College district selects bid
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Deirdre Newman
A bidding war on Wednesday over the development of an apartment
complex ended with the Coast Community College District getting a
commitment of about $1.8 million in annual rent for the property.
After a heated oral bidding process, the district chose Advanced
Real Estate Services Inc. to develop a multifamily rental project
that it wants to develop on property where the district offices are
now.
“It’s very exciting because they kept bidding against each other
and the price kept going up and up and up,” board President George
Brown said.
The board was poised to select a bidder in November, but chose to
abandon the process and start over, citing confusion in the original
request for bids.
After a final agreement is cemented with the district, it will be
up to Advanced Real Estate Services Inc. to work with city officials
on the exact number of apartments it wants to build. The district’s
request was for a minimum of 250 units, and that’s the number
Advanced officials are focusing on building, said Robb Cerruti,
director of property development.
The company isn’t wasting any time as it is scheduled to meet with
city officials next week, Cerruti said.
“[The project] fits into our portfolio well,” Cerruti said.
The original request had asked developers to create a project with
a minimum number of units that exceeded what the city allows. The
maximum density in the city’s general plan for residential areas is
20 units per acre.
The original request also asked developers to design an apartment
on a lot of indefinite size, described as a minimum of 12.14 acres
and a maximum of 13.77 acres. This time, the board chose the maximum
acreage of 13.77 acres so the minimum of 250 units equates to 18.1
units per acre.
The district received 14 written proposals and then was required
to open up the process to oral bids. The highest written bid was
about $1.3 million, spokeswoman Erin Cohn said. During the oral
bidding process, five companies raised the stakes by 5% each time,
and Advanced Real Estate Services was the last one standing.
The company owns about 4,000 apartment units in Orange County,
Cerruti said. This will be its first project in Costa Mesa.
“It’s a real-quality bidder that bid on this, so there’s no
question in my mind that we’ll get a high-quality product,” Brown
said.
The district is counting on the project to generate a substantial
amount of money. In August, the district raised its enrollment fees
by 60% to deal with a funding cut of $4 million from the state.
“We don’t know what the state’s doing to us [this year], but this,
in time, will give us a revenue stream that we can use to help
students and help wherever we need to help,” Brown said. “It will be
an unencumbered revenue stream.”
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