No Comments

Blackstone Doubles Down On Miami With $230 Million Purchase Of 2 Office Buildings

Two office towers sold for $230 million in Downtown Miami to New York private equity firm Blackstone, signaling the firm’s ongoing belief in the potential of Miami’s business environment.

The acquisition of 2 and 3 Miami Central comes just months after Blackstone said it would be opening a tech office at 2 Miami Central totaling 41,000 square feet. Although the two announcements are not directly related — Friday’s acquisition is by funds managed by Blackstone Real Estate, a separate group from Blackstone’s tech unit — they are driven by the same confidence in Miami’s future.

Nadeem Meghji, Blackstone’s Head of Real Estate Americas, said the acquisition, from previous owner Shorenstein Properties LLC, was motivated by the momentum Miami has seen throughout 2020 and into 2021 from corporate relocations and expansions, as well as strong demographic trends, a business friendly environment and a large pool of talent — factors that predate the pandemic.

The buildings — 2 Miami Central at 700 NW First Ave., and 3 Miami Central at 161 NW Sixth St. — total 320,000 square feet. The buildings are 98% occupied with remaining lease terms of more than eight years on average, Blackstone said. Tenants include Carlton Fields, Ernst & Young, ViacomCBS, and New Fortress Energy, a clean energy solutions group formed in 2014 by Wes Edens.

 

Source:  Miami Herald

No Comments

Report: Miami Multifamily Holds Steady

As Miami continues to navigate the health crisis and ensuing economic hardship, the metro became an example of resilience in the face of adversity, according to a study by the Atlantic Council’s Adrienne Arsht-Rockefeller Foundation Resilience Center.

The report commended Miami’s efforts to repurpose existing strategies—already tested against coastal vulnerabilities, disease outbreaks and economic difficulties. Despite the challenges, Miami real estate has endured, with multifamily rents up 0.4 percent to $1,704 on a trailing three-month basis as of December, above the $1,462 U.S. average.

Despite a slow pace, employers added some 24,400 jobs in the metro over the three months ending in November. But as a region heavily reliant on tourism, Miami has felt the full weight of job losses in the leisure and hospitality sector, which contracted by 19 percent and shed 63,300 position in the 12 months ending in November. On a positive note, following the $900 billion federal relief package passed in late December, many Floridians had already started receiving the extra $300 payments for the week ending Jan. 2.

Metro Miami had 35,969 units under construction as of December, with 87 percent of those aimed at high-income earners. The bulk of the pipeline (71 percent) is expected to come online through this year. More than $2.2 billion in assets traded in 2020, representing a 19 percent decline from 2019.

 

Source:  MHN

No Comments

Biscayne Boulevard Dev Site Hits Market For $11M

A multifamily and commercial development site along Biscayne Boulevard near North Miami hit the market for $10.5 million.

Owner Alex Silberman purchased the 3.2 acres of land at 11240 Biscayne Boulevard in August 2012 for $2.9 million from Biscayne 114 Center of New York, property records show.

The asking price shows a significant uptick in valuations since then.

Colliers’ Gerard Yetming, Julian Zuniga and Mitash Kripalani listed the land for sale on behalf of Silberman.

The Biscayne Boulevard site has two different zonings, as 2.17 acres is designated for 10 to 21 multifamily units per acre, and the remaining 1.06 acres is designated for a commercial use such as retail, according to a press release.

Yetming said in the release that the site is centrally located and comes at a time when the multifamily market is doing well.

 

Source:  The Real Deal

No Comments

Medical Office Buildings Continue To Gain Investor Interest

Medical office properties are rapidly becoming some of the most prized assets in real estate. They have survived the global crisis caused by the spread of the coronavirus with strong rents, on average, and very little vacant space.

“A well-functioning medical office is going to trade as aggressively as the best downtown office building,” says Chris Bodnar vice chairman and co-Head of healthcare and life sciences capital markets for CBRE, working in the firm’s Denver offices.

Eager buyers spent $3.8 billion on medical office buildings in the fourth quarter of 2020. That helped make up for deals that did not close in the spring and summer because of the pandemic. It brought the amount that investors spent in 2020 to a total of $10.6 billion, according to Real Capital Analytics.

That’s just 3 percent less than investors spend in 2019—despite that chaos caused by the coronavirus. Just to compare, investors spent 41.8 percent less in 2021 to buy conventional office properties compared to 2020.

At the same time, price rose compared to the income produced by medical offices. Average cap rates for medical office have compressed about 20 basis points year-over-year and the average price per square foot increased by 5.5 percent over the same period, according to Real Capital Analytics.

“The amount of capital available for real estate—and medical office properties in particular—has just swelled,” says Mindy Berman, senior managing director and healthcare group leader for JLL, working in the firm’s Boston offices. “The pandemic has proved the investment case again for medical office properties.”

The amount of space at medical office properties that is occupied by tenants has stayed between 91.5 percent and 92.5 percent on average for more than a decade, according to JLL’s Berman.

“The occupancy rate has barely moved through the Global Financial Crisis and the pandemic,” she says. “And medical office rents are predictable. They barely budge, compared to conventional office rents in Manhattan that seesaw.”

It turns out that medical offices need space to see patients—even in a pandemic in which people with existing health needs were especially vulnerable to the disease.  Many doctor’s offices shut their doors early in the pandemic—only to reopen for business later in 2020.

“It’s about the continued need for physical space and the need for patients to continue to be seen,” says CBRE’s Bodnar. “It’s not like retail space. You can decide to stay home from a movie or going out to dinner, but it is very difficult to defer spine surgery or cardiac surgery.”

The tenants at medical offices properties have also become even more dependable as health provided have merged and acquired each other.

“There are fewer health systems and bigger health systems—which is credit positive,” says Berman.

The buyers interested in medical office buildings include a growing number of private investment funds, investment advisors and pension funds. They join the specialized healthcare REITs that have historically been the biggest aggregators of medical office properties.

Most recently, healthcare REITs have announced institutional joint ventures—several have recapitalized their holdings with pension funds, sovereign wealth funds and foreign capital.

“There is an inordinate amount of capital chasing medical office buildings,” says Berman. “We could have $20 billion in transactions in a year if we had the supply of product available for sale.”

 

Source:  Wealth Management

No Comments

East End Capital Sells Wynwood Building For $12M, Resolves Foreclosure

An affiliate of East End Capital sold a commercial building in Miami’s Wynwood Arts District for $11.8 million, resolving a foreclosure lawsuit in the process.

EERC 310 Owner LLC, led by Jonathan Yormak and David Peretz of New York-based East End Capital, sold the 19,891-square-foot building at 310 and 318 N.W. 25th St. to 310 NW 25 SPE LLC, managed by Chaim Cahane of Miami Beach-based Forte Capital Management and Jonathan Krasner. The buyers assumed the seller’s $11 million mortgage with FS Rialto 2019-FL1 Holder LLC, an affiliate of Rialto Capital Management.

 

Click here to read this story in its entirety.

 

No Comments

Miami 21’s Special Area Plans Have Created Special Problems

In a recent article, Neisen Kasdin, managing partner of Akerman LLP’s Miami office, argued that the opposition to special area plans (SAPs) was “largely driven by community activists who oppose change because they like things the way they are and want to preserve their positions of power in the community. They generate opposition by preying upon people’s fear of progress, often without regard to the true long-term interests of the community.”

Nothing could be further from the truth—the opposition to SAPs has been galvanized across a broad spectrum of opponents who have watched this planning tool turned against our most vulnerable communities by developers. That outrage resulted in the City of Miami Planning Zoning & Appeals Board voting unanimously last year to recommend to city commissioners that SAPs be abolished from the Miami 21 zoning code.

SAPs Are Government Up-Zoning

A “special area plan” is a zoning process in Miami 21 that allows a developer that assembles over nine acres of land to apply for the right to build at much greater height and density than would otherwise be allowed. If that application is approved after going before the PZAB for its recommendation and then obtaining final approval from the city commission, the developer then has greater flexibility (e.g., the Magic City SAP received exemption from certain liquor sales limitations) as well as relief from the Code’s otherwise strict rules regarding “succession.”

Miami 21 is a “form based” code designed for “successional growth.” For example, the T-3 transect governs single family and duplex residences of maximum two stories, and T-4 governs multifamily apartments of three stories maximum. Any up-zonings of more than one transect are generally not allowed. SAPs are a planned exception to successional growth, intended to incentivize developers to cooperate with the city planning staff to create a better development than the developer might otherwise build. Kasdin is correct that this process has worked well in some high density places, such as Brickell City Centre. But not all, and there’s the rub—“one size does not fit all.”

At their root, the projects Kasdin is promoting involve governmental up-zoning, with lobbyists approaching the city of Miami on behalf of developers seeking permission to build more than they are otherwise legally allowed to build.

This type of government led development is neither organic nor the result of natural market forces. Rather, market forces are being manipulated to incentivize acquisition of real property in poorer neighborhoods where private investment has been largely absent, except by slumlords, often for decades.

In theory, this process involves the city agreeing to allow more density and height in exchange for the developer making available to residents certain benefits, such as affordable housing, workforce preferences and living wages. But the “community benefits” are only as good as the negotiating process, and it is often the case that the neighborhood doesn’t get what it deserves in a process controlled by connected people in “special deals for special people” handed out by compromised politicians who don’t have the public interest at heart.

 

Click here to read this story in its entirety.

 

No Comments

CRE Price Growth Expands in January

In January, US commercial real estate price growth hit levels not seen since before COVID-19, according to the latest Real Capital Analytics CPPI: US summary report.

Overall, the US National All-Property Index rose 6.9% from a year ago and 1.2% from December.

While prices continued to accelerate in January, deal volume slumped after a record-breaking December 2020.

While there are still questions about how much of the workforce returns, office prices rebounded 3.3% year-over-year in January. Suburban offices drove those gains. Last August, office prices were posting no annual growth.

Industrial, which has been the hottest sector through the pandemic, posted 8.3% annual growth, giving it the top spot among all the property types. Industrial prices are slightly below what it posted in 2019.

Gains in multifamily stayed near the 7% they have been hovering near over the last several months, hitting 6.8% in January. They are well below the highs posted in 2018.

The struggling retail sector again saw price growth fall 1.8% year over year. Retail trailed the other sectors before the pandemic, posted less than 5% growth.

Overall, US commercial real estate transaction volume was down 58% in January, according to RCA. In December, transaction volumes increased 8% year-over-year. January experienced similar declines to the second and third quarters of 2020, which directly followed the onset of the pandemic.

Transaction volumes in January fell across property types at double-digit rates, except for senior housing. This was a pivot from December transactions when apartment and industrial sales took off, driving most activity. Even office properties had a good month with the highest transaction volumes since 2019. It should be noted that it is typical to see an end-of-year rush and RCA adds that the activity was likely compounded by investors closing delayed deals from earlier in the year.

 

Source:  GlobeSt.

No Comments

Downtown Miami Revitalization Takes Flight

The revitalization of Downtown Miami is continuing to evolve.

New York-based developer Time Century Holdings has entered the Miami market to transform the Metro Mall into a luxury jewelry center. The developer secured a $23.6 million construction loan for the $50 million project through City National Bank of Florida.

Time Century Holdings is working with architect Kobi Karp on the project to create a destination for “luxury jewelry retailers, wholesalers, consumers and watch enthusiasts.” Phase one includes a basement, ground, mezzanine and second floors, while the second phase—set to start later this year—will include the development of four stories of office space. The wholesale retail portion of the project is already 60% leased by jewelers from Europe, South America and Asia. The leasing helped to secure the loan, which Yair Levy of Time Century called a “true endorsement” of the project and of Downtown Miami.

The jewelry center itself will take up four floors with a three-story atrium. There are retail spaces ranging from 500 to 2,000 square feet with rental rates ranging from $65 to $150 per square foot.

The jewelry center is just one of several ongoing projects transforming Downtown Miami and big real estate players are getting involved.

 

Source:  GlobeSt.

No Comments

Miami Beach Adds 17th Street Garage To Class A Office Request For Proposal

Following a large response from developers interested in building Class A office space on three city-owned parking lots north of Lincoln Road, Miami Beach Commissioners this week decided to add one more option to a formal Request for Proposals (RFP) process – the 17th Street garage across from City Hall.

Eighteen developers including Design District developer Craig Robins’ Dacra, Michael Comras’ The Comras Company jointly with David Martin’s Terra, and Integra partnering with Barry Sternlicht’s Starwood Capital, responded to the City’s Request for Letters of Interest (RFLI) to build Class A office space on the three surface parking lots. It’s part of an effort to diversify a tourism-dependent economy hit hard in recent years by hurricanes, Zika, and, more recently, COVID.

Adding the aging garage structure to an RFP would allow the City to “have someone else pay for the rebuilding of that garage,” said Commissioner Ricky Arriola who raised the idea after Miami Beach Planning Director Tom Mooney suggested it. It also would open the door to a “more elegant” structure that could address concerns about a need for more height. “If we could smooth [the space] out over a greater area, we might avoid having the height issues that I think is going to be of concern to our residents,” he added.

Commissioner David Richardson said, “It’s an interesting idea and I suppose it wouldn’t hurt for us to hear solicitations, but I’m not of the belief at this point that we should surrender that piece of land right now.”

Calling it “a gateway property” leading from 17th Street to Lincoln Road, Richardson said, “There have been many discussions over the years about ways to open up the funnel” from the Miami Beach Convention Center to Lincoln Road. “I do agree the parking structure is coming to the end of its useful life” but he expressed concerns about the amount of parking that will be needed there in light of the request by the developers of the planned Convention Center Hotel to eliminate parking and reduce the hotel’s size as a way of increasing the likelihood of getting financing.

“Never hurts to listen but I would say it’s a pretty high bar for me to let that property leave government hands,” Richardson said.

Mayor Dan Gelber addressed “the funnel” to Lincoln Road. “It’s almost like people don’t walk that way sometimes because it feels like there’s a wall there,” he said. “We ought to be looking at ways to make that more of a gateway,” the opposite of what it is now, he said, which is “almost like a barrier.”

“Obviously, there’s an appetite for [Class A office space],” Gelber said, but added, “I’m not looking for Class A office buildings because I think it’s better to have… The goal is to diversify your economy so that you have more than just [tourism]” to rely on.

“We love our hospitality industry, but it’s not the most resilient industry,” he said. In addition to the potential to attract “knowledge-based industries, information-based industries,” Gelber said, “If we could have better office space here, you really do get people out of their cars and off the causeway… We have a huge number of residents who go back and forth” between Miami and Miami Beach.

“We don’t’ have to commit to it, let’s just see,” Gelber said.

Interim City Manager Raul Aguila told Commissioners, “This is really the time that this city has to consider some really bold planning ideas… This garage is a relic and we’ve been trying to reprogram Lincoln Lane for the longest time.” Developing the garage site would “activate that area,” he said.

Adding it to an RFP would not be binding, Aguila emphasized, but “since there’s been so much interest from high-profile developers, I think it’s just a terrific idea to authorize us to add the 17th Street garage as a developer’s option.”

He reminded them the RFP has to come back to the Commission for approval and any proposals would be further vetted by the Commission.

“I think it’s a cool idea,” Commissioner Michael Góngora said, while noting he wasn’t sure he could support it given the request for reduced parking for the Convention Center Hotel. He agreed the garage “is kind of a big block of cement.”

“From an aesthetic perspective,” he said, allowing a private developer to “make it more beautiful” is appealing.

Aguila noted the City could require as part of the RFP that a developer replace the parking. “This is to give you all an option to look at this as a holistic site.”

Both Arriola and Góngora expressed concerns about the potential of four active construction sites along Lincoln Road at one time. “Sometimes these progressive ideas are difficult to oversee and administer in real life,” Góngora said.

“If you don’t like it, you don’t have to approve it,” Aguila responded, “but I’d like to put something before you to consider.”

Commissioner Mark Samuelian who has made economic diversification one of his priorites said, “Possibilities and options are right up my alley so I will support this tonight.”

“Offices often can be a less intensive use, 9 to 5 office [hours] versus a hotel,” he said. “My gut says I’d probably lean toward the office being a little more community friendly.” Once again, he urged the City to “engage the community early and often” as long-term leases on the properties under consideration would require voter approval.

Richardson said, “What that particular area is begging for is a gateway to Lincoln Road” but, to do that, he said, “It seems clear to me you’ve got to chop off a northeast corner of the building [to] open it up.” He suggested asking developers to take into consideration the desire “to eliminate the funnel” when submitting proposals.

“This is just giving a bigger canvas for developers to come to us with a proposal,” Arriola said. “We would still own the land.”

Reiterating the Commission would have final say over the RFP that is developed and voters have the ultimate word on long-term leases, Arriola said adding the 17th Street garage is “giving ourselves a lot more flexibility [taking] an aging garage that some future Commission is going to have to deal with and get the private sector to pay for it.”

“It is a brutalist structure and it divides the Convention Center from Lincoln Road,” Arriola said. “Any design should make it a holistic integration, so I think it’s a smart move by us.”

 

Source:  RE Miami Beach

No Comments

City Gives Easy Online Access To Miami Comprehensive Neighborhood Plan

This week, the City of Miami added the Miami Comprehensive Neighborhood Plan (MCNP) onto the publicly-available Gridics Municipal Zoning Platform, CodeHUB. The MCNP is a key zoning document that creates the policy framework that guides all future public and private development decisions in the City of Miami to ensure the City meets the needs of existing and future residents, visitors and businesses, while preserving the character and quality of its communities.

The incorporation of the MCNP into CodeHUB will help to drive smarter regional planning decisions for the future by integrating future land use, environmental, and infrastructure requirements into an interactive, parcel level, 3D map. This is the first time that the MCNP has been made available to the public in such an interactive and accessible tool, allowing the public to be actively involved in understanding the direction of their community, including how the infrastructure will change to support future growth. The most updated version of the MCNP and Future Land Use Map (FLUM) will be made available 24/7 through this new platform.

This week’s online publication of the MCNP follows the successful 2018 launch of the Miami 21 Zoning Code on the Gridics platform, providing citizens an up-to-date and fully digitized version of Miami 21, plus parcel-specific lookup tools for citizens to get zoning property record data for their property or parcel.

 

Source:  MiamiGov.com

© 2024 FIP Commercial. All rights reserved. | Site Designed by CRE-sources, Inc.