Manhattan church sells air rights for $30 million
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A UMNS Photo by John Goodwin Christ Church sits at the corner of Park Avenue and 60th Street in Manhattan.
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Christ
Church United Methodist, at the corner of Park Avenue and 60th Street
in Manhattan, has voted to sell its air rights to developers for $30
million. The sale made the news because - at $430 a square foot - the
price was more than twice the going rate for air rights in New York. A
UMNS photo by John Goodwin. Photo #05-842. Accompanies UMNS story #683.
12/8/05. |
Dec. 8, 2005
By Linda Bloom*
NEW YORK (UMNS) — After the Rev. Stephen Bauman became pastor of Christ
Church, a United Methodist congregation on Park Avenue in Manhattan, in
1987, he began receiving calls from people involved in real estate.
The pitch from these callers was invariably the same, asking him if he
realized that the church sat on “one of the five most valuable,
underdeveloped properties in Manhattan.”
Bauman had a stock response: “I always thought it was developed,” he would tell the callers.
Christ Church has found something else to develop, however: the air
above its building. And in an “only in New York” scenario, the
congregation has decided to sell its air rights to a pair of developers
for some $30 million. That decision was confirmed Dec. 4 by a
congregational vote.
What made the news in New York — the New York Times had a story
on its front page on Nov. 30 — was that the amount paid for the air
rights, roughly $430 a square foot, is more than twice the going rate.
According to the Times, the developers, brothers William and
Arthur Zeckendorf, also paid the Grolier Club, a building next to Christ
Church on East 60th Street, another $7 million for its air rights.
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A UMNS Photo by John Goodwin The Rev. Stephen Bauman stands on the roof of Christ Church, where he is pastor.
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The
Rev. Stephen Bauman, pastor of Christ Church United Methodist in
Manhattan, stands on the roof of his church, which houses a playground
for its children's day school program. The church has sold its air space
above the building to developers for $30 million. A UMNS photo by John
Goodwin. Photo #05-843. Accompanies UMNS story #683. 12/8/05. |
The plan is to build a 35-story apartment tower on a site just west of
the Grolier Club on that block. By acquiring air rights, the Times article explained, developers can build taller buildings by buying the space over lower buildings.
The deal was about 10 years in the making, Bauman told United Methodist
News Service during a Dec. 6 interview. M. Meyers Mermel, a church
trustee and real estate broker, helped Christ Church with its
negotiations.
“We always knew there was a potential,” the pastor said. “Then it was
just a matter of waiting for Providence to work its magic.”
Although the three participants — the developers, the church and the
club — came to the agreement “with widely, even wildly divergent
concerns,” location, availability and the timing of “the hottest real
estate market in the history of New York” made it happen, Bauman added.
Currently, he said, the church is in the contract phase of the
agreement, with the closing expected early next year. The total amount
will be received over the next two and a half years. “The payout comes
in three chunks, scheduled on the anniversary of the closing,” he noted.
Christ Church, which has approximately 500 to 600 members, also is
leasing one of several Park Avenue addresses under its domain to the
Zeckendorfs for their apartment tower, at a rate of $30,000 per year.
The air rights windfall comes as “an obligation to the future,” the
pastor said. “It puts the ground beneath our feet so we can reach for
the stars.”
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A UMNS Photo by John Goodwin On its roof, Christ Church United Methodist provides a playground for its children’s day school program.
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Above
the roof of Christ Church United Methodist, located at the corner of
Park Avenue and 60th Street in Manhattan, the congregation has sold its
air rights to developers for $30 million, a record amount for New York. A
35-story apartment tower will be built on a site to the west of the
church. A UMNS photo by John Goodwin. Photo #05-844. Accompanies UMNS
story #683. 12/8/05. |
About a year and a half ago, when it appeared the air rights deal was
“getting warmer,” the congregation began a strategic planning process it
named “Vision 2020.” The idea was “to think as big as we could,”
according to Bauman.
“The church is at a creative stage in its own maturation,” he explained.
“We’re not huge, but we have a very talented group of leaders.”
The goal, he said, is that the church’s vision should exceed any type of
gift that it receives. That vision includes restoring and expanding the
property, building program and securing the future.
Christ Church already is involved in outreach — whether locally, through
its informal adoption of a school in the South Bronx, or
internationally, through its mission work in Ghana.
Now, the congregation would like to “strengthen and embolden” its
presence in the city and beyond. Other goals include providing
leadership development for clergy and laity and articulating “a
different Christian voice,” Bauman added.
“We want to make clear this $30 million is a legacy and not just to be spent,” he said.
*Bloom is a United Methodist News Service news writer based in New York.
News media contact: Linda Bloom, New York, (646) 369-3759 or newsdesk@umcom.org.
Audio Interview with the Rev. Stephen Bauman |
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