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Värde, Unity Medical partner up for West Palm Gardens office acquisition

Laser and Surgery Center of the Palm Beaches gained just 3.5% in value since last trade in 2015

Värde, Unity Medical Buy Palm Beach Gardens Offices
From left: Värde Partners' Brad Bauer and Ilfryn Carstairs, Unity Medical CEO David Lynn and the Laser and Surgery Center of the Palm Beaches at 3602 Kyoto Gardens Drive in West Palm Beach (Värde Partners, LinkedIn, Google Maps)

Värde Partners and Unity Medical Properties are partnering up to acquire a medical office building in Palm Beach Gardens.

An affiliate of Värde, a Minneapolis-based global investment firm, and Unity, a Monterey, California-based medical office real estate investment firm, paid $14.5 million for Laser and Surgery Center of the Palm Beaches. The joint venture also obtained $8.7 million in seller financing, records and real estate database Vizzda show. 

The seller, an affiliate of Denver-based Healthpeak Properties, paid $14 million in 2015 for the single-story building that sits on 1.9-acres on 3602 Kyoto Gardens Drive, records show. That’s only a gain of about 3.5 percent in value in nine years for the 21-year-old building. 

It was also one of the smaller South Florida medical office deals in recent months. 

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A former hospital campus sold for $37.7 million in March. Orlando-based Foundry Commercial and Greenwich, Connecticut-based Wheelock Street Capital acquired a vacant 30.7-acre complex in Boynton Beach from Bethesda Hospital, a subsidiary of Baptist Health South Florida.

Another Boynton Beach deal involved Boca Raton-based Kayne Anderson and Chicago-based Remedy Medical Properties acquiring a pair of two-story medical office buildings. The joint venture paid $20.5 million for the site in February. 

The previous month, New York University paid $33 million for a medical office development site in West Palm Beach. 

In April, Värde, led by Brad Bauer and Ilfryn Carstairs, played a role in a deed in lieu of foreclosure sale of a Miami Beach hotel. The company agreed to drop a foreclosure lawsuit in Miami-Dade Circuit Court against Santa Monica, California-based Raven Capital Management. As a result, Raven sold Kayak Miami Beach, a 51-key property at 2216 Park Avenue, for $13.6 million to Atlanta-based Trimont Realty Advisors. The sale price covered roughly the mortgage debt Raven allegedly owed Värde.

Also in April, Värde and David Weekley Homes paid $60 million for 606 home lots in two Phoenix suburbs. The joint venture is land banking the assemblages for future David Weekly projects. 

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