Sale of Lido Marina Village almost final
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Noaki Schwartz
BALBOA PENINSULA -- The financial firm involved in a failed attempt to
purchase Lido Marina Village -- the property that proved to be former
City Manager Kevin Murphy’s Waterloo -- is now reportedly close to buying
the rundown shopping center again.
Very few details about the new deal have been released, and city
officials -- with the exception of one council member -- say they know
almost nothing about it.
Lehman Brothers Holdings, the New York-based financial firm that was in
escrow to buy the 4-acre site in 1998, has bought portions of the
property and is under contract to purchase the remainder, said Tony
Wattson, president of Wattson Breevast, a local developer working on the
deal with Lehman Brothers.
Property owner Jerry Friedman did not return phone calls. Lehman Brothers
representatives declined to comment on the deal.
In June 1998, Lehman Brothers, along with Pasadena-based Ratkovich &
Associates, had a contract with the village’s property owners, but
withdrew at the last minute.
Calling itself LJR Lido Partnerships, the group issued a cancellation
notice after the City Council rejected a proposed 50-year lease of the
boat slips adjacent to Lido Marina Village.
LJR Lido Partnerships had said it needed the long-term lease in order to
close the deal. However, at least four council members at the time did
not want to write the tidelands lease until they were presented with a
plan to renovate the property and gather more information about the value
of the boat slips.
At the time, James Ratkovich, a partner in the group, said he wanted to
work with the community before proposing a detailed plan. But that was
not solid enough for council members and they rejected the proposed
lease, causing LJR Lido Partnerships to finally withdraw from the deal.
Although many believe Murphy’s forced resignation was simply the result
of politics and his disintegrating relationship with a majority on the
council, the Lido Marina Village deal became the public reason behind his
departure.
Some alleged Murphy tweaked the appraisal of the boat slips to make the
deal work, but no evidence of that was ever produced. In fact, Murphy and
other staff members maintained he was barely involved with the appraisal.
This time around, whether the tired Lido MarinaVillage will finally get
the financial injection it so desperately needs remains to be seen.
“The escrow is not closed and they haven’t finalized the purchase,”
Wattson said.
He would not comment on whether Lehman Brothers could still withdraw from
the deal or was still interested in obtaining a 50-year lease on the boat
slips before closing the purchase.
Councilman Tod Ridgeway said for the moment, the property will continue
to be on an annual renewable permit.
“They haven’t brought in a project yet,” he said. “The city will evaluate
the totality of the circumstances -- [that is] how does it address
long-term city needs, Coastal Commission, public access needs. There are
so many issues to evaluate.”
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