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Electra America JV nabs Roger hotel for $71M discount

$19M deal is one of the first for Electra-AKA partnership to invest in distressed hotels

The Roger New York hotel at 131 Madison Avenue, Larry Korman of AKA Hotel Residences and Joe Lubeck of Electra America (Google Maps, Getty, Electra)
The Roger New York hotel at 131 Madison Avenue, Larry Korman of AKA Hotel Residences and Joe Lubeck of Electra America (Google Maps, Getty, Electra)

Electra America Hospitality Group nabbed The Roger New York hotel for a hefty discount.

The joint venture between Electra America and luxury extended-stay firm AKA Hotel Residences snapped up the 193-room hotel at 131 Madison Ave. for $19 million. That’s $71 million less than what the hotel’s last buyer, LaSalle Hotel Properties, paid in 2010, Commercial Observer reported.

The seller in the transaction was Pebblebrook Hotel Trust, which acquired ownership of LaSalle in 2018 through a $5.2 billion buyout. Maxim Capital Group served as the lender in the deal.

Pebblebrook said proceeds from the sale could go toward reducing the company’s outstanding debt, as well as acquiring or investing in other hotel properties. The Roger, which has 23 years left on its ground lease, is closed until Spring 2022 for renovations, its website says.

The deal is one of the first for the Electra-AKA team’s distressed hotel venture. The team debuted a $500 million investment fund in February to pick up discounted hotels in New York, Miami, Los Angeles, Washington D.C., Toronto and London.

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After the pandemic decimated the hospitality industry, New York’s hotel stock has seen several distressed properties trade hands and hundreds of others close entirely, Commercial Observer reported.

Mack Real Estate Group bought a portfolio of seven Manhattan hotels at auction for a more than 60 percent discount in May, the same month AllianceBernstein transferred the ground lease for FiDi’s Motel Hotel to lender Tribeca Associates. Katara Hospitality bought the ground lease for Chelsea’s Dream Downtown this month after the hotel’s owner defaulted on a $80 million loan.

The New York State Legislature passed a bill this month that would allow the conversion of distressed hotels into permanent affordable housing. The legislation is awaiting a signature from Gov. Andrew Cuomo.

[Commercial Observer] — Suzannah Cavanaugh

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