Los Angeles Times

Famed TV lot finds a taker

Hackman Capital Partners to buy CBS’ Studio City complex for $1.85 billion.

- By Meg James and Roger Vincent

ViacomCBS has reached a $1.85-billion deal to sell the CBS Studio Center complex in Studio City — home to such landmark TV shows as “Seinfeld,” “The Mary Tyler Moore Show,” “Gilligan’s Island” and “It’s Always Sunny in Philadelph­ia.”

Real estate investors Hackman Capital Partners and Square Mile Capital Management teamed up to win competitiv­e bidding for the 55-acre Radford Avenue property.

The staggering price tag underscore­s the value — and scarcity — of TV soundstage­s

in Los Angeles as content producers scramble for space to shoot TV shows and movies to stock their streaming services. ViacomCBS disclosed its plan to sell the property last summer.

The deal, announced Tuesday, represents one of the largest ever real estate transactio­ns for a TV studio complex in Los Angeles. In addition to the real estate assets, CBS will turn over its lucrative studio operations business, which includes stage rentals, facilities management and production support services on the lot.

“We’re honored to have been selected as the new stewards of CBS Studio Center, one of the most celebrated and successful studios in Los Angeles,” Michael Hackman, the founder and chief executive of Hackman Capital Partners, said in a statement.

“The studio has been a hit maker from the days of ‘Gunsmoke,’ ‘Mary Tyler Moore’ and ‘Seinfeld,’ and we’re thrilled to continue our ongoing relationsh­ip with ViacomCBS to service its many successful shows currently filmed on the lot,” Hackman added.

Hackman Capital Partners is one of the world’s largest providers of entertainm­ent production facilities. It currently owns four studios in the L.A. region, along with facilities in New York, New Orleans, London and Scotland.

In 2019, Hackman Capital purchased CBS’ other sprawling complex in Los Angeles — the 25-acre Television City adjacent to the Original Farmers Market and the Grove — for $750 million.

Hackman Capital recently announced plans for $1.25 billion worth of improvemen­ts to Television City that will add soundstage­s, production support facilities and offices for rent. The company’s plans for the Studio City complex have yet to be disclosed.

Hackman Capital also owns the Manhattan Beach Studios Media Campus and the historic Culver Studios in Culver City, where “Gone With the Wind” and “E.T.” were filmed. Amazon Studios now operates from the site. Earlier this year, Hackman Capital Partners bought the Sony Pictures Animation campus in Culver City.

To pull off the deal for the Radford lot, the privately held Los Angeles-based Hackman Capital entered into a partnershi­p with Square Mile Capital Management, a New York-based real estate and management firm that co-owns all of Hackman’s studios.

CBS’ two L.A.-based television stations, KCBS-TV (Channel 2) and KCAL-TV (Channel 9), are housed at the CBS Broadcast Center on the Radford lot, and the local news operation will stay put as part of a long-term leaseback, ViacomCBS said.

CBS, which acquired the property from Republic Pictures in the 1960s, will continue to occupy stages and produce content on the Radford lot. At least three CBS-produced shows, “Big Brother,” “Entertainm­ent Tonight” and “The Talk,” will remain on the site.

For 13 years, the Radford property has been the West Coast headquarte­rs of the CBS television network. It intends to lease back office space from the new owners through at least June, CBS Chief Executive George Cheeks said in a memo. The company plans to transition workers to new locations, primarily to ViacomCBS’ office building near the corner of Sunset Boulevard and Gower Street in Hollywood.

CBS Studio Center, just north of Ventura Boulevard, offers 18 traditiona­l soundstage­s and four other stages. The site also has about 210,000 square feet of production office space and its own mill to provide carpentry services, a paint shop, a commissary and a car wash.

It also has a backlot with a “Central Park” and a “New York Street” with 11 building fronts, including four brownstone­s. It also includes simulated residentia­l neighborho­ods with a hodgepodge of houses in different architectu­ral styles.

CBS sold Television City to Hackman Capital in early 2019. The same year, Warner Bros. agreed to sell its historic North Hollywood Way facility in Burbank, known as the Ranch lot. The new owners of the Ranch lot will redevelop the property with 16 new soundstage­s, part of a wave of studio developmen­t in recent years to add soundstage­s and production facilities to meet demand from old and new entertainm­ent creators. In early November, NBCUnivers­al said it would build eight new stages as part of a major developmen­t to boost production at its famed Universal Studios lot.

Ever since Viacom and CBS merged nearly two years ago, the New York company has been casting off signature CBS properties in an effort to generate cash. Last summer, it sold CBS’ iconic New York skyscraper known as “Black Rock” to a private firm, Harbor Group Internatio­nal, for $760 million. The granite tower in midtown Manhattan, designed by Eero Saarinen, has served as CBS’ headquarte­rs since 1965.

Cheeks, in his memo to staff members, said the Radford lot sale “is part of a strategic plan to consolidat­e the company’s real estate footprint, bring teams together in centralize­d locations, and direct proceeds from these sales towards more best-in-class content.”

Most employees should expect to return to Radford “when we return to a mostly hybrid work model, starting Jan. 10, or the designated date determined by your divisions,” Cheeks said in the memo. He noted that most CBS Entertainm­ent, CBS Studios and CBS Media Ventures employees would join other ViacomCBS teams already at the six-story building in Hollywood that was completed in 2016.

In 2020, ViacomCBS announced a deal to sell its book publishing house, Simon & Schuster, to Bertelsman­n’s Penguin Random House for $2.18 billion. But last month the U.S. Justice Department sued to block that deal on antitrust grounds.

The Radford complex was the very studio lot that gave rise to the name Studio City.

Its sale is expected to close by year’s end. Facilitati­ng the deal for ViacomCBS are real estate brokers Carl Muhlstein and Kevin MacKenzie of JLL, according to a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commision.

“With ViacomCBS maintainin­g an important presence at the property, we anticipate a smooth ownership transition and many more great years ahead,” said Square Mile Capital Chief Executive Craig Solomon.

 ?? Al Seib Los Angeles Times ?? CBS STUDIO CENTER in Studio City is network’s West Coast headquarte­rs and home to KCBS, KCAL.
Al Seib Los Angeles Times CBS STUDIO CENTER in Studio City is network’s West Coast headquarte­rs and home to KCBS, KCAL.

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