SAN FRANCISCO | Hayes Point (30 Van Ness Avenue) | 520 FT | 47 FLOORS

This will be a mixed-use tower with offices in the podium and 333 condominiums in the tower. Designed by Solomon Cordwell Buenz for Lendlease.

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Since we’ve published this story, Lendlease has confirmed with me that construction has officially started. “The 540-foot-tall tower with a projected end value of $1.15 billion represents Lendlease’s largest investment to break ground in the Americas to date”

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Very nice! Some good height and density, with plenty of amenities. I believe this will be 19th in the city, the current city anyway not including anything UC or proposed.

Interesting to see that area becoming a mini cluster.

Per Jerry of San Fran:

09/12/2022 - Malcom equipment being taken apart. The project is now known as Hayes Point . A ceremony has been held for the official start of the project.
(I spent two weeks in France enjoying architecture from Bordeaux to Toulouse. On the 9 hour flight from London to San Francisco Covid caught up with me!)

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Per Jerry of San Fran:

10/29/2022 Excavation is happening for the foundation

Hayes Point, 30 Van Ness Avenue, San Francisco

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https://www.sfgate.com/bayarea/article/sf-skyscraper-halts-construction-17808833.php

The work stoppage could delay the completion of the building, which had a target date of 2025, and may increase costs on one of the most expensive construction projects underway in the city. It’s valued at $1.15 billion.

yikes

SF seriously needs to get its act together.

From Real Deal, a nearby building -

The value of luxury apartment complex NEMA has shrunk by nearly 50 percent, according to Trepp, citing remittance data from September. The recently appraised value of $279 million, or about $370,000 per unit, is well below the loan balance of $384 million and about half of its 2018 value of nearly $544 million.

The loan was sent to special servicing and owner Crescent Heights [faced “imminent default” in August, Trepp said, citing servicer comments. The loan backed by the 754-unit Mid-Market complex was originated by Natixis in 2019 but then packaged into a commercial mortgage-backed securities offering.

“Bond holders are likely looking at losses down the road,” Trepp’s Manus Clancy said via email.

The two-building complex was built in 2013 at the corner of 10th Street and Market, across the street from the headquarters for X, the company formerly known as Twitter, which [has shed two-thirds of its office space since Elon Musk assumed ownership. Just down the street, [Whole Foods abruptly closed a location that had been open just under a year in Trinity, another large newly built apartment complex, citing safety concerns for its employees. NEMA is two blocks from the city’s Civic Center and UN Plaza along 10th Street.

NEMA has not brought in enough money to meet its debt obligations since 2020, according to special servicer notes. In 2022, the loan posted a debt service coverage ratio of 0.71 and had an occupancy of 91 percent. Both numbers were up slightly in the first quarter of 2023.

Beyond what the new valuation means for this particular loan, Clancy said the “sheer size of the drop is noteworthy” and could have a ripple effect on the values of other properties in the city, where [one of the largest landlords recently defaulted on a portfolio that had been worth $1 billion.

The 50 percent decline is much more than the assumed 15 to 25 percent drop in multifamily values nationwide, Clancy said. It could speak to “things beyond interest rates like [quality of life, occupancy and rent levels” impacting San Francisco apartments in particular.

It’s hard to make comparisons between NEMA and other recent San Francisco apartment building sales because there are few of the same size, with newer construction and not under rent control. But a non-rent-controlled 28-unit apartment building near Civic Center and built in 2002 sold in September for just under $10 million, or about $360,000 per unit, in the range of NEMA’s per unit valuation.

While allowing that property values can vary greatly from block to block, Clancy said that NEMA’s low valuation “is a sign that [multifamily values in the SF MSA are off considerably.”