Single-Family Residence Planned for Main St. Downtown

Single-Family Residence Planned for Main St. Downtown

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Think Financial Student Loans

A single-family dwelling on the same block as the Hyatt downtown? That is the plan scheduled to be presented to the Zoning Board of Appeals on Wednesday. Not to worry, it will not be a vinyl-sided center-entrance colonial. Kent Keating has the four-story building at the northwest corner of Main and Mohawk under contract and is proposing to renovate it into commercial space topped by one residential unit. Steel posted on the subject building located at 496 Main Street last week.

Sidenote: Word on the street is that Kent Keating wife’s law firm, Massaro Keating & Cosgriff & White, could be relocating from Williamsville to the base of the building. The same sources say that the Keatings would occupy the upper residence. The planned split of commercial and residential space is unknown. None of this has been confirmed.

The 11,440 sq.ft. building is still owned by Naseem Malik and had been listed through Chris Malachowski and Hunt Commercial for $340,000. Happy Garden Chinese Restaurant is the only tenant in the building currently.

496 Main Street is adjacent to The Belesario lofts and cater-corner to Carmina & Woods architects' impressive renovation of 487 Main. Hundreds of residents have moved into downtown lofts in recent years, but Keating’s live-work proposal is certainly exciting and unique.

This wouldn’t be Kent Keating’s first pioneering effort. In 1999 he founded internet marketing firm Kanoodle, one of the early pioneers in search-targeted sponsored links. The firm offers online purchase and placement tools to help advertisers effectively target their campaigns. Rapidly growing Kanoodle has over 80 employees at its offices on North Forest Road in Amherst.

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What Others Have To Say

  1. Paul

    0 ratings12345
    Jul 23rd 2007, 07:22

    Um, I clicked the little white icon in the top right and get a mini-mini header with the Luxury Apartments story lead in, but now I can't get back to the picture only header. The top right icon is now gone in this tab, and in other tabs there appears that camera icon. If I click that, it doesn't switch back to the mini-header. I'm really surprised no one mentioned that the date no longer appears; I miss that but don't put it back if it slows things down again. Paul

  2. Paul

    0 ratings12345
    Jul 23rd 2007, 07:27

    Um, never mind! I was commenting on another story and had several BRO tabs open at the same time. Posted my message in the wrong one! Sorry! Paul

  3. MisterChips

    3 ratings12345
    Jul 23rd 2007, 08:37

    Next Mr. Keating can bring Kanoodle downtown!

  4. porter

    2 ratings12345
    Jul 23rd 2007, 08:45

    Not his law firm. Check your information.

  5. Dan

    6 ratings12345
    Jul 23rd 2007, 08:55

    Now downtown is saved! There's no better way to revitalize an urban central business district than to put professional offices in ground-floor retail spaces, and use large buildings as a single family residence. (Is there a rolleyes smiley?)

  6. WCPerspective

    1 ratings12345
    Jul 23rd 2007, 09:29

    Thanks Porter....I quickly double-checked and it appears it his wife, Lisa Massaro Keating, who is the lawyer. I'll edit the post. The occupancy information is only speculative and uncomfirmed at this point. The project is however going to the Zoning Board on Weds. WCP

  7. STEEL

    9 ratings12345
    Jul 23rd 2007, 10:04

    Dan, Yes downtown is going to have a lot of problems if wealthy people keep moving downtown and bringing their businesses with them.

    Hooray...I wish for someone to restore this gem and it happens!

  8. MikeJ

    1 ratings12345
    Jul 23rd 2007, 10:21

    Kanoodle is downtown...they have an office/network operations center in the main place mall. I personally know Kent, he is an amazing man...always thinking of the next step and staying ahead of the game...good luck Kent!

  9. urbanesque

    1 ratings12345
    Jul 23rd 2007, 10:44

    That will make a fabulous residence, especially with the park and secured parking areas adjacent to the building.

    Any word on the status of the building next door. I heard that vandals had caused significant damage to the upper floors. This would make a great residence as well, if it isn't beyond repair.

  10. Biniszkiewicz

    4 ratings12345
    Jul 23rd 2007, 11:45

    These buyers are real. Their buyer's rep (Alan Hastings) brought them through the BK across the street (which I represent). The buyers have 10 Acres in Clarence, but commute to Buffalo every day because their daughter goes to Nardin. They have a weekend home in Ellicottville. They travel a lot. They don't see any need to commute to Clarence day in and out. He owns a company. She's a professional. They can pretty much live wherever they want. They like downtowns. They're comfortable that by the time they feel like selling (five or ten years maybe), downtown will have caught up with them and they'll be able to get their money out. They're right.

    I'm a little surprised to hear that there will be no other residential rental units in this builidng. I had heard they were going to include a few rental flats.

    In the neighborhood, the BK across the street (495 Main) is 'under contract' to a good developer. The building next door to it (Stuart & Benson) is under contract to a different developer through Chris M. @ Hunt. I believe Chris also has the third of Naseem's properties--the Sizes Plus store and photography store, with an intact white terra cotta original facade underneath some fifties or sixties two story brick facade that will come right off--under contrract, too. I might be wrong, but it was under contract about a month ago.

    'Under Contract' means a sale contract has been signed by all parties (buyer and seller) and is in force. It does not necessarily mean that a property will sell ('close'). The contracts usually call for a period of 'due diligence' during which time the buyer gets to investigate everything about the building and decide whether or not the buyer's plans for the space will work (this often includes approvals by municipal planning review boards). Usually the buyer can back out with no financial penalty during the due diligence period for any reason at all; it's usually at the sole discretion of the buyer whether to continue the contract. Typically due diligence lasts a few months. Sometimes one month, sometimes three, sometimes longer. After this period, the buyer can't back out (or can't back out without heavy financial penalties). So telling you that these properties are under contract doesn't mean necessarily that they are going to close, but chances are very good in both cases that they will.

    Anyone interested in a condo downtown should seriously consider buying one of the smaller buildings in the 500 block of Main Street.

    Buy it. Gut it. Build what you want inside the bones you uncover.

    You'll end up with a chic address on a classic block of old downtown Buffalo buildings, each renovated into high end flats and townhouses (that is, assuming a dozen other buyers get the same notion, which I think is possible). Think European downtown flavor. If you just buy one building (for yourself and a commmercial unit for rental), your exposure financially isn't stratospheric and you get to make all the design choices yourself instead of accepting some developer's ideas. Then you can have a very cool condo, in your very own building, right in the Middle middle of downtown. Right there on Main Street across from high end apartments and the Hyatt. Right between Lafayette Square and Fountain Plaza. Right in the middle of downtown, smack dab on the main drag, you can live in your very own private residence!

    You just have to renovate it yourself--you and your favorite five contractors. Don't worry. It's not as intimidating as it seems. Buy a place you like. Hire an architect after you get to know your building. The architect will guide you through a lot. So might your real estate agent. So will others. Twenty years from now (and much sooner as well), you will be so glad you did.

  11. Denizen

    3 ratings12345
    Jul 23rd 2007, 11:55

    Hey Dan, when downtown land values skyrocket and gas prices spike bigtime, then you'll be seeing more "glamorous" uses for these old buildings. Until then we'll have to put up with them being converted into sweet luxury pads...

    I think we can put up with high-end occupancy for now right? Or would this building be better looking like one of those moribund members of the Genesse block?

  12. GorgeousGeorge

    3 ratings12345
    Jul 23rd 2007, 13:07

    Ahhhh bluebloods. What would Buffalo do without them?

  13. STEEL

    4 ratings12345
    Jul 23rd 2007, 15:25

    Bini,

    I hope plans for the BK include either a complete makeover or a demo. Funny how no one ever wants to demo worthless eyesores like that one.

  14. nottooanon

    2 ratings12345
    Jul 23rd 2007, 17:05

    Before we start calling people names, you should do your history on Mr. Keating and realize that he's earned every penny he's got. He comes from a family of hard working people. He may come of as a 'blueblood,' but its only because of the way he makes his money that makes him as much as he does. Kudos Kent, you deserve it.

  15. Andrew

    1 ratings12345
    Jul 23rd 2007, 19:04

    I'm glad for this, i only wish i could have done it.

  16. ktl340

    2 ratings12345
    Jul 23rd 2007, 19:12

    Stories like this, about a re-use success are now beginning to be common on this site! I can't help but think we as a city are on the cusp of a renovation explosion in this city, I bet we look back on 2006-2007 as a watershed moment

  17. Biniszkiewicz

    0 ratings12345
    Jul 24th 2007, 11:13

    Steel: re 495 Main street 'BK', aka 'worthless eyesore'

    It is butt ugly. But it's a good skeleton. Built in the late 70s over an existing basement, the construction is steel and concrete and can be reskinned easily and even added to. It's bounded on three sides by public streets (Main, Mohawk and an alley) so there is plenty of opportunity for light. No need to tear down. Just reinvent.

  18. paragon

    0 ratings12345
    Jul 27th 2007, 12:35

    The burger king site has the potential for a much larger project than the current building allows.

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