One World Trade Center reaches deal for entire floor

Real Estate

Cooperation among the owners of One World Trade Center, Advance Communications and JLL to find users for some of Condé Nast’s space in the tower has resulted in a second substantial deal.

JLL, Advance’s leasing agent, just completed a 48,000-square-foot sublease for digital marketing specialists Constellation Agency on the tower’s entire 21st floor.

It followed a 40,000-square-foot deal for Reddit in the publisher’s no-longer-needed space. Advance, parent of Condé Nast, plans to unload 400,000 of its total 1.1 million square feet. 

The asking rent for the Condé sublease space is in the $60s per square foot, The Post reported earlier this month.

As we first reported on Aug. 1, peace broke out between Advance and the Durst Organization, the tower’s managing and leasing agent, after the media giant dropped its threat to leave and also paid nearly $10 million for four months’ back rent.

The settlement included Durst’s agreement to “collaborate” with JLL on Advance’s sublease effort by being flexible and helping to “facilitate” any deals. It was understood that Durst’s cooperation would cut red tape and shorten the time for landlord approval of subtenancies.

Peter Riguardi speaking
JLL tristate President Peter Riguardi represented Durst and the Port Authority in the One World Trade Center deal.
Paul Bruinooge/Patrick McMullan

Constellation, which will move from 110 William St. nearby, offers tech-enabled marketing and creative services through a proprietary advertising engine. The company provides a hybrid approach to advertising through internal and client-facing technology tools.

JLL tristate President Peter Riguardi said that the still-available Advance space at One World Trade “provides tenants with significant flexibility, spectacular views and access to abundant amenities.”

One World Trade Center entrance seen at street level
Reddit cut an earlier deal for office space in One World Trade Center, seen here at street level.
Christian Johnston for NY Post
Security guards standing near turnstiles inside One World Trade Center
Tenants must pay $60 or more per square foot to lease space in One World Trade Center.
Gregory P. Mango for NY Post

Riguardi and JLL’s Joseph Messina and Steven Rotter represented tower owners Durst and the Port Authority. Cushman & Wakefield’s Dale Schlather and Greg Herman acted for Constellation.

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The main finding of the Partnership for New York City’s revised survey of how many employees would return to their offices this fall was widely reported — namely, that 41 percent would be back after Labor Day, down from a pre-Delta estimate of 62 percent last May.

But some intriguing details went mostly overlooked. Among them:

* The real estate industry, perhaps not surprisingly, accounts for the highest percentage of employees in their offices — 85 percent, up from 70 percent in May.

* In financial services, 29 percent of employees were at their office terminals, up from 14 percent.

* Large companies with 5,000-plus employees contributed most to the summer’s overall physical-occupancy uptick — climbing from 8 percent in late May to 25 percent in late August.

Currently, Manhattan office buildings are only about 21 percent occupied, although rent is being paid on 95 percent of space, according to major landlords and industry analysts.

Jessica Lappin
Alliance for Downtown President Jessica Lappin says Lower Manhattan has regained tenants.
Getty Images

The Partnership projected that 76 percent of employees would be back by January, based on a survey of companies. But that of course could be chopped should another dangerous variant emerge. Nervous landlords are crossing fingers that it won’t.

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How badly did Lower Manhattan empty of residents after the pandemic struck?

Very badly at first, according to some revealing new data from the Alliance for Downtown — but an ongoing rebound is gradually putting life back on the streets.

Of 64,000 pre-pandemic residents in the Alliance’s territory (which roughly extends to Chamber Street but doesn’t include Battery Park City), about 40 percent moved away starting in March 2020, according to cell phone data obtained by the organization.

But today, the live-in population “is currently nearing daily levels seen in early 2020,” the Alliance report said.

Alliance President Jessica Lappin further clarified, “As of July we were back to nearly 84 percent.”

There’s still a way to go, but the return trend bodes well for the district where office vacancy of nearly 20 percent is the highest of any Manhattan commercial zone.

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In another deal negotiated by JLL, Dutch global payment platform Adyen is taking 30,415 square feet on the tenth floor and penthouse at 71 Fifth Ave., moving and expanding from 18 E. 16th St.

Landlord Madison Capital was repped by a JLL team headed by Mitchell Konsker, Dan Turkewitz and Benjamin Bass. Adyen was repped by Transwestern’s Rory Murphy and Thomas Hines.

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