Posts Tagged ‘Scranton Realtors’

Steve Carroll Joins Hinerfeld

Thursday, July 22nd, 2010

steve_c_biophotoSteve has been serving commercial and industrial clients in Eastern Pennsylvania  for 18 years. As a top producing broker for many years, Steve has in depth experience in industrial/office and retail  sales and leasing as well as land development sales transactions. He believes in keeping the focus of his efforts on personal client service, consultation and communication to achieve the client’s goals. ” Maximum market visibility is important for the client’s available property. This is a given.  However with the complex nature of today’s real estate transactions the asset needs to be properly positioned with all facets of the real estate properly considered to present the asset to the marketplace to conclude a transaction for our client.”

Steve is a licensed Associate Broker since 1999 and earned a Bachelor of Science degree majoring in Real Estate from The Pennsylvania State University. Steve is a  Lackawanna County resident  and enjoys time with his wife Janice and three children.

Rod Azar joins Hinerfeld

Thursday, May 27th, 2010
rod

rod

Mr. Azar joined the Hinerfeld team in early 2010, and will seek to grow the firm’s institutional real estate brokerage business on both a local and regional scale.  He will also focus on private equity fundraising, principal investments and consulting assignments.

Previously, Mr. Azar was an investment banker with JPMorgan in New York City for over 15 years, where he developed an extensive background and understanding of both corporate finance and commercial real estate.  Over the course of his career, Mr. Azar has executed over $35 billion in real estate mergers & acquisition assignments, and has raised over $30 billion in real estate debt and equity capital.

Mr. Azar was most recently a Managing Director within JPMorgan’s Commercial Mortgage-Backed Securities (“CMBS”) group, where he headed a team of professionals who originated commercial loans from the firm’s real estate investment banking clients.  During his three years heading this unit, Mr. Azar and his team successfully originated over $15 billion of fixed and floating-rate commercial loans, which were then either securitized or sold privately by the firm.

Prior to joining the CMBS group, Mr. Azar worked for nearly 12 years within JPMorgan’s Real Estate, Lodging & Gaming Investment Banking group.  During this period, he covered a large number of the firm’s institutional real estate clients, and was responsible for executing the full spectrum of investment banking products including mergers & acquisitions, property sales, mortgage placements, sale-leasebacks, syndicated loans, investment grade bonds, private equity placements, etc.

Prior to joining JPMorgan, Mr. Azar worked in the commercial real estate leasing division of Milstein Properties in New York City.

Mr. Azar is a graduate of Columbia University where he earned a bachelor’s degree in Political Science, and participated in both NCAA track & field and football.  He currently lives in Clarks Summit, PA with his wife Megan and their two young sons, Rodman and Adrian.  Mr. Azar is also a football and track & field coach at Tunkhannock Area High School.

HCRE Mission Statement

Friday, February 12th, 2010
  •  We are in the commercial real estate business offering sale, leasing and consulting services.
  • We are qualified, competent and capable professionals with a passion for excellence. We use our expertise and our market knowledge to serve our clients. Our guiding principle is the “golden rule.” 
  • We adhere to the code of ethics of the national association of realtors and provide the highest level of fairness, honesty and integrity.
  • We strive to be the preferred source for commercial real estate solutions in Northeast Pennsylvania.
  • We afford our employees and associates the opportunity for personal growth.

Scranton Neighbors Say Good Riddance to Daron Northeast

Monday, November 10th, 2008

After almost six years of living next to Daron Northeast, Tom Prendergast knows to place the china securely toward the back of the cupboard.

When Daron’s trucks rumble by, the vibrations are enough to rattle the porcelain cups and dishes right to the edge of the shelf.

For Evann Xanthis, it’s the dust. The chalky, pervasive dust that coats everything and jams air conditioners.

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Harry Rothstein Participates in Ben Franklin Birthday Party

Monday, March 10th, 2008

Ben Franklin celebration
PLAINS TWP. – Not only is 2008 the University of Pennsylvania Alumni Club of Northeastern Pennsylvania’s 100th anniversary, making it the university’s oldest club in the world, but it also marks the 302nd birthday of Benjamin Franklin – a celebration the group holds yearly.

Although Franklin’s birthday was actually in January, the alumni group met Sunday at the East Mountain Inn to commemorate the day. Franklin is the founder of the university.

Each year, the alumni group picks a fun topic to celebrate. This year, the group chose “Ben and Me,” a book written by Robert Lawson in 1939, which tells a fictitious tale of how a mouse named Amos is really the one to be credited with all of Franklin’s great inventions.
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Cognetti Helps Sell Dunmore Defense Plant Site

Tuesday, February 26th, 2008

The site of a former manufacturing plant in Dunmore may turn into more housing for the community.

The former BAE Systems Specialty Defense System of PA Inc. building in Dunmore recently sold for $235,000 to 530 Sherwood Development LLC.

“Our plan is to develop residential townhouses for sale at the location,” said Jerry Ferrario, who is developing the property with brother Joe Ferrario and Mike Vacendak.

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Snack Food Firm Expands Holdings

Thursday, February 14th, 2008

MOOSIC, PA – A frozen snack foods manufacturer has acquired an adjacent building for $1.2 million for additional storage.

J&J Snack Foods Corp./MIA Products bought the 42,000-square-foot structure at 625 Rocky Glen Road for warehousing, MIA vice president and general manager T.J. Couzens said. MIA employs about 200 people.

The company will relocate storage operations from a leased site in Scranton to the Moosic building by April 1, Mr. Couzens said.

John Cognetti, president of Hinerfeld Commercial Realty, which represented seller Carl Touhey, of Albany, N.Y., said the structure was built in the early ’80s for Federal Express.

Its most recent tenants were DHL Express and Jack Williams Tire & Auto Service Centers.

-Courtesy of The Times-Tribune

Detter Leasing Keystone Commons Property

Wednesday, February 13th, 2008

PLAINS TWP., PA – Keystone Commons should be more than an idea by next February.

The Keystone CommonsConstruction of the twin office buildings planned for high ground in the East Mountain Corporate Center is expected to begin by the end of this year, or sooner, said Chris Siegel, chief executive office of Ruckno Construction Co.

“That will be the tentative goal,” Siegel said Monday after he and Ernie McCabe, president of Ruckno’s commercial division, visited the site along Baltimore Drive.

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Hinerfeld Leases Hickory Street Property

Friday, January 25th, 2008

SCRANTON, PA – Keystone Community Resources, Inc. leased 13,000 s/f of space at 215 Hickory St. from DDRC Realty Company. The space consists of 8,000 s/f of showroom and workshop space, 3,000 s/f of warehouse space and 2,000 s/f of unfinished space.

Hickory Street Property, Scranton, PAJohn Cognetti, SIOR, CCIM, who represented DDRC in the lease negotiations, said that the space was a perfect fit for this particular tenant. Their need was for space for an adult day activities center for persons with mild and severe disabilities, a storage facility for equipment and supplies that would serve all their facilities and office space plus adequate parking and space for client transport. The space at one time was home to a Harley Davidson franchise and recently was a showroom and production space for vinyl products contractor.

“Seeing beyond what was there took the creative efforts fo the Keystone staff, their architect and the owners who are general contractors,” said Cognetti. The location within two blocks of an entrance/exit ramp to the Central Scranton Expressway provides convenient access to all of Lackawanna County. Also it is near Downtown Scranton and accessible to all parts of the City.

-Courtesy of Mid Atlantic Real Estate Journal

Scranton Engraving Faces Murky Future

Sunday, November 25th, 2007

A one-time downtown Scranton firehouse and long-time home of an engraving facility has been sold, and its fate is uncertain.

Scranton Engraving, 233 Franklin Ave., was sold last week for $138,500 to Bill Rosado, owner of the Rosado Group and the Ford Dealership that flanks building.

The seller was Scranton Engraving owner Thomas G. McCormack, 82, who continued to run the business until a just few weeks ago.

Mr. McCormack purchased the business from Times-Shamrock Communications (which publishes BusinessWeekly) almost three decades ago. Scranton Engraving had been a wholly owned subsidiary whose largest customer was The Scranton Times, although the business did outside commercial jobs as well.

Because of technological upgrades, The Scranton Times production moved from hot-type to cold-type printing. Engraving was no longer needed, and the company sold the business to Mr. McCormack in June 1979.

With its handful of clients and six employees, the company moved to Franklin Avenue and continued to produce half tones, line negatives and other prepress services.

He was able to expanded the business. But the digital age soon caught up with company, as more printed material moved from a computer directly to a printer or offset plate. Prepress services became more obsolete.

In more recent years, Mr. McCormack kept the company going thanks plaque etching and boutique work. Shrinking volume and taxes took too great a toll.

“Business was good for a long time. We expanded, got more work and changed with what was happening, but we never got into computers,” Mr. McCormack said. “We did a good job, and we had loyal clients. But this sort of work isn’t needed as much, and we didn’t have the volume to continue.”

The property was listed by John Cognetti and Harry Rothstein, of Hinerfeld Commercial Real Estate, in Scranton. The building was initially listed at $190,000, Mr. Cognetti said, but its marketability was limited by its “as-is” status, equipment included in the sale and limited parking.

Mr. Cognetti said Mr. Rosado wasn’t sure if he had a use for the building or would demolish it.

Property facts
Location: 233 Franklin Ave., Scranton.
Sale price: $138,500.
Land: 3,600 square feet.
Building: 4,900 square feet.
Old use: Home of Scranton Engraving.
New use: To be used or demolished by the surrounding car dealership.

- Courtesy of The Times-Tribune Business Weekly