Skip to comments.
Court Decision Leaves Developer Less Insurance Money At Ground Zero
Engineering News Record ^
| May 5, 2004
| Sam Lubell
Posted on 05/07/2004 10:03:59 AM PDT by snopercod
Developer Larry Silverstein has lost the majority of his insurance claims in court regarding the attacks on the World Trade Center.
A Federal Jury in Manhattan Monday ruled that the attacks on the Twin Towers constituted only one attack, and therefore the majority of Silversteins insurers only owed one payout.
Therefore Silversteins insurance payout, which he had hoped would be as much as $7 billion, will be much closer to the $3.5 billion one attack would have paid. The final payout is pending a final court case late this summer.
Silverstein purchased the lease on the World Trade Center just prior to the 9/11 terrorist attacks. The insurance decision significantly affects his ability to fund developments at Ground Zero, including the Freedom Tower and the other planned office towers on the site. Much of the funding, it appears, will now be privately raised, not paid for by insurance company claims.
The developer admitted his displeasure in a written statement yesterday, but claimed he would continue rebuilding as before: Of course I am disappointed that the jury did not see things our way with respect to most of the insurers in the WTC coverage. But let me be clear. A defeat in the courtroom is not a defeat for rebuilding. Whatever happens in court, we are determined to rebuild the World Trade Center, under Governor Pataki's leadership and in keeping with the Master Plan.
Prior to the decision, Lower Manhattan Development Corporation President Kevin Rampe said that the insurance decision would have no impact on building at the Trade Center site. The plan will not change, said Rampe, who said if Silverstein lost, he would have to find funding through traditional sources.
TOPICS: Business/Economy; Extended News; News/Current Events; US: New York; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: insurance; larrysilverstein; worldtradecenter
Silverstein purchased the lease on the World Trade Center just prior to the 9/11 terrorist attacks.Good timing. </sarcasm>
1
posted on
05/07/2004 10:04:00 AM PDT
by
snopercod
To: snopercod
This was a no win situation. Attack wasn't defined in the Silverstein's insurance policy. Furthermore, since it had just purchased the operating lease from the Port Authority, he was still in negotiations with several insurers about terms and conditions.
Legally, this was a coin flip but that's why I hate corporate law, company A tries to screw rich guy B. It's more fun to respresent real people, even if this was an intellectually interesting legal problem.
To: bigeasy_70118
Aren't "acts of war" excluded from most policies?
3
posted on
05/07/2004 10:12:56 AM PDT
by
snopercod
(I used to be disgusted. Then I became amused. Now I'm disgusted again.)
To: snopercod
this boob was trying to get an extra $4 billion profit....he should be run off the pier.
To: BurbankKarl
Silverstein invested a bunch of money in the WTCs, only to have them destroyed.
Without knowing what he paid and the amount of his insurance policy, it's hard to say whether he is trying for a betterment.
5
posted on
05/07/2004 10:20:53 AM PDT
by
snopercod
(I used to be disgusted. Then I became amused. Now I'm disgusted again.)
To: BurbankKarl
Decision Hinders
Leaseholder's Ground Zero Plan --
Perhaps It's All for the Best
By JULIA VITULLO-MARTIN
May 6, 2004; Page D10
New York
The major leaseholder of the World Trade Center, Larry Silverstein, spent some $100 million in legal fees to try to convince a federal jury that he was entitled to a double insurance payout. The jury didn't buy it. In their May 3 verdict concluding that the two attacks constitute one event for insurance purposes, the jurors may have dealt Mr. Silverstein's rebuilding efforts -- and the Libeskind masterplan for Ground Zero, which was dependent on the double payout -- a mortal blow. Though Mr. Silverstein may get as much as $4.5 billion, he will not have the $7 billion to $10 billion needed to rebuild the trade center site with his 70-story Freedom Tower plus four other buildings. (Gov. George Pataki announced yesterday that the developers would break ground on July 4 for the Freedom Tower, the one building Mr. Silverman can afford to complete.)
But this verdict is not a defeat for Lower Manhattan, whose rebirth from the rubble has taken place the old-fashioned way: via capitalism. Fueled by the entrepreneurial energy of hundreds of small businesses, shops, restaurants and services, and bolstered by the goodwill and spending of workers, residents and tourists, the neighborhood is beginning to thrive again. It's not back to where it was in 2001, when demand was so high that many landlords offered old-time commercial tenants buyouts. But it's getting there. According to the Downtown Alliance, Lower Manhattan's commercial vacancy rate fell from 18.3% in 1995 to 8.6% before the attacks, which emptied out many buildings. As of the first quarter this year, the vacancy rate stood at 12.9%.
What the verdict does is give all parties to downtown's rebuilding a pause to think -- and that's not necessarily bad. After all, the World Trade Center had never been the monument to capitalism the terrorists believed it to be. Rather, it was the product of the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey's peculiar brand of government gigantism -- immense office towers built on private land acquired under eminent domain, exempted from city building codes, and freed from all taxes to compete with the private sector. Despite the status of Mr. Silverstein and his partners as leaseholders, the Twin Towers were never truly privatized -- which in normal terms would have meant "sold." Instead they were merely leased for 99 years to maintain such Port Authority privileges as tax exemption and freedom from city regulatory codes.
Now Mr. Silverstein -- the leaseholder, but not the owner -- and the government agencies in charge of rebuilding must rethink their options. Mr. Silverstein can try to cobble together Liberty Bonds with conventional financing. But his bankers are going to want proof of private demand -- which Mr. Silverstein cannot give them. He has not been able to sign up any tenants other than his own company for 7 World Trade Center, a 52-story office tower he is building at the north end of Ground Zero. Nor does he have a single confirmed tenant for the Freedom Tower.
The Port Authority has repeatedly said it must "honor" the lease with Mr. Silverstein. But what does that mean if Mr. Silverstein cannot "honor" his end? Since he lacks the financing to build, he lacks the wherewithal to complete his side of the contract. One obvious option is for the Port Authority to renegotiate its contract with Mr. Silverstein, letting him build the Freedom Tower, but opening up the rest of the site to bids from other developers. Why not see what an open bidding process would produce?
Meanwhile, the culture of government pseudo-capitalism that built and managed the towers has unfortunately imbued many of the ideas behind the rebuilding efforts. Certainly the agencies in charge think they know best how to administer a central plan -- which has included a memorial and cultural space, as well as the replacement of all commercial and retail space -- with very little regard for actual private demand. While the residential market has fully revived, downtown's commercial vacancy rate is still a little worrisome. Battery Park City, for example, which faces Ground Zero and is generally regarded as downtown's most successful mixed-use development, has almost no empty residential space but nearly one million square feet of empty commercial space.
Plus the central planners have refused to return the site fully to New York's street grid, thereby perpetuating many of the problems of the original World Trade Center, which killed off nearly all the small businesses around it. Mr. Silverstein's setback offers the planners a chance to bring in new developers with new ideas about how to maximize usable space in the context of the pedestrian-friendly grid.
We all know what downtown needs: people working, living, shopping and eating out, just as they always had. Government officials were quick to understand that abandonment by residents and visitors after the attacks would finish off the badly scarred and shaken neighborhood. The Bush administration pushed through aggressive residential subsidies to lure New Yorkers to stay or move downtown. The subsidies worked, and half-vacant buildings filled up again with people who otherwise would have lived elsewhere. The idea was to get people back on the streets, spending money in shops and restaurants. Life attracts life, as urban theorist Jane Jacobs has repeatedly noted. And commerce is a kind of life, she added, that always attracts more.
Entrepreneurs, residents and workers have done their share in restoring the neighborhood's economic life. Government planners have just been handed an opportunity to rethink their share -- and they should.
To: BurbankKarl
This developer is just plain arrogant. He would have had national support and possibly national financial support if he just rebuilt the towers as they were.
Intead we have the artsy fartsy crowd giving us a broken tower tribute to the terroists.
To: snopercod
Why knock Larry Silverstein? The country needs big-time real estate developers, and he's one of the good ones. I don't know how big his loss was, but my sympathies tend to be with him.
As for the design of the new towers, I don't believe that's his fault. He was caught up in a political process. What he HAS done is to insist that the new complex has to be practical and usable. The tower design was at least partly out of his control.
And I'm not sure if it will be ugly or not. It's pretty hard to tell from those small drawings. A lot of people thought the twin towers were ugly, although I always admired them. I'm reserving judgment on the new buildings.
8
posted on
05/07/2004 11:20:44 AM PDT
by
Cicero
(Marcus Tullius)
To: snopercod
Boom. Boom.
9
posted on
05/07/2004 11:23:42 AM PDT
by
RichInOC
(...somebody had to say it...why not me?)
To: Cicero
Why knock Larry Silverstein?I'm not. I do note that the insurance companies are acting in a typical-for-them fashion. Take your money eagerly up front, then refuse to pay for a covered claim.
10
posted on
05/07/2004 12:05:48 PM PDT
by
snopercod
(I used to be disgusted. Then I became amused. Now I'm disgusted again.)
To: snopercod
Bro, they are fighting over $3.5 BILLION dollars...that is not an insurance co. nickel and diming an insured....that is an insurance co, and the reinsurer, trying to stay afloat.
To: BurbankKarl
2 planes, 2 buildings, 2 attacks...
Just because the towers were side by side doesn't mean it's one building.
12
posted on
05/07/2004 12:16:14 PM PDT
by
ffusco
(Maecilius Fuscus,Governor of Longovicium , Manchester, England. 238-244 AD)
To: ffusco
haha...yeah right.
9.11 and 9.11 ver. 2.0
sorry, but everyone with money on the line was made whole....that is my opinion. the insurance writer was verbal or on a slip of paper...next time it should be ironclad.
Disclaimer:
Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual
posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its
management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the
exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson