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Lawsuit Seeks to Block New Partnership From Foreclosing on Stuyvesant Town

Stuyvesant Town and Peter Cooper Village stretch over 80 acres on the East Side and include more than 11,000 apartments.
Stuyvesant Town and Peter Cooper Village stretch over 80 acres on the East Side and include more than 11,000 apartments.
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Flickr/Marianne O'Leary

By Patrick Hedlund

DNAinfo News Editor

STUYVESANT TOWN — The company currently in control of Stuyvesant Town and Peter Cooper Village filed a lawsuit on Wednesday to block a new partnership from making a play to take over the properties.

Hedge fund Pershing Square Capital Management, L.P. teamed up with the Boston-based Winthrop Realty Trust last week to scoop up $300 million in mezzanine loans on the property, paying just $45 million for the debt.

CW Capital, an asset company representing creditors who took over the complex when its previous owner defaulted on its mortgage, reportedly filed a suit in state Supreme Court to stop the partnership’s effort to foreclose on the 11,227-apartment complex. The suit argues that the joint venture needs to first pay off the properties’ initial mortgage, or some $3.7 billion, the New York Times reported.

It has been speculated that CW Capital would hold its own foreclosure Stuyvesant Town and Peter Cooper Village sometime in September, the Times added.

In a statement last week, the partnership between Pershing and Winthrop said it intended to complete an “affordable” co-op conversion of the properties.

The Stuyvesant Town-Peter Cooper Village Tenants Association responded that it is “willing to evaluate any proposal and work with any party who shares our goals and who seeks to reach a restructuring that is in the best interest of all concerned, especially the residents who make this community the valuable asset that it is for our city,” according to a statement.

The 56-building complex — which stretch along the East Side between 14th and 23rd streets, from First Avenue to the East River — currently houses about 25,000 rent-regulated and market-rate renters.