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National Real Estate Investor and PRIMEDIA Business Magazines & Media would like to express our deepest sympathies to the families and friends of the victims of the September 11 attacks on our country. Our thoughts and prayers are with you.

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New locations of displaced WTC tenants

Building Status Update
12/17/01


World Trade Center tenant listing

World Trade Center retail tenant listing

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Matt Valley
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Steve Webb
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Stephen Ursery
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blank blank Do you have a comment, observation or question about how the attacks on New York City and Washington D.C. are affecting the commercial real estate industry? Send us an e-mail.

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LeFraks say Jersey City is answer to Manhattan’s tight office market

 By Cristina Gair, Associate Editor

Online Exclusive, Oct 16 2001

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NEW YORK — To deal with the squeezed Manhattan office market, Jamie LeFrak and Harrison LeFrak are touting development opportunities in Jersey City, N.J., to real estate lenders. The brothers — managing directors of the family-owned Lefrak Organization based in Queens, N.Y., and grandsons of company chairman Samuel LeFrak — made their pitch Tuesday at the New York-based Real Estate Lenders Association’s monthly breakfast meeting.

"Construction needs to happen in Jersey City now," said Jamie LeFrak. He said if the real estate community doesn’t address this issue, New York and the surrounding areas could lose tenants and residents to less constrained markets in the wake of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks.

The Lefrak Organization already is heavily invested in the New Jersey waterfront. The $10 billion Newport project in Jersey City — a 600-acre mixed-use community featuring office space, apartments, a shopping mall and a Courtyard by Marriott hotel — has proven successful. Harrison LeFrak said the Newport development boasts 13,000 employees, and when completed will employee 20,000. Newport also has 10,000 residents.

Jamie LeFrak emphasized that Jersey City is poised to become an even more prime location. "In the long run, there will be an equalization of these two locations, Jersey City and downtown Manhattan," said Jamie LeFrak. He said Jersey city was many displaced companies’ first choice.

A viable development option

The LeFrak brothers contend that developing new properties in Jersey City makes sense right now because development in downtown Manhattan won’t be possible for a few years. Rebuilding in lower Manhattan can’t begin until after the WTC site cleanup is completed and the foundation is repaired. Transportation issues also need to be addressed.

Due to the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, Harrison LeFrak said that companies will move toward location diversification. Companies have discovered they can’t place all of their mission critical processes and data in one place anymore. The LeFrak Organization wants companies to consider Jersey City as one option.

Jersey City, Harrison and Jamie explained, complements lower Manhattan with a well-functioning transportation system. And the brothers contend there are other benefits — for example, barriers to entry for development in Jersey City are less taxing than in Manhattan, and there is land ready for immediate development.



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  As a lender, if a prospective borrower were to inform you that a property he is refinancing, purchasing or developing does not carry terrorism insurance, would you:
  approve the loan anyway
  reject the loan
  make loan approval contingent on the applicant fulfilling certain requirements
  other
   
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