Variety

Full House in Gotham

Production facilities bolster NYC’S commercial real estate sector

- By Kathy A. Mcdonald

Fully booked production facilities are one bright spot in New York City’s commercial real estate landscape.

“Speaking as a New Yorker, the pandemic proved the importance of this industry to the economic diversity of New York,” says Hal Rosenbluth, CEO of Kaufman Astoria Studios.

The Kaufman Astoria facilities and all available borough full-service soundstage­s are mostly filled with at least ƒ„ projects filming as of August. A recent report by New York City’s Mayor’s Office of Media and Entertainm­ent documented the profound economic impact and ripple effect of production coin, as well as the region’s return to pre-pandemic production levels, all bolstered by the state’s production tax credits.

These solid occupancy rates have attracted major capital investment and enticed investors into former industrial zones to build out soundstage­s, support facilities and other infrastruc­ture. Marquee developmen­t projects in the works include new and upgraded soundstage­s and facilities at Brooklyn’s Steiner Studios, plus a ‹ŒŒ,ŒŒŒ-sq.-ft., $‘‘Œ million Made in N.Y. campus managed by Steiner slated for Brooklyn’s waterside Sunset Park; two stages and undergroun­d parking at Kaufman Astoria; the longplanne­d opening of five stages at

Lionsgate Studios in Yonkers in November; and the proposed •• soundstage­s at Wildflower Studios, on •‹th Avenue in Astoria Queens adjacent to Luyster Creek.

Wildflower is a ground-up build with foundation work now underway. The $™ŒŒ million project is expected to be operationa­l in October šŒšƒ and represents a high-profile partnershi­p between Robert De Niro, Jane Rosenthal and others, totaling ž™Œ,ŒŒŒ square-feet of purpose-built production facilities located on a waterfront esplanade that is open to the public.

“We began with a large site, and a blank paper, and began asking industry profession­als from senior production executives to lighting designers to makeup artists to the Teamsters, ‘What would your dream facility look like and how would it function?,’” says Adam Gordon, Wildflower’s managing partner, of the innovative plans for the ‘.š‘-acre site purchased from Steinway & Sons.

Wildflower’s concept (executed by architectu­ral firm Bjarke Ingels Group: BIG) is to stack soundstage­s vertically — rather than spread out over acreage — and center activity along a central corridor, with parking and loading areas below. The building will be an optimized environmen­t for creating content, one designed for storytelli­ng, no matter the eventual format, Gordon promises.

“We compete locally, nationally and internatio­nally, which is not true of other uses of real estate,” says Doug Steiner, chairman of Steiner Studios. The real estate developer got plenty of pushback when he opened his studio complex at the Brooklyn Navy Yards more than šŒ years ago. “Our project did a lot for surroundin­g communitie­s to bring the creative class to Brooklyn and our new project will have similar impact in Sunset Park and Bay Ridge,” he says.

We compete locally, nationally and internatio­nally, which is not true of other uses of real estate.” — Doug Steiner

His track record of meeting the needs of demanding clientele put the company in the position to tackle the ambitious eight-soundstage developmen­t at Sunset Park. (Under the auspices of the New York City Economic Developmen­t Corp., the  -acre campus will also have room for garment manufactur­ing and light industrial uses.)

“Production is a great economic driver and pays for itself and then some,” Steiner says, despite its specialize­d real estate requiremen­ts and its comparativ­ely high property costs. He’s hoping that New York’s production soundstage market does not get overbuilt; and he’s confident that there’s enough demand to embark upon a ˆ‰Š,ŠŠŠ-sq.-ft. gut renovation of stages ˆ and ‰ at Steiner Studios, previously utilized for Steven Spielberg’s “West Side Story,” out in ‰Š‰‰.

Additional confidence in Gotham’s commercial real estate market rebound comes from Google’s contract, inked in September, to spend $‰.ˆ billion on the St. John’s Terminal building in Hudson Square. The outlook for office leases remains cloudy in the near term as businesses continue to allow work-from-home and Manhattan’s density poses health obstacles to commuters. Per second quarter Colliers’ research, office vacancy rates are still close to May’s all-time high of just over ˆ–%, while asking rent averages have decreased to ‰Šˆ– levels.

On set, pandemic protocols remains in place and those have translated into the need for more facility rentals rather than a return to extensive location shooting. Shows continue to book additional stages to accommodat­e workflow and need for prep space, says Kaufman Astoria’s Rosenbluth.

“New York has been a very busy place, thank God for that. The film business is very important to city and state of New York,” he adds. And decidedly to New York’s post-industrial economy and revitaliza­tion of its underutili­zed commercial real estate assets.

 ?? ?? Kaufman Astoria and other New York studios are booked and booming with production­s.
Kaufman Astoria and other New York studios are booked and booming with production­s.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States