Ed Hanley |
The purchase price was
$28.6 million. According to CoStar, this is the second grocery-anchored
property to trade in the Inland Empire in the last 24 months.
Hanley Investment Group
Executive Vice President Pat Kent,
along with President Ed Hanley and Senior
Associate Corey Olson, represented
the seller, Cornerstone Development Partners of Irvine, Calif. The buyer,
Phillips Edison & Company of Cincinnati, Ohio, represented themselves.
Built in 1991, Sierra Del
Oro Towne Centre shopping center is located on 11 acres at 2621-2721 Green
River Road in Corona. Tenants include Ralphs, Dollar Tree, Anytime Fitness,
Bank of America, Jack in the Box, Domino’s Pizza, Children’s Montessori Center,
Kumon Math and Reading Center, Mercury Insurance and Postal Annex.
Pat Kent |
“The sale of Sierra Del
Oro represented a unique opportunity to acquire an entire grocery-anchored
shopping center, including the anchors, shop tenants and pad building ground
leases in an affluent market located in Southern California,” said Kent.
“Ralphs has operated at the shopping center since it was originally constructed
in 1991 (26+ years) and executed a five-year extension in 2015.”
According to Kent, Sierra
Del Oro’s Ralphs grocery store is the only “traditional” grocery store within a
three-mile radius serving the westerly part of the Corona market and Ralphs has
a captured customer audience of nearly double that of its competitors.
Corey Olson |
The property is conveniently situated less than one mile from the Serfas Club Drive exit and two miles from the Green River Road exit on the 91 Freeway (with 275,000 cars per day).
“Since 2014, there have
been 25 retail properties that have traded for over $20 million in Riverside
and San Bernardino counties, according to CoStar; only six of these properties
were grocery-anchored, which speaks to the rarity of this type of property,”
said Kent.
“In that same period of time, there have been
195 retail properties that have traded for over $20 million in Los Angeles,
Orange and San Diego counties, including five grocery-anchored retail
properties that changed hands in this year alone.”
“The market for grocery-anchored centers in infill markets remains strong with interest from both the institutional buyers and private 1031 exchange buyers,” said Hanley.
“So far, this year, we have seen an increase in the supply as sellers recognize that this is an ideal time to sell. However, there still remains limited properties available similar to the Sierra Del Oro in both size and quality.”
Hanley Investment Group
has several grocery-anchored shopping centers listed for sale. “Buyers are
willing to look in both primary and secondary markets outside of California in search
of higher returns and more inventory,” Hanley noted.
For a complete copy of the company’s news release,
please contact:
Anne Monaghan
MONAGHAN COMMUNICATIONS,
INC.
830.997.0963
.
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