RANCHO CUCAMONGA, CA-Two separate buyers have acquired two parcels totaling 120,000 sf at Town Center Square for a combined $23.6 million, according to Faris Lee Investments.

The sales of the properties conclude the breakup of what was once a 212,000-sf center into individual parcels in transactions that greatly increased the overall equity return on the property, Irvine-based Faris Lee reports.

Donald J. MacLellan and Richard J. Walter of Faris Lee, who represented the seller in both transactions, explain that the sales were part of a master break-up strategy executed by the Irvine brokerage.

The first transaction, a $10.7 million purchase, included a single-tenant building occupied by Best Buy. The 59,818-sf building at 11098 Foothill Blvd. was sold by Rancho Town Center LP to a family trust as a 1031 Exchange. Ed Hanley of Marcus & Millichap represented the buyer.

The other transaction was the $12.9 million sale of two single-tenant, stand-alone properties occupied by Office Max and Barnes & Noble adjacent to each other at 11070 and 11090 Foothill Blvd. respectively. The two total 60,527 sf, with Office Max occupying 36,347 sf and Barnes & Noble in 24,180 sf. The buildings were sold by Rancho Town Center LP to another private buyer as a 1031 Exchange, with Jon Busse of Colliers International representing the buyer.

MacLellan notes that the buyer of the Office Max and Barnes & Noble site previously owned apartments and decided to roll the proceeds of the apartment sale into retail because the buyer was attracted by the long-term lease and the prospect of little or no management duties associated with owning the retail property.

This represents a trend in the marketplace–a large buyer pool looking for investments with or without credit tenants, MacLellan adds. When Rancho Town Center LP acquired the 212,000-sf Town Center Square shopping center in March 2003 it was purchased as a whole and included the following tenants: PetsMart, Steinmart, Best Buy, Office Max and Barnes & Noble. During escrow, Faris Lee says, it advised Rancho Town Center that selling the center as several separate parcels would maximize the property’s value.

Want to continue reading?
Become a Free ALM Digital Reader.

Once you are an ALM digital member, you’ll receive:

  • Unlimited access to GlobeSt and other free ALM publications
  • Access to 15 years of GlobeSt archives
  • Your choice of GlobeSt digital newsletters and over 70 others from popular sister publications
  • 1 free article* every 30 days across the ALM subscription network
  • Exclusive discounts on ALM events and publications

*May exclude premium content
Already have an account?


NOT FOR REPRINT

© 2024 ALM Global, LLC, All Rights Reserved. Request academic re-use from www.copyright.com. All other uses, submit a request to [email protected]. For more information visit Asset & Logo Licensing.

Dig Deeper

GlobeSt

Join GlobeSt

Don't miss crucial news and insights you need to make informed commercial real estate decisions. Join GlobeSt.com now!

  • Free unlimited access to GlobeSt.com's trusted and independent team of experts who provide commercial real estate owners, investors, developers, brokers and finance professionals with comprehensive coverage, analysis and best practices necessary to innovate and build business.
  • Exclusive discounts on ALM and GlobeSt events.
  • Access to other award-winning ALM websites including ThinkAdvisor.com and Law.com.

Already have an account? Sign In Now
Join GlobeSt

Copyright © 2024 ALM Global, LLC. All Rights Reserved.