PRESS RELEASE: Santa Monica , Ca. 10-1-19 IMN Real Estate Conference

IMN Real Estate Conferences Inc. has announced that Los Angeles-based real estate developer Bob Sonnenblick, Chairman of Sonnenblick Development LLC, has been chosen to speak on the keynote panel at their upcoming Hotel Construction and Development Conference on October 28th at The Miramar Fairmont Hotel in Santa Monica, California. Mr Sonnenblick will be joined on the panel by senior executives from Kimpton Hotels & Margaritaville Hotels.

3:30 PM Revenue-Driving Trends in Architecture & Design

  • What are the efficiencies and challenges in bringing supertall developments to market in Southern
  • California? How can this positively or negatively impact the guest experience?
  • What goes Into the alternative material and construction process decision?
  • What steps have you taken to create a more efficient, flexible, and cohabitation-friendly environment for living and working? Where have you seen or applied this concept in practice, and how has this new concept been received by guests?
  • How do you balance cost-effective architecture with an enhanced guest experience? How does lighting design
    play a role in the guest experience?
  • What Is your definition of efficient design?
  • Where have you seen brand integration succeed or fail within an architectural design?
  • What do you consider top renovation ideas that will help your hotel stand out and increase revenue?

Beyond The Bio: 16 Questions With Sonnenblick Development Chairman Bob Sonnenblick

August 26, 2019 Joseph Pimentel, Bisnow Los Angeles

Growing up as a scion from a highly regarded real estate family, Bob Sonnenblick had no interest in working in the family business.

Sonnenblick’s great-grandfather, Alexander Sonnenblick, founded Sonnenblick Goldman Corp. in New York in 1893. The company specialized in providing financing for real estate projects. 

His grandfather, Nathan Sonnenblick, was the chairman of Sonnenblick Goldman, and was described by The New York Times as one of the nation’s foremost mortgage brokers.

His father, Jack Sonnenblick, succeeded his father as chairman of Sonnenblick Goldman, served as a trustee of the New York Bank for Savings, and founded North American Mortgage Investors.

His uncle, Arthur Sonnenblick, is the senior managing director at Cushman & Wakefield Equity, Debt & Structured Finance — formerly Cushman & Wakefield Sonnenblick Goldman. He sits on the board of trustees of Vornado. 

Sonnenblick said growing up, his father never pushed him to go into real estate.

“He told me, ‘Go to business school and just learn about business,’” Sonnenblick told Bisnow. “He never forced me.”

It wasn’t until his senior year at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania when a real estate mogul gave a presentation in front of his class that his interest in commercial real estate arose.

“Donald Trump Sr. walked into our class and started telling us about all of these wild and crazy deals he was doing,” Sonnenblick said. “It really got me very interested in the real estate business. Once I graduated, my dad welcomed me into the business.”

In his 35-year career, Sonnenblick has completed more than $1.5B of commercial real estate transactions and has developed several big office and hotel projects on the East Coast, in Florida and in California. 

When asked if his kids will eventually follow in his footsteps and keep the family legacy going, Sonnenblick leaves it up to them. 

“My dad never forced me,” he said. “That’s what I’m doing with my kids as well. I think that’s the right way to do things.”

Bisnow: What is your favorite part of your job? 

Sonnenblick: My favorite part of my job, which is developing big office buildings, is taking a vacant piece of land and designing and master planning the entire project. It’s very creative. I sit down with the architects. I love the creative part of designing a beautiful new building from a vacant piece of dirt.

Bisnow: What is the worst job you ever had?

Sonnenblick: To be honest with you, this is the only job I’ve really ever had. But as a kid in high school, I used to clean swimming pools in Beverly Hills. It was horrible. The pools were large and the customers were very finicky and difficult to work with.

Bisnow: If you weren’t in commercial real estate, what would you do? 

Sonneblick: A farmer. At my house in Los Angeles, I have about 150 fruit trees, all different kinds — oranges, lemons, blueberries, raspberries. When I get home from work, all weekend long, I spend most of time in my backyard. I get a lot of pleasure from it. So I would be a fruit tree farmer.

Bisnow: What deal are you proudest of? 

Sonnenblick: Easy one for me. I own the LA headquarters for the Department of Homeland Security. It’s a 500K SF office building in Norwalk. Of all the deals I’ve done in my career, that was clearly the most difficult. Yet in spite of all the obstacles, we got it done. It will forever be my favorite and proudest project in my entire career.

Bisnow: What deal do you consider to be your biggest failure?

Sonnenblick: My biggest failure was a hotel project that we were working on on the campus of the USC Medical Center. It exploded at the eleventh hour because USC was so difficult to deal with. I learned a lesson that I will never deal with an institution like USC again. They are just too difficult to work with and that deal was a failure as a result. 

Bisnow: What is your biggest pet peeve?

Sonnenblick: The morals and business ethics of our industry have dropped precipitously the last couple of years. I don’t know if that’s the function of our president or just a general comment about our society today. That is absolutely my biggest pet peeve. In the old days, we used to be able to do business with a handshake. That is no longer the case in today’s world.

Bisnow: What is your greatest extravagance?

Sonnenblick: My polo ponies and playing polo in general. It’s a very expensive sport but it’s a game and a passion that I truly love. But it’s very much an extravagance. But I can’t help it. I’m addicted to it. 

Bisnow: What motivates you? 

Sonnenblick: Previously, it was money and creation of wealth. But that is no longer the case. Now I build these buildings to create a portfolio and a legacy. It’s not the financial benefit anymore. It’s just to create a legacy and to grow the portfolio. 

Bisnow: What advice do you wish you got when you started in CRE? 

Sonnenblick: I wish instead of building office buildings and hotels that someone would have told me 30 years ago to get into the apartment development business. Because that business is much easier than the road I took. 

Bisnow: What is the biggest risk you have ever taken?

Sonnenblick: I am very risk-averse. But if I had to think of one thing, it probably would have been that crazy USC hotel deal. That was the biggest risk and it was an absolute failure as a result of our poor relationship.

Bisnow: What keeps you up at night?

Sonnenblick: Right now, the main thing that keeps me up at night and my biggest worry is that we are absolutely in the peak of the economy and the real estate market. The last time I felt this way was in 2008. There was a six-year downturn that followed. We were at the peak then and that downturn was an ugly period for almost everybody in our entire industry.

Bisnow: What is your favorite place to visit?

Sonnenblick: I love St. Bart’s in the Caribbean. It’s just a fabulous place to get away, turn off the phone and the internet, and just enjoy life on the beach. 

Bisnow: Outside of work, what are you most passionate about?

Sonnenblick: Family. I have gotten very lucky. I have been married for almost 30 years. I have a great wife and great kids. I am spending more and more time with family as a result. 

Bisnow: What CRE trend do you think will have the most impact over the next few years?

Sonnenblick: I think the biggest current trend that will have the most impact on CRE is the upcoming disappearance of the Chinese investors in commercial real estate. A lot of the Chinese money is being called back to China by the Chinese government. As a result, all the EB-5 deals and Chinese-backed funded deals are going to implode. I think that will have a huge negative impact on real estate prices very soon.  

Bisnow: What would people be surprised to learn about you?

Sonnenblick: I’m a very open person so I don’t know. All of my friends and business associates know my story. There really [aren’t] a lot of surprises. 

Bisnow: What do you want your legacy to be?

Sonnenblick: I’m the fourth generation of a family in real estate that began in 1893. This is our 126th year in the commercial real estate business. If I want to be known for anything, I want people to know that I was always a very honest and straightforward businessman. I’m very open. I didn’t have any hidden agendas.

I’m unfortunately a dying breed. I’m very old school. I don’t think you’ll see a lot of old school, honest businessmen in the future in our industry, unfortunately.

I just want to be known as a very honest, straightforward guy who people enjoyed dealing with.

Wanted in DTLA: hip new hotel brands to continue success story [Infographic]

Wanted in DTLA: hip new hotel brands to continue success story [Infographic]

While DTLA’s hospitality revolution has been remarkable, more innovation and hotel development is crucial, say panellists at TOPHOTELWORLDTOUR Los Angeles

The manner in which downtown Los Angeles (DTLA) has changed the game for hotels in LA has been nothing short of spectacular.

With more than 10,000 hotels rooms dominated by branded and independent, full-service and boutique hotels, this phenomenon is worth paying attention to.

Despite pressure from home-sharing services and an influx of new hotel rooms, the Greater Los Angeles region is poised to remain among the top-performing U.S. hotel markets, according to CBRE Hotels Americas Research Group.

Factors driving the trends

At the panel discussion titled “Ultimate Game-Changer? Downtown LA’s Hospitality Revolution” at TOPHOTELWORLDTOUR Los Angeles, Bruce Baltin, Managing Director, CBRE Hotels said DTLA had been changed for the better by hotels.

“Currently, occupancy is at around 78%, where as it was at 68% before 2010,” Baltin said, “There is certainly more opportunity for leisure and boutique hotels, as evidenced by Ace and NoMad hotels.”

However, the LA hospitality stalwart foresaw a “blip in 2021 with a potential 1.4% decrease in RevPAR.”

Christopher M. Henry, Co-Founder, Chairman and CEO, Majestic Hospitality Group, feared that LA stood the risk of losing business to other, more vibrant cities given the challenges of having several historical buildings with complicated planning permissions.

Also, the limited space in DTLA is constantly being chased by condo & residential developers alike, making hotel development all the more challenging.

“To me, soft brands is the way to go, especially those which explore the co-living and co-working trend,” Henry told the panel.

Biggest challenges

What is particularly promising is seeing higher occupancy rates in DTLA over the weekends, said Benjamin Young, Vice President of Asset Management, AEG.

“One needs capital and patience for hotel development in DTLA as building and operation costs are high,” he added, “Be patient as it’s a tough market.”

Echoing a similar sentiment, Luke Bujarski, Founder & CEO, LUFT, who moderated the panel, cited the exploding, almost prohibitive costs of hotel development in DTLA.

Bob Sonnenblick, Principal, Sonnenblick Development, agreed there was a drop-off in new hotel projects in DTLA and also a corresponding decrease in interest rates.

“The biggest challenge for the hospitality industry in DTLA will be to find new brands and cool, hip hotels to bring in revenue,” he added.

According to the TOPHOTELCONSTRUCTION online database 41 hotel projects are currently in the pipeline in Los Angeles:

LA architecture “disappointing” compared to San Francisco, Seattle: Robert Sonnenblick

LA architecture “disappointing” compared to San Francisco, Seattle: Robert Sonnenblick

by Rahul Venkit | Jul 21, 2019 | Experts

“Limited and select service hotels is where the real profitability and future of the hospitality industry is, says LA real estate veteran Robert Sonnenblick of Sonnenblick Development

Robert Sonnenblick lives and breathes LA. This Wharton graduate has more than 30 years of experience in various aspects of real estate and real estate finance in the region.

Prior to forming Sonnenblick Development, he was the senior partner in a Los Angeles-based real estate development firm (Sonnenblick Del Rio Development) which specialized in public-private partnerships throughout the LA basin.

On the sidelines of TOPHOTELWORLDTOUR Los Angeles, Sonnenblick spoke to TOPHOTELNEWS on the influx of foreign-funded construction in LA, how mass transit from LAX airport is poised to boost tourism, and how limited-service hotels is where the most profitability is.

“Dramatic” influx of foreign capital in LA

Sonnenblick: The change has been dramatic especially in the last four or five years. And it’s interesting: it’s all been foreign capital, largely from China and a little bit from India as well. Whereas historically, everything that you see built has been locals doing it. That’s totally changed in the last four years.

LA skyline deserves awesome architecture like San Francisco & Seattle

Sonnenblick: I am a huge fan of Los Angeles, you know that, but I must tell you very honestly: I’m disappointed in our architecture. If you look at the skyline, you mentioned San Francisco, for example, San Francisco, the city mandates that you must — you must — do something interesting with your building. No more regular rectangles, that just doesn’t work. They won’t approve your project if you do that.

Here, we just do regular, everyday, blase – unfortunately – buildings and when you look at the skyline, although it’s a large and successful skyline, architecturally, very honestly, compared to cities like Seattle, like San Francisco, we are trailing very badly. And that’s very unfortunate because we’ve got an opportunity to really make a difference — and we’re not.

LAX mass transit will further boost tourism

Sonnenblick: At LAX, there’s $8 billion worth of new construction going on between the rental car facility and the monorail and things like that. But there’s one other key thing that leads me to be very optimistic about the future.

For the first time in a hundred years, they are tying LAX in to mass transit. So that instead of somebody having to take a taxi or Uber down there, you can now, or you will be soon, able to just get on mass transit and go to anywhere else in the city. I think the lack of that has really been holding us back for many decades so this is good news. LAX is one of the really, or the future of LAX, is one of the really good points of this city.

Limited-service hotels is where the most profitability is

Sonnenblick: For the first 25 years of my career in the hospitality business, all we focused on were high-end, four-star luxury hotels. My partners and I built the Loews Hotel at the beach here in Santa Monica, a four-star hotel. But to be honest with you, the real money in our business, and again, I discovered this very late, better late than never, but I discovered it late, when you build select service and limited service, that’s where the real profitability of the industry is.

And as a result, if you look at the last 10 years, probably 95% of the new hotels that have been built across the United States, are limited service and select service. And again, being honest, I discovered that too late. We’re into it now, I wish I had discovered this 15 years ago. But that’s where the real profitability, and future of the industry is.

Thoughts on the TOPHOTELWORLDTOUR

Sonnenblick: Oh, I think this is fantastic. It gives everybody a chance to really network. And it’s not like it’s all developers — it’s developers and architects and brokers and contractors and things like that. It’s a great opportunity for everybody to get together and just talk. And not just people from L.A., even though this conference is L.A.-based, it’s people from all over the country and even the world. It’s fun to meet people and I enjoy that very much.

Robert Sonnenblick was a delegate at TOPHOTELWORLDTOUR Los Angeles 2019. To attend, address or sponsor our boutique hospitality networking events around the world, contact TOPHOTELPROJECTS Head of Global Events & Conferences

Kayley van der Velde.

West Hollywood Edition Hotel and Residences Secures $300 Million in Refinancing

Boutique Hotel Project on Greater Los Angeles’ Sunset Strip Expects September Opening

Rendering of the West Hollywood Edition Hotel and Residences. Illustration: CoStar

Rendering of the West Hollywood Edition Hotel and Residences. Illustration: CoStar

The owners of the upscale West Hollywood Edition Hotel and Residences in greater Los Angeles have secured a $300 million, floating-rate loan just months ahead of the boutique property’s anticipated grand opening in September, when it will join several competing developments on the famous Sunset Strip.

Global commercial real estate advisory firm Newmark Knight Frank arranged the refinancing on behalf of the owner, a partnership between New York developer Witkoff and Miami investment company New Valley. The loan was provided by investment bank and financial services company Deutsche Bank and stock brokerage and investment banking Mirae Asset Daewoo in South Korea.

The 190-room hotel with 20 luxury condos is under construction at 9040 Sunset Blvd., in West Hollywood, a tony city between Hollywood and Beverly Hills in the heart of metropolitan Los Angeles,

The developers said they opted to refinance to retire a construction loan following the completion of the project this year.Edition Hotels is a brand by hotelier and real estate developer Ian Schrager, who was also the co-founder of New York’s famed Studio 54 nightclub, in partnership with Marriott International. The West Hollywood property will feature a rooftop pool, a fitness center and spa, and views from downtown to the Pacific Ocean.

“The world-class hotel and condo development represents a truly one-of-a-kind experience for visitors and tenants,” Dustin Stolly, vice chairman and co-head of debt and structured finance at Newmark Knight Frank, said in a statement.

The development is among several new projects headed to the Sunset Strip, an indication of the strong demand and high prices the coveted West Hollywood market can dictate. Among other projects are actress Gwyneth Paltrow’s Arts Club, a London-based social club and hotel development, and the proposed $300 million 8150 Sunset Blvd. commercial-residential project that could replace a retail center with a landmark Lytton Savings bank.

Sales prices for hotels in the area are among top in the county. For instance, 1 Hotel West Hollywood, formerly known as the Jeremy West Hollywood Hotel, at 8490 W. Sunset Blvd., sold for $283 million, or $989,510 per room, in 2017, according to CoStar data.

With so much similar development proposed or underway, the project could face ample competition. It may also open up to a slowing economy that could push down nightly rates as U.S. economic growth nears a record 10-year streak that many analysts expect to cool in coming years.

But Bob Sonnenblick, chairman at L.A. development firm Sonnenblick LLC, who has toured part of the West Hollywood Edition project, said the “breathtaking” views from some of the units are part of the reason he thinks it could do well.

“With L.A. having the best year ever in terms of hotel tourism combined with the low-interest rates on loans, it ensures the success of the project long term,” Sonnenblick said. “It’s a fabulous combination.”

Last year was the eighth consecutive year of record tourism for Los Angeles with 50 million visitors on record, according to the Los Angeles Tourism & Convention Board.

The project, designed by architectural designer John Pawson and architectural firm HKS Architects, also has more than 11,000 square feet of meeting space and approximately 16,500 square feet of hotel terrace space that could draw in additional crowds.

For the Record: The Newmark Knight Frank team was led by Dustin Stolly and Jordan
Roeschlaub, vice chairmen and co-heads of debt and structured finance, along with Nick Scribani and Chris Kramer, managing directors at NKF.

Real Estate Conference on April 19, 2019

Press Release: San Diego, Calif. March 5, 2019

Crittenden Conferences Inc has announced that Los Angeles-based real estate developer Bob Sonnenblick, Chairman of Sonnenblick Development LLC, has been chosen to moderate their keynote conference panel at the upcoming Crittenden National Real Estate Conference on April 19th in San Diego, California.

The panel topic is:
New Southern California Construction projects for 2019. The conference will take place at The Hard Rock Hotel in Downtown San Diego.

For more information, please see www.CrittendenNational.com