which cannot be moved. The company previously moved some employees to Fort Greene, Brooklyn, from its current New York corporate headquarters at 1095 Ave. of the Americas — which also has switching equipment.

Verizon’s global headquarters is in Basking Ridge, NJ, which offered an $81.6 million incentive package in 2005 to create 2,800 jobs in the state.

Inside the Boardroom: Chris Balestra

Chris Balestra, President and Chief Investment Officer at Taconic Partners, joined the Real Estate Daily Beat for an interview. We discussed the implications of the hybrid work model, the life sciences sector, challenges in the affordable housing market, and other interesting topics.

Daily Beat: Many large companies announced plans to delay their return to the office to October because of the Delta variant. What are your thoughts on the future of the office sector and work from home trends?

Chris Balestra: In the long-term, I think companies will ultimately revert back to something closer to the previous norm. But until people take that first step back, tenants do not know what they’re going to need space wise. We’ve been in this situation for too long now.

Our firm has been in the office for a while now with some flexibility, but you really need those big companies to come back, and see how they’re using space. I don’t think we’re going to really know for another year or two.

Assuming that people do come back in greater quantities in the fall, there will be more clarity at that point as to what the long term really brings. Selfishly, as an office landlord, we’re definitely betting on a more full return to work and that work from home doesn’t work for everyone. It certainly doesn’t work for our industry.

Daily Beat: One thing that frequently gets lost in this conversation is that the hybrid work model doesn’t necessarily mean less office space. Let’s take a firm that allows employees to work remotely one to two days per week. How much less space can those firms really get away with?

Chris Balestra: I think if you’re looking at a 3-4 day per week scenario, I agree with you that it would be hard to operate with less space. People don’t like the touchdown desk scenario. In recent years – even pre-pandemic – we were moving away from those super tight office spaces. So that’s why I think people really have to wait and see, but the collaboration that takes place within the office, even if it’s three or four days a week, you still need the same sorts of spaces that we’ve had in the past.

People forget about the fact that employees are sometimes traveling on vacation and get sick. Even before Covid, everyone didn’t come to the office five days a week necessarily anyway. You have to take that into account in the overall formula.

Daily Beat: Taconic has been active in the life sciences sector for a while now with projects like 125 West End Avenue and Hudson Research Center. The space is certainly heating up post-pandemic. What attracted you to the sector?

Chris Balestra: Life sciences is a sector that we’re highly invested in and have a lot of faith in. Even pre pandemic – three or four years ago – we saw that interest in some early tenancies that we had at the Hudson Research Center and trying to understand the space and the needs of those tenants better.

The sector presents a crazy supply demand imbalance in New York City compared to other major cities with lots of life science space. A lot of it stems from having alternatives to build over the years like high price condos and other office space, which led to lab space not really being built.

New York has the medical research institutions and the funding and unfortunately a lot of the great ideas that happened in those institutions have been forced to leave to grow their businesses. It’s been our experience so far that if you can provide great lab space, tenants will rent it. As soon as we pre-build a space, tenants are leasing it and paying phenomenal rents. New York is currently that type of market and I think they’re really happy with the product that we’re creating.

Daily Beat: I’m always surprised by the lack of supply.

Chris Balestra: The space doesn’t exist and these companies that are rapidly growing can’t sit around and wait for a three-year conversion to get lab space. They have to move and be nimble. The other thing to note is that most NYC
buildings can’t be converted. It’s really hard to build new product given the land basis for most areas in the city.
You have to find vacant assets that have floor loads that can handle it and ceiling heights that work, so that you can do the infrastructure projects that are required to attract the tenants. We’ve been successful in finding some of those opportunities and that’s also why the sector can’t quadruple overnight here because most assets aren’t really capable without massive retrofits.

Daily Beat: Let’s say you’re looking at a new office development. How are you pricing the costs of a life sciences project on a square foot basis versus a traditional new Class A building?

Chris Balestra: The space building premium we apply compared to a new office development is probably 40%. And then the TI’s on top of that, which is probably 2x what traditional office leasing is today – perhaps even more depending on the location. So it’s more expensive, but the rents are higher and they have to be justified. If you have a tenant that wants to stay in New York, you’re getting into some fairly high rent premiums, but our thesis across the board is always about talent. New York attracts and retains talent and those companies want to grow here. That’s what you’ve seen in the tech and banking sectors, and I think it’s the same thing in the healthcare and the life science industry.

Daily Beat: What are some of the discrepancies between different types of lab space and how does that impact development?

Chris Balestra: Because the New York market is still maturing, our approach is to put in robust infrastructure at the base building level that can support a variety of different types of user needs. If they want to build their own space or they come to us early enough and can help design their space, we’ve got the infrastructure to accommodate it.

In a scenario where we pre-build space and aren’t sure what type of tenant exactly might take it, we build the most flexible space possible where we can move the lab benches around. Modular construction is very helpful with that.

Daily Beat: What are you seeing in the affordable housing space? It’s obviously a very challenging political environment.

Chris Balestra: We try not to get too political, but the reason that a lot of the incentive programs were put into place initially was to incentivize developers to invest in properties. When the rent laws changed two years ago, it turned that upside down. You can’t raise rents and there hasn’t been a true acknowledgement that operating expenses are higher. In order to continue to improve properties, it takes rent.

So we hope that in the future – perhaps five to eights years – the pendulum will swing back a little bit. And at that point, the government will put some of those programs back into place to help incentivize the reinvestment into rent stabilized properties.

Daily Beat: The new 421-a program (Affordable Housing New York Program) is set to expire next year and many developers fear what happens next.

Chris Balestra: 421-a is a hot potato. Although it sounds politically great to not give tax incentives to developers, the reality in New York City is that with land, construction costs, and taxes so high – these residential buildings won’t get built without them. The unfortunate outcome is there won’t be the affordable units delivered, in addition to the market rate units that come along with them. And then the only true affordable housing development will be based on more highly subsidized government funding through HPD and the state. But those projects won’t be in the same places that those 421-a buildings would have been. So the policy is detracting from the overall creation of affordable housing and the general housing market.

Daily Beat: I think what many miss is that we aren’t operating on a fully capitalist playing field in the first place. With the high cost of land and taxes, the alternative is developers not building new affordable housing. The deals just don’t pencil out.

Chris Balestra: Exactly. If you look at the rent guidelines board increases, there was a small increase this year, but it’s been basically nothing for years. And I’d love to find a building whose operational costs haven’t gone up, but they don’t exist.

We own 2,000 units in the Bronx where costs to operate the properties have risen. These buildings deserve to be improved, but landlords won’t necessarily do that without the ability to raise rents as well, even on the margin.

Daily Beat: Do you have any WeWork or co-working exposure in the portfolio?

Chris Balestra: We do not. That’s one thing that looking back we intentionally avoided. It wasn’t because we don’t think it’s a trend that will stick around – it’s certainly useful in certain settings, but we were skeptical of the crazy growth the sector went through and shied away from it.

Daily Beat: You guys recently did a deal with Trader Joes for a new grocery store at 121 West 125th Street in Harlem. Interestingly, the sector has remained strong despite secular headwinds in the broader retail sector. What are your thoughts on the future of the space?

Chris Balestra: Personally I like going to the grocery store and there are many people that like to shop for their own groceries. If you look at certain areas of New York City, they’re very underserved by retail, including grocery. The first deal that we did with Trader Joe’s was at Essex Crossing. There are hundreds of thousands of people who live right around that area without a real major grocery store.

If you find pockets of the city that are really underserved by retail, it can be very successful. If you look at 125th Street, there’s a Whole Foods, but Trader Joe’s goes well with it. In that area, there’s enough demand to satisfy the additional need in grocery.

Daily Beat: Are you looking at the e-commerce / industrial sector at all for new acquisitions?

Chris Balestra: We’re looking at deals in the industrial sector. It’s very intriguing and clearly has legs. Our team is looking at deals that would cater to the likes of Amazon and others that are more locally focused.

Daily Beat: Do you think developers are too focused on the larger industrial leases when last-mile delivery will necessitate micro-fulfillment centers?

Chris Balestra: We’re still underserved from the logistics standpoint in the New York Metro area. That’s what you still see those big leases getting signed. That’s why development sites in New Jersey are so expensive, but I totally agree that the sector as a whole has a long way to go in the neighborhood level. It’s probably not as efficient as it could be on the delivery side and I think that’s why you’re seeing even the likes of Amazon taking smaller spaces that they can bike delivery from. I think that as we adapt to the world that has overnight packages, there’s going to have to be adaption in the city.

As an example, if you look at residential buildings, nobody designed package rooms to be warehouses. If you take a 400-unit residential building and everybody’s got Amazon package or two showing up every day, you’ve got major problems. So I think the change in that sector in general is already having a ripple effect throughout other asset classes in the city. If you’re designing a new building today, you’re doing it completely differently and there’s probably room in the space to get your package picked up at somewhere local versus having it delivered right to your home and maybe that’s cheaper.

Daily Beat: Where do you think is a better place to be in the office market right now? Smaller (5,000-10,000 SF tenants) or larger (100,000 SF) ones?

Chris Balestra: I think you’re still going to play in all of it. We’re definitely seeing a much greater increase in tenant traffic and deals on the smaller side. I think that the big tenants will come out of the shadows soon enough. But I think that goes back to one of our earlier discussion points of getting back to the office.

Those big guys who either have a little bit of term left or who maybe did some shorter term extensions, I think they’re just reluctant today to make long-term large space decisions without fully knowing how they’re going to continue to use their space. Maybe they use the space no differently than they do today, but they don’t know yet because their workforce isn’t here. So today, if you have smaller tenant type space available, you’re probably very happy about that. If you have truly unique product for larger tenants, you have seen some of those deals get done, but I think you’re going to see a pickup in the larger tenant space three to twelve months after everybody actually gets back to the office.

Daily Beat: Congrats on your recent promotion!

Chris Balestra: Thanks Joe. I joined Taconic back in 2005. I started my career at M&T bank as a commercial real estate lender. I was an econ major and knew I wanted to try to work for a bank and kind of fell into the real estate side of it and really enjoyed it.

The other thing that I figured out pretty quickly into my tenure at the bank was that it seemed like a lot more fun and more interesting to be on the developer and operator side. I left the bank in 2005 and then started at Taconic, which at the time was really just a handful of people – maybe less than 10. We’ve grown tremendously over those years and I think that today we’re closer to 50 people in our office.

I came in as an analyst and worked my way up to CIO a couple of years ago, and then the recent promotion this year. Some of that I’d like to think was skill and some of it’s a little bit lucky because most people in order to move up off have to go somewhere else with people in the way. Being at a smaller, entrepreneurial company to start and that has grown over the years, gave me the opportunity to be able to step up as I was ready, so I’m fortunate in that way.

Daily Beat: And I’m glad the firm enjoys our premium newsletter!

Chris Balestra: It’s one of the first emails I read every day. I’ve been a reader for a few years and when you converted to premium content, we signed up because it’s a great synthesis of the real estate world and very helpful.

*The interview has been edited and condensed for clarity.

Clarion Partners, Taconic Partners and Bright Power Install Solar Photovoltaic Panels at Eastchester Heights

Solar Panels will Bring Sustainability to Bronx Community and Environment

Clarion Partners (Clarion), a specialist investment manager and subsidiary of Franklin Resources, Inc., and Taconic Partners (Taconic) celebrated the completion of a noteworthy solar power project at their flagship Quality Communities property, Eastchester Heights, in the Bronx.

Eastchester Heights is a 1,416 unit residential apartment complex which spans five city blocks and 114 individual buildings. Built in 1935 and situated on 14.84 acres, it is among the largest residential communities in the Bronx, and in greater New York City.

By adding solar, Taconic and Clarion are improving an existing property and reducing its emissions. The solar installation will produce over 1.1 million kilowatt hours of clean electricity, equivalent to removing 165 cars from the road for a year or the carbon sequestered by over 12,800 tree seedlings grown over 10 years.

“We’re very proud of this project and the positive impact it will not only have on the environment, but also the Bronx community,” said Taconic’s Andrew Schwartz, Vice President of Residential Asset Management. “We are committed to being a part of a solution to fight climate change and look forward to exploring solar and other sustainable technologies for more of our properties.”

Taconic and Clarion contracted Bright Power, an energy and water management consulting and construction company, to design and install 917 kilowatts of solar photovoltaic panels at their Quality Communities property.

“Bright Power applauds Taconic and Clarion’s commitment to clean, renewable energy. A solar installation of this magnitude sets an example for other real estate owners,” said Jeff Perlman, CEO and founder of Bright Power. “Taconic and Clarion are making the Bronx more sustainable while they preserve high-quality affordable workforce housing. It’s a win for the Bronx, Eastchester Heights residents, and the environment.”

With new legislation in New York City aimed to reduce emissions from existing buildings, Taconic and Clarion will be one step ahead in helping the city meet its goal to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 80% by 2050. The solar panels at the Quality Communities property will help New York State reach its goal of 100% carbon-free electricity by 2040 and decrease emissions in an area that has the highest asthma rates in the country.

“Clarion Partners is proud of the investment Eastchester Heights is making in clean energy,” said Katie Vaz, Managing Director, Clarion. “We are excited to include Eastchester Heights as a contributor to our ever-growing portfolio of properties which collectively produce over 30 megawatts of solar power annually.”

For more information on Eastchester Heights, please visit https://www.eastchesterheights.com.

The Life Sciences Power 50

The scientists, entrepreneurs and investors driving New York’s biotech boom.

As New York struggled through the worst of the coronavirus pandemic, one of the few sectors of the local economy that not only survived but thrived was the life sciences. But it wasn’t an overnight success story. Years ago, forward-thinking leaders saw other major cities emerging as biotech hot spots and identified the potential – a highly educated workforce, world-class health care institutions, real estate developers and Wall Street types eager to invest – to cultivate a major life sciences hub in New York. Existing academic and research centers created collaborative partnerships. New biotech incubators were launched to support promising startups. Investors and economic development agencies provided millions of dollars for researchers and entrepreneurs to translate scientific discoveries into real-world applications – and high-paying jobs.

City & State’s first Life Sciences Power 50 – researched and written by City & State’s Jon Lentz and Kay Dervishi – recognizes many of the key individuals behind the sector’s remarkable growth in New York, including scientists, venture capitalists, government officials, health care executives, real estate developers, philanthropists and others who have positioned New York as a biotech center on track to rival those in Boston and San Francisco.

Charles Bendit & Paul Pariser

Co-Founders and co-CEOs, Taconic Partners
Charles Bendit and Paul Pariser, credit Max Flatow

In October, The New York Times published an in-depth feature on how the life sciences sector is a bright spot in Manhattan’s “battered” office market. The publication cited Taconic Partners’ planned conversion of an old West Side auto showroom into yet another life sciences hub as the latest example of biotech investment buoying the real estate industry. Taconic Partners was founded in 1997 by Charles Bendit and Paul Pariser, who still lead the company today as co-CEOs. In the spring, they completed a $600 million recapitalization for the new hub.

Taconic Partners, Nuveen Close on $260M Fund to Buy NYC Real Estate

Taconic Partners and Nuveen Real Estate closed on a $260 million fund to pick up real estate around New York City, hoping to create a portfolio valued at more than $1 billion, Commercial Observer has learned.

The fund, dubbed the New York City Property Fund II, plans to target “value-add” opportunities around the five boroughs and parts of New Jersey, said Chris Balestra, co-president and chief investment officer for Taconic Partners. Nuveen and Taconic are not limiting themselves to any asset classes and are looking at office, life sciences and last-mile distribution properties.

“It’s for any asset class that we can make those returns on,” Balestra said. “If an industrial deal pops up and it makes sense to do it, [we’ll do it].”

Balestra could not say which companies participated in the fundraising, only that it included several European pension funds.

The joint partners started fundraising in 2018 and closed on the fund’s first project the next year, a former auto dealership at 125 West End Avenue the pair picked up for $230 million with plans to turn it into a life sciences hub.

Nuveen and Taconic planned to close on the rest of the fund in 2020, but the coronavirus pandemic hit and made investors wary about jumping into the New York City market.

“That was a tough time to raise,” Nadir Settles, head of Nuveen’s New York regional office, said. “So many investment commitments were still nervous about New York.”

The pair had to lower their target goal for the fund, originally $500 million, but was still able to close on it this month. Settles said the joint venture’s foothold in the city’s growing life sciences market — and the $600 million capitalization for 125 West End they landed in March — helped ease investors’ concerns about the New York market and any amount raised during the pandemic is a good thing.

“There hasn’t been a lot of fundraising in the time of COVID,” Settles said. “But we were still able to raise the lion’s share of the capital. That is a huge win.”

The pair are now actively seeking opportunities around the city to deploy the rest of the fund’s capital and hope to close on its next acquisition by the end of the year.

Despite foreign investors wavering on New York City’s future, both Balestra and Settles said their companies never thought about abandoning the fundraise.