Luxury Real Estate Goes to the Dogs (and Chinchillas)

Jan. 11, 2017
Luxury Real Estate Goes to the Dogs
(and Chinchillas)
Super high-end pet amenities are here to stay
BY BILL CARYORIGINALLY PUBLISHED ON JANUARY 11, 2017|MANSION
GLOBAL|
MiMA Dog City offers walking, day care, play dates, grooming, boarding and veterinary care for dogs.
COURTESY OF SCOTT-FRANCIS FOR RELATED
Pets have never had it better.
A decade ago, pet owners in tony apartment buildings in the United States made do with
cramped basement “spas” and cleanup rooms equipped with garden hoses, slop buckets
and open drains.
But these days, the Fidos and Fifis lucky enough to live in luxury developments are
frolicking in their own swimming pools, getting high-end haircuts, blowouts and
pawdicures on-site, and enjoying prearranged vet visits, play dates and “yappy hours”
with their best friends in the building.
To lure and keep pet-obsessed tenants and buyers, luxury developers in New York,
Chicago, Boston, Miami and Atlanta increasingly are offering top-notch pet services
along with the expected fitness centers, entertainment lounges, children’s playrooms and
rooftop lap pools.
After all, “I have long observed that dogs are the children of condo and apartment
owners,” said Scott Leventhal, the CEO of the Trillist Companies, a developer in Atlanta,
South Florida and South America.
At its new YOO on the Park rental complex in Atlanta, Trillist has created a 700-squarefoot Pet Respite with two bathing and grooming facilities as well as “doggie treats and
supplies and a mural we’re doing for owners of their four-legged friends,” Mr. Leventhal
said.
Pet spas galore
Related Companies, a developer with offices and major buildings in in San Francisco,
Las Vegas, Chicago, London, Shanghai, Abu Dhabi and Sao Paulo, has created its very
own on-site pet-services amenity called Dog City for some of its luxury buildings. These
include Manhattan’s MiMA, which has a bone-shaped pool for dogs on its outdoor
terrace, as well as Manhattan’s Abington House, The Caledonia and 70 Vestry, and 500
Lake Shore Drive in Chicago.
“Dog City is our own proprietary pet spa,” says Ben Joseph, executive vice president of
Related. “We offer walking, day care, play dates, grooming, boarding and veterinary care
for our dogs.”
Dog City handlers receive ongoing training on all aspects of dog care, including CPR, first
aid, safety and health, and even understanding how dogs are feeling or connecting
nonverbally. Dog City also hosts quarterly “yappy hours” with drinks and treats for pets
and their owners, and the Lake Shore Drive building has an annual Dog Swim in
October, just before closing the pool for the season.
“We feel that it’s just extending our concierge service to our four-legged friends,” Mr.
Joseph said.
And to live in the building, it’s well-behaved dogs only, please. “We interview all of the
dogs before they’re accepted,” he said. The pups must pass a temperament test, be
spayed or neutered (if they’re over a year old) and have current vaccinations.
Pet-services companies providing amenities for four-legged residents
Other developers and leasing agents are teaming up with existing pet-service companies
to help design and staff the pet amenities in their new buildings. The goal is to keep
everything on-site and super-convenient for the pet owners.
Baroo, a high-end pet concierge service founded by Lindsay Hyde, has partnered with
Equity Residential, Avalon, Bozzuto, Greystar and other developers to bring pet services
to premier multi-family buildings in Boston, Chicago and the Washington, D.C., metro
area. They plan to be in New York within the next 12 months, Ms. Hyde said, with
“Seattle and San Francisco on the horizon.”
“We’re teaming up with luxury buildings to meet this incredible demand for pet services
and amenities,” Ms. Hyde said. “The pets get the exercise they need and the owners have
the convenience of everything being on site.”
In Chicago, for example, Baroo services nearly 10,000 multi-family homes across 25
properties, offering a variety of dog walk or run programs, on-site playdates, in-home pet
sitting, grooming, feeding, vet visits, and training and pet therapy with animal
behaviorists. For cats, they provide nail clipping, feedings and playtime as well as daily
litter box scoops and weekly litter box change-outs.
“All of our employees are individually trained and arrive on site in a uniform,” Ms. Hyde
said.
Liz Verhyden, who lives in an Equity building in Washington, D.C., with her fiancée and
an energetic 18-month-old German shepherd named Ranger, loves that individual
attention her pet gets on his walks with Baroo handlers.
That includes daily photos and detailed texts. “Did he pee? Did he poop? Did they refresh
his water? Then I know what to expect when I get home,” Ms. Verhyden said.
Anastasia Kaup, who lives in the luxury Marquee at Block 37 in Chicago with a 9-pound
miniature dachshund named Charlotte, is also a big fan of the Baroo services. “As a
neurotic dog owner, I want to know that Charlotte seems to be in a contemplative mood
today and she’s had half a bowl of water so far,” said Kaup, who also appreciates her
building’s fifth-floor covered dog run where dogs can do their business without going
down to the street.
In winter, Baroo dog walkers look for warm walking areas, and the dogs get booties for
snow and ice and full paw and body wipe-downs before they are returned to their
apartments.
At OneEleven in Chicago, Baroo has a light and bright Pampered Pet Retreat with four
pet rooms, including a recreational Puppy Play Space and a Run & Relief Room, which is
designed with natural elements like AstroTurf and a fire hydrant.
And it’s not just cats and dogs that get the pampering, Ms. Hyde said. They have a
chinchilla that gets pet-sitting services and “we also have some exotic fish and snails we
take care of.”
Meanwhile, at its new Grove at Grand Bay in Miami’s Coconut Grove neighborhood,
developer Terra is partnering with a local company called Dogtown to provide walks, day
care, feeding and vet outreach. Terra also built a swank new 1,500-square-foot spa with
multiple bays, lockers and tons of toys and treats.
Los Angeles introduces pet amenities
In Los Angeles, which has plenty of parks, beaches and other dog-friendly open spaces—
and not very many high-rise apartment buildings—pet amenities are a new thing, said
David Solomon, a luxury real estate agent at The Agency in L.A.
Both of the new condo towers on Ocean Avenue South in Santa Monica–The Waverly
and The Seychelle, by Related California, have pet spas.“They’re the only buildings I
know of in L.A. that have a pet facility.”
“It’s like the nicest bathroom I’ve ever seen, with very expensive tile and state-of-the-art
grooming equipment,” is how he described it.
High-end agent David Kramer, who focuses on Beverly Hills and Bel Air, agrees with Mr.
Solomon’s assessment of the L.A. pet scene.
“I’ve also seen houses where people have turned bedrooms into dog play areas,” Mr.
Kramer said.
Veterinarian concierge services along with grooming for pets
Back in New York, the pet spa at 50 West, a 64-story luxury condominium tower rising in
Manhattan’s Financial District, will have three stations for grooming, including a ramped
shower and dog-washing station.
Time Equities, the developer of 50 West, is looking to partner with a veterinarian
concierge that would make house calls for sick pups and kitties who live in the building,
said Seth Coston, director of condo operations at Time Equities. And they are now
vetting grooming services that would provide the dogs at 50 West with VIP treatments,
such as show cuts and makeovers with organic shampoos and other products.
When it comes to deluxe pet amenity services, Adam Light and Mike Lavora are
seasoned pros, having launched their Throw Me a Bone company in New York in 2008.
They now have 30 employees who provide on-site pet services such as grooming,
walking, training seminars and overnight care for such top-shelf buildings as 15 Central
Park West and Gotham West as well as hotels like the Plaza, Pierre and St. Regis.
These high-end pet amenities are here to stay, Lavora said. “It’s now no longer a
novelty–I think this will become the norm.”
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