Real Estate

Huge Midtown office building sells at auction for a 97% discount after receiving just 1 bid

In a sign of the times, an almost 1-million-square-foot Midtown office building has so🐬ld for a bonkers discount. 

An enormous, half-block glass tower at 135 W. 50th St. — home of the 2022-opened Urban Hawker Singapore-style market on the ground level — was auctioned off for just $8.5 million on Wednesday. That’s a mind-boggling markdown from the $332 million its sellers purchased it for back in 2006, the .

Even remote work-weary developers and sales brokers well aware how badly working from home has impacted buildings’ values say that such a discount is unheard of — and couldn’t think of a similar one in recent memory. 

The structure’s deep discount is seen as a sign of the times and the struggling office market. Anissa Lorenzi Boukourizia/NY Post
The building’s sale did not include the land beneath it. Anissa Lorenzi Boukourizia/NY Post

Following failed attempts to offload the classic 1963-built behemoth — which, since COVID, has received a visible facelift in an apparent nod to lure in tenants — the structure’s owner, UBS, put it up for auction on a two-day real estate auction website called Ten-X. On Wednesday, it closed after receiving a single bid. 

The 23-story tower was built in 1963. Anissa Lorenzi Boukourizia/NY Post
The building, sold for $332 million in 2006, garnered just $8.5 million at auction this week. Anissa Lorenzi Boukourizia/NY Post

“Wha🥂t’s shocking is how fast the valuations dropped now that we’ve seemingly reached bottom, or close to it,” David Sturner, the son of the developer who sold the propertꦡy in 2006, told the Times of the sale.  

The building “certainly wasn’🦄t the greatest asset we owned,” but was a “solid” property, he added, although today its woe🍌s are many.

Once the home to such companies as jewelry retailer Zales, the New York Telephone Company (Verizon’s predecessor) and Sports Illustrated, the 23-story goliath today sits 65% vacant, despite a pretty prime location across Sixth Avenue from Radio City. As well, the bad light from its mid-block address, r🧸elatively low ceilings and haphazardly located tenants make it a parti𝕴cularly bad contender for residential conversion. 

And, most significantly, th🌳e building does not come with the land beneath it. That was sold by the seller to a company called Safehold for $285 million in 2019, , arguing that the land sale’s profits mean the building’s discounted sale should be conside▨red much less of a loss.

But it was still most certainly a loss. 

“UBS’s perspective was, ‘We ne෴ed to sell this quick, we’ve kind of made peace with this is gonna be a big loss,” the auction website’s president, Steven Jacobs, said last monthꦓ in an interview, according to the Real Deal. “We need to sell it and we need to move on.”