New York Post

High-rise finance firms

Mizuho, Silver Lake take tower spaces

- scuozzo@nypost.com STEVE CUOZZO

TWO large financial-firm leases that were in the works have just been signed — and in the year’s biggest non-surprise, neither was in East Midtown.

While the Grand Central and Plaza districts wait on East Midtown rezoning, brand-new towers and redevelope­d older ones to the west continue to snap up large tenants. (The rezoning measure, which would allow larger, modern new buildings to go up in the mostly stagnating district, was cleared by the City Planning Commission last week and now continues to slowly wend its way to a vote by the City Council.)

Mizuho Americas completed a lease for 148,000 square feet at Rockefelle­r Group’s 1271 Sixth Ave., the former Time-Life building.

An ongoing, $600 million redesign will make the tower virtually new. John

Maher, part of a CBRE team that repped Rockefelle­r Group, said 1271 Sixth’s new curtain wall should be finished by summer 2019 and the redevelopm­ent project entirely finished by spring 2020.

Mizuho Americas is a subsidiary of Mizuho Financial Group, which boasts $1.8 trillion in global assets. Mizuho’s taking 1271 Sixth’s large second and third floors plus some below-grade space. It’s the second new tenant signed at the cur- rently empty address since Major League Baseball committed to 400,000 square feet.

The asking rent for Mizuho’s floors was in the low $80s. The firm will consolidat­e staff from several other locations including 320 Park Ave., where it has its trading operation.

Mizuho has been reported to be in talks for 200,000 square feet at 1271 Sixth in addition to the just-signed 148,000 square feet, but the status of those talks were unclear.

In addition to Maher, Rockefelle­r Group was repped by CBRE’s Mary

Ann Tighe and Howard Fiddle and by Rockefelle­r’s

Ed Guiltinan in-house. Mizuho was repped by a Savills

Studley team including Mitchell Steir, Matthew Barlow and Steve Berliner.

Meanwhile, Related Co.’s Far West Side leasing locomotive powers along at full steam. Private equity firm Silver Lake has completed a lease for 56,000 square feet at 55 Hudson Yards, the 1.3million-square-foot, 51-story tower at Eleventh Avenue and West 34th Street that Related is developing with Oxford Properties Group. (Mitsui Fudosan owns a majority stake.) Silver Lake will move from Sheldon So

low’s 9 W. 57th St. Also coming to 55 Hudson, which is now 60 percent leased, are Steve Cohen’s Point72 Asset Management; two law firms, Milbank Tweed and Boies, Schiller; Intercept Pharmaceut­icals and electronic trading platform MarketAxes­s.

A 75,000-square-foot lease with Dan Loeb’s hedge fund Third Point, first reported by the Real Deal, is also expected to be signed at 55 Hudson Yards within a few weeks, sources said. Third Point will exit Lever House, marking yet another defection from the once-almighty Park Avenue corridor.

Carlos Suarez’s Casa Nela restaurant trio in the West Village is about to become a quartet. Suarez has signed a lease for a new, 1,500-square-foot eatery at 1 Perry St. just off Seventh Avenue South. It will be just steps from his insanely popular Rosemary’s at 18 Greenwich Ave. and not far from his Claudette and Bobo.

All three previous places, part of Suarez’s “Europeanin­fluenced collection,” have been smash hits.

A prolific Eastern Consolidat­ed dealmaker, senior director James Famularo, negotiated for the landlord, while Suarez was repped inhouse by David Latman.

The asking rent was $150 a square foot. Famularo said the lease took longer than expected to finalize because of a dispute involving a now-closed restaurant at the address, Yerba Buena.

Famularo marveled that, despite widespread recent attention to restaurant failures in the area, the blocks around Suarez’s new places have regenerate­d with new eateries.

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