View Full Version : Glass Tower | 23 fl | Pro
Westsidelife February 18th, 2007, 04:35 AM Location: 11th Street and Grand Avenue
Function: Mixed-Use | 128 Units
Developer: The Kalantari Group (http://www.kalantarigroup.com/)
Architect: DeStefano + Partners (http://www.destefanoandpartners.com/)
Completion: N/A
Glass Tower Condominiums
Construction could begin by the end of the year on a 25-story, $60 million ground-up residential tower at 1050 S. Grand Ave. Owner and developer Amir Kalantari said the glass-clad building would hold 128 high-end condominiums from 850 to more than 3,300 square feet. Units would sell for $400,000 to $3 million. Kalantari said the venture would take two years to complete. - Los Angeles Downtown News
http://www.kalantarigroup.com/theglasstower/images/renderinga_big.jpg
Fern~Fern* February 18th, 2007, 10:38 AM Completion date 2009... We should get moving on this Tower!
latennisguy February 18th, 2007, 10:27 PM do u have the old rendering? I think I liked the old one more
Fern~Fern* February 18th, 2007, 10:36 PM ^ There's nothing wrong with this one....
Westsidelife March 7th, 2007, 04:32 AM Never Mind the Naysayers, Says Developer of Glass Tower
DOWNTOWN: Kalantari says groundbreaking for skyscraper is set for April.
THERE is only one way Amir Kalantari can prove he is actually going to build his Glass Tower condo project: evidence of construction in progress.
Skepticism has grown because the developer's company, Kalantari Group, purchased the site at 11th Street and Grand Avenue in 2004, got it entitled in 2005 and then let it sit vacant amid the boom in downtown condo construction. Kalantari says he understands real estate industry naysayers, but still vows to build the 23-story, 192,000-square-foot tower, which he said is being financed entirely by company cash flow. Groundbreaking is now scheduled for April with construction expected to take 24 months.
"Speculation doesn't bother me. When you entitle a building with this much publicity and don't get in the ground, people scratch their heads," Kalantari said. "I have way too much personal cash and time in this to not build."
Speculation about the project, with its striking glass facade, has accelerated in recent months, especially given the slowdown in the downtown housing market, where at least one developer has publicly declared he won't build one of his condo towers. There was also Kalantari's decision in February 2006 to put the property on the market. He called the decision an "exercise more than anything" to test its value, adding that he received offers for the parcel but "none were even looked at."
Even Calvin Abe, president of Ah'be Landscape Architects, who worked on some preliminary landscape work, said he thinks Kalantari will sell the fully entitled project before building it. "They take it through entitlements and then the value goes up," Abe said.
But Kalantari said a rise in construction costs slowed the project, requiring it to be redesigned by DeStefano and Partners Ltd., which replaced Nadel Architects Inc. last summer. The DeStefano redesign stripped the building of much of its expensive glass facade, though one corner of the 128-unit building will still feature elaborate glasswork.
The building's sixth-story pool deck is also a feature often discussed by downtown real estate denizens, who question its design. The pool will be built on the northwest side of the building and will not receive direct sunlight for parts of the day. "We did studies; it gets afternoon sun, it doesn't get morning sun," said Hanson, adding that he could not change the placement because the building's footprint was finalized in the entitlement process. The pool deck had been designed foremost to offer a view of the downtown skyline.
Fern~Fern* March 7th, 2007, 09:18 AM What a bummer it's been downgraded to 23 floors!!!
Westsidelife March 7th, 2007, 12:22 PM ^ It has always been 23 stories. They just don't count the 4 story podium the 23 story tower sits on.
Elsongs March 8th, 2007, 07:21 AM One thing's for sure. The people who will live here won't throw any stones. :lol:
soup or man June 6th, 2007, 05:55 AM New renderings of The Glass Tower
http://i61.photobucket.com/albums/h61/11jp/dtla/5_30_big.jpg (http://www.kalantarigroup.com/theglasstower/images/5_30_big.jpg)
http://i61.photobucket.com/albums/h61/11jp/dtla/5_30_2_big.jpg (http://www.kalantarigroup.com/theglasstower/images/5_30_2_big.pdf)
http://i61.photobucket.com/albums/h61/11jp/dtla/5_30_3_big.jpg (http://www.kalantarigroup.com/theglasstower/images/5_30_3_big.pdf)
TICONLA1 June 6th, 2007, 06:01 AM So, is it still going to happen.??
soup or man June 6th, 2007, 06:05 AM I strongly believe so. Hopefully by July.
godblessbotox June 6th, 2007, 08:25 PM looks pritty cool
Westsidelife November 28th, 2007, 06:28 AM Financing is Coming Into Focus for Kalantari Building
Development: Glass Tower's location has sat idle since 2005 entitlement
By DANIEL MILLER
Los Angeles Business Journal Staff
November 26, 2007
While most downtown developers loathe to admit it publicly, some in the development community have been impacted by this summer's credit crunch. One such developer is Amir Kalantari.
Speculation about his condo site at the northeast corner of 11th Street and Grand Avenue has lingered for years -- partly because the developer's company, the Kalantari Group, got the property entitled in 2005 and then let it sit while other builders got in on the residential building boom.
Though Kalantari was set to break ground this summer on his 23-story Glass Tower -- so-called because of its glass exterior -- the developer said that didn't happen because he has had to "revisit" secondary financing options. While Corus Bank of Chicago has been retained as the primary lender on the project, Kalantari said that now he must decide whether to "pay out of pocket or get a mezzanine lender" for secondary financing. Kalantari declined to say how much additional funding the $70 million project needs.
"We have been forced to slow down because of issues in the banking market," Kalantari said. "We are still bullish about the product in the market."
Corus also is financing the construction of Beverly Hills-based Astani Enterprises Inc.'s Concerto condo development downtown. Astani secured a $190 million loan from Corus earlier this year after dropping lender Fremont Investment & Loan when it became entangled in the subprime meltdown.
Kalantari said the credit crunch has reduced his options for secondary financing. "Whereas I might have had 10 options a year ago, that has been lowered to three. You have to weight the costs of going out of pocket or to a lender."
Mezzanine financing has become more common in the development industry as primary construction lenders have lowered the percentage of a project they are willing to fund. As recently as last year, construction loans might cover 75 percent of the cost of a project but now most lenders are only willing to cover about 65 percent, forcing developers to seek higher-rate mezzanine loans to see a project to completion. Both loans are then paid back through long-term mortgage debt.
Kalantari said that in the next month he will decide which funding route his company will take. Once that is settled, the project could break ground in six months at the latest.
The 192,000-square-foot, 128-unit building was designed by Doug Hanson of DeStefano and Partners Ltd., who already has scaled back much of the expensive glass facade envisioned by a prior design firm. Despite prior speculation, Kalantari said that he's not interested in selling the site, which he purchased in 2004.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
Source: Los Angeles Business Journal
solongfullerton November 28th, 2007, 06:35 AM I don't understand the whole issue with buildings being put on hold. All the developers have to do is lower the prices and people will buy. The issue is not that there are not enough buyers, its that prices are too high for the current population of potential buyers. Maybe these developers won't make as much as they had planned, but its in thet best interest of the future of downtown and future developments there to keep the building process moving along.
milquetoast November 28th, 2007, 08:52 AM Completion date 2009... We should get moving on this Tower!
Don't want to piss off my hometown but 2 years? This part of City Center hasn't taken 2 years! Why does it take so long?
http://i231.photobucket.com/albums/ee192/trolltoast/HPIM2206.jpg
Westsidelife December 19th, 2007, 07:47 AM http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2302/2113379955_6cf0227c17_b.jpg
Glass Tower to Break Ground Early 2008
By fridayinla
December 18, 2007
After years of delays and redesigns, the long-awaited Glass Tower (http://www.theglasstower.com/) will finally break ground at 11th and Grand in South Park during the early part of 2008. We contacted developer Amir Kalantari of Kalantari Group (http://www.kalantarigroup.com/) who confirmed the project is nearly ready to move forward.
The most recent reports suggested Kalantari had set his sights on an early January kick-off, but he now says, “Our ground breaking schedule has been pushed back beyond January 2008. The slight delay will be used to study the secondary financing market and finalize our firm’s financing decisions for the project. The scope of the project remains the same.”
Another reliable, but separate, source close to the project confirms this information.
The sleek 23-story tower designed by De Stefano + Partners (http://www.destefanoandpartners.com/) will contain 128 luxury condominiums and 5,600 square-feet of ground-level retail. The development will replace a surface parking lot on the northeast corner of 11th and Grand in the South Park district, catty-corner to the new South Group towers (http://www.exploresouthgroup.com/).
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
Source: angelenic (http://www.angelenic.com/downtown-general/glass-tower-to-break-ground-early-january/)
Westsidelife December 19th, 2007, 11:47 PM I won't believe it until I actually see it. But it's great hearing that plans for this project haven't been scrapped. This will be a great addition to that developing cluster.
redspork02 December 20th, 2007, 08:45 PM Is this the tower that was/is going to have a observation area on the top??
Westsidelife December 21st, 2007, 02:21 AM ^ Why would a 23 story residential tower have an observation deck? That makes no sense.
phattonez December 21st, 2007, 03:41 AM I thought it was Park Fifth.
klamedia December 21st, 2007, 10:19 PM ^ Why would a 23 story residential tower have an observation deck? That makes no sense.
:lol::lol::lol:
milquetoast February 28th, 2008, 12:01 PM :):)
ArchiTennis February 28th, 2008, 10:34 PM ^^ aww man. this is getting annoying...i was hoping to read some news or something about this project...and NOPE! i see two smiley faces...what gives?
xXFallenXx February 29th, 2008, 12:05 AM :):)
Are you turning into Robert?
Please say no.
milquetoast February 29th, 2008, 04:37 AM If you're talking about Robert Stark, I hope not. I'm running around sweeping up my mess. Found a new weekly update of LA Downtown News dated the 28th, but the information they gave was a little rosier than I realized was true, and I jumped the gun. Things are being pushed back as far as approvals and groundbreakings and the site doesn't take these new developments into consideration- so I've learned. But once you post something, the thread is bumped up regardless.
rubencito February 29th, 2008, 04:40 AM dont like it at all
milquetoast February 29th, 2008, 04:46 AM Could you be more specific?
xXFallenXx February 29th, 2008, 06:12 AM good milquetoast, good.
soup or man May 21st, 2008, 05:46 PM Although the project has been delayed multiple times, owner/developer Amir Kalantari said a 25-story, $60 million ground-up residential tower at 1050 S. Grand Ave. will begin construction in about six months. Designs are almost complete and Kalantari said he will soon seek city permits. Plans call for a glass-clad edifice in South Park with 128 high-end condominiums from 850 to more than 3,300 square feet. Units would sell for $400,000-$3 million. Kalantari said the venture would take two years to complete.
phattonez May 21st, 2008, 05:48 PM We've heard that so many times from the developer of this site. I hope you all agree with me when I say: "I'll believe it when I see it."
soup or man May 21st, 2008, 06:03 PM I agree. I wonder if the sign is still there?
Westsidelife May 21st, 2008, 09:33 PM This one is worse than the Grand Avenue project. We shall see, but I'm not counting on this one breaking ground in six months.
San Marino Guy May 22nd, 2008, 08:18 AM I agree.
milquetoast May 22nd, 2008, 01:05 PM Downtown's Glass Tower Refuses To Die
http://i231.photobucket.com/albums/ee192/trolltoast/200805glass.jpg
According to the latest Downtown News Development Report, the 25-story Glass Tower is alive! Well, sort of. The $60 million South Park residential building at Grand and 11th, across from the pretty South towers, will begin construction in 6 months, says developer/owner Amir Kalantari. That seems fast for a project which has yet to complete its designs and has not yet sought city permits. Hmmm. Well, if it ain't malarkey and this actually gets built, The Glass Tower will feature 128 high-end condominiums, from 850 to more than 3,300 square feet, selling for $400,000-$3 million. And yes, that sign on the corner of Grand and 11th advertising the project is still there. [Image via DeStefano + Partners web site]Curbed LA
ArchiTennis May 22nd, 2008, 03:49 PM ^^ "That seems fast for a project which has yet to complete its designs and has not yet sought city permits"
wow...if this gets built then u all have to believe in immaculate conception.
soup or man May 22nd, 2008, 08:20 PM Downtown's Glass Tower Refuses To Die
http://i231.photobucket.com/albums/ee192/trolltoast/200805glass.jpg
According to the latest Downtown News Development Report, the 25-story Glass Tower is alive! Well, sort of. The $60 million South Park residential building at Grand and 11th, across from the pretty South towers, will begin construction in 6 months, says developer/owner Amir Kalantari. That seems fast for a project which has yet to complete its designs and has not yet sought city permits. Hmmm. Well, if it ain't malarkey and this actually gets built, The Glass Tower will feature 128 high-end condominiums, from 850 to more than 3,300 square feet, selling for $400,000-$3 million. And yes, that sign on the corner of Grand and 11th advertising the project is still there. [Image via DeStefano + Partners web site]Curbed LA
Well that answeres my question.
No idea why this project has taken this long to design but if it breaks ground in six months, I'll reconvert to whatever religion that worships architecture gods. Architecturanity?
milquetoast April 22nd, 2009, 11:15 AM Given all the delays surrounding this project, it's easy to be skeptical about the prospects of this thing actually going up, but tonight the Downtown Neighborhood Council's Planning and Land Use Committee will hear a presentation by a representative from land use consulting firm Craig Lawson on the long-dormant Glass Tower, developer Amir Kalantari’s planned residential building at Grand and 11th. “Basically, [Craig Lawson] is presenting the Glass Tower before the committee because we are making a slight revision to the existing entitlements,” Kalantari tells us, adding that number of condos changed from 125 to 151. But tonight’s meeting is also meant to start generating neighborhood (and perhaps financial) support for the project, which'll go up on a key corner in South Park. . "In May, there'll be a neighborhood meeting, ie a kind of meet and greet, to introduce the Glass Tower to locals."
I'd like to introduce my schlong to Scarlett Johannson -- which is about as likely to happen as this building ever being built.
What an enormous waste of time for the parties involved!
Comment #10, left at 04/21/09 07:44 PM. Curbed LA
surfnspy April 22nd, 2009, 06:31 PM oops. SORRY! How do I delete the thread I should not have started?
Imperfect Ending April 22nd, 2009, 09:14 PM ^^ just let it slowly sink down hehe
dleung May 26th, 2009, 04:54 AM It looks like the worst kind of concrete waffle building from the 60's, with some libeskind-style parasite. Funny how they almost completely faded out the former in the rendering.
jessemh431 May 26th, 2009, 08:11 AM ew
Westsidelife May 28th, 2009, 01:02 AM ^ I still like this one, particularly the massing and the way it accentuates the corner.
dleung May 28th, 2009, 07:13 AM ^^You might be alone in that one... what's so good about the massing? It's a stumpy concrete block, and they decourated just the one corner with an element that doesn't match; and even deliberately hid the rest of the building in the renders. Sorry, just trying to understand ur thinking...
|
|