Equity One, the real estate firm proposing to redevelop 22 acres of commercial property in the Westbard area of Bethesda, has been acquired by Jacksonville-based Regency Centers, a firm whose portfolio is also dominated by shopping center holdings. The new, larger Regency Centers company will remain headquarted in Florida, retain its REG trading symbol, and be led by current Regency CEO Martin E. "Hap" Stein, Jr.
With 307 retail centers, Regency is a giant compared to Equity One (the merged company will now hold 429 properties in total). 223 of those centers have been developed by Regency in the last 16 years alone. They do not have the level of mixed-use experience of firms like Federal Realty or The JBG Companies, something they share with Equity One. CityLine Market in Texas, with almost 4000 housing units, is the only mixed-use property highlighted on the Regency website. But they are definitely a giant in the retail business.
In Montgomery County, they currently own Cloppers Mill Village in Germantown, Firstfield Shopping Center in Gaithersburg, King Farm Village Center, Shoppes of Burnt Mills in Silver Spring, Takoma Park Shopping Center, and Woodmor Shopping Center in Silver Spring.
Some tenants in the Westbard properties Equity One plans to redevelop as a mixed-use urban center have expressed concerns about what the Regency takeover may mean for them. Equity One had made certain public statements about their intentions regarding the transition for existing tenants. But none of these were codified in the Westbard sector plan, and some tenants have reported Equity One would not respond to their wishes to negotiate future leases now, leaving them unable to plan for their future.
Now with new people in charge, whatever tenuous suggestions of goodwill there had been could be out the window - or Regency could take a more proactive approach and reassure tenants of long-term stability via lease extensions or other tangible assurances. So, too, could Regency take a more responsive approach to community concerns about the realization of promises to naturalize the Willett Branch stream, which runs alongside part of the "Westwood Complex" of property Regency now controls; the lack of green space in the plan; building heights and massing along Westbard Avenue; and the relocation of Westbard Avenue and above-ground utilities along it.
We will find out what Regency's approach is in the coming months.
"...To Dissappear Into..." is a very strange headline.
ReplyDelete6:01: It's also an accurate headline - the company is going under the Regency name post-merger, not "Equity One."
ReplyDeleteIf I have a 100% Equity stake in Robert Dyer @ Bethesda Row and it is worth $0, is it really equity?
ReplyDeleteHopefully Regency's first change will be hiring security to keep creeps like you off their properties.
ReplyDelete#MakeBethesdaSafeAgain
Dyer endlessly criticizes the Westbard plan, but is secretly supporting Equity One and the development plans for their site. He is far more corrupt than the county council.
ReplyDeleteEvidence?
Delete8:49AM - I'm with you.
ReplyDelete@849 - the only reason Dyer knows about the merger is because someone commented about it on here yesterday.
ReplyDelete@901 - good for you! No one cares.
I'm with her (Hans).
ReplyDelete@8.49: Agreed. Of course, the trolls attack Dyer because he is the sole source reporting consistently on the opposition to Westbard.
ReplyDeleteDoes Regency have asphalt Wednesday parties like Equity One does, five people and the food truck vendor want to know...
ReplyDeleteA food truck burned up yesterday in DC. 3 injured, one critically. Why is Dyer covering this up?
ReplyDelete6:30: This is a Bethesda news site - why would I have reported that?
DeleteMaybe Dyer will disappear into Westbard
ReplyDelete@855 - because you are a birdbrained piece of shit
ReplyDelete7:59 is Dyer's Mom trolling him from upstairs
ReplyDelete