News: Long Island

Cushman & Wakefield Sonnenblick Goldman's Global Hospitality Group arranges hotel sale

According to Cushman & Wakefield Sonnenblick Goldman's Global Hospitality Group, the Hilton Long Island/Huntington, a 304-room property situated in the Rte. 110 business corridor in the center of Long Island, has been sold by an institutional ownership group to Prudential Real Estate Investors and The Dow Hotel Company. The sales price was not disclosed. A Cushman & Wakefield Sonnenblick Goldman team led by Tom McConnell and Ernest Lee represented the sellers. "This hotel is one of the premier full-service hotels and meeting destinations in Long Island," said Tom McConnell, a senior managing director at Cushman & Wakefield Sonnenblick Goldman. "We received incredible interest during the sale which highlights the continued demand for well located, high quality hotels in the greater New York City area." The Hilton is located at 598 Broad Hollow Road in Melville, NY and is situated on the border of Nassau and Suffolk counties. The property is the sole full-service Hilton on Long Island and features 30,000 s/f of meeting space. In recent months, Cushman & Wakefield Sonnenblick Goldman's Global Hospitality Group has been involved in several of the nation's premier hotel transactions, including the sales of the JW Marriott San Francisco and the Hilton Rye Town in Rye Brook, New York, and the financing of a $170 million portfolio consisting of two Times Square hotels, a $212 million 9-hotel portfolio for FelCor Lodging Trust, and the Four Seasons Austin, among others.
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Suffolk County IDA supports expansion of A&Z Pharmaceuticals

Hauppauge, NY The Suffolk County Industrial Development Agency (IDA) has granted preliminary approval of a financial incentive package that will assist a manufacturer in expanding its business by manufacturing more prescription (Rx) pharmaceuticals in addition to its existing over-the-counter
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Columns and Thought Leadership
The evolving relationship of environmental  consultants and the lending community - by Chuck Merritt

The evolving relationship of environmental consultants and the lending community - by Chuck Merritt

When Environmental Site Assessments (ESA) were first part of commercial real estate risk management, it was the lenders driving this requirement. When a borrower wanted a loan on a property, banks would utilize a list of “Approved Consultants” to order the report on both refinances and purchases.