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 | Ronald S. ShapiroMember Ronald S. Shapiro ("Ron") is Co-President of Shapiro, Lifschitz & Schram. Armed with a wealth of experience in a broad range of commercial real estate and other business transactions, Ron represents real estate developers and investors, including foreign individuals and institutions, in sophisticated transactions throughout the Washington, DC region.
Shapiro, Lifschitz and Schram, P.C. 1742 N Street, N.W. Washington, District of Columbia
20036
Telephone: 202-689-1900 Fax: 202-689-1901 www.slslaw.com
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| Practice Areas | Real Estate; Commercial Law; Commercial Transactions; Business Law; Finance; Creditors Rights; Commercial Real Estate; Commercial Real Estate Acquisitions; Commercial Real Estate Development; Retail Leasing; Office Leasing; Joint Ventures; Partnership Law; Limited Liability Company Law; Loan Workouts | | | Education | George Washington University, J.D., with honors, 1972, University of Maryland, B.S., Accounting, 1969 | | | Admitted | 1973, District of Columbia | |
| Memberships | The District of Columbia Bar. | | | Born | Washington, D.C. | | | Biography | Phi Delta Phi. Listed, SuperLawyers 2008 and 2009. Former Editor of the National Property Law Digests, The National Financing Law Digest and The Digest of Environmental Law of Real Property. | | | ISLN | 903818092 | | | Transactions | Through one of his friends from college, Ron learned of a parcel of land for sale on an underdeveloped block in Washington's central business district. He alerted a client to the investment potential if the parcel could be added to an assemblage. The client agreed, and over the next several months, Ron successfully negotiated for the acquisition not only of the original parcel, but also two adjoining parcels. The first adjoining parcel was owned by a widow (who was required to sell only after a court in Reno, Nevada declared her incompetent to make sound business decisions). The second adjoining parcel had been in the same family for eight generations and required the consent of three individuals with a combined age of 270. The assemblage also required a buy-out of a long-term lease encumbering one of the properties. Ron then spearheaded the sale of the entire assembled package to a public company for four times what his client had invested. Ron represented a regional homebuilder in a successful work-out and restructuring of $60 million in loans from several institutional lenders, secured by properties in Maryland, Virginia, Georgia and Florida. The lenders were not acting in a consortium, and they each had to be persuaded that it was in their best interest to negotiate and compromise, rather than fight to the death. Ron's client survived the downturn and was in a position to take advantage when the market improved. Ron successfully counseled a client through the acquisition of several pieces of contiguous ground in the East End neighborhood of Washington. More than one potential buyer had passed on the deal because, as one seasoned professional commented, it had "too much hair on it." But Ron knows that in a great challenge lies a great opportunity. Various parts of the site involved just about every problem that can be encountered in a downtown commercial real estate project title defects; "strips, gaps and gores" on the survey; a neighboring tenant who encumbered the future development of the parcel in question with a long-term lease including rights of expansion and renewal extending 30 years into the future; unique zoning restrictions; historic preservation requirements; a required public alley closing; special arts requirements; joint development requirements imposed by law and by private covenants; and shared underground parking facilities and above-ground loading docks. Ron coaxed each piece of the deal across the finish line. His client then sold part of the property to a public company and sold the rest to a non-profit theater company, all at a large profit. Ron represented the seller in a $45 million stock sale involving a large stone quarry operation in West Virginia with additional mineral rights and other assets in suburban Maryland. The purchaser was a multi-national public company. Ron deftly bridged the considerable culture gap between the Appalachian miners and the European businessmen, and by almost continuous negotiations, he hammered out a complex agreement over the Thanksgiving holiday. Since a transaction of this type involves (among other things) real estate, employee contracts, permits, mineral rights, equipment, vehicles and environmental issues, there is usually a period of several months between contract execution and closing. Since Ron's client had a timing issue, the deal was closed over the New Year's holiday in a round-the-clock session. The purchaser was so impressed with Ron that they hired him for their next U.S. acquisition. A construction company built a hotel in downtown Washington, DC for a customer who was unable to pay for it. The company turned to Ron. He negotiated the acquisition of the hotel by his client and the eventual re-sale to a very thinly capitalized purchaser. Four separate layers of debt and equity were required, as well as a creative management agreement, but the sale was completed and Ron's client enjoyed a profit instead of a disastrous loss. | |
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