You know it’s a bad week when a $43 million Chicago foreclosure lawsuit is the least of your problems.
That’s exactly the position New York-based commercial real estate giant 601W Companies finds itself in, though.
Seattle-based Washington Capital filed a $42.6 million foreclosure lawsuit against the landlord’s Tesla-leased service center at 717 South Desplaines Street, near the southwest corner of Chicago’s Loop, compounding distress across the owner’s portfolio, court records show.
Washington Capital, acting as administrative agent for affiliated lender entities MIF IL Desplaines LLC and REEF IL Desplaines LLC, filed the complaint in Cook County Circuit Court on Tuesday. The lawsuit names 601W-affiliated entities Jefferson Polk LLC, Jefferson Polk 2 LLC, and Jefferson Polk 3 LLC as defendants.
The lender alleges the borrowers defaulted on a $42 million commercial loan when it reached its maturity date on May 1. The loan originated in July 2023, and the parties executed four extension agreements before the final maturity date. The lender issued a notice of maturity default on June 10.
As of May 29, the outstanding debt totals $42.6 million, which includes $42 million in principal and $665,000 in accrued default interest. Interest continues to accrue at a per diem rate of $16,333. Washington Capital seeks a judgment of foreclosure, the sale of the property and the appointment of a receiver. The lender isn’t seeking a personal deficiency judgment.
601W executive Mark Karasick, who signed the loan as guarantor, didn’t return requests for comment. Neither did Washington Capital executives nor the firm’s attorney in the foreclosure suit.
A 601W venture purchased the 4.5-acre site from data center firm Ascent for $34 million in 2018, when it previously held a vacant warehouse. A data center development plan eyed by Ascent never came to fruition. At the time, 601W was trying to swallow up land near its huge Old Post Office redevelopment, which is a couple blocks away from the Desplaines site.
Developer Sterling Bay previously purchased the Desplaines site for $23.5 million in 2012.
Washington Capital’s 2023 loan provided financing for construction costs tied to the Tesla lease. Tesla rented about 116,000 square feet to convert the existing industrial building into a service and maintenance facility as well as a showroom. The loan agreement allocated funds for a $1.2 million tenant improvement allowance and an approved project budget of $9.3 million set to be funded by 601W, with Tesla set to pick up the remaining costs of its project, according to documents filed in the lawsuit.











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