Foreclosed West End office building sells at auction to local investor Marwaha

capital city physicians1 Cropped

The building was sold at auction Wednesday morning. (Courtesy New Media Systems)

Gagan Marwaha has snatched up yet another distressed Richmond-area office building, this time at the auction block.

The local investor won Wednesday’s foreclosure auction of the Capital City Physicians Building at 8002 Discovery Drive with a winning bid of $4.05 million. The four-story, 55,000-square-foot West End building sits on three acres across from the Henrico Doctors’ Hospital campus. 

It fell into foreclosure over the summer after its former owner, Atlanta-based Bauman & Co., defaulted on a loan from lender South State Bank.

The foreclosure auction, conducted by auction house Tranzon Key, was held Wednesday in one of the building’s many available suites. Around 50 individuals were in attendance. 

Bidding started at $1 million and lasted around 15 minutes. Around six individuals placed bids, but none was willing to go higher than Marwaha’s $4.05 million, which amounts to about $73-per-square-foot. 

After paying closing fees and premiums, Marwaha said the cash purchase will total around $4.3 million – about $1 million less than the property’s most recent county-assessed value of $5.3 million, and $2 million less than the $6.3 million Bauman & Co. paid for it in late 2019. 

Marwaha, through his firm Marwaha Investments, specializes in pumping new life into office assets that are on the fritz. 

Gagan Marwaha

Gagan Marwaha

His strategy includes rebranding the buildings, renovating the vacant spaces on spec, and then leasing them out, typically to a mix of smaller tenants. He’s previously employed that playbook at the former Parham Place business park in Henrico and the completely vacant Patriot Tower in Chesterfield

With a 75 percent vacancy rate, Marwaha said the Capital City Physicians Building was right up his alley.  

“This acquisition just goes towards our strategy of investing in value-add office space,” Marwaha said. “We’re going to make all the available vacancies rent-ready. We’re going to spec everything and make it turn-key.”

Of the building’s 41,500 square feet of available space, Marwaha said about 7,000 is shell space that he’s also going to build out on spec. He’s budgeted around $700,000 for those renovations. He added he’s planning to sign the existing tenants at the building to long-term leases. 

Like his other holdings, the Capital City Physicians Building will be rebranded to bear his name – in this case Marwaha Plaza. Parham Place is now called Marwaha Business Park and Patriot Tower is now Marwaha Tower. 

“That’s the first thing I do. I always rebrand everything because I want the market to understand there’s a new owner who’s ready to cut deals on realistic pricing,” Marwaha said. “We’re going to be flexible in cutting deals and bringing people in.”

Tucker Dowdy and Eric Hammond of Commonwealth Commercial will handle leasing for Marwaha Plaza. 

Meanwhile, out at Marwaha Tower, Marwaha said he’s in discussions with some state agencies and architecture firms about taking space in the 127,000-square-foot building near the Powhite Parkway-Midlothian Turnpike interchange. 

capital city physicians1 Cropped

The building was sold at auction Wednesday morning. (Courtesy New Media Systems)

Gagan Marwaha has snatched up yet another distressed Richmond-area office building, this time at the auction block.

The local investor won Wednesday’s foreclosure auction of the Capital City Physicians Building at 8002 Discovery Drive with a winning bid of $4.05 million. The four-story, 55,000-square-foot West End building sits on three acres across from the Henrico Doctors’ Hospital campus. 

It fell into foreclosure over the summer after its former owner, Atlanta-based Bauman & Co., defaulted on a loan from lender South State Bank.

The foreclosure auction, conducted by auction house Tranzon Key, was held Wednesday in one of the building’s many available suites. Around 50 individuals were in attendance. 

Bidding started at $1 million and lasted around 15 minutes. Around six individuals placed bids, but none was willing to go higher than Marwaha’s $4.05 million, which amounts to about $73-per-square-foot. 

After paying closing fees and premiums, Marwaha said the cash purchase will total around $4.3 million – about $1 million less than the property’s most recent county-assessed value of $5.3 million, and $2 million less than the $6.3 million Bauman & Co. paid for it in late 2019. 

Marwaha, through his firm Marwaha Investments, specializes in pumping new life into office assets that are on the fritz. 

Gagan Marwaha

Gagan Marwaha

His strategy includes rebranding the buildings, renovating the vacant spaces on spec, and then leasing them out, typically to a mix of smaller tenants. He’s previously employed that playbook at the former Parham Place business park in Henrico and the completely vacant Patriot Tower in Chesterfield

With a 75 percent vacancy rate, Marwaha said the Capital City Physicians Building was right up his alley.  

“This acquisition just goes towards our strategy of investing in value-add office space,” Marwaha said. “We’re going to make all the available vacancies rent-ready. We’re going to spec everything and make it turn-key.”

Of the building’s 41,500 square feet of available space, Marwaha said about 7,000 is shell space that he’s also going to build out on spec. He’s budgeted around $700,000 for those renovations. He added he’s planning to sign the existing tenants at the building to long-term leases. 

Like his other holdings, the Capital City Physicians Building will be rebranded to bear his name – in this case Marwaha Plaza. Parham Place is now called Marwaha Business Park and Patriot Tower is now Marwaha Tower. 

“That’s the first thing I do. I always rebrand everything because I want the market to understand there’s a new owner who’s ready to cut deals on realistic pricing,” Marwaha said. “We’re going to be flexible in cutting deals and bringing people in.”

Tucker Dowdy and Eric Hammond of Commonwealth Commercial will handle leasing for Marwaha Plaza. 

Meanwhile, out at Marwaha Tower, Marwaha said he’s in discussions with some state agencies and architecture firms about taking space in the 127,000-square-foot building near the Powhite Parkway-Midlothian Turnpike interchange. 

This story is for our paid subscribers only. Please become one of the thousands of BizSense Pro readers today!

Your subscription has expired. Renew now by choosing a subscription below!

For more informaiton, head over to your profile.

Profile


SUBSCRIBE NOW

 — 

 — 

 — 

TERMS OF SERVICE:

ALL MEMBERSHIPS RENEW AUTOMATICALLY. YOU WILL BE CHARGED FOR A 1 YEAR MEMBERSHIP RENEWAL AT THE RATE IN EFFECT AT THAT TIME UNLESS YOU CANCEL YOUR MEMBERSHIP BY LOGGING IN OR BY CONTACTING [email protected].

ALL CHARGES FOR MONTHLY OR ANNUAL MEMBERSHIPS ARE NONREFUNDABLE.

EACH MEMBERSHIP WILL ONLY FUNCTION ON UP TO 3 MACHINES. ACCOUNTS ABUSING THAT LIMIT WILL BE DISCONTINUED.

FOR ASSISTANCE WITH YOUR MEMBERSHIP PLEASE EMAIL [email protected]




Return to Homepage

POSTED IN Commercial Real Estate

Editor's Picks

Subscribe
Notify of
guest

5 Comments
oldest
newest most voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Michael Patterson
Michael Patterson
1 month ago

Guy’s a machine. Another brilliant move. You couldn’t buy that land, clear it and build that building for under $20M today. The inherent value there is just astounding.

Landon Edwards
Landon Edwards
1 month ago

The fact that office space these days is inconsequential to many businesses is just a minor detail, I suppose.

geri nel
geri nel
1 month ago
Reply to  Landon Edwards

I remember when industrial space was out of favor. time will tell and determine his return

Ludwig Carlson
Ludwig Carlson
1 month ago

He’s been killing it with his investments. Breathing fresh life in to these old buildings!

geri nel
geri nel
1 month ago
Reply to  Ludwig Carlson

Agreed. He found a niche and knows how to work it.