Bloomberg
Publicly traded landlord Equity Residential is marketing two Manhattan apartment buildings, and just completed the sale of a third, as it seeks to reduce its holdings in a rental market that’s softening.
The Chicago-based real estate investment trust is looking to sell 800 Sixth Ave., a high-rise tower in Chelsea, and 505 W. 54th St. in Hell’s Kitchen, according to a person with knowledge of the offering, who asked not to be identified because the matter is private.
This week, Equity Residential completed the sale of 101 West End Ave., a 506-unit building between 64th and 65th streets, for $416 million to a consortium including Dermot, Dutch pension fund PGGM and USAA, according to Steve Benjamin, Dermot’s chief executive officer.
Over the next several years, the buyers plan to upgrade the property, the second rental the group has bought in Manhattan this year.
Marty McKenna, Equity Residential’s head of investor relations, didn’t have a comment. PGGM and USAA didn’t immediately respond to requests for comment.
Equity Residential, founded by billionaire Sam Zell, is trying to curb its exposure to Manhattan’s West Side, a wide swath of the borough where rents have been weighted down in recent years by a glut of new apartment supply, David Neithercut, the REIT’s outgoing chief executive officer, said on a July conference call with analysts. He said the company was listing one building for sale in the area as “an opportunity to address the negative impact in our New York City growth rates.â€
The property at 800 Sixth Ave., between 27th and 28th streets, was built in 2003 and has 266 units, according to Equity Residential’s annual report.
Amenities at the tower, where a two-bedroom is listed for $7,200 a month, include a rooftop deck with panoramic city views and a putting green, according to the rental website.
The 54th Street building, at the corner of 10th Avenue, was constructed in 2001 and has 222 apartments. Available studios start at $2,985 and one-bedrooms start at $3,615.
Cushman & Wakefield brokers Douglas Harmon and Adam Spies are representing Equity Residential and declined to comment.
The sales team has also been hired by rival landlord AvalonBay Communities Inc., which is marketing a 50 percent stake in seven of its Manhattan properties, including one each in the West Side neighborhoods of Chelsea and Morningside Heights.