Quantcast
Home manage Las Vegas Review-Journal
  Jobs Cars Homes Shopping Travel Weddings Golf Best of Las Vegas Photo   Search:

RECENT EDITIONS
Wed Thu Fri Sat Sun Mon Tue

sponsored by
Business


Condo auction won't happen

Lender takes over Newport Lofts

One of the lenders for Newport Lofts has taken over management of the 23-story downtown luxury condo development, canceling an advertised auction of 60 units starting at $229,000, industry sources said.

A meeting between developer West Seegmiller and bank officials is scheduled for later this week, a marketing executive for the $115 million project said Monday.


Most Popular Stories
  • Buyout to take casino parent private
  • BEST PLACES TO WORK: The readers have voted: These Southern Nevada companies know how to keep workers happy
  • REAL ESTATE: Homebuilders hunt for land
  • INSIDE GAMING: Sanitizing slots, cards a priority for casinos
  • TIVOLI VILLAGE: Work intensifies at mixed-use center, with first phase to open in December 2010
  • CityCenter licensing gets own hearing
  • NEVADAN AT WORK: Twenty-year veteran of openings prepares for CityCenter
  • Home sales, median prices rise in valley
  • MARKETPLACE: Herbst Gaming reduces staff
  • Vote paves way for LV-style casinos in Ohio




  • "There's been a change in ownership and the auction is not happening. That's all I can say," Gary Frey of Creative Sales said.

    Pyramis Global Advisors, the institutional assets management division of Fidelity Investments, is now managing partner of Newport Lofts, a source said.

    Phone calls to Fidelity in Boston and Seegmiller in Newport Beach, Calif., were not answered.

    Sam Cherry, developer of nearby SoHo Lofts, helped with financing, construction and marketing of Newport Lofts under a joint venture agreement with Seegmiller. Cherry has a good business relationship with both Corus Bank, which provided the construction loan for Newport Lofts, and Breslin Builders, the general contractor.

    "There's been no direct financial impact on Cherry Development," Cherry said. "We met all of our obligations. I think the building is in a better position today. It's nothing specific to do with downtown. The market is what it is."

    Aaron Auxier of Luxury Realty Group said this will be a year of suffering for high-rise projects that are not located directly on or within a quarter-mile of the Strip. Buyers are demanding prime locations and buyer interest in areas away from the resort corridor has waned, he said.

    "Will these areas have their day? Almost certainly. The question is when," Auxier said.

    Housing analyst Dennis Smith of Home Builders Research reported just one sale at Newport Lofts in the past six months. In July, Newport had 32 sales at an average price of $536,315.

    He said a lot of high-rises are having "issues" with escrow closings.

    "Regarding mid-rise and high-rise (condos), we're just beginning to see problems come up in 2008 and 2009," Smith said. "There's too many investors and they're not being able to sell or refinance those units right now."

    Smith said some projects have 50 units left to sell and developers are competing with resale units that have never been inhabited and are being offered at a lower price.

    Seegmiller told the Review-Journal in September that only 44 of 168 units remained for sale at Newport, priced from the mid-$500s a square foot. He said one-fifth of the buyers are investors and the rest are second-home owners.

    Contact reporter Hubble Smith at hsmith@reviewjournal.com or (702) 383-0491.

    Newsvine Digg Fark Technorati reddit StumbleUpon del.icio.us Slashdot Propeller Mixx Furl Twitter MySpace Facebook Google Bookmarks Yahoo! Bookmarks Windows Live Favorites Ask MyStuff myAOL Favorites

    Leave Your Comment 7 Reader Comments
    Terms & Conditions
    The following comments are provided by readers and are the sole responsiblity of the authors. The reviewjournal.com does not review comments before publication nor guarantee their accuracy. By publishing a comment here you agree to abide by the comment policy. If you see a comment that violates the policy, please notify the web editor.

    Some comments may not display immediately due to an automatic filter. These comments will be reviewed within 48 hours. Please do not submit a comment more than once.
    Current Word Count:

    Note: Comments made by reporters and editors of the Las Vegas Review-Journal are presented with a yellow background.

    Report abuse

    OCGUY wrote on April 22, 2008 10:06 AM: Wow I can't understand why these aren't selling after looking at www.newportloftslv.com I think they are amazing! $550 per sq ft seems a little high but I bet people would jump all over these at $375 per sq ft. That would be a great value!!!


    Report abuse

    Lee wrote on January 15, 2008 05:55 PM: People can afford to live here now. Just stop trying to live beyond your means and enjoy a comfortable life at the level that you earn.

    Works for me!


    Report abuse

    oldlawdawg wrote on January 15, 2008 02:55 PM: Let the real estate market CRASH! NO FEDERAL INTERVENTION! LET THE MARKET FIX ITSELF SO WE CAN ALL AFFORD TO LIVE IN LAS VEGAS, AND NOT JUST WEALTHY TRANSIENTS AND SPECULATORS WHO DO NOT LIVE HERE AT ALL!


    Report abuse

    oldlawdawg wrote on January 15, 2008 02:41 PM: Once again, the financial greed of speculators continue to drive our real estate markets to heights that cannot be sustaioned, yet exclude too many locals 2ho cannot afford to buy such high end housing. These lofts were priced so high because not because they were being bouight by local execs., lawyers and doctors, but because they were a less expensive alternative for out-of-state purcahsers that ciould not afford resort area condos.

    Will Las Vegas ever be able to offer its local professional population attractive, quality housing at affordable prices when our real estate market is geared toward out-of-state speculatiors? Probabaly not, so why should so many good doctors, lawyers executives and professionals who earn a good living but not a king's ransom even stay here at all? How can Las VEgas ever develope its own diverse and sustaining population and be free from the economic ravages of a transient or out-of-state economy when it does not do anything to make living here affordable to even higher salaryt earners? It can't, plain and simple, and so few can afford to buy a small condo for $5-600,000.00, let alone a nice, large condo or hous in a nicer suburban area. THOSE WHO LIVE IN LAS VEGAS HAVE FAR TOO LITTLE TO SAY ABOUT THE ECONOMY OF LAS VEGAS, WHICH IS WHY SO MANY PEOPLE HAD TO TAKE SKY-HIGH MORTGAGES THEY REALLY COULD NOT AFFORD ON HOUSES THAT WERE NOT EVEN WORTH THE PRICE -- THEY HAD NO ALTERNATIVE THAT COULD EVEN REMOTELY BE CALLED A "DECENT" INVESTMENT LET ALONE AN "ATTRACTIVE" ONE, SO WHERE ELSE CAN THEY PUT THEIR MONEY?


    Report abuse

    Jessica wrote on January 15, 2008 12:06 PM: Seegmiller Partners came up wth an innovative and edgy concept when they created Newport Lofts, and the building is complete and beautiful. Much nicer than SoHo Lofts, that's for sure.


    Report abuse

    John wrote on January 15, 2008 11:26 AM: Darn, I would buy one for $229k!


    Report abuse

    Me wrote on January 15, 2008 10:31 AM: If the RJ had done their job in the past the Seegmillers would not have been able to fool people by claiming to have developed other properties. This was their fist and only commercial development despite what they claim in ads.