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Mansion takes bow on market
BY LIANA GREY
Last week, Howard Dolch and
Robin Abrams of Lansco Corpora-
tion began marketing six stories of
retail space at Villard Mansion, a
130-year-old structure on Madison
Avenue and 50th Street that houses
the New York Palace I lotel and the
acclaimed restaurant, Gilt.
Never before has such a large
chunk of retail space been available
in the mansion's north wing, which
encompasses 27,265 s/f.
Until 2009, the Municipal Arts
Society leased much of the north
wing from former New York Palace
owner Harry Helrnsely, using it as
MINA
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Howard Dolch (inset) and Robin
Abrams are marketing a six story
retail space at the Villard Mansion.
office and exhibition space. A sole
retailer, a handbag shop with an
entrance on 51st Street, occupied the
ground-floor level.
The Sultan of Brunei, which ac-
quired the New York Palace several
years ago, considered expanding the
hotel into the north wing. But the
plan fell apart when Northwood In-
vestors purchased the property, and
sought a high-end tenant instead.
Though open to leasing some of
the higher floors to a hedge fund, and
perhaps a portion of the north wing
to a restaurant, Dolch and Abrams
arc targeting a single luxury retailer,
much like the Polo Ralph Lauren
flagship at the
Rhinelander
mansion on
72nd Street
and Madison
Avenue, which
was leased by
Lansco's Alan
Victor, who
is also help-
ing out on the
Villard cam-
paign-
"It had the
same feeling,"
Abrams said
of the 22,000 s/f
menswear shop.
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"It was also a big, structural, single-
use building."
Though marketing a historic,
multilevel space has its chal-
lenges — "it's not for everyone,"
Abrams said — a launch party
last Wednesday attracted a far
larger crowd than the leasing team
expected.
'It's the only commercial man-
sion available in midtown — or
really any place in town," Dolch
explained.
With the exception of the man-
sion leased to Ralph Lauren, similar
properties tend to be located on
side streets further uptown, and are
Continued on Page A2
h
C
I
Moinian: How I
BY Ax, BARBAIUNO
Joseph Moinian owns 17 million
square feet of property. So you could
say that he knows how to lay down
a steady foundation.
But when the CEO of the Moinian
Group —one of the most active devel-
opers in the city during the boom—laid
down his plans for 2012 at a luncheon
put on by theAssociation of Real Estate
Women this wreck, he acknowledged
that things got a bit shaky for a while.
"The good news for my company is we
• Green treasure
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owners a green alternative
to disposing of their trash.
Page A9
• Keeping it real
Studley's Greg Taubin
on why he takes nothing
for granted.
Page BI
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Owings & Merrill for U.S. Steel, and is adjacent to Zuccotti
Park.
Mansion takes a bow
Continued from Page Al
mostly occupied by embassies and art galleries.
After a reception at Gilt, which was awarded two Michelin
stars and attracts an affluent crowd with its $89 prix fixe menu,
guests at the launch toured several highlights of the north wing,
including a grand ballroom on the first floor.
With its arched floor-to-ceiling windows and ornate carv-
ings, the space brings to mind a wedding hall. "I could see a
fabulous bridal gown retailer here," said Abrams. "You can
stage everything."
Dolch agreed. "The grandeur of the room, the size, lends
itself to retail —someone like Valentino or Oscar de la Renta,"
he said.
Despite period details throughout the mansion, like fire-
places, a skylight, wood paneling, and even buttons the Villard
family once pressed to summon butlers and maids, potential
tenants have a lot of flexibility with the
space; the only land/narked features
inside the north wing are a marble
staircase and a section of black and
white tiles on the first floor.
Even a public courtyard out front,
designed in the style of a Roman pal-
ace, has branding potential. "A retailer
could put in curvy white planters,
or put showcases in the courtyard,"
Dolch said. The open space attracts a
mixture of hotel guests, Madison Av-
enue shoppers, and tourists exploring
nearby attractions like St. Patrick's
Cathedral.
Though he wouldn't name an exact
figure, Dolch said asking rents arc
commensurate with the luxury market in the area.
Earlier this year, he told the Wall Street Journal that his
team was looking for a ground-floor tenant willing to pay a
rent of around $2,000 per s/f, which is typical for high-end
retail space on Fifth Avenue.
Indeed, the space has ii
..mmon with Fifth Avenue
retail palaces occupied by MIMI and other jewelers, which
have had success running multilevel shops. "It could be
wonderful for a jeweler that wants to have a presence here,"
Abrams said.
ROBIN ABRAMS
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