Tech

Bellevue's high-end development sold to NYC investors

Despite opening in a tough economy less than years ago, The Shops at Bravern have done well. Now, the complex has attracted a buyer who already boasts such iconic spots as Boston's Faneuil Hall Marketplace and Washington's Union Station.

Bellevue's high-end development sold to NYC investors
Advertisement

by

Ronald Holden

Despite opening in a tough economy less than years ago, The Shops at Bravern have done well. Now, the complex has attracted a buyer who already boasts such iconic spots as Boston's Faneuil Hall Marketplace and Washington's Union Station.

It's  a 300,000-square-foot complex of restaurants, high-end boutiques like  Hermès, Louis Vuitton, and the only Neiman Marcus in the  Pacific Northwest. The developer, Schnitzer West, sent a team of architects  to a dozen city center shopping plazas in Europe for inspiration in the  design of an "upscale urban mall" concept. It's glitzy shopping without  any rough edges, and (unless you're used to shopping in southern  California or Arizona) it feels a bit artificial, a bit like Las Vegas.

Schnitzer has just sold The Shops at the Bravern to a buyer with a record of managing showcase properties around the country and will continue to manage the complex.

The Shops at the Bravern opened in  September 2009, just off Interstate 405 in Bellevue, probably not the  most opportune moment for a luxury retail development. The four  residential towers were quickly converted from condos to rentals;  Microsoft immediately filled of two them. But with Neiman as the anchor,  the Jimmy Choos and Ferragamos lined up for space. Not all would be  successful. The most notable failure was Terrance Brennan, who arrived from  New York with his Artisanal Brasserie concept as well, built a handsome  space on the mezzanine level for 300 diners and drinkers, and collapsed within nine months.

Occupancy rates were acceptable, around 85 percent, though that left  a dozen or so storefronts empty. Still, Schnitzer West decided to sell  off the retail development, and went looking for an investor with a  national profile and experience managing a Neiman connection. That ruled  out local, Carhartt-Pendleton-Eddie Bauer types.

Understandable. When I toured the Bravern three years ago, then-under construction, I was probably guilty of fashion provincialism  myself: images of Cadillacs with steer-horn hood ornaments, women with  beehive hair, men with giant belt buckles. But Dallas, after all, is  home to the nation's most prestigious department store with literally hundreds of elegant designers from Armani and Balenciaga to Versace and Zasha.

Two quick asides: high fashion, regardless of its cost, never seems  to go out of fashion. Also: Seattle's where Nordstrom started, and  Nordstrom has plenty of designer labels, too, but lacks the ooh-la-la  factor of Neiman's.

The gent who brought Neimans to Seattle is its senior VP for  properties and store development, Wayne Hussey, who toured the  unfinished space in a well-cut dark blue suit by Zegna, wide-stripe  light blue shirt, elegant rep tie (more blue), old-fashioned analog  watch. No doubt he reports to an even more senior exec in Dallas, who  reports to a chief exec and a board of directors. It was comforting to  know that he prefers Jaeger LeCoultre to Rolex.

The assumption was that wealthy Eastside shoppers would flock to the  Bravern, drawn by the elegant fashions, the easy access, valet  parking, and the fact that it was clearly more upmarket than busy, bland  Bellevue Square, all of three blocks to the west. The recession put a  damper on those projections, to be sure, but Schnitzer says the  Bravern's chain stores are doing very well indeed compared to other  markets.

The buyer is a private equity outfit in New York called Ashkenazy Acquisition Corp. that manages  showcase properties in New York (650 Madison Avenue), Boston (Faneuil Hall Marketplace), Chicago (700 North Michigan Avenue), and Washington, D.C. (Union Station). The  sales price was $79 million, which works out to about $250 a square  foot. That's a premium number, but then rents in the Bravern are in the  neighborhood of $50 a foot, so the price seems fair. Schnitzer VP Tom  Woolworth called it "right in line" with expectations. And Schnitzer  will continue its role as day-to-day manager of the properties.

One sad note regionally:The sale of the Shops at the Bravern hit the news  the same day that Seattle's iconic Smith Tower was sold at a bankruptcy  auction. The 38-story, virtually empty "skyscraper" went for $37  million.

Donation CTA
Ronald Holden

By Ronald Holden

Ronald Holden is a regular Crosscut contributor. His new book, published this month, is titled “HOME GROWN Seattle: 101 True Tales of Local Food & Drink." (Belltown Media. $17.95).