in other news

Starrett City Sale: Not Dead Yet

Let’s check in again with David Bistricer, the real-estate investor on an increasingly quixotic quest to buy Starrett City, an enormous, subsidized enclave in Brooklyn. His two previous bids for the property were rebuffed by every elected official in New York, with the possible exception of the Marriage Bureau’s Commissioner of Deeds, and ultimately shot down by the federal Housing Secretary, despite his $1.3 billion offer and, on the second go-round, two influential black ministers in tow. But he’s back! Now, reports the Times, Bistricer has forged an actual working relationship with one of the ministers, the Reverend Calvin O. Butts. (It’s not too much of a stretch; Butts is a successful developer in his own right.) They’re preparing to approach Starrett City’s current owners with an undisclosed new offer. The previous offers have foundered because no one sees how Bistricer will make money on his enormous investment without drastically raising rents, so apparently the new negotiations will have an unusual twist: In a kind of reverse auction, the buyer and seller might have to agree on a lower price before the deal can go through. Why don’t negotiations for things we’re trying to buy ever work that way?

Investor-to-Be in Starrett City Is Bargaining for New Deal [NYT]
Earlier: How to Win Friends and Influence Starrett City

Starrett City Sale: Not Dead Yet