See which spaces are actively tracked, with full contact and ownership data.
Request Access βWhat you're looking at
Every red pin on this map is a retail business that has closed somewhere in New York City. The data behind it β business type, neighborhood, close date β is pulled from Station CRM's live database, which tracks retail closings across the five boroughs as they happen.
The map is intentionally limited. It shows that a space became available, not which space. The address, the landlord's name, the ownership history, the listing status β that's what Station CRM surfaces for brokers who need to act on it.
Why retail closings matter to NYC brokers
A retail closing is the starting gun for a leasing opportunity. The moment a tenant vacates, a landlord has a problem: empty space, no income, and a decision to make about what comes next. The broker who reaches them in the first 48 hours is in a different conversation than the one who calls two weeks later.
Most brokers find out about closings the same way everyone else does β they walk by, they hear from a contact, they read about it. That's too slow. Station CRM surfaces closings from press coverage within 24β48 hours of publication, cross-referenced with ACRIS ownership data, so you can call the right person the same day.
What Station CRM adds to each closing
- Landlord name and entity from ACRIS records
- ACRIS deed history β when the building last sold and for how much
- Owner contact research β phone, email, LinkedIn where available
- Listing status β whether the space is already on-market with a broker
- Enriched property details β SF, floors, storefront type
- Outreach tracking β so your team knows who's already been contacted
Neighborhoods covered
- SoHo, NoHo, Nolita, Tribeca
- Williamsburg, Greenpoint, DUMBO
- Upper East Side, Upper West Side
- Flatiron, Chelsea, Meatpacking
- Midtown, Hell's Kitchen, Murray Hill
- Lower East Side, East Village, West Village
- Park Slope, Carroll Gardens, Cobble Hill
The timing advantage
Speed is everything in retail leasing origination. A landlord who just lost a tenant isn't thinking about brokers yet β they're thinking about their mortgage payment and what kind of tenant fits the space. The broker who shows up at that moment, with a specific tenant in mind, doesn't need a pitch. The conversation starts from a different place entirely.
The map shows density and recency. You can see where closings are clustering β whether there's a wave in a particular corridor, which neighborhoods are turning over fastest in a given quarter. That's useful context for any broker trying to understand where the active market actually is, separate from where deals are being announced.
See the full picture
The map shows the pins. Station CRM shows the landlord name, contact info, ownership history, and a structured lead record you can track through outreach. Request a demo to see how it works for a specific corridor you cover.
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