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Flaherty & Collins has hired Urban Works of Minneapolis to design the project, which will likely take three years to build.
The project will be geared toward young professionals, mostly likely single with high disposable income, Crossin said.
The apartment sizes will range from a studio flat of 650 square feet to a two bedroom/two bathroom apartment up to 1,200 square feet.
Rents will be from $815 for the studio flat to $1,275 or $1,400 on the two bedroom/two bathroom apartment configurations.
The three-bedroom townhomes with two-car, tuck-under garages are expected to be 1,838 square feet and rent for $1,800.
Each unit will feature nine-foot ceilings, 42-inch cabinets, granite counter tops, track and pendant lighting, brushed nickel hardware, Roman soaking tubs in the bathrooms, ceramic tile, stainless steel or black appliances, Berber carpet, some wood flooring, oversized windows and ceiling fans in the bedrooms and the living room.
The complex’s amenities include a fitness room with aerobic and weight machines, free weights and flat screen television.
The building will also have a 200 square-foot theater as well as a gathering room, which is designed like a living room for people to congregate, Crossin said.
The room can be used for parties or just for visiting, wine tastings, football gatherings and holiday parties, he said.
It will feature flat screen televisions, free WiFi in all common areas, a kitchen and billiards, according to Crossin.
The Residence will also have a courtyard with a outdoor resort-style swimming pool for summer recreation, a fire pit and gathering areas with benches and tables for year-round activities.
When completed in July 2008, it will have 208 units. The luxury apartment homes will feature 52 one-bedroom, one-bath units; 132 two-bedroom, two-bath units, and 24 three-bedroom, two-bath units.
All of the apartment homes will have nine-foot ceilings, washer/dryer connections, patios and balconies, and high-speed Internet. The apartment community will also feature a resort-style pool, clubhouse, premier fitness club, business center , tanning salon, private cinema, and a great room with a gourmet kitchen, coffee bar and billiards.
Federal, state and local agencies are working on the investigation. They include the National Response Team (NRT) from the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF), the ATF Columbus Field Division, the Indianapolis Fire and Metropolitan Police Departments and the Indiana Department of Homeland Security's State Fire Marshal's office. More than 50 people were interviewed in the process of the investigation.
Investigators took photographs, conducted interviews and recovered potential evidence from the scene for laboratory analysis. The ATF will leave Indianapolis Tuesday and the evidence will be analyzed at an ATF lab.
Herbert Miller, a private fire investigator with ARC Investigations who used to work for IFD, says it's too early in the investigation to reveal much information.
"The situation is that they don't want to put out any sensitive information. They are probably going to do analysis of the samples they have extradited from the scene," Miller said.
The developers are now free to start the demolition and rebuilding process, which according to Miller, means the investigators know exactly what started the fire.
"But they have a lot of work to do before they can really start naming specifics," Miller said.
Investigators fear too much information might tip off their suspects. Everyone working on the project have been ruled out - at least for now.
"When we had our meeting with [the ATF], they don't think it is an arson for profit. We had that conversation," Collins said. "We don't have any reasons to suspect anybody."
Randy and Adrienne Hollifield were considering a move to Charlotte from Tampa when their online search found plans for a proposed uptown entertainment complex and adjoining condo tower.
They were hooked.
At 210 Trade, they could live next door to the sports arena and light rail line. They could walk to restaurants.
After a quick visit to Charlotte in January 2007 to view site plans, the couple paid more than $25,000 as a deposit on a corner unit, asked for work transfers and moved to the Queen City.
"It was just very enticing. We wanted to be back in an urban area," said Randy Hollifield, who had lived in Fourth Ward years earlier.
Their dreams were crushed this week when the project's developer, Charlotte FC, an affiliate of Indianapolis-based Flaherty & Collins Properties, filed a Chapter 7 bankruptcy petition indicating it wanted to liquidate its remaining assets instead of reorganize.
The filing caps nearly two years of uncertainty for the project, which has been mired in lawsuits and an alleged squabble over building codes. Construction on the condo tower at College and Trade streets stopped in February 2008.
That the developer of 210 Trade filed for liquidation, instead of a reorganization, likely kills any chance depositors will get their money back, attorneys say. The tower wasn't built - only the foundation was poured, with the slab sitting atop a corner of the EpiCentre, rebar jutting out.
[...] The bankruptcy filing gives a glimpse into how people lost as little as $11,000 and as much as half a million dollars in deposits for units at 210 Trade.
More than 200 people paid more than $7.3 million in deposits for 261 units between 2006 and 2007, according to the filing, which lists 59 pages of unsecured creditors.
More than half a dozen buyers told the Observer they were embarrassed and angry about the ordeal, saying Flaherty & Collins didn't respond to repeated calls or e-mails made during the past year. A call to the company was not returned.
[...] David Pfleeger paid a $150,000 deposit for a two-story penthouse, according to the bankruptcy filing. Pfleeger said he and his wife planned to have his mother-in-law, Tina Chiofalo, move in with them. The floor plan would have allowed the couple to look after Chiofalo but still have privacy.
"It seemed a great opportunity," he said.
In anticipation of the move, Chiofalo sold her home 18 months ago and moved in with the Pfleegers in their Fourth Ward condo. Pfleeger, president of Atlanta-based AOS USA Inc, which consults clients on facilities and project management, has since turned his home office into a television room for Chiofalo.
He said he's frustrated by how Flaherty & Collins never responded to the 10 telephone messages he left.
"Things go up and things go down. I understand the realities of life and that you don't always win," he said. "But it seems like the state lets the developer take the money and not communicate with folks. It doesn't seem right."
Developer Afshin Ghazi, who built the adjoining EpiCentre, said he couldn't comment on the bankruptcy filing or Flaherty & Collins, which is involved in lawsuits with his company, The Ghazi Co.
Ghazi said he and close friends and family members lost more than half a million dollars in deposits on a dozen units. His parents, he added, had hoped to live in the tower.
In court papers, the developers blame each other for the tower's problems. Flaherty & Collins claimed The Ghazi Co. refused to provide agreements that could help them satisfy city code requirements, while Ghazi has said the developers did not get the needed financing and were using the permitting issue to "extort millions of dollars" from his firm.
[...]
With the financial market still weak because of the state of the economy, the assistance the project will receive is only the minimum required to make the complex a success, [Jim Crossin, Flaherty and Collins development vice president ...] said.
There is no luxury family housing in communities northwest of Minneapolis, which presents a challenge to secure financing without subsidies because it is a new concept, he said.
Using TIF and other financial means that other financial entities don’t have, the city can make sure this project has the horsepower to finish, said Councilmember David Elvig.
Caught off guard
Although Flaherty & Collins Properties has been in business since 1993 building, constructing and managing multi-family housing in nine states and has 90 properties, totaling 12,000 units, the company has had two projects go into bankruptcy in recent years.
In October 2009, the company filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy on a 48-story, 419-unit condo tower it was constructing in Charlotte, N.C.
It was followed seven months later when the company filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy on a 274-unit apartment complex in Raleigh, N.C.
“The bankruptcies happened at a time when real estate values deflated because of the economy and (changes in) credit market,” Crossin said.
The Raleigh project had been completed, but the mortgage market situation made it difficult to get permanent financing to pay off the construction loan, even though the complex was 93 percent filled and was already making money, he said.
The project was later sold and everyone was paid, Crossin said.
“There was no impact to the residents,” he said.
Although the council was aware of the 2009 bankruptcy, several councilmembers were caught off guard when the 2010 bankruptcy was discovered after it approved the purchase agreement for the three acres of land and the development agreement Nov. 23.
Elvig supported the project at the Nov. 23 council meeting.
“It’s an exciting component,” he said.
The project is of a quality unsurpassed in the state, said Elvig.
Having 3,000 square feet of retail space under the housing is one of the most difficult aspects of The COR project and this gets it done right away, he said.
It will also brings about 400 people into The COR and to the proposed rail site, according to Elvig.
After the Nov. 23 meeting, city staff and councilmembers found out about the second bankruptcy.
“That was new information. It was a real blow to find out,” said Elvig.
The council had asked specifically on Flaherty & Collins’ business history and financials, he said.
Although the city had a Dun & Bradstreet report done on the company, it did not show both bankruptcies, Elvig said.
While Elvig said he understands the financial game is different in today’s market, “it’s not the mistakes, it’s how they are fixed that are important,” he said.
“It makes me a little more skeptical about the project,” Elvig said.
Councilmember John Dehen is concerned that Flaherty & Collins may be “attempting to pull the wool over council’s eyes to make it look favorable in the eyes of the Ramsey City Council that is giving Flaherty & Collins subsidies/monies,” he said.
“Bankruptcies are relevant information that should be disclosed and discussion should be had where public dollars are at risk,” Dehen said.
“The failure to disclose that information is either not being forthcoming from Flaherty & Collins or a pathetic failure to apprise the city council from Landform (the city’s development management consultant firm) who stands to gain financially on the project.”
“Either way, it stinks and places a cloud of suspicion on the project. I may choose not to do business with persons or companies who deliberately fail to give me relevant information but failure to disclose in my estimation is a reason for termination.”
After the council found out about the second bankruptcy, Flaherty & Collins provided the city with an explanation, Mayor Bob Ramsey said.
He has no concerns about the bankruptcy or that the city had not been told, he said.
The project meets all the criteria set by the council, according to Ramsey.
It’s going to bring more development into The COR and at least 230 new residents,” Ramsey said.
“A claimed high-end apartment complex that is subsidized approximately $6.75 million in The COR on the back of taxpayers is not a score for The COR,” said Dehen.
The city’s agreements with Flaherty & Collins provide protections if the project does go into bankruptcy, said Assistant City Administrator Heidi Nelson.
In addition to stopping any TIF payments, the agreements also allows the city to seek court action to reclaim the land.
Statue of Ben Dover, the Ramsey taxpayer. Facing an eight million bend. |
Curtis Alan Martinson was sentenced Monday to two years' probation and a $20,000 fine for conspiracy to commit bank fraud related to the Ramsey Town Center development.
Though Martinson, 55, could have faced up to six months in prison, U.S. District Judge Patrick Schiltz noted that prosecutors never connected the losses suffered by the banks that backed the Town Center project to the "dishonesty of Martinson and others."
In addition to the probation and the fine, Martinson will perform 100 hours of community service in each of the next two years.
eric zaetsch <[...]@gmail.com> Sat, May 21, 2011 at 11:44 AM
To: Randy Backous, Dave Jeffrey , hnelson@coratramsey.com, hnelson@ci.ramsey.mn.us
Randy, Dave, and Heidi-
I saw the council update by Backous-Jeffrey, or more correctly a part of it, and the council [wearing HRA hats] was reported to have split 4-3, and I wondered how Elvig and the new guy, Tossey, voted. Also, minutes will not be available, but could you send an online link to the full agenda page where the issue of terms including timing alterations with the F-and-C team were put to a vote. My understanding is initial proposals had the City extending credit, and possibly that decision may worsen. Any help would be appreciated. Heidi, as the city's HRA key staff person, I am asking your help too - could one of the three of you send a "reply all" helping me out? I believe I already know the voting of mayor, Wise, McGlone, and the two email addressees who, in the segment I saw televised identified their voting, so it is only the Elvig and Tossey votes that are a mystery to me.
Also, is there any city knowledge of whether Landform is receiving a commission or other cash, present or future-conditional, FROM F-and-C? I know the new contract has monthly money plus conditional commission payment to Landform, but I saw nothing in the contract barring Landform from working the other side of the street too; so, are they?
Thanks.
Eric
Randy BackousSun, May 22, 2011 at 8:12 PM
To: "[eric zaetsch ...] <[...@gmail.com>, David Jeffrey, Heidi Nelson
Mr Zaetsch:
Thank you for your questions and for your interest. Elvig voted for the motion and Tossey voted against with Jeffrey and me. The HRA meetings are now being televised so you can watch everything on the QCTV website.
The question at hand was whether or not we should move forward with negotiations. I won't comment on the votes of others but there were many reasons for my vote.
While I love the project I don't believe the city or any government should be involved to the point that we are being asked to participate in this project. Our job is to literally pave the way with roads, other infrastructure, utilities, etc. Our job is not to be a major participant in the financing. That is the private sector's role. I'm a capitalist who believes in the power of the free maket and whenever we start questioning or manipulating the free market we will get into trouble one way or another. I believe the free market spoke loud and clear and I think we should listen.
In my opinion, by voting to move forward with this scenario, we publicly made a statement that we have the stomach for putting public dollars into a private project in the role of a lender. That only sends the message to all future developers and their lenders to go to the City of Ramsey and demand more and more. It also sent the wrong message to F&C in my opinion in that they no longer have an incentive to find other lending or private equity options.
I want The COR to succeed and I too am getting impatient but I don't think we should get desperate or get into the trap of believing that F&C is the only project that will help us move forward. Responsible development will be the key. This project is starting to resemble a young couple who gets seduced by that beautiful new house that they will do anything to get. You try to warn them about the cost of utilities, property taxes, landscaping, upkeep, furnishings, etc but they don't want to hear about reality or consequences - just getting that house.
I would rather take a more careful, patient, flexible approach.
Sorry I haven't responded sooner. I've been working all weekend.
Randy
eric zaetschSun, May 22, 2011 at 7:57 PM
To: Randy Backous, David Jeffrey , hnelson@ci.ramsey.mn.us, hnelson@coratramsey.com
Cc: Kurt Ulrich, Mayor Bob Ramsey , tammy.sakry@ecm-inc.com
David, Randy and Heidi-
This evening I saw more of the Jeffrey-Backous Council Update.
Please confirm, that beyond being land speculators as done already in buying the failed-foreclosed parcel from foreclosure, the Council in its HRA implementation is now contemplating being a co-investor, co-landlord (i.e., positioning to gain rental income, if any, from the F-and-C venture), and co-developer of the Flaherty-and-Collins thing.
I was shocked to hear that. Shocked!
Next thing city employees will be laying bricks!
This, if I understand it correctly, is expanding the subsidized competition of the city governmental arms with private enterprise far, far further into speculative land dealings than previously.
Please confirm, or deny and explain.
Please give this inquiry prompt attention.
What's up? How far down this land deal co-promotion co-speculation path is the city going?
Will the city also have to pay money to Landform for the part of things it is co-venturing into with city cash; a commission, bounty, whatever it is called these days?
Eric Zaetsch
cc: mayor
cc: city administrator
cc: Sakry
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