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#hotel financing advisors in Berlin
agilisadvisorsgmbh · 3 years
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Hotel Financing Advisors in Berlin, Germany, Europe – Agilis Advisors
We are providing the financial Advisory service would help you to channelize your investments correctly but will also bring out strategies through which you can recover the old investments made. for more info:- +49 (0) 176 36395599.
Reinstating hospitality industry with pristine financial assistance from Agilis advisors
No doubt covid-19 pandemic has caused more disaster than one could manage. The hospitality industry is no exception and has been left with meager survival strategies. There are pending hospitality loans and the acute shortage of cash flow has literally drowned in the Vintage hotels. Agilis Advisors can introduce you with some great financial management strategies that can put an end to the Deep Impact of covid-19 pandemic.      Hotel financing in Germany
Lower down business complexities with the laudable financial management system
The customised approaches and documentation can help your business to cover-up warranties for the loans. Everything is expertly tailored so that no financial shortage occurs and you invest in the correct place. The experts from Agilis Advisors are completely aware about the Global scenarios and for that's how they structure your financial Investments to give you maximized returns. They develop solutions that can be employed to overcome the debt constraints. You can discuss the financial complexities with them so as to clarify things better. A piece of advice from them can help you to overcome an ongoing series of issues in almost no time. The pandemic is not over yet and substantial regulatory movements have to be taken to mitigate the effects. It is only through export tips from agilis Advisors that there would be a possibility of quick Revival in your business. Measures regarding cash control and security can be left upon the experts who have a distinctive and knowledgeable approach of managing things. They Understand the way hotel business is run at global level and that's the reason why strategies applied by them are never a failure.    Hotel financing in Berlin
Get distinctive Hospitality Management Services under one roof
Not only the financial Advisors would help you to channelise your investments correctly but will also bring out strategies through which you can recover the old investments made. The hotel management that are run under a brand name need more diligent financial management that we deliver. We understand that whatever financial management steps are taken by the franchise holders must not result in defying of certain rules. We undertake the Required refurbishing facilities and confirmation of financial resources to meet the future capital expenditures. We shoulder critical financial situations in a way that nothing attracts penalty but pure rewards. Unlike other businesses, Hotel Management requires expertise in a variety of tasks. Agilis Advisors undertake steps to make sure that the required services are delegated while keeping the short term and long term needs in mind.
Maintain your accounts and always remain confident
It goes without saying that the sound financial management system is the backbone of a successful business. Apart from taking a couple of personal decisions to run your business, it is also important to choose a good financial advisor that can give you a promising future . Naturally a single entity cannot focus on annual budget, financial reporting, accountability and adapting to change all alone. There has to be a helping hand that can cover up the services of maintenance, energy and revenue . The financial managers from Agilis aptly identify the sources of revenues and Threads. They also maintain proper accounts and reconcile the difference so that you always have everything written.
Track market changes single handedly
Not everybody can track the changing market scenarios while looking after the routine business chores. If you run a hotel, it is absolutely necessary to look after the changing market conditions. Agilis Advisors can help you to track those changes so that you can integrate them in your own business. The experts keep on exploring better opportunities and help your business to embrace them for a powerful Hotel financial management system.
https://www.agilisadvisors.com/
Germany (Headquarters) - Lindenstraße 74, 10969 Berlin
UAE - Sheikh Mohammed Bin Zayed Rd, 111123 Dubai
Mauritius - Royal Road, 71366, Rose Hill
Netherlands - 5612 LW, Eindhoven
+49(0)30 25293151 +49 17636395599, +971 552879830, +230 54988787, +31 682978092
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biofunmy · 5 years
Text
Co-Living Grows Up – The New York Times
New Yorkers have long shared apartments in order to afford the city’s famously high rents. This, of course, often entails hunting down an apartment with a real estate agent — and paying a broker’s fee, plus a hefty deposit — then furnishing the place, lining up roommates and getting electricity and internet service up and running.
For several years, co-living companies have been popping up, providing a fast, streamlined alternative in the form of fully furnished, move-in-ready rooms in shared apartments.
Lately the trickle of co-living activity has become a torrent.
Homegrown companies are expanding into new neighborhoods. Brands that have built up their businesses elsewhere are planting their flags here. And even traditional real estate companies are getting into the act.
“No one wants to be left behind,” said Matthew Polci, a managing director at Mission Capital Advisors, which has been financing an increasing number of co-living projects.
With so many in the pipeline, Brad Hargreaves, chief executive of the Brooklyn-born co-living company Common, predicts that the number of co-living rooms in the New York today — over 25,000, by some estimates — is a “fraction of a fraction of what it will be.” His own company, which he founded in 2015 and now operates in six cities, has 520 rooms in 20 buildings in New York alone, and more on the way.
Although there are differences among co-living companies — some focus on communal life with comfy lounges and social activities, others emphasize getting out into the neighborhood — all do essentially the same things: trick out rooms, hook up utilities, hire housekeepers to clean and maybe replenish toiletries, match up roommates — and charge a monthly rent that covers all of the above. They also offer wiggle room in the lease term.
But as more co-living companies muscle their way into New York — and competition among them heats up — some are upping the ante. They are jazzing up the décor in their buildings. They are giving some rooms private bathrooms and adding full-fledged studios and one-bedroom apartments so a resident can graduate from a shared apartment to his or her very own place. And they are not only retrofitting apartments in existing small- and medium-size buildings but also working with developers to add co-living to new large-scale projects — or even planning their own buildings from scratch.
For tenants, none of it comes cheap.
The San Francisco-based Bungalow, which typically works with owners of small buildings, offers some of the least expensive co-living rooms in New York, based on a comparison of prices online. But the furnishings are fairly basic and the housekeeping monthly rather than weekly.
Generally, the all-inclusive rent for a co-living room starts at around $1,300 and can run well over $2,000 for a room with an en suite bath — not unreasonable, perhaps, considering all that’s covered in the monthly fee, but not exactly low budget.
Still, for those moving to New York for the first time, or for a finite period, the arrangement can be a boon.
It certainly has been for Andrew Athanasiadis, a Chicago native. He had two weeks to find a place to live here after landing a job at Cushman & Wakefield, but he didn’t know New York well and was loath to get locked into a long-term lease for fear he’d end up in a neighborhood he didn’t like.
A Chicago friend had mentioned the co-living company Quarters, which was founded in Berlin and had opened a project in Mr. Athanasiadis’s hometown. Quarters, he learned, also operates two locations in Manhattan (and has three more in the works, in Brooklyn).
A bedroom was available in a three-bedroom, one-bath apartment in the company’s building in the East Village and he signed a six-month lease at a rate of $1,700. He was grateful not to have to “buy all new everything” and figured he could move once he got his bearings.
But he found he liked the social activities in the building, which include weekly happy hours, as well as outings that he and other residents planned on their own, such as a trip to the Hamptons over the summer. The building provided an instant social network. And its location meant an easy commute to work.
Recently he renewed his lease, locking in a discounted rate of $1,600 because he signed for another six months. Mr. Athanasiadis, who is 30, said that eventually he will want his own place. For now, he added, “as long as the price is right I see no reason to move.”
Although Mr. Athanasiadis’s building is a six-story brick apartment house from the 1920s that was retrofitted for co-living, Simon Baron Development’s Alta+ rental tower, which opened in 2018 in Long Island City, devoted the second through the 16th of its 43 floors to co-living from the start. The co-living operator Ollie advised on the layouts of the 169 shared suites on those floors and now manages them.
The model co-living apartment is 918 square feet — the size of a one-bedroom one-bath apartment on the regular upper floors of the building. By eliminating the living room, Ollie managed to fit in three modestly sized bedrooms, two baths and a kitchen. And perhaps borrowing a page from the micro-unit trend, the company outfitted the bedrooms with Murphy beds and multifunctional furniture so they could each feel like a living room during the day.
While Alta+ combines co-living and conventional apartments in a single building, the Collective, a London-based company, is experimenting with co-living/hotel hybrids.
The company recently acquired a century-old industrial plant in Long Island City that had been converted to a 125-room hotel called the Paper Factory (the building once produced newsprint). After a few tweaks and a rebranding, the property was relaunched late last year as the Collective Paper Factory, offering rooms available for a single night or up to 29 (the maximum stay starts at $2,300).
And the Collective has three ground-up projects in progress. Working with Tower Holdings Group, a local developer, the company will soon begin constructing a 439-unit project in the Bedford-Stuyvesant neighborhood of Brooklyn; it will offer a combination of short- and long-stay rooms across three buildings. In southeast Williamsburg, it will build a 26-story tower with 246 co-living units and 306 hotel rooms. And a central Williamsburg project will combine 97 rooms of student housing with 127 studios for nightly and monthly stays. All rooms will have private baths.
The projects, which are expected to be completed in 2022, will also offer amenities associated with luxury housing. The southeast Williamsburg building, for instance, will have multiple lounges along with a hammam/spa and a music practice room.
While such projects may point in a plush direction for co-living, there are also plans for projects dedicated to those of more modest means — the 21st-century equivalent, perhaps, of 19th-century boardinghouses and 20th-century single room occupancy hotels.
The city’s Department of Housing Preservation and Development recently held a competition eliciting proposals for co-living projects that would become part of the city’s affordable housing efforts. In October the agency announced that it had chosen three “shared housing” projects to be constructed over the next few years.
The largest of these, in East Harlem, will be developed by Common working with L+M Development Partners and LIHC Investment Group, an affordable housing owner. Two-thirds of the units in the project will go to tenants earning 50, 80 and 120 percent of city’s area median income. The lowest rent: around $800.
Sahred From Source link Real Estate
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agilisadvisorsgmbh · 3 years
Text
Hotel Financing Advisors in Berlin, Germany, Europe – Agilis Advisors
We are providing the financial Advisory service would help you to channelize your investments correctly but will also bring out strategies through which you can recover the old investments made. for more info:- +49 (0) 176 36395599.
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agilisadvisorsgmbh · 3 years
Text
Capital raising Advisory in Maldives | Financial Advisory Company in Berlin, Germany, Europe
Agilis advisors are providing the best Capital raising Advisory service and also our Financial Advisory Company registered in Berlin, Germany, with presence in Europe, Asia, Maldives Etc for more information please contact us :- +49 17636395599,visit us:- https://agilisadvisors.com/
TYPE OF FUNDING: Capital Raising (Debt & Equity)
LOCATION OF THE COMPANY: Maldives
DESCRIPTION OF THE CLIENT:
Client is a Financial Advisory company registered in Berlin, Germany, with presence in Europe, Asia & MENA region. It is creating an SPV to enter into an operator and management agreement with one of the top 5 hotel operators of Europe for the development of 4*+ Resort in Dhighudhefaru, Baa Atoll, Maldives.
OTHER KEY POINTS:       Capital Raising Advisory in Maldives
* The project will be funded by way of debt and equity in the proportion of 60% and 40% respectively.
* The developer will start earthworks in January 2020. The resort will be completed and operational by January 2023.
INVESTMENT HIGHLIGHTS:   Financial Advisory Company in Berlin
* The client will assign a project management entity which will issue an occupation guarantee that equates to ~50% of the GOP    starting for Year 1 for a minimum 10 years, escalating at 3% pa.
* The project achieves an initial 8% return in year 1 of operations and an IRR of 17% over the 10-year period. The Debt is fully repaid    within 7 years of operation.
We quarterback the entire capital raising process from the initial due diligence, preparing financial models and marketing materials, securing the proper capital sources, negotiating key terms, and covenants through closing. We strive to find the right financing partners to achieve the most economically attractive and flexible structure, consistent with market conditions and management objectives.
Our range of capital raising services includes, but not limited to:
> Advice and guidance on structuring transactions & discreet introductions to the right investors
> Identify the appropriate investors to address specific corporate objectives
> Feasibility study and due diligence preparation & Negotiation, conclusion, and follow-through of your deals.      Capital raising advisory in Europe
Our ultimate objective is to ensure that our clients don’t give up control of their business to outside investors to support growth. We help our clients transform their business to high growth enterprises with high multiple valuations.
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biofunmy · 5 years
Text
Co-Living Grows Up – The New York Times
New Yorkers have long shared apartments in order to afford the city’s famously high rents. This, of course, often entails hunting down an apartment with a real estate agent — and paying a broker’s fee, plus a hefty deposit — then furnishing the place, lining up roommates and getting electricity and internet service up and running.
For several years, co-living companies have been popping up, providing a fast, streamlined alternative in the form of fully furnished, move-in-ready rooms in shared apartments.
Lately the trickle of co-living activity has become a torrent.
Homegrown companies are expanding into new neighborhoods. Brands that have built up their businesses elsewhere are planting their flags here. And even traditional real estate companies are getting into the act.
“No one wants to be left behind,” said Matthew Polci, a managing director at Mission Capital Advisors, which has been financing an increasing number of co-living projects.
With so many in the pipeline, Brad Hargreaves, chief executive of the Brooklyn-born co-living company Common, predicts that the number of co-living rooms in the New York today — over 25,000, by some estimates — is a “fraction of a fraction of what it will be.” His own company, which he founded in 2015 and now operates in six cities, has 520 rooms in 20 buildings in New York alone, and more on the way.
Although there are differences among co-living companies — some focus on communal life with comfy lounges and social activities, others emphasize getting out into the neighborhood — all do essentially the same things: trick out rooms, hook up utilities, hire housekeepers to clean and maybe replenish toiletries, match up roommates — and charge a monthly rent that covers all of the above. They also offer wiggle room in the lease term.
But as more co-living companies muscle their way into New York — and competition among them heats up — some are upping the ante. They are jazzing up the décor in their buildings. They are giving some rooms private bathrooms and adding full-fledged studios and one-bedroom apartments so a resident can graduate from a shared apartment to his or her very own place. And they are not only retrofitting apartments in existing small- and medium-size buildings but also working with developers to add co-living to new large-scale projects — or even planning their own buildings from scratch.
For tenants, none of it comes cheap.
The San Francisco-based Bungalow, which typically works with owners of small buildings, offers some of the least expensive co-living rooms in New York, based on a comparison of prices online. But the furnishings are fairly basic and the housekeeping monthly rather than weekly.
Generally, the all-inclusive rent for a co-living room starts at around $1,300 and can run well over $2,000 for a room with an en suite bath — not unreasonable, perhaps, considering all that’s covered in the monthly fee, but not exactly low budget.
Still, for those moving to New York for the first time, or for a finite period, the arrangement can be a boon.
It certainly has been for Andrew Athanasiadis, a Chicago native. He had two weeks to find a place to live here after landing a job at Cushman & Wakefield, but he didn’t know New York well and was loath to get locked into a long-term lease for fear he’d end up in a neighborhood he didn’t like.
A Chicago friend had mentioned the co-living company Quarters, which was founded in Berlin and had opened a project in Mr. Athanasiadis’s hometown. Quarters, he learned, also operates two locations in Manhattan (and has three more in the works, in Brooklyn).
A bedroom was available in a three-bedroom, one-bath apartment in the company’s building in the East Village and he signed a six-month lease at a rate of $1,700. He was grateful not to have to “buy all new everything” and figured he could move once he got his bearings.
But he found he liked the social activities in the building, which include weekly happy hours, as well as outings that he and other residents planned on their own, such as a trip to the Hamptons over the summer. The building provided an instant social network. And its location meant an easy commute to work.
Recently he renewed his lease, locking in a discounted rate of $1,600 because he signed for another six months. Mr. Athanasiadis, who is 30, said that eventually he will want his own place. For now, he added, “as long as the price is right I see no reason to move.”
Although Mr. Athanasiadis’s building is a six-story brick apartment house from the 1920s that was retrofitted for co-living, Simon Baron Development’s Alta+ rental tower, which opened in 2018 in Long Island City, devoted the second through the 16th of its 43 floors to co-living from the start. The co-living operator Ollie advised on the layouts of the 169 shared suites on those floors and now manages them.
The model co-living apartment is 918 square feet — the size of a one-bedroom one-bath apartment on the regular upper floors of the building. By eliminating the living room, Ollie managed to fit in three modestly sized bedrooms, two baths and a kitchen. And perhaps borrowing a page from the micro-unit trend, the company outfitted the bedrooms with Murphy beds and multifunctional furniture so they could each feel like a living room during the day.
While Alta+ combines co-living and conventional apartments in a single building, the Collective, a London-based company, is experimenting with co-living/hotel hybrids.
The company recently acquired a century-old industrial plant in Long Island City that had been converted to a 125-room hotel called the Paper Factory (the building once produced newsprint). After a few tweaks and a rebranding, the property was relaunched late last year as the Collective Paper Factory, offering rooms available for a single night or up to 29 (the maximum stay starts at $2,300).
And the Collective has three ground-up projects in progress. Working with Tower Holdings Group, a local developer, the company will soon begin constructing a 439-unit project in the Bedford-Stuyvesant neighborhood of Brooklyn; it will offer a combination of short- and long-stay rooms across three buildings. In southeast Williamsburg, it will build a 26-story tower with 246 co-living units and 306 hotel rooms. And a central Williamsburg project will combine 97 rooms of student housing with 127 studios for nightly and monthly stays. All rooms will have private baths.
The projects, which are expected to be completed in 2022, will also offer amenities associated with luxury housing. The southeast Williamsburg building, for instance, will have multiple lounges along with a hammam/spa and a music practice room.
While such projects may point in a plush direction for co-living, there are also plans for projects dedicated to those of more modest means — the 21st-century equivalent, perhaps, of 19th-century boardinghouses and 20th-century single room occupancy hotels.
The city’s Department of Housing Preservation and Development recently held a competition eliciting proposals for co-living projects that would become part of the city’s affordable housing efforts. In October the agency announced that it had chosen three “shared housing” projects to be constructed over the next few years.
The largest of these, in East Harlem, will be developed by Common working with L+M Development Partners and LIHC Investment Group, an affordable housing owner. Two-thirds of the units in the project will go to tenants earning 50, 80 and 120 percent of city’s area median income. The lowest rent: around $800.
Sahred From Source link Real Estate
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