According to The Real Deal, Madison Realty Capital "has sold the $44 million loan secured by the property." The buyer is reportedly 605 East 9th Community Holdings LLC, repped by David Pfeffer of NYC firm Tarter Krinsky Drogin.
A lawyer for Gregg Singer, who bought the property in a city auction in 1998 for $3.15 million, claims that Aaron Sosnick, a billionaire hedge fund manager who lives next door in the Christodora House, is behind the LLC.
The Real Deal also published a series of emails and texts between consultant Paul Wolf and Sosnick — obtained by Singer through a freedom of information request — that show an interest in acquiring the building. (Sosnick and Pfeffer did not return TRD's request for comment, while Madison Realty Group declined.)
As we first reported, the building is headed to a bankruptcy sale on Nov. 8. Per TRD: "The owner of the loan can bid using the debt, making it the clear favorite to acquire the property."
In January 2022, Supreme Court Justice Melissa Crane ruled that Madison Realty Capital could move forward with a foreclosure against Singer after years of delay.
Madison Realty Capital reportedly provided Singer with a $44 million loan on the property in 2016. Court records show that he failed to repay the balance by its maturity date in April 2016, and by that September, the lender filed to foreclose.
Through the years, Singer wanted to turn the one-time P.S. 64 into a dorm (more here), though those plans never materialized, and the building has sat in disrepair. The 135,000-square-foot building is zoned for “community facility use,” any conversion to a condoplex or residential housing would require a zoning variance.
As previously noted, some residents want to see the space used again as a community center, as it was during its time as Charas/El Bohio Community Center. Singer evicted the group on Dec. 27, 2001.
Sosnick also reportedly bought the former Boys' Club of New York on 10th Street and Avenue A, now home to the Joyce Theater, several nonprofit arts groups, and a gallery.
In August 2019, Crain's first reported that Sosnick, founder of the investment fund A.R.T. Advisors LLC, was the new owner, buying the 7-floor building for $31.725 million with the intention of selling the property, "potentially at a substantial loss," to a nonprofit that would maintain its civic use.
3 comments:
Please turn it into a hospital. We desperately need one.
If the report is correct that Aaron Sosnick is behind the buyout of the loan on Charas, this is wonderful news!! He is a billionaire philanthropist supporting the arts, education, human services, and community projects. He is behind the recent purchase of the Boys Club building on Avenue A and 10th St. which the Joyce Theater moved into with option to buy in one year at a substantial discount. A very big THANK YOU to Mr. Sosnick for buying the loan, a first step toward buying Charas at the November auction. Whatever happens with the building, it will not become a luxury highrise through "creative" rezoning by the Adams administration if it is true that one of Mr. Sosnick's foundations becomes the owner.
This is wonderful news!
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