New York Post

Unfinished business

Retailer interest up, but stores still dark

- STEVE CUOZZO scuozzo@nypost.com

THERE’S “growing demand from a diverse range of retailers” for Manhattan storefront­s, the Real Estate Board of New York crows in its spring 2022 survey of retail activity. The claim might be true, but growing demand doesn’t immediatel­y or necessaril­y translate into a big reduction in the number of vacant stores.

The metrics for the past six months cited by REBNY definitely show improvemen­t. Average asking rents per square foot in nine of 17 major shopping corridors grew from the fall of 2021 — suggesting that the market is stabilizin­g after two years of declining rents.

Soho and upper Madison Avenue are seeing interest from high fashion, sportswear and home decor companies.

One year ago, most large new leases were for food and beverage and fitness users. A new, 14,000 square-foot Swarovski lease at 680 Fifth Ave. not only fills a long-dark space but represents a move upmarket from the Gap outlet that previously filled the three-level venue.

Another big reclamatio­n at a long dark location is Taiwanese eatery Din Tai Fung’s 26,400 square-foot deal at 1633 Broadway. The Michelin-starred noodlesand-dumplings mecca, to be designed by David Rockwell, presumably will draw a more sophistica­ted clientele than tourist-trap Mars 2112, which closed 100 years early in 2012.

REBNY credits the fitful recovery to rising consumer demand and a rise in visitors to the city despite Omicron, higher transporta­tion costs and worries about crime.

Even so, it might be a long time before Manhattan’s retail scene fully rebounds from the one-two punch of the pandemic and the online shopping revolution that began taking a toll before anyone heard of COVID-19.

For all the new leases, store windows in many Manhattan areas — residentia­l and commercial — remain full of “Prime Retail Space” signs.

The REBNY doesn’t cite retail vacancy rates, which are covered in a separate report later in the year. It emphasizes instead that asking rents have ticked upward or at least held their own in the various corridors.

But as my colleague Kerry Byrne wrote recently, long slices of Broadway look abandoned at sidewalk level. While its Soho portion thrives (along with the rest of Soho), Broadway south of Houston Street has precious few actual stores beyond hair salons and a few funky art galleries.

Madison Avenue still reels from the losses of Barneys, Brooks Brothers and, most recently, Harman Kardon. Empty windows cast a pall especially in the East 60s.

Vacant storefront­s actually outnumber filled ones in parts of the FiDi area. The closing of Century 21 — which supposedly will reopen with much less space next year — cast a pall across from the World Trade Center. Fulton Street can boast of thriving Brookfield Place and the rejuvenate­d South Street Seaport at its east and west ends, but between them lies a depressing sea of vacancies; even neighborho­od fastfood places and shoe-repair shops closed and have yet to be replaced.

So while it’s legitimate to assert that a nascent recovery is taking place, let no one think that all those “for rent” signs will disappear soon.

One by One

Four leases totaling nearly 94,000 square feet have been signed at the Rudin Family’s and Allianz Real Estate’s One Battery Park Plaza.

The deals bring the 870,000 square-foot tower to 93% leased.

Nationwide Mutual Insurance Co. took 38,187 square feet through a 9,880 square-foot direct lease with Rudin and a 28,307 square-foot sublease with Liberty Mutual. The sublease will convert to direct when it expires in November 2025. Nationwide is moving from 7 World Trade Center.

In another move within FiDi, law firm Cullen and Dykman will leave 44 Wall St. for 28,307 square feet at One Battery Park Plaza. Meanwhile, the Internatio­nal Refugee Assistance Project is doubling its space at the tower with a 19,407 square-foot lease. And law firm Abrams, Gorelick, Friedman & Jacobson renewed on 78,775 square feet.

NYC satellite

Consumer Reports has signed a two-year lease for 8,189 squarefoot office at the Durst Organizati­on’s 675 Third Ave. The teenytiny lease is notable because it will be the first time the venerable product- and service-testing organ has ever had a Manhattan office.

The satellite location in the recently upgraded tower will give Consumer Reports staff easy access to their Yonkers headquarte­rs via Metro North from nearby Grand Central Terminal.

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