Most Popular in Apple
-
A fix for those "Pairing Record Missing" errors
-
Mac Hey, Sailor! Collection Lipstick Swatches
-
Apple receives regulatory approval for solar farm in North Carolina
-
Woz hired as technical advisor on Jobs biopic
-
Daily Update for May 18, 2012
-
Being Open Could Close the Door on Android
-
How Much Is Zuckerberg Worth? [Live Infographic]
-
Yodlee Wants to Shake Up Finance, Introduce Alternate Credit Score
-
Amazon planning to sell ads on Kindle Fire welcome screen
-
Class-action suit targets Apple for iCloud downtime
Apple's Grand Central Neighbor Seeing 7% Increase In Sales
New York City's Metropolitan Transportation Authority (MTA)'s sweetheart deal for Apple's just-opened Grand Central Terminal retail store seems to be paying dividends for the MTA and neighboring stores. One restaurant is reporting a 7 percent increase in sales since the store opened in December.
Michael Jordan's The Steak House is located across the terminal from the new Apple Store, Grand Central and co-owner Peter Glazier says the restaurant has seen a 7 percent jump in sales in the seven weeks that the Apple Store has been open, reports Crains New York. Glazier also says the rise isn't because Apple replaced another restaurant, Metrazur, in the terminal. "The jump only happened after Apple opened," said Glazier, not in the several months that the space was being renovated as the store was built.
There was some criticism of the deal that Apple and the MTA worked out, most notably around the lack of a revenue sharing agreement which is standard for most tenants of Grand Central. Apple's $60-per-square-foot lease agreement is also significantly lower than what most other tenants are paying. The MTA argued that a flagship Apple Store would bring in significant foot traffic to the terminal, benefiting both other GCT tenants and the terminal as a whole.
The MTA has previously noted that for every 1% increase in sales across the terminal's retailers, the MTA will gain $500,000 in rent due to the percentage rent provisions in place on the leases of nearly every other tenant with the exception of Apple.
MTA's gamble appears to be paying off, for at least one establishment.
(Photo via Yelp/Chris F.)
Recent Mac and iOS Blog Stories
• Apple Releases iBooks 2.0.1 to Address Issue with Textbooks Not Opening
• Id Software's RAGE Arrives on Mac App Store
• 'The Daily' Reports 100,000 Paying Subs on One-Year Anniversary
• Safari 5.1.4 with JavaScript and PDF Handling Improvements Seeded to Developers
• Apple Grabs Another Gaming PR Executive for App Store

Michael Jordan's The Steak House is located across the terminal from the new Apple Store, Grand Central and co-owner Peter Glazier says the restaurant has seen a 7 percent jump in sales in the seven weeks that the Apple Store has been open, reports Crains New York. Glazier also says the rise isn't because Apple replaced another restaurant, Metrazur, in the terminal. "The jump only happened after Apple opened," said Glazier, not in the several months that the space was being renovated as the store was built.
There was some criticism of the deal that Apple and the MTA worked out, most notably around the lack of a revenue sharing agreement which is standard for most tenants of Grand Central. Apple's $60-per-square-foot lease agreement is also significantly lower than what most other tenants are paying. The MTA argued that a flagship Apple Store would bring in significant foot traffic to the terminal, benefiting both other GCT tenants and the terminal as a whole.
The MTA has previously noted that for every 1% increase in sales across the terminal's retailers, the MTA will gain $500,000 in rent due to the percentage rent provisions in place on the leases of nearly every other tenant with the exception of Apple.
MTA's gamble appears to be paying off, for at least one establishment.
(Photo via Yelp/Chris F.)
Recent Mac and iOS Blog Stories
• Apple Releases iBooks 2.0.1 to Address Issue with Textbooks Not Opening
• Id Software's RAGE Arrives on Mac App Store
• 'The Daily' Reports 100,000 Paying Subs on One-Year Anniversary
• Safari 5.1.4 with JavaScript and PDF Handling Improvements Seeded to Developers
• Apple Grabs Another Gaming PR Executive for App Store
More Stories in Macrumors News
- ElcomSoft's Phone Forensics Software Offers Near Real-Time Access to iCloud Backups
- Apple in Talks to Open R&D Facility in Russia's Skolkovo Innovation Centre?
- Apple's Annual iTunes Festival in London Moves to September
- Steve Jobs 'Worked Closely' on Design of Next-Generation iPhone with Larger Display
- Screenwriter Aaron Sorkin Shares Some Thoughts About Steve Jobs Biopic, Woz Hired As Advisor
- Apple Board Member Mickey Drexler on Steve Jobs' iCar Dreams, Apple's Living Room Push
- Verizon Clarifies Discontinuation of Grandfathered Unlimited Data: Applies to New Subsidized Devices
- Apple Cutting Off Mac App Store Hotkey Apps as Sandboxing Requirement Goes Live on June 1?
- Apple Cutting Off Mac App Store Hotkey Apps as Sandboxing Requirement Goes Live on June 1? [Updated]
- Apple's Data Centers to Be Powered by 100% Renewable Energy
Most Popular Stories
A fix for those "Pairing Record Missing" errors
Mac Hey, Sailor! Collection Lipstick Swatches
Apple receives regulatory approval for solar farm in North Carolina
Woz hired as technical advisor on Jobs biopic
Daily Update for May 18, 2012
Being Open Could Close the Door on Android
How Much Is Zuckerberg Worth? [Live Infographic]
Regular expression
Yodlee Wants to Shake Up Finance, Introduce Alternate Credit Score
loginlog not registering failed logins