Page 73 - [George_Ross,_Andrew_James_McLean,_Donald_J._Trump(BookFi)
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P RINCIPLES   OF N EGOTIA TION

                     Trump said to me, “George, I’m thinking of turning 40 Wall Street
                     into  co-op units, because that’s what everybody else is doing. I
                     want you to analyze the situation and tell me what you think I
                     should do.”
                        A number of well-known brokers had analyzed the building and
                     determined that there were no tenants looking for office space down-
                     town. They said that even if the office rental market improved, the
                     higher floors were too small to be attractive, and the lower floors
                     contained huge columns that interfered with efficient space usage.
                     Their sentiments were unanimous: “It will never work as an office
                     building even if by  some miracle the market for downtown office
                     space improves.”
                        But there was a major roadblock to residential conversion. Before
                     any workcouldbecommencedadealwouldhavetobemadewith
                     theseven-floor law firm to give up their lease. Based on my exten-
                     sive experience in dealing with holdouts and knowing the principals
                     of the law firm, I knew this would be a time-consuming and expen-
                     sive settlement.
                        Not satisfied with the advice of others to turn the building into co-
                     op apartments, I did my own analysis and about a week later I went to
                     Donald and said, “I studied the best use of the building and came to
                     the conclusion that it actually can work as an office building. The ex-
                     perts have been taking the wrong approach and reached the wrong
                     conclusion. You don’t have one office building, you have three. They
                     just happen to be on top of each other. You have 400,000 square feet
                     of small office space on the top portion of the building. I don’t care
                     what  the  others  say;  I  think that’s rentable at  $17 per square foot
                     (which was $2 per square foot over the average market rent) because
                     a tenant will have the prestige of renting an entire floor, and a fantas-
                     tic view of New York harbor.”
                        IalsotoldhimthatIworked out the financial projections based on
                     his total cost of acquisition and renovation. I concluded that: “If we
                     cantake the 400,000 square feet at the top of the building and rent it
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