
Cypress Takes 27 Acres, Plans Home
Depot
By Marita Thomas
March 27, 2006
UPPER MERION TWP., PA-Dallas-based Cypress
Equities acquired a 27-acre site at 181
S. Gulph Rd. and the Schuylkill Expressway
near King of Prussia from locally based
AMC Delancey Group. Kenneth Balin, AMC Delancey’s
president and CEO, tells GlobeSt.com the
price was $17.5 million, or about $648,148
an acre.
Cypress plans to develop a Home Depot and
one or more additional retail tenant spaces.
The site contains the 400,000-sf now-vacant
Philadelphia Gear Co. plant, which will
be demolished. Steven Kushner, managing
principal of Cypress’ New York City
office, tells GlobeSt.com the Home Depot
will be approximately 115,000 sf with a
28,000-sf garden center. The zoning also
allows for a pet store and auto dealership,
he says, but no deals for such units are
now in place.
The Home Depot is scheduled for completion
in summer 2007. As a part of Cypress’
agreement with Home Depot, Cypress will
acquire an existing 130,000-sf Home Depot
on an 11.5-acre parcel a mile from the new
one and develop it for retail use, once
Home Depot moves to the new location. Kushner
declined to disclose the price of that acquisition
and says, “We really don’t know
yet what we’ll do with it. We’re
really focused on the new store, and the
existing one won’t be available until
the move.”
Philadelphia Gear and AMC Delancey are
sister companies of Wind River Holdings,
a King of Prussia-based investment company.
The property became “surplus,”
Balin says, when the gear manufacturer switched
to a service orientation and relocated.
In partnership with Philadelphia-based Keating
Co., AMC Delancey developed plans for 400,000
sf of office space and a hotel at the site,
but ran into objections from the township.
Lacking progress on that plan, Balin says,
“We scrutinized the light-industrial
zoning and saw it did allow for a car dealership,
lumber yard, plumbing supply and pet supply
store.” AMC Delancey worked with Dan
Hughes of Metro Commercial in discussions
with Lowe’s and Home Depot. Balin
says he then enlisted Arthur
Weisman of NAI Geis Realty to propose
a sale to Cypress. “Because it was
a ‘by right’ sale that had all
the permits required by law, the purchase
price was kicked up.”
Weisman represented AMC Delancey. Cypress
is the retail development and acquisition
affiliate of Staubach Retail, also based
in Dallas. Rich Weitzman of Staubach Retail’s
Philadelphia office represented Cypress.
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