3 
 COURIER LIFE, MARCH 25-31, 2022 
 A project ‘never meant to be’ 
 Real estate rep behind Century 21 revamp spills how owners came to choose demolition 
 BY JESSICA PARKS 
 When cousins Sonny  
 and Al Gindi opened Century  
 21’s flagship location in  
 1961, they quickly learned  
 they were onto something.  
 The Bay Ridge department  
 store  gained popularity  
 seemingly overnight due to  
 its affordable pricing, and  
 the Gindi family went on  
 to open a dozen other locations  
 — and expand its footprint  
 on 86th Street by buying  
 up property along the  
 thoroughfare. 
 After more than 50  
 years, owners, citing a lack  
 of COVID-related payout  
 from their insurance company, 
  filed for bankruptcy  
 at the end of 2020, and the  
 sprawling southern Brooklyn  
 department store closed  
 its doors. Though the closure  
 left a hole in the hearts  
 of Brooklynites, a coming  
 demolition of the space  
 promised to make room for  
 new business that the shopping  
 strip — still rebounding  
 from the pandemic —  
 has never seen before. 
 But, project leaders say  
 it  was  never  meant to  be  
 this way. 
 “Unfortunately, the pandemic  
 with its overreaching  
 impact in New York  
 City just devastated their  
 business,” said Gene Spiegelman, 
  vice chair and  
 principal at RIPCO, the  
 commercial real  estate  
 company managing Century  
 21’s demolition, and  
 the  space’s  revitalization.  
 “And the lack of post-recovery  
 has kept them on the  
 sidelines, figuring out what  
 to do with it in the future.” 
 After  demolition  permits  
 were filed for 448 and  
 460 86th St., word of coming  
 “Class A retail” began  
 to spread — squashing rumors  
 of a second-coming  
 for the store. 
 Sources close to  the  
 project said the demolition  
 was spurred by Century  
 21’s uniquely department  
 store layout. 
 “It was a very complicated  
 infrastructure of  
 buildings,” Spiegelman  
 confirmed. “A determination  
 was made that new construction  
 would be best.” 
 As is, Century 21 would  
 fit multiple retailers, many  
 of which have “very, very  
 specific requirements”  
 when choosing a new space  
 — and so does the city.  
 “There’s considerations towards  
 all the regulations  
 and all the new energy-efficiency  
 codes that are coming  
 into play, you know  
 many different factors that  
 new  construction  is  the  
 way to go,” he said. 
 Construction is set to  
 begin in 2023, with an expected  
 completion of late  
 2025, according to Spiegelman. 
  RIPCO’s project also  
 includes the former TJ  
 Maxx store at 502 86th St.,  
 and a 290-car, multi-level  
 parking garage nearby. 
 Spiegelmann said the  
 “anchors” — stores that  
 draw shoppers to the area  
 — will be signed on before  
 the project gets underway,  
 but over time, RIPCO is  
 hoping to lease out to a variety  
 of retailers “that has  
 not been represented” in  
 Bay Ridge before. 
 The  150,000-square-foot  
 development could cost as  
 much as $45 million, though  
 that estimate is expected to  
 change closer to the start of  
 construction. In the meantime, 
  the Siegelman urged  
 local skeptics to remember  
 that the family behind the  
 project is the same family  
 that’s been in the community’s  
 corner all along. 
 “These are people who  
 have been involved here  
 for decades who had to  
 blaze forward,” he said of  
 the Gindi family, who live  
 in Bay Ridge. “They are  
 going to be the owners forever, 
  they have been longterm  
 owners and plan to be  
 longer-term owners.” 
 And Spiegelman should  
 know — RIPCO has had a  
 long-standing relationship  
 with the Gindi family, and  
 he himself worked as the  
 real estate representative  
 for Century 21’s properties  
 over the course of the last  
 decade. 
 “I have been through  
 the best and the worst,” he  
 said.  
 A line of people wait to shop at Century 21 before its closure in  
 late 2020.  File photo by Paul Frangipane 
 SUMMER OF AD V E A SUMME R O F A DVE NTURE AT 
 SUMME SUMMER SUMMER R OF AD OF O VENTURE F AD ADVENTURE VENTURE A A AT 
 AT 
 summer 
 summer 
 summer 
 Ca Ca Ca MpS 
 MpS 
 MpS 
 175,000 sq. ft. of safe and secure  
 summer fun, with everything a  
 camper needs for an unforgettable  
 175,000 sq. ft. of safe and secure  
 summer fun, with everything a  
 camper needs for an unforgettable  
 175,000 sq. ft. of safe and secure summer fun,  
 175,000 with everything sq. ft.summer  of summer under a safe camper one under and secure  
 roof. 
 needs  
 one roof. 
 summer fun, with everything a  
 camper needs for an unforgettable  
 for an unforgettable summer under one roof. 
 Low camper-to-counselor ratios 
 Early drop off and late stay available 
 Low Low camper-camper-to-to-counselor counselor ratios 
 ratios 
 Early drop off and late stay available 
 summer under one roof. 
 Early drop off and late stay available 
 Lunch and snack included 
 Lunch and snack included 
 Lunch and snack included 
 Low camper-to-counselor ratios 
 Early drop off and late stay available 
 AviatorSports.com/summer-day-camp 
 AviatorSports.com/summer-day-camp 
 Lunch and snack included 
 
				
/summer-day-camp
		/summer-day-camp