The story of NYC developer Brandon Miller, who died after being found unconscious in the garage of his $8 million Water Mill home,
has become tabloid fodder in recent weeks. (A cause of not has not ben made public.)
Many of the stories focused on the lavish lifestyle that the 43-year-old Miller led with his wife, Candice Miller, a blogger and Instagram influencer, and two children who shuttled between their $50,000-per-month Upper East Side rental apartment and a Hamptons home in Water Mill with a collection of classic cars.
There is a local real-estate angle in the story.
According to
The Real Deal, Miller inherited the commercial and residential real estate firm Real Estate Equities Corporation (REEC) from his father, shopping mall tycoon Michael Miller, who died in 2016. (The younger Miller joined the firm in 2004)
Per TRD: "It came out after the elder Miller’s death that he had allegedly told his assistant to forge Brandon's signature on loan documents related to a condo project, according to court records."
The many REEC investments under Brandon Miller's watch weren't paying off either. He was reportedly $17 million in debt to friends and facing several lawsuits when he died, according to
published reports.
In November 2017, REEC picked up the 99-year leasehold for the assemblage on the NW corner of St. Mark's Place and Third Avenue for nearly $150 million. The Gabay family had owned the buildings
for generations. (There were
other suitors for the property.)
The previous buildings here, which included retail tenants such as Korilla BBQ, the Continental and McDonald's,
were demolished in the summer of 2019 to make way for an office building.
There was a lot of drama surrounding the size of the building (
flashback), and work was stopped for 10 months as Madison Capital Realty tried foreclosing on the property in 2021. Foundation work finally started in late August 2022 — this after crews and equipment were assembled here
in the summer of 2020.
From
the story last Thursday at
TRD about 1-3 St. Mark's Place:
...but progress was slow. Before foundations were even dug, Madison Capital Realty tried foreclosing on the property in 2021.
Parkview Financial rescued the project with a $70 million refinance the following year.
Only the third and final tier of the nine-story building is still under construction. But as the building nears completion, 24 percent of Manhattan offices remain vacant, according to a Cushman & Wakefield report, and for the first time since 2021, no new construction or full renovations of offices were completed last quarter.
REEC recently fell behind on loan payments at the project, Parkview Financial CEO Paul Rahimian told TRD, and there are not yet tenants for the building's retail or office space. "The project is entirely on spec," Rahimian said.
Elsewhere on the Lower East Side, REEC took over the leasehold at 156-166 Bowery, a 15,000-square-foot assemblage just south of Delancey, in a deal valued at $50 million.
Per TRD:
In 2022, the firm filed plans for a 73,000-square-foot mixed-use commercial building and landed a $60.5 million loan from Raven Capital Management, according to property records.
But progress at that property appears to have stalled.
Said Parkview's Rahimian: "We think there will be demand for new offices in such a popular neighborhood, and we were surprised like everyone else to learn about what had happened [with Miller]."
"We think there will be demand for new offices in such a popular neighborhood"
ReplyDeleteLOL, no. Just stop it. If something *must* be built, make it housing.
So, now what? Is that building on St Marks going to be finished, or just sit there collecting dust like the unfinished eyesore down on Allen & Stanton?
Very strange and disturbing. All of this. He was still a young man. Something feels off. I walked past this building yesterday and wondered about its completion date. Let's hope more details emerge about his death and the status of what is to come regarding the property itself. RIP Brandon.
ReplyDeleteAll those long-term neighborhood businesses killed and the buildings housing them destroyed. All for NOTHING.
ReplyDeleteThe Astor Place "Death Star" has a new cousin. There goes the neighborhood
ReplyDeleteToday's "office building" is a ground floor retail space which serves 300 variations of what was once a cup of coffee or tea. The real estate idiots need to learn a new trade, they are all dinosaurs.
ReplyDeleteWhat exactly did we lose there, besides Continental? Nothing
ReplyDelete@7:50pm: I guess you haven't lived here long enough to know what was on that corner for many years. It's more than just Continental.
ReplyDeleteAnd Papaya King? Meh.
ReplyDeleteIt was the gateway to the neighborhood, permanently disfigured at Astor Place and here too with the approval of demolition and new construction, instead of historic preservation. All of it should have been landmarked including the original traffic patterns around the Alamo, which traced old Native paths. The defacement of this corner compounds former Mayor Bloomberg's mistake of not landmarking CBGB-OMFUG.
ReplyDeleteLandmark Continental ? Now thats funny.
ReplyDeleteJust another developer who was not considerate to the neighborhood and just wanted to make money. The gateway to St. Mark's Place was very historic and architectural lyrics significant and he just wanted cash flow and wealth. Even though real estate is soaring in price he botched his business which he inherited as he was a nepobaby
ReplyDelete