Real Estate News, Views & Schmooze!
Renting
Tales Of The Property Manager…The Story Of The Clogged Sink
Nov 20th

I love hearing stories about apartment tenants and their issues. Let’s just say it’s my version of great reality TV. Here’s one from Robert Kramer- Owner of Kramer/Saxl Group, LLC , a client of mine who sent me this as an email yesterday.
Subject Line: Resident says– “My sink is clogged and I don’t know why”
Repair guy says– “The drain is filled with wax!”
Landlord says — “What!?!?
Tenant says– “Well I did spill a little wax, but I thought I got it all.”
Landlord thinks to self–”Oy Vey”!
Pictures Shown Below:
PS wax plug available for inspection on my desk!
Please, if you have other landlord stories you’d like to share, let me know as I will be featuring them in the annual Schmoozer recap.
Gulp!…Uptown Apartments Sell For Upsize Price
Sep 18th

Down market, Uptown price
by Burl Gilyard
South Minneapolis apartments sell for $30 million, perhaps a result of ‘pent-up demand’
By all accounts, the investment market for commercial real estate is slow.
But the recent sale of the Uptown City Apartments project in south Minneapolis suggests a strong investor appetite for solid multifamily properties.
Dallas-based Invesco Real Estate paid $30.1 million for Uptown City Apartments, a robust price that works out to just shy of $185,000 per apartment unit. The seller was Farmington Hills, Mich.-based Village Green Companies and its partner in the development, Hartford, Conn.-based Cornerstone Real Estate Advisers, LLC, an arm of the Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Co.
The deal closed on September 2.
“We had more than 70 confidentiality agreements returned. We had a good and solid shortlist of buyers,” said Gina Dingman of Colliers Turley Martin Tucker, who brokered the sale of Uptown City Apartments with her colleagues James McCaffrey and Julie Lux.
“I think there’s been so little property come on the market in the Twin Cities that there’s a pent-up demand here. People are looking for quality investments in good locations,” Dingman said.
Uptown City Apartments is actually two separate buildings that stand a few blocks apart at 714 and 1220 West Lake Street, respectively, and offers a combined 163 apartments.
Dingman said Uptown City Apartments was 98 percent leased at the time the deal closed. The development includes 222 enclosed parking spaces and some retail space.
Dingman declined to discuss or comment on the sale price, which surfaced through public records.
Village Green Companies started the recent local trend of developing new Class A apartments with Uptown City Apartments in 2003.
Andrea Roebker, a spokeswoman for Village Green Companies, said that Village Green is typically a long-term owner of its apartments. But in this case, she noted, the firm’s joint venture partner had a right to pursue a sale under the terms of their contract. Village Green’s partner in the project was
Cornerstone Real Estate Advisers, LLC, an arm of the Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Company.
Abe Appert, an apartment broker in the local office of CB Richard Ellis, said it’s been a quiet year so far for apartment sales, with only three sizable deals closing since the beginning of the year.
But he expects more deals before the end of the year. Appert said 10 local apartment buildings are currently on the market for sale.
“The second half of the year should be busier for us as well as the entire market,” Appert said. “There is a lot of new capital chasing apartments in the Twin Cities today.”
The Uptown City deal marks the second large local apartment deal to close within the last month, according to local property sales records.
The Boston-based Intercontinental Real Estate Corp. bought the 353-unit International Village in Bloomington for $30.1 million, in a deal that closed on August 12. The property was 98 percent full. Appert is part of the team at CB Richard Ellis that brokered that sale.
The pricing on that deal works out to roughly $85,000 per unit. In contrast to Uptown City Apartments, the International Village building dates to 1968.
Earlier this year, Seattle-based Olympic Investors paid $24 million for The Cosmopolitan, a 255-unit building in the Lowertown area of downtown St. Paul. That deal closed in January.
Village Green still has interests in 6 local apartments. The company’s latest project, the 213-unit Eitel Building City Apartments, opened in January near Loring Park in Minneapolis.
“Eitel has performed very well. I think we’ll be at 95 percent occupancy at the end of the month,” Roebker said.
Village Green also plans to develop the 175-unit Mill District City Apartments in downtown Minneapolis along Washington Avenue near the Guthrie Theater on which another developer once planned condos. Construction is slated to start this winter.
Dingman said that apartment investors see the Twin Cities apartment market as stable, with lower vacancy than other cities.
“Our market is very stable,” Dingman said. “There’s definitely a demand for multifamily in the market.”
U of Minnesota’s Dinkytown To Get Some New Digs
Sep 16th

New Dinkytown Apartment Complex Deal Finalized
By Paul Groessel Twin Cities Business
The Dinkydome is getting hitched. Property sales to Doran Development were finalized, and renovations of the 90-year-old building, along with construction of a new 12-story apartment complex, named Sydney Hall, will begin immediately.
The renovation of the University of Minnesota landmark will take two years, in time with the intended occupancy date of July 2010 for the complex’s 198 apartment units and ground-floor retail units. Twenty-three surface parking spaces and 192 underground spaces will also be constructed.
From its connection to the iconic Dinkydome, the new Sydney Hall will extend to the northeast corner of Fifteenth Avenue and Fourth Street Southeast, and the former university parking lot on Fourth Street.
With a range of floor plans, from studio apartments to four-bedroom units, the new complex “will be the premier student housing project in the Midwest,” said founder and chief manager of Doran Development, Kelly Doran, in a press release.
The coordination between Doran Companies, Dinkydome tenants, the university and the City of Minneapolis, “took a little longer to put together,” Doran said, “but it was worth it.”
Rent And Run…Clinton Staff Stiff Landlord!
Feb 8th

Making matters worse, Bennett said, the 3,000-square-foot building at 236 Union St. was left trashed. Campaign signs were left lying all over the place, he said.
Apartment Complex Bans Tattooed Tenants!!
Oct 2nd

Some apartment buildings in
Is this an act of discrimination or not?
The Federal Fair Housing Act states illegal discrimination occurs when a landlord treats a prospective renter differently based on certain characteristics or lifestyles. The Act applies to all apartments except buildings of four or fewer units where the owner also lives, housing run by organizations or private clubs, and single-family housing rented without the service of a licensed Real Estate Broker. A landlord cannot treat you differently during any stage of the rental process based on the following categories: Race or Color National Origin, Religion, Families with Children Under 18 or Pregnant Women.
It might be morally unjust but according to federal law, it is legal.
I’d like to know what your thoughts are on the subject.
Please remember…
If you are in the market for a new apartment, you’d better think twice before getting way too inebriated at the next holiday party like this guy did.








