Tag Archives: Hancock Street

R.I.P. Kings Inn tower, hello Super 8

In case you missed it, the infamous tower at the former Kings Inn motel is no more, having been demolished last month. The hotel itself is no longer a Kings Inn but a newly renovated Super 8, one of more than a dozen brands within Wyndham.
Continue reading R.I.P. Kings Inn tower, hello Super 8

Foreclosed Riverwalk units will become rentals

The 19 Riverwalk townhouses that went into foreclosure will be turned into rental units before the end of the year.

Englewood-based Real Estate Equities Group acquired the 19 townhouses for $111,842 each, according to property records, which works out to a total of roughly $2,124,998.

Greg Van Cleef of Real Estate Equities Group said renovations to the existing townhouses should be completed by Dec. 15. One unit was completed prior to acquisition but others only had rough work done, with plywood floors and Sheetrock. Renovations will include granite counter tops and other amenities.

Rents will range from $2,250 to $3,000, according to Van Cleef. The 19 units are two-bedrooms with a den but some have garages while others have lofts. The foreclosed units range from 1,350 to 1,745 square feet. Tax assessments range from $151,000 (one unit) to $179,300 (three units), with property taxes from a low of $9,131 to highs of $10,842. The 19 units have a total tax assessment of $3.2 million, with an average assessment of $168,437, yielding an average property tax bill of $10,186. Eight are located on Genovese Lane, another five on Hancock Street, and three each on Danchetz Court and Barnhardt Lane.

Real Estate Equities Group specializes in apartment rentals and this is their first property in Rahway, attracted by the proximity to downtown and the train station, according to Van Cleef.

More than half of the owner-occupied Riverwalk units have successfully appealed their tax assessments in recent years (about 24 in 2011 and eight in 2012). Collectively, the 86 Riverwalk units had a tax assessment of $14.4 million, yielding almost $825,000 in property taxes before appeals. The overall assessments have since dropped by 5 percent, to a total $13.6 million. About 30 units that sold have not appealed their tax assessments.

(File photo)

The average sale price for the 68 Riverwalk units sold by the original developer was about $444,000, an aggregate sum of nearly $32 million, according to my calculations. Fewer than 10 units sold a second time, and many at significantly lower prices.

Bank Of America foreclosed on remaining unsold Riverwalk units in late 2009. Now-defunct Diversified Communities constructed a total of 86 townhomes as part of  the Essex Street-area development, with many selling for $400,000 and $500,000 during the housing boom around 2006 and 2007, but 19 went unsold before the developer skipped town. The $5.255-million Sheriff’s Sale on the 19 unsold units took place Aug. 15, 2012 and was acquired by VFC Properties in Waco, Texas, a part of FirstCity Financial Corporation, which is dedicated primarily to “distressed asset acquisitions and special situations investments.” This was the first sale after the foreclosure.

 

Sheriff’s sale of Riverwalk this week

Postponed twice, the Union County Sheriff’s Sale of the 19 unsold, foreclosed Riverwalk townhouses is scheduled for 2 p.m. on Thursday (Aug. 16). The $5.255-million sheriff’s sale originally was scheduled in February, then postponed again in April on the townhouses that went into foreclosure in late 2009.

Continue reading Sheriff’s sale of Riverwalk this week

Essex, Hancock work to be done

It should be a good month for residents of Riverwalk. First, Myron R. Ross Park looks all but completed, and come Monday, the paving of Essex and Hancock streets will begin.

The City Council Tuesday night authorized $125,000 for materials while the labor will be done by the county, according to City Administrator/Redevelopment Director Peter Pelissier. The work is expected to take a few days. The city will continue to pursue Diversified Communities for almost a half-million dollars in improvements, or reimbursement of the improvements. The Redevelopment Agency declared the Parsippany-based developer in default of its redevelopment agreement last month.

Pelissier said other improvements that Diversified is responsible for, such as drainage, will be done after the complaint is settled.