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Homeowners May Get Share of Future Project

Los Angeles Business Journal Staff

To expedite the approval process of its new Century City condominium project, Related Cos. has worked out a settlement with homeowners groups that development experts say is unprecedented in Los Angeles.

Developers often work out monetary settlements with associations to address the concerns of local homeowners. And in exchange for fixed payouts, the groups agree not to oppose a development.

However, in the case of Related’s condo tower on the site of the former St. Regis Hotel, called The Century, a deal was done with seven nearby homeowner associations that could give them an equity interest should another high-end condo project now in the talking stages be developed.

As a result, the homeowners’ coalition presumably would get some percentage of any income created by that condo project.

Real estate industry professionals say that revenue generated by the nearby Century Woods Estates development – which has yet to move beyond the conceptual stage – would likely be quite a bit larger than a simple monetary settlement. It is unclear, however, how much money that would be.

“It is a gamble, but I would hope it would be in the many millions,” said Mike Eveloff, president of the Tract 7260 Association and a member of the coalition of homeowner associations that worked out the deal.

“It’s an unusual settlement that benefits the city, homeowners, and developer, and we are fortunate that as a result there has not been an appeal by any of the homeowner groups,” said Lisa Specht, partner at Manatt Phelps & Phillips LLP, who helped with land use and entitlement work on The Century for New York-based Related.

The deal involved the transfer of rights to generate traffic by a new development, which were limited by the 1981 Century City North Specific Plan. The document limits “daily arrivals at and daily departures from a building or structure by motor vehicles” but allows such “trips” to be traded among developers.

Given the amount of development in the area, all trips allowed under the plan already have been allocated. However, the demolition of the St. Regis Hotel left Related with excess trips, because its new Century condominium complex is expected to generate about 160 fewer daily trips than the hotel.

Meanwhile, because the site of the Century Woods project is a vacant lot fronting Century Park West and south of MGM Drive, any development there would need to acquire trips already allocated to another developer.

“They created a currency. Trips are traded back and forth because there are no new trips,” said Eveloff. “Within Century City, the game is how to maximize the value of trips and minimize the trips used.”

Bill Witte, president of Related of California, said that the company was in separate talks with the homeowners’ coalition and representatives from Century Woods when it was determined the excess trips could be used in a settlement.

Source familiar with the deal said they understood that the lot had been given to the 87-unit Century Woods Homeowners Association by JMB Realty Corp., as part of a previous settlement made between Century Woods and JMB. The Century Woods Homeowners Association declined to comment and JMB did not return telephone calls for comment.


  February 8 - 14, 2010
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