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Invsco
Home Guide
"S__ in the City*"
August 24, 2003 |
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Invsco
Home Guide
"My Kind of Town"
August 10, 2003 |
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Invsco
Home Guide
"Knowledge is Power"
July 27, 2003 |
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Invsco
Home Guide
"The secret of buying real estate at half price"
July 13, 2003 |
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New
Homes Magazine
"Modern Love"
Winter 2002/2003 |
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Heartland
Real Estate Business
"Chicago Rises Higher"
November 2002 |
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New
Homes Magazine
"A Sterling Address"
August 2002 |
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Chicago
Tribune New Homes
"A Posh View, Much More,
At The Sterling"
October 27, 2001 |
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Today's
New Homes
"Sales Soar At Sterling"
July 18, 2001 |
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New
Homes Magazine
"American Invsco Rolls Out Red Carpet for Sterling Opportunity"
May 12, 2001 |
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Chicago
Sun-Times
"Condo King In Front"
February 2, 2001 |
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Forbes
"Leading The Way"
December 25, 2000 |
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Crain's
Chicago Business
"Converting The Masses"
March 1, 1999 |
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Crain's Chicago Business: Converting The Masses
Crain's Chicago Business
March 1, 1999
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When
Nicholas Gouletas approached basketball star Isiah Thomas in 1988
about investing in his $200-million plan to convert Chicago's Lake
Point Tower into condominiums, Mr. Thomas -- a Chicago native who
was playing with the Detroit Pistons -- didn't say yes. But he didn't
say no, either.
That was all the encouragement a consummate salesman
like Mr. Gouletas needed.
The
chairman of Chicago's American Invsco Corp. finally got the answer
he was looking for 11 years later, albeit for a different project.
Mr. Thomas, now chairman and CEO of Detroit-based Isiah Investments
Inc., recently became an investor in Mr. Gouletas' conversion of
the Gold Coast Galleria, a 34-story, 331-unit building at 111 W.
Maple St.
The project is part of a wave of major condo
conversions under way in Chicago, a trend that began in the city's
core and that's spread to outlying neighborhoods.
Several factors are contributing to the resurgence:
the strong demand for housing, particularly downtown; apartment
building owners ready to cash out after a long, slow climb in the
values of their properties, and real estate investors eager for
a quick return on their money.
But one factor controls all the others. "No.
1 is low interest rates for home mortgages," says Mr. Gouletas.
Condo conversions in the late 1990s never will
match the rapid pace set earlier in the decade, when many major
apartment towers in the city were sold following a glut of construction.
The reason: There aren't many left to convert. But even so, the
conversion business has been brisk lately. "If
this is a boomlet, I'd like to see the boom," says Herbert Emmerman,
president of Equity Marketing Services Inc.
Condo conversion sales in the central business
district increased 35% in 1998 to 1,019, according to an analysis
of major projects there compiled by Chicago-based Appraisal Research
Counselors Ltd. Last year's total was the highest since 1988, except
for 1994, when 2,424 sales were recorded.
In addition to the the Gold Coast Galleria, other
apartment buildings being converted include:
- The
Grand Ohio, a 593-unit, 27-story building at 211 E. Ohio St. recently
purchased by a joint venture of Equity Marketing Services and
Chicago-based Draper & Kramer Inc. Marketing is starting this
month.
- 1122
N. LaSalle St., a 302-unit property that American Invsco acquired
last month from an investment partnership managed by Bruce Wexler.
Marketing is also starting this month.
- 201
E. Ontario St., a 51-story, 394-unit building purchased last summer
by the Equity Marketing-Draper & Kramer joint venture, which began
marketing the property in July. About half the units are sold
and the sales are expected to close this month.
- CityView,
two mid-rise buildings with a total 424 units at 440 and 480 N.
McClurg Court, which are being converted by Chicago-based MCL
Cos. as part of the $750-million River East development. Marketing
began in July 1997 and more than 310 sales have been closed.
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Inside look at the process
Apartment rents have been on a steady climbing since
the early 1990s, but not high enough for apartment operators to
outbid condo converters as building owners consider the next move
for their properties.
"In the last two years, the vast majority of deals
have gone to condo converters," says John W. Guinee, chief investment
officer of Virginia-based Charles E. Smith Residential Realty Inc.,
which is building a 52-story building at 1 W. Superior St., the
first high-rise rental tower downtown in eight years. "They are
buying buildings at below-replacement cost and they are attracting
opportunistic, quick-turnaround capital for the conversion process."
Mr. Gouletas' Gold Coast Galleria deal offers
an inside glimpse at the mechanics of the current condo conversion
market.
He acquired the building from its construction
lender, Prospect Heights-based Household International Inc., which
took control of the property in 1991. Amid a glut of new apartments,
the developer could not obtain permanent financing to replace Household's
$55-million loan.
While many lenders quickly flipped the buildings they
reluctantly acquired, Household waited for the real estate market
to recover.
Two investment partnerships managed by Mr. Gouletas
paid more than $50 million for the property, which includes 55,000
square feet of commercial space, sources say. One group purchased
the residential units, while another group of long-term investors
bought the commercial space.
Mr. Gouletas paid for the property by putting up between
20% and 25% in cash and obtaining a short-term mortgage from Chicago's
LaSalle National Bank for the balance. Renovation will add about
$1.6 million to the cost.
Race against
time
Condo conversion is a race against time in which the
profitability of a project may be determined by how quickly you
can complete sales and reduce your carrying costs and marketing
expenses.
"If I could sell out a building in a day, that
would be the ideal," says Mr. Gouletas.
To gain momentum, selling units to a building's
rental residents can be crucial. While renters are offered discount
prices, those sales cost the developer less money in marketing.
At Gold Coast Galleria, sales began in early October.
Through mid-February, sales of 112 units had closed, generating
more than $18.7 million in cash, most of which was used to pay down
debt. The entire project may now take less than half the two years
that had been predicted.
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Mr. Gouletas expects
to gross more than $64 million from sales, with a goal of achieving
a rate of return as high as 25%. Then, it'll be on to the next deal.
"We're always looking for new buildings," he says.
But the conversion trend, which has swept through
the central city, slows down as it reaches the city limits. In the
suburbs, the number of units converted to condos last year increased
just 6% to 975, compared with the 1997 total, according to an analysis
of major suburban projects compiled by Schaumburg-based market tracker
Tracy Cross & Associates Inc.
"In the suburbs, most of the major properties
that have changed hands have been acquired by real estate investment
trusts or pension funds with plans to operate them as rentals,"
says Tracy Cross, the firm's president.
Apartment buildings in Cook County suffer from
higher tax rates. In the collar counties, 42% to 44% of the income
an apartment building generates goes toward taxes and operating
expenses. But Cook County's oft-criticized property tax classification
system raises that percentage to as much as 56%.
Meanwhile,
condo conversion projects are dotting Chicago's outlying neighborhoods.
"What's
happening is that the downtown area is so full of vitality, and
it's spreading to the neighborhoods," says Douglas R. "Rick" Woodworth,
president of Chicago-based real estate firm Habitat Co. "People
who years ago might have been concerned about owning a home in the
city are changing their minds."
Most of the projects are conversions of three-flats
and courtyard buildings.
For example, Chicago attorney Morton Kaplan is
converting three 1929 buildings with a total of 80 units at 10901-51
S. Longwood Drive in the Beverly neighborhood on the Southwest Side.
Buying is attractive option
The
largest project outside of downtown is Habitat's four-year program
to convert 800 apartments of the 1,500-unit mixed-income South Commons
complex along South Michigan Avenue between 26th and 31st streets,
which it developed from 1967 to 1971. The company is spending about
$20 million to renovate the properties.
Says Habitat's Mr. Woodworth: " With mortgage
rates so low, the rent-buy decision is much easier for renters to
make."
A March 1 report on condominium conversions
contained two incorrect street addresses. American Invsco Corp.
is converting an apartment building at 1122 N. Clark St. And a joint
venture of Equity Marketing Services Inc. and Draper & Kramer Inc.
is converting a building at 401 E. Ontario St. (printed 3/8/99)
> For news headlines throughout the business day, go to: http://www.chicagobusiness.com
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