A landlord battered by the pandemic-era collapse in tourism is scrambling to hold on to a boutique Nolita resort as a long-running foreclosures inches ahead.
Veracity Equities, the decrease Manhattan-focused agency run by Edmond Li, is dealing with a $35.3 million judgment tied to a defaulted mortgage on the Nolitan, a 55-key resort at 153 Elizabeth Avenue. The nine-story constructing on the nook of Kenmare Avenue had been slated to go up for public sale this week, Crain’s reported.
As a substitute, the public sale has been pushed — once more. Li and lender Silverpeak Actual Property Finance agreed Monday to delay the sale till Feb. 4, a transfer that seems geared toward shopping for the borrower extra time to safe a refinancing and repay the debt.
The delay marks the third time the court docket postponed an public sale of the property, underscoring how messy and drawn-out pandemic-era resort exercises might be.
Li purchased the Elizabeth Avenue web site in 2006 for $5.4 million and redeveloped it into the Nolitan, which opened in 2011. At this time, rooms begin at round $300 an evening. The property can be dwelling to the Japanese-Italian restaurant Kimika on the bottom ground.
Silverpeak, a Midtown-based lender, issued a $24 million mortgage on the property in 2016 that was later securitized and offered to buyers. After Covid shutdowns destroyed resort income, Li stopped making funds in 2021, prompting the lender to launch foreclosures proceedings later that 12 months, in accordance with court docket information.
Li has argued that the lender and a court-appointed receiver undercut his efforts to stabilize the asset, together with blocking plans for a rooftop bar that would have generated roughly $68,000 a month in lease and stopping repairs to deal with water leaks.
Manhattan Supreme Court docket Justice Francis Kahn in the end sided with Silverpeak, ruling that Li stays accountable for roughly $35 million, together with principal, curiosity and costs.
If the foreclosures goes by way of, it will be the newest blow to Veracity’s downtown portfolio.
The agency can be dealing with foreclosures on a $32 million mortgage tied to a few close by rental buildings at 137 Thompson Avenue and 26 and 29 Prince Avenue. Final 12 months, Li offered a mixed-use walkup at 146 Mulberry Avenue for $12.7 million, beneath the $13.3 million he paid in 2015.
Silverpeak’s legal professional declined to remark. Li and his counsel didn’t return calls.
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