Showing posts with label Willis Tower. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Willis Tower. Show all posts

Friday, March 13, 2015

Willis Tower Sold for $1.3B to Blackstone

Blackstone and 233 South Wacker LLC announced that they had signed a definitive agreement for Blackstone Real Estate Partners VII to acquire the second tallest building in the country, the Willis Tower in Chicago, for $1.3 billion. The sellers of the 110-story skyscraper, formerly known as Sears Tower, are a group including New York-based investors Joseph Chetrit and Joseph Moinian, and American Landmark Properties Ltd. They paid $841 million for the tower in 2004, while Blackstone's purchase price of $1.3 billion is, according to Crain's Chicago Business, set to become the highest ever paid for a U.S. office building outside Manhattan. Douglas Harmon of Eastdil Secured LLC was the broker for the sale to Blackstone. Further terms of the transaction were not disclosed.

"We are bullish on Chicago as companies expand within and move into the city and look for first-class office space," Blackstone managing director Jacob Werner said in a statement. "We see great potential in further improving both the building's retail operations and the tourist experience for one of the most popular destinations for visitors to Chicago."

The Willis Tower is a 3.8 million square-foot office building in downtown Chicago and, at 110 stories, is the second-tallest office building in the United States and the fifth-tallest office building in the world. The building also features a top Chicago tourist attraction in the Skydeck on the 103rd floor, which provides 1.6 million visitors per year with unmatched views of Chicago and the surrounding area including from the "Ledge", glass cubes which extend from the building. The New York-based company plans to spend as much as $150 million to improve the tower's retail portion and 103rd-floor observatory, according to a Boston Globe article.

For more news and information visit Blumberg Capital Partners.

Friday, May 10, 2013

One WTC Construction Complete as Tallest Building in the Western Hemisphere

One World Trade CenterTowering 1,776 feet above the ground, in honor of the year that began the American revolution against British rule and what is considered the start of the modern United States, New York's One World Trade Center met the end of its construction as a tall, heavy spire was hoisted into place today. Installation of the final two sections of the 408-foot, 758-ton spire was completed after pieces of it had been transported to the roof of the building last week. It will serve as a world-class broadcast antenna. The spire makes the building the tallest building in the Western Hemisphere, 47 feet taller than Chicago's Willis Tower, though it is substantially shorter than towers in the Middle East and Asia.

"It's a culmination of a tremendous amount of team work ... rebuilding the New York City skyline once again," said Juan Estevez, a project manager for Tishman Construction, from a temporary platform on the roof of the tower where he and other workers watched the milestone.

"It's going to have a light that you can see from tens of miles away," said Port Authority Vice Chairman Scott Rechler. "And that light will change colors and in the next few months we are going to be activating that light, and it will be a beacon of hope just like the Statue of Liberty."

9/11 Memorial President Joe Daniels watched the spire piece rise Thursday morning from the memorial's office windows overlooking the World Trade Center site. "It's a big milestone in the history of the rebirth of the site," Daniels told NBC News. "This renewal of spirit, to see spring here and this beautiful weather, the memorial fountains and the flag on the spire piece going up. It was one of those things that you won't forget."

For more news and information visit Blumberg Capital Partners.

Friday, June 3, 2011

North America's Tallest Building Up for Sale/Investment

The Willis Tower in Chicago, formerly known as the Sears Tower and North America's tallest building, is on the block according to the Wall Street Journal as the owners are reportedly looking to recapitalize or sell the property. The owners of the property, Chicago's American Landmark Properties Ltd, New York Developers Joseph Moinian of the Moinian Group and Joseph Chetrit of the Chetrit Group, originally purchased the building for $900 million, or about $244 a square foot, in 2004. The building carries $780 million of debt on it said sources.

Completed May 3, 1973, Willis Tower stands 1,450 feet tall and is one of the most recognizable landmarks in the Chicago skyline . The building held the record for the world’s tallest building for 25 years until the Petronas Towers in Kuala Lampur, Malaysia were built in 1998. The 3.8 million square foot tower was designed by the architectural firm Skidmore, Owings & Merrill for Sears, Roebuck & Company. The building was renamed to Willis Tower in 2009 when UK insurer Willis Group Holdings leased 140,000 square feet at $14.50 per square foot. Watch an Associated Press video report on the marketing of the tower here.

For more news and information visit Blumberg Capital Partners.