IMPORTANT DATES:

IMPORTANT DATES:

Tuesday, August 5, 2014

PacificBusinessNews-article

August 5, 2014

Honolulu insurance agent buys Kailua vacant property primed for development

By Duane Shimogawa

A Honolulu insurance agent has purchased nearly 30,000 square feet of vacant, foreclosed property in Kailua in Windward Oahu for about $2 million that could be redeveloped as apartments, retail, offices or assisted-living facilities, PBN has confirmed with the new owner.
Scott LaRue, an independent insurance agent with Honolulu-based Atlas Insurance and owner of Kailua-based Highmark Capital LLC, told PBN that he made the purchase as an investment and still has not decided yet what to do with the property.
Scott Carvill, principal broker for Kailua-based Carvill Sotheby’s International Realty, represented the LaRue in the sale, while Kalani Schrader and Dana Peiterson, both of CBRE Inc. Hawaii, represented the seller, Beverly Ing Lee. Lee’s Uluniu-Maluniu LLC is listed as the previous owner, according to public records.
The two fee-simple lots, which are connected and are currently being used for parking, are located a block from Kuulei Road at the corner of Maluniu Avenue and Uluniu Street.
Together, the lots comprise of a little more than half an acre. The 18,360-square-foot Maluniu Avenue parcel is zoned for residential development and has a height limit of 25 feet. The 10,034-square-foot Uluniu Street lot is zoned for commercial, mixed-use opportunities and has a height limit of 40 feet.
The properties were being marketed as two lots that could’ve been purchased together or separately, according to marketing materials from CBRE, which also noted that priced together, the lots had an asking price of $2.1 million.

Other uses could include medical office and single-family homes.

Monday, August 4, 2014

StarAdvertiser-article

August 4, 2014

Kailua restaurant to serve last cheesesteaks Sept. 30

By Erika Engle

The roll in which a cheesesteak sandwich is served is key to the success or failure of the final product, and Pepper's Place in Kai­lua serves its cheesesteaks on genuine, Philadelphia-made Amo­roso rolls.
Not for much longer, though, as owners John and Carol Dee will be closing Sept. 30, having failed to extend their lease with landowner A&B Properties, a subsidiary of Alexander & Baldwin Inc.
A&B leased the space Pepper's has occupied, for about 14 years, to another tenant.
Fellow tenants in Kai­lua Shopping Center are upset and concerned about their futures as well, Carol Dee said, but none the Hono­lulu Star-Advertiser reached were willing to speak on the record.
Alexander & Baldwin bought 70 percent of Kai­­lua's commercial real estate and 90 percent of its retail property from Kane­ohe Ranch and the Harold K.L. Castle Foundation last year.
David Haverly, senior vice president of leasing for A&B Properties, said in a statement A&B Properties has completed lease renewals with 10 local tenants since the beginning of the year and is "actively working with several others."
"Inevitably there will be some changes in tenant mix over time as we seek to provide a great customer experience. We are actively evaluating each of our shopping centers and tenants, and engaging in discussions with tenants as their leases come up for renewal," he said.
The Dees said they reached out to A&B in February but were told "we can't do anything right now" by a longtime official of Kane­ohe Ranch who transitioned to A&B.
"And then it just kept getting put off," Carol Dee said. "We never imagined they'd give the shop away."
At a June meeting the Dees learned a prospective tenant had offered A&B double the rent that Pepper's had been paying. "I guess we have to decide whether we're going to pay double rent or move," Carol Dee said she told A&B at that time.
The Dees went to a meeting with A&B a week ago thinking they would finally be negotiating a new lease to succeed the one that expires Aug. 15.
The agent "apologized, saying the situation ‘with our lease was not handled very well' but our space was already leased," Carol Dee said.
He told them it had happened a while ago.
"He asked us what our plans were," she said. She told the A&B representative they had no plans "as this came as quite a shock to us."
During the July 28 meeting, the agent reminded them of the more than twice-as-big, 900-square-foot space available on Hekili Street they'd previously been offered, Carol Dee said.
Any move would be akin to starting all over again, she said, but the Hekili Street location also includes a risk of getting, at any time, a 180-day notice to vacate for redevelopment of the building, via a clause in the lease.
The "clause was included in the majority of the leases assumed when acquiring the portfolio in late 2013," Haverly said.
Haverly would not identify the new tenant taking the Pepper's location, saying the company "does not disclose specific information regarding negotiations or arrangements with tenants."
At one point A&B had told the Dees that lease considerations weren't just focused on money, but on the tenant mix. The Dees offered to adjust their menu if that was an issue.
Last week they began telling customers that Pepper's last day in business will be Sept. 30.
"People are really upset," she said. "I had one older man, who comes from the other side of the island for his steak sandwich once a month, break down with tears in his eyes. It made me so sad."
Reach Erika Engle at 529-4303, erika@staradvertiser.com or on Twitter as @erikaengle.