New York Post

City Point schoolhous­e

- STEVE CUOZZO scuozzo@nypost.com

THE City Point complex in Downtown Brooklyn has apartments, stores, offices, a film-production studio, the DeKalb Market food hall — and next year, it will have reading, writing and arithmetic, as well.

Adding to City Point’s multifacet­ed prestige, the private school BASIS Independen­t Brooklyn has signed a lease for a second campus at the site, The Post has learned. The new, 62,000-square-foot Lower School facility will open in the fall of 2021 and serve pre-K through second grade.

The original Brooklyn Upper School location of rapidly expanding BASIS is at a Red Hook building that opened in 2014 and teaches grades 3-12.

The new facility will fill most of the newest of three City Point buildings, which has 71,000 square feet, according to Paul Travis, managing partner of Washington Square Partners, which manages the complex for Albee Developmen­t in a joint venture with Acadia Realty Trust. Arch Brokerage principal Laurence Roberts represente­d the landlord, Albee Phase 3 Developmen­t.

The BASIS school will have its own dedicated campus entrance. Its Brooklyn locations are part of BASIS Independen­t Schools’ national network of private secular schools on eight campuses, as well as the institutio­n’s global network.

A Sag Harbor resort found a solution for families that plan to postpone their return to the city — and a way to bolster the hotel’s bottom line during the off-season.

Baron’s Cove, facing the picturesqu­e village marina, has launched what it calls “A Key to the Hamptons: A Private Harborview Retreat.” Guests can book a six-month stay from $14,000 to $20,000 depending on room size and location. Some 30 of Baron’s Cove’s 67 rooms are available for extended stay, all equipped with refrigerat­or, coffee makers and microwaves.

“Claim your key on Oct. 12, 2020, return it on April 1, 2021,” is the brainchild of Curtis Bashaw, founder and managing partner of Baron’s Cove owner Cape Resorts.

The program should lift off-season occupancy, which dips to 50 percent in January. Room rates during the six-month period run from $200 to $600 a night in the fourth quarter and from $180 to $500 in the first quarter. A night-bynight stay at Baron’s based on the average regular rates would cost $63,000.

Bashaw called the program “ideal for individual­s and families who aren’t quite ready to return to the city or would like to take a break, but are not ready to give up their apartments. With people working remotely and schools going virtual, many are also looking for a pied-à-terre or temporary second residence for a change of scenery.”

The heat’s on City Council Speaker Corey Johnson over rezoning Industry City in Brooklyn’s Sunset Park.

The controvers­ial proposal by the industrial park’s owners, Jamestown Properties and Belvedere Capital, to add 1.4 million square feet to the complex’s existing 6 million square feet was approved in an 11-1 vote at the City Planning

Commission on Friday. The plan would also allow more retail than currently exists at the 16-building, 35-acre waterfront site.

Under the Uniform Land Use Review Procedure, it heads next to the City Council — where member Carlos Menchaca, who represents the area, plans to vote against it.

Council members traditiona­lly have veto power over rezonings in their own districts. However, with a promised increase of 8,000 to 20,000 jobs at the site if the rezoning is approved, Johnson is being urged by the developers, business and civic organizati­ons, labor unions and even some other council members to override Menchaca, as it’s the speaker’s right to do.

The council is expected to take up the matter in late September or October.

Menchaca claims the rezoning — which would affect no area outside of Industry City itself — will turn Industry City into a “mall” and gentrify the surroundin­g working-class neighborho­od.

But City Planning Commission­er Marisa Lago noted that the city has lost 770,000 jobs since March, many of them among the city’s lower-income communitie­s. She said an enlarged Industry City “can help us stop this cycle of neglect and inequity and help us to right a historical wrong.”

Restaurant-world insiders were agog over our exclusive story last week that Greek seafood brasserie Avra signed a lease for a giant, three-level eatery at 1271 Sixth Ave. at West 50th Street.

How could even an outfit as successful as Avra Group take a chance on a third big Manhattan restaurant on the avenue, where few office employees have returned to their desks and when nobody knows when restaurant­s will reopen for indoor dining?

CBRE’s Gary Trock, who worked on the deal for Avra, credited a spirit of cooperatio­n — and optimism — on the part of Avra and landlord Rockefelle­r Group.

The place won’t open until fall 2021, and by then, Radio City Music Hall across the avenue and large hotels will hopefully be back in action.

Moreover, the lease was carefully structured to protect both Avra and Rock Group. Trock said it was crafted “to grow within the framework of the pandemic we’re living through.”

He wouldn’t share numbers but said the lease “starts as a low base rent and percentage of sales. As the volume increases, the percentage increases.”

“That was the mindset on both sides of the negotiatio­ns. It was almost a lovefest because everybody wanted it to work for both sides,” he said.

Such a landlord-tenant arrangemen­t — essentiall­y a kind of partnershi­p built on a below-market starting rent and landlord participat­ion in future profits — is exactly what many restaurate­urs say is the only way they’ll be able to survive. Contingenc­y planning in various forms is also believed to be part of many of the large signings we recently reported. Among them: huge office leases for Facebook, TikTok, AIG and Raymond James, for retailers such as Target on East 125th Street, and for giant food halls at the Starrett-Lehigh Building and at 19 Union Square.

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 ??  ?? CLASSY: The private school BASIS Independen­t Brooklyn will open a new facility in the City Point complex next year.
CLASSY: The private school BASIS Independen­t Brooklyn will open a new facility in the City Point complex next year.
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