patching...
Welcome back, Patch Blogger!

Oliver Mc Millan

Monday, January 28, 2013

Receivership Firm Investigates Glen Town Center's Underperformance

RE Solutions, the court-appointed receiver, is studying how to boost sales at the Glenview shopping center.

A Chicago-based receivership company has been tasked with improving business at Glen Town Center, Chicago Tribune reported.  Glen Town Center Developer OliverMcMillan is in court facing a $56 million foreclosure lawsuit that claims it has not made a loan payment on its 267,000-square-foot Glenview mixed-use retail project since July 2009.  Earlier this month, Cook County Circuit court appointed RE Solutions as the receiver and the company is looking at why the shopping center is still underperforming even though 94 percent of the retail space is leased, Chicago Tribune reported.  The highly anticipated 267,000-square-foot mixed-use retail center opened in 2003 and was supported by the Village with a $12 million revenue-sharing agreement …

beauregard

7:04 am on Wednesday, January 30, 2013

Which bank financed this mess?   more ›

Wednesday, June 27, 2012

Glen Town Center Developer Faces $55.6 Million Foreclosure Suit

San Diego-based OliverMcMillan LLC has not made a loan payment on its 267,000-square-foot Glenview mixed-use retail project since July 2009, according to a complaint filed in Cook County Circuit Court last week.

Glen Town Center Developer OliverMcMillan is more than a little behind on loan payments, according to Crain’s Chicago business. The San Diego-based real estate development company has not made a payment since July 1, 2009 and is facing a $55.6 million foreclosure suit, according to a complaint filed in Cook County Circuit Court last week. Want Glenview news in your inbox every morning?  Subscribe to Patch's newsletter. The highly anticipated 267,000-square-foot mixed-use retail center opened in 2003 and was supported by the Village with a $12 million revenue-sharing agreement with the developer. But, according to a loan report from Bloomberg, the retail property has not generated enough cash flow to cover its debt since 2006. “The Town …

beauregard

8:01 pm on Tuesday, January 29, 2013

Iseem to remember that the revenue sharing agreement didn't kick in until "profits " kicked in at a certain level. S9ooooooo. Just keep ur profits low by paying urself huge salaries. The whole thing stinks.   more ›

Got a Hot Tip?