Pryconsa Acquires RC5 in Madrid from Mahou

30 September 2019 – Pryconsa, the Colomer family’s real estate developer, has finalised its acquisition of the RC5 plot of land from the Mahou brewery in its Operación Calderón. Market sources state that the negotiated sales price was around 3,000 euros per square meter, for a total of more than 55 million euros.

Mahou opted to go with Pryconsa since its offer of payment was seen as better, though the cooperatives were able to pay slightly more.

Mahou is selling off three plots of land by the former stadium in Madrid: RC5, RC1 and RC2. Pryconsa acquired the first, which has a buildable area of 18,508 square meters. The developer plans to build houses for sale, not for rent.

Original Story: El Confidencial – Elena Sanz / Ruth Ugalde

Adaptation/Translation: Richard D. K. Turner

Pryconsa Close to Finalising Acquisition of RC5 from Mahou

27 September 2019 – Pryconsa, the Colomer family’s real estate developer, is close to finalising an agreement to acquire the last plot of land on sale by the Mahou brewery in Madrid.  The sale, part of the Operation Calderón, is expected to go more than 55 million euros.  

Pryconsa would thus take over the plot of land known as RC5, which has a buildable area of ​​18,805 square meters. The land that makes up Operation Calderón has a total area of ​​193,804 square meters and a building area of ​​147,000 square meters and is one of the last large plots of land left in central Madrid.

Original Story: Eje Prime

Adaptation/Translation: Richard D. K. Turner

Mahou Hires Colliers to Sell Two Plots of Land Linked to Calderón

2 September 2019

Mahou-San Miguel has commissioned the real estate consultancy Colliers to sell the two neighbouring plots of land to Mahou-Calderón.

Colliers was already in charge of the sale of the first two plots of land, in addition to the two now under consideration, plots RC1 and RC2. RC1, RC2 and RC5 have a total buildable surface area of ​​63,075 m2, according to the project. The residential component amounts to 55,823 m2, while the rest will be for retail and offices. Sources say that the average price per residential m2 will likely be around 3,200 euros, generating total revenues of close to 180 million euros to the land as a whole.

Original Story: Idealista

Adaptation/Translation: Richard D. K. Turner

Atlético de Madrid Sells Last Plot of Land by Former Stadium

5 August 2019

Atlético de Madrid has finalised the sale of the last of the three plots of land it owned by its former stadium in the Mahou-Calderón area of Madrid. The football club chose to sell the land to Vivenio for approximately 75 million euros.

The 6,544-m2 plot of land, denominated RC4, has a residential building area of 27,000 square meters. Vivenio, a socimi controlled by the Dutch fund APG and Renta Corporación, intends to develop rental housing on the property.

Original Story: Expansión – Rocío Ruiz

Adaptation/Translation: Richard D. K. Turner

Pryconsa and SVPGlobal in Talks to Acquire Land from Atlético de Madrid

30 July 2019 – Richard D. K. Turner

Pryconsa, the Colomer family’s developer, and SVPGlobal, which owns the Benidorm highrise, are bidding to take the last of the three plots being sold by Atlético de Madrid’s Operación Calderón. The first two plots of land went to a joint venture by Azora and CBRE GI, in a deal worth just over 100 millions of euros.

Stoneweg’s partnership with Hines had been seen as likely to win the bidding for the last plot of land, but an unexpected offer from Vivenio and the Dutch fund APG surpassed their bid at the last moment. Talks with Vivenio subsequently broke down when the firm was unable to secure the necessary financing.

Somewhat late to the party, Strategic Value Partners (SVPGlobal) and Pryconsa have both also now also expressed interest in submitting bids. The firms are analysing the asset, which Atlético de Madrid is selling for €3,150/m2. Bids are expected this week.

If neither of the two manages to reach an agreement with the football club, Atlético de Madrid is expected to go back to Stoneweg-Hines and Vivenio for final proposals, looking to finalise a deal shortly.

Original Story: El Confidencial – Ruth Ugalde / Elena Sanz

Atlético de Madrid Sells Land By Former Stadium to Azora and CBRE GIP

20 July 2019 – Richard D. K. Turner

Azora has entered a partnership with CBRE Global Investment to acquire two plots of land from the Atlético de Madrid football club for approximately 100 million euros. The two firms plan to build a 340-home development on the site in Mahou Calderón.

The area formerly housed the Vicente Calderón stadium and a brewery. In 2008, both companies reached an agreement with the Madrid City Council to transform the area into a new 2,000-home residential development. A decade later, and after a series of changes, Atlético de Madrid sold two of the three plots it owns, where plans exist for a total of 129,000 square meters of residences, 79,900 m2 of parks and gardens and 12,800 m2 of facilities and public spaces.

Azora and CBBRE will now develop two residential complexes with a total of 340 homes, involving an additional investment of 11 million euros in basic infrastructure costs. Gestilar will act as project manager and marketing agent.

Original Story: Expansión – Rocío Ruiz

Aelca, Ibosa, Amenabar, Pryconsa, Libra & Princeton Compete For Calderón Plots

18 November 2017 – El Economista

Atlético de Madrid has already received its first offers from investors interested in acquiring the plots of land adjacent to the Vicente Calderón stadium. The sale represents the largest land operation currently underway in the centre of Madrid and the football club is taking advantage of that fact to try to find a buyer willing to pay double the current prices in the area.

According to several sources in the sector, the companies that have bid to acquire these plots of land include the property developer Aelca, in which Värde holds a stake. It is the only one of the four large real estate companies still in the process, given that Neinor, Aedas and Vía Célere have all ruled out participating in the operation, due to its high price.

The same sources state that Grupo Ibosa is another one of the firms that is pushing ahead with the purchase process; and it is doing so with the backing of a fund. Similarly, the property developers Amenabar and Pryconsa have also submitted bids, as has the cooperative manager Libra Gestión.

The British family office Princeton is another name that appears on the list of investors interested in the Calderdón. That firm arrived in Spain at the beginning of 2015 and since then has closed several residential operations as well as a handful of others of a tertiary nature.

CBRE, which is advising the operation, will receive the binding offers at the end of November, with the aim of trying to close the sale before the end of the year. Atlético de Madrid wants to repay Carlos Slim on time for the more than €160 million that he loaned the Club, through the company Inbursa, to finance the works on the new stadium, Wanda Metropolitano.

The land up for sale is divided into three plots (RC-4, RC-7 and RC-8) and together cover more than 63,000 m2. The largest space corresponds to private residential use and the rest to tertiary use. The amount that Atlético de Madrid expects to receive for this operation, according to real estate sources in the know, comes to €200 million, which places the price per square metre in a very high range, of around €3,300/m2. In this way, the c. 480 homes that will be constructed on the site, will have to be sold for around €6,000/m2 if the operation is to be profitable for the buyer. It is precisely these figures that have deterred the large listed real estate companies, as well as those that have financial backing from funds, given that they must fulfil the returns they have promised to their shareholders and investors in every operation.

First obstacles

Although the project known as Mahou-Calderón, which encompasses the sale of these plots, has already received provisional approval from the Town Hall of Madrid, it is still awaiting definitive approval from the Community of Madrid’s Urban Planning Committee, which has four months to analyse the one-off amendment to the PGOU, and the Community of Madrid’s Governing Council, according to José Manuel Calvo, a Councillor for the Town Hall of Madrid, in an interview for the El Economista’s Inmobiliaria magazine.

Nevertheless, on Wednesday, it was revealed that the Ministry for the Environment and Land Planning had identified a “calculation error” in the buildability coefficients, and has urged the municipal technicians to correct the errors in order “to prevent the operation from being susceptible to being challenged in the courts in the future”, said sources from the Ministry to EP.

Original story: El Economista (by Alba Brualla)

Translation: Carmel Drake