According to data from CoStar Group Inc., a Washington, D.C.-based real estate information service, the last time a downtown Detroit office building with more than 100,000 square feet sold for less than $45 per square foot was in 2021, when New York City-based Reign Capital LLC paid $15.5 million for AT&T Inc.’s 20-story addition to its central business district campus complex, a rate of $28.11 for its 551,500 square feet.
Prior to that, you have to go back to 2015, when Joe Barbat paid $3.2 million for the 105,400-square-foot former Gabriel Richard Building on Michigan Avenue. That’s a rate of about $30.38 per square foot.
Regardless, the low purchase price can be attributed to the side effects of the COVID-19 pandemic, which has plunged office values across the country as hybrid work arrangements remain common and landlords continue to look for ways to use office space that has gone dark. Friedman is fluent in repositioning real estate that has seen better days, I noted in this space last month.
Here are the other large office buildings downtown that have sold at less than $45 per square foot since 2010, arranged by order of price per square foot, according to CoStar:
- David Stott Building, 1150 Griswold St. October 2013. Buyer: Bedrock LLC. Purchase price: $9.4 million. Price per square foot: $44.98.
- Marquette Building, 243 W. Congress St. December 2014. Buyer: Carlos Slim Helu. Purchase price: $5.775 million. Price per square foot: $33.97.
- Grand Park Centre, 28 W. Adams St. July 2013. Buyer: Princeton Management. Purchase price: $4.25 million. Price per square foot: $32.17.
- Former Chase Building, 611 Woodward Ave. April 2011. Buyer: Bedrock LLC. Purchase price: $16 million. Price per square foot: $29.24.
- One Woodward Avenue. November 2012. Buyer: Bedrock LLC. Purchase price: $8.35 million. Price per square foot: $22.55.
- Former Detroit Free Press building, 321 W. Lafayette Ave. October 2013. Buyer: Bedrock LLC. Purchase price: $4.23 million. Price per square foot: $13.98.
- David Whitney Building, 1 Park Ave. February 2011. Buyer: Roxbury Group. Purchase price: $3.3 million. Price per square foot: $13.20.
- First National Building, 660 Woodward Ave. August 2011. Buyer: Bedrock LLC. Purchase price: $8.1 million. Price per square foot: $9.52.
- Federal Reserve Building, 160 W. Fort St. January 2012. Buyer: Bedrock LLC. Purchase price: $959,000. Price per square foot: $6.63.
- Penobscot Building, 645 Griswold St. May 2012. Buyer: Triple Properties LLC. Purchase price: $4.8 million. Price per square foot: $4.82.
- 500 E. Lafayette Blvd. August 2013. Buyer: Blue Cross Blue Shield of Michigan. Purchase price: $1.4 million. Price per square foot: $4.
At the higher end of the spectrum, for example, Southfield-based Redico LLC paid $81.5 million — $141.83 per square foot — for the 150 West Jefferson high-rise in July 2016.
Last year, Boca Raton, Fla.-based The Herrick Company Inc. paid $150 million for the new 20-story Huntington Bank tower on Woodward Avenue downtown. That sale price amounts to $355.08 per square foot.
That one, however, is a bit of a different animal as it is a brand-new, build-to-suit single-tenant office headquarters completed in the last couple of years rather than an early 1980s multi-tenant building like, for example, the 600 Tower.