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First Mixed-Use Class A Office Space To Break Ground In Miami Beach

The first purpose-built Class A office space will rise in the Sunset Harbour district of Miami Beach after a mixed-use project won approval from the city commission last week.

With an influx of business and wealth migration to South Florida, many are looking at Miami Beach as a place to relocate.

Eighteen Sunset will span more than 60,000 square feet and offer luxury residential, retail and residential accommodations in one building. The five-story building will have two floors of Class-A office space, a residential penthouse with a rooftop, 32,000 square feet of indoor and outdoor space with a deck overlooking Biscayne Bay, and street-level retail and restaurant space.

“We haven’t even begun marketing this and yet we’ve had a lot of interest and demand from various folks for all aspects of the project. I think we’re hitting it just at the right time,” said  Brad Colmer of Deco Capital Group, the development firm behind Eighteen Sunset.

The third and fourth floors will be 32,000 square feet of office space for finance and investment firms, family offices, technology firms, and professionals seeking waterfront views. Deco Capital Group has enlisted a best-in-class team to represent Eighteen Sunset, with Stephen Rutchik of Colliers International leasing the building’s office space, and Sara Wolfe of Koniver Stern marketing the retail offerings.

The penthouse has 15,000 square feet of indoor space and sits one floor above the office space, where an executive can live and work under the same roof. The rooftop deck will have a pool, hot tub and outdoor dining area. The penthouse owner will also have a private garage that has room for at least six cars on the building’s second floor and direct elevator access.

“The Penthouse at Eighteen Sunset will be the pinnacle of luxury and exclusivity in Miami Beach, making it unlike any private residence the city has seen,” said Oren Alexander of Douglas Elliman, which is selling the penthouse. “This is perfect for a buyer drawn to the idea of taking an elevator down to the ground floor and being immersed in a vibrant, walkable neighborhood that offers everything from sidewalk cafes and coffee shops to trendy boutiques and a marina across the street. All of this is available in a building offering beautiful views and the amenities and security features of a world-class building.”

Eighteen Sunset, located between Purdy Ave. and Bay Road, will overlook Biscayne Bay and Maurice Gibb Park, close to dining and retail destinations. The project is the newest development by Deco Capital Group, a Miami-based real estate development and investment firm.

“We have a covered breezeway as well as covered sidewalk space,” Colmer said. “I can’t think of many other buildings in South Florida that are going to have the amount of covered outdoor space that we have and the indoor and outdoor connectivity for ground-level activation. I think that offers a lot of exciting opportunities.”

Colmer says construction is expected to start around September and is scheduled to be completed in 2023.

 

Source:  GlobeSt.

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Prime Development Site In Downtown Miami Hits The Market

As downtown Miami continues to evolve, one of the area’s most strategically located development sites has hit the market. The 37,857-square-foot parcel, currently occupied by a three-story building, is across the street from MiamiCentral’s main entrance.

MiamiCentral is home to the MetroRail, MetroMover, Tri-Rail, MetroBus, the Trolley system and Brightline, a commuter train that connects Miami to Fort Lauderdale, West Palm Beach and soon Orlando. Colliers’ Urban Core Division brokers Mika Mattingly, Executive Managing Director, and Cecilia Estevez, Associate, are marketing the property, located at 49 NW 5th Street. The site, which doesn’t have an asking price, could sell for over $40 million.

“This opportunity is unmatchable,” said Mattingly, who leads Colliers’ Urban Core division. “The buyer could build up to 400,000 square feet and 435 residential units just steps away from a mass-transit hub. Brightline projects 12 million visitors annually will ride the train, giving this property great exposure and a competitive advantage over other residential developments. The developer would be exempt from having to build residential parking spaces due to its proximity to public transit.”

The T6-80 zoning of the property would permit several uses, including residential, hotel, office and retail. The maximum height permitted at the site is 80 stories with unlimited height available through public benefit bonuses.

The development site is home to a building of historic value that could be demolished or designated as a historical landmark to be included on the National Historic Registry. Under such designation, the Citadel building, as it is called, would be protected, and the developer would be able to allocate the air rights to the northern parking lot.

The Citadel was built in 1925 to house the Salvation Army in response to a growing demand for religious and humanitarian services during the land boom of the 1920s. Although only a portion of this historic building survives as the entry portico to an office complex, the existing architectural details reveal the rare Venetian Gothic subtype of the Gothic Revival style, according to the City of Miami.

Today, Citadel is home to CenturyLink, a telecommunications company with over two years remaining on the existing lease. The building is currently producing significant revenue.

“This property is ideal for an efficient and cost-effective redevelopment with the ability to receive supplemental cash flow throughout the planning and approval process,” Estevez said.

The site is located blocks away from the Perez Art Museum, the Frost Museum of Science, Biscayne Bay, Miami Worldcenter, Miami Dade College and several residential and office buildings.

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Miami Beach To Prohibit Hotels In Sunset Harbour?

New proposed zoning regulations for Miami Beach’s Sunset Harbour neighborhood would encourage office development, but shun future hotels, putting a new project by Ronny Finvarb in a perilous position.

The Miami Beach Planning Board on Tuesday recommended the city commission approve the new overlay district for Sunset Harbour, along with an amendment that would allow hotel and residential projects that submitted design review board applications before April 27 to move forward. However, city commissioners could decide to remove the amendment when the proposed regulations come up for first reading on May 12.

The overlay district would only allow primarily office buildings up to 65 feet tall in Sunset Harbour. The legislation provides for retail and restaurant uses in ground-floor spaces and some residential units, as long as a majority of a building is office use.

Directors of the Sunset Harbour Neighborhood Association, which helped craft the language for the new regulations with commissioner Ricky Arriola, spoke against Finvarb’s project, a 36-room boutique hotel that would be built at 1790 Alton Road. His affiliate Sobe 18 LLC recently paid $4 million for the 10,200-square-foot property and has an agreement with Kimpton to also manage the new hotel.

Geoffrey Aronson, an association director, said that even though Finvarb is only proposing 36 rooms, the units are large enough to accommodate up to eight guests, and that it would attract tourists looking to split the cost of hotel stays. He also noted that the association voted 9-1 to oppose the hotel project.

“That is about 230 or so potential guests at any one period of time,” Aronson said. “I would suggest to you that the location of the hotel is not necessarily attractive to Class A tourists. There are going to be five hotels surrounding our area.”

Mike Ruben, another association director, said the group would consider dropping its opposition if Finvarb agreed to reduce room occupancy from eight to six people, which the developer said he would.

“Our concern is that there has been a degradation of tourism in Miami Beach, and we feel higher occupancy rooms invite that type of tourist,” Ruben said. “We would have to meet as a board and then meet with Mr. Finvarb.”

Finvarb, who has developed four other hotels in South Beach, told the planning board that the new hotel he is proposing is not out of scale for Sunset Harbour and that he is not seeking any height increases or variances.

“I took a risk making an investment during the pandemic,” Finvarb said. “Now there is some discussion about taking away our property rights and penalizing us.”

Finvarb did not respond to a request for comment on Wednesday.

Mickey Marrero, the attorney for Sobe 18, said Finvarb, prior to closing on the development site, met with Miami Beach Planning Director Tom Mooney to confirm a hotel would be permitted on the property.

Marrero said Finvarb executed the purchase agreement with a nonrefundable deposit a week before the Feb. 10 city commission meeting, when commissioner Arriola initially floated his proposal to limit commercial development in Sunset Harbour.

A Miami-Dade County deed shows Finvarb closed on the site on April 6.

Marrero claimed Finvarb was blindsided by the proposed restrictions. “At no point in our discussions [with Mooney] did the possibility of prohibiting hotels come about,” Marrero said. “Our client did everything a property owner should do in good faith.”

When 1790 Alton Road was listed for sale, marketing materials said the property was approved for a five-story commercial/retail building with 30 parking spaces and a roughly 8,000-square-foot ground-floor commercial space.

Finvarb also owns the Kimpton Hotel Palomar South Beach at 1750 Alton Road. His portfolio also includes the Residence Inn by Marriott South Beach, Thompson South Beach, and Courtyard by Marriott South Beach.

 

Source:  The Real Deal

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Miami Is A Hotspot For Retail Development

Miami is one of the top markets in the country for retail development, according to a report from Marcus & Millichap. The firm’s second quarter 2021 outlook report forecasts nearly 1.5 million square feet of retail space will deliver into the market this year, the highest level since 2017.

Mall redevelopment and mixed-use projects are driving the development activity, and much of it wrapped up in three projects. One of the largest projects in the market is the Miami Worldcenter, a mixed-use development with residential hospitality and 300,000 square feet of retail space. In Miami Beach, Bal Harbour Shops is adding 350,000 square feet, which is scheduled for completion in 2023. Finally, the Aventura Mall is in the middle of a 215,000-square-foot expansion, which is expected to hit the market later this year.

Last year, the pandemic hampered retail development. According to the report, retail deliveries were half of what they were for the previous five-year average and the lowest level in a calendar year in more than a decade. Still, retail projects continued to come to market. Miami Beach added nearly 100,000 square feet of space, and South Dade added more than 71,000 square feet of space. This year, developers will make up for the lost time, delivering 1 million square feet more year-over-year.

Developers are clearly bullish on the Miami retail sector, but the market has certainly seen an impact from the pandemic. This year, the report expects vacancy rate to climb 80 basis points to 5.2%, the highest rate since 2010. The slowed leasing activity along with increased retail development will also drag asking rents down 1.3% this year to $31.83 per square foot. In 2020, the vacancy rate was unchanged, and asking rents fell 3.1%.

Miami’s downtown area is experiencing a renaissance that his helping to fuel development activity and growth. The market is attracting out-of-state investment. Earlier this year, New York-based developer Time Century Holdings 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.

 

Source:  GlobeSt.

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Lissette Calderon Delivers First Multifamily Project In Allapattah

Developer Lissette Calderon has completed the first of her three apartment projects in Miami’s Allapattah neighborhood.

Nearly two and a half years after buying the land, Calderon’s Neology Life Development Group received a temporary certificate of occupancy for the 192-unit No. 17 Residences, a 13-story building at 1569 Northwest 17th Avenue.

Calderon said it’s “the perfect time” to build in Allapattah, which she said is Miami’s “last authentic urban core neighborhood.” The area has attracted major real estate players, including the Related Group’s Jorge Pérez and 1111 Lincoln Road developer Robert Wennett.

Pre-leasing, including virtual tours, launched earlier this year. Calderon said monthly rents start at about $1,200 for a studio apartment. The building offers “attainable luxury” that was lacking in Allapattah, she added. Studios start at 740 square feet, and one-bedroom apartments start at 600 square feet. Units go up to 1,125 square feet for a three-bedroom, according to the development’s website.

The building is west of the Miami Health District and northeast of her Pier 19 Residences & Marina apartment building on the Miami River. It’s south of the Rubell Museum and the popular Hometown Barbecue restaurant.

Amenities include an 8,000-square-foot park for residents, which was added during the pandemic due to increased demand for outdoor space, a pool deck with cabanas, rooftop garden, fitness center, co-working spaces, and package rooms.

Calderon said she plans to break ground on her next two projects, 16 Allapattah and 14 Allapattah, this summer, and deliver those buildings about 16 months from groundbreaking. 16 Allapattah is planned as a 323-unit rental building with 9,000 square feet of office space and ground-floor retail, and 14 Allapattah, a two-tower project on an Opportunity Zone site, is expected to have 237 apartments and ground-floor retail.

Wennett, who tapped Bjarke Ingels to design his major mixed-use development nearby, secured approval from the Miami City Commission about two years ago for his Miami Produce Center special area plan. The planned 1.4 million-square-foot development could have as many as 2,400 co-living units and 637 traditional residential units, nearly 231,000 square feet of office space, 129,000 square feet of retail space, about 22,000 square feet for “educational uses,” as well as more than 1,000 parking spaces.

Calderon said she has been welcomed by the community in Allapattah, and that she is not displacing residents.

“I go into neighborhoods where I’m wanted,” she said, noting that her firm purchased existing warehouses and shuttered buildings.

 

 

Source:  The Real Deal

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Ironstate Pays $16M For Wynwood Site, Marking First Property In Miami

Ironstate Development Group purchased a property in Wynwood for $15.6 million, marking its first South Florida site.

The Hoboken, New Jersey-based development firm, led by brothers David and Michael Barry, acquired the Art by God assemblage at 60 Northeast 27th Street. The buyer is 26-60 NE 27th Street LLC, according to brokers involved in the deal.

Ironstate’s portfolio includes properties in New Jersey and New York, and the company has been considered a key player in Jersey City’s evolution. It is unclear what the firm’s plans are for the Wynwood site.

Art by God, led by Gene Harris and his family, was in contract to sell the land at 26 Northeast 27th Street, 25 Northeast 26th Street, and 61 Northeast 26th Street since October 2019. The previous buyer, Miami Beach-based Lucky Shepherd, assigned the contract to Ironstate, which acquired the property on Wednesday, according to the brokers.

Lucky Shepherd, led by Christine Menedis and Naveen Trehan, had planned to build a 150-key hotel with 48 rental apartments.

Andy Charry of Metro 1 represented the seller, while Colliers International South Florida brokers Mika Mattingly and Cecilia Estevez represented Lucky Shepherd.

Mattingly called it a “prime example of a Covid-ravished deal” that emerged “triumphantly.” Charry said the pandemic threw a monkey wrench through the original timeline. The closing was initially scheduled for early 2020.

“They had a great property located on a great street, and it became even better because of the proposed Brightline station,” Charry said, referring to the sellers. The family owns the gift shop that offers minerals, fossils and other natural resources.

Developers including the Related Group, Property Markets Group, Kushner Companies, East End Capital and others have flocked to Wynwood in recent years, developing mixed-use, multifamily projects.

 

Source:  The Real Deal

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The Collective Unveils Plans For ‘Co-Living’ Building In Wynwood

The Collective has unveiled plans for its first co-living project in South Florida within a mixed-use building in Miami’s Wynwood Art District.

The city’s Wynwood Design Review Committee will consider the project at 2825 N.W. Second Ave. during its April 14 meeting. The 41,750-square-foot lot is owned by Wynwood Gateway II LLC, an affiliate of the Collective, a co-living operator based in New York, London and Berlin. The project would replace an auto showroom currently on the site.

The Collective first announced its intention to develop the site in 2019, but it hadn’t put forth a specific description of the project until now.

The building would total 351,443 square feet, with 12 stories along 29th Street and eight stories on 28th Street. It would have 108 apartments, 70 hotel rooms, 9,508 square feet of commercial space, and 163 below-grade parking spaces. As for the units, the hotel rooms range from 330 to 1,049 square feet. The apartments would range from 1,083 square feet with four bedrooms to 2,395 square feet with six bedrooms.

 

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Brickell Dev Site Hits Market, Broker Expects To Fetch More Than $25M

A developable assemblage in Miami’s Brickell neighborhood hit the market, with zoning that allows for two 48-story towers. The listing broker said he expects it to sell for more than $25 million.

Owner Progesti Corp. listed the 1.3 acres at 180 Southwest Ninth Street, 244 Southwest Ninth Street, and 901 Southwest Third Avenue. Progesti, whose president is Jose Nunez, bought the properties, which currently house two small multifamily buildings, in 1999 for $2.85 million, a deed shows.

ColliersVirgilio Fernandez and Gerard Yetming are lead brokers on the listing.

Up to 531,258 square feet can be built on the two parcels, with a mix of hotel, condominiums, office and retail. The parcels are walking distance from each other, but aren’t contiguous.

The property at 901 Southwest Third Avenue and 244 Southwest Ninth Street has a three-story, 68-unit multifamily building that was constructed in 1962, according to property records. The other, at 180 Southwest Ninth Street, has a three-story, 24-unit multifamily building constructed in 1964.

Fernandez said he has seen interest so far for the assemblage, particularly from New York investors. He said he expects the sale price to far exceed $25 million.

The listing comes on the heels of another swath of land hitting the market. A Biscayne development site spanning 3.2 acres at 11240 Biscayne Boulevard near North Miami has an asking price of $10.5 million.

 

Source:  The Real Deal

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Rilea Group Taps Crowdfunding Platform RealtyMogul For Project In Wynwood

Rilea Group launched a crowdfunding effort to capitalize a mixed-use project near the Wynwood Art District neighborhood of Miami.

The Miami-based developer has qualified its Mohawk at Wynwood project for the crowdfunding platform run by RealtyMogul. RealtyMogul has more than 200,000 qualified investors.

The developer has 1.5 acres at 56 N.E. 29th St. under contract. The property is currently owned by 29th Street Warehouses LLC and has an old warehouse.

Rilea Group President Diego Ojeda said the campaign, which launched April 5, aims to raise $10 million through crowdfunding towards the $103 million project. There will probably be a second round of crowdfunding, and it would be combined with equity from high-net-worth investors and debt.

 

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Miami Approves New Zoning For Neighborhood Near Wynwood

A neighborhood on the north side of Wynwood has been rezoned, with the hopes of spurring more investment and redevelopment in the area.

The City Commission unanimously approved the Wynwood Norte rezoning plan on March 25. The plan covers 140 acres west of Midtown Miami and north of Wynwood. The largest pocket of development would be on Northwest 36th Street, the north side of Northwest 29th Street and North Miami Avenue. The new zoning would allow up to eight stories of mixed-use development, or five stories for purely residential.

With more flexible parking requirements under the new zoning, it would be easier to build two- and three-story apartment buildings and small retail spaces. A fourth story could be added for projects with 20% affordable housing.

The rezoning process was largely driven by residents of the neighborhood, who advocated for the creation of the Wynwood Norte Neighborhood Revitalization District with this legislation. While Miami’s overall population has grown in recent years, the population in Wynwood Norte has fallen by nearly 50% since 1985. There are many vacant lots, so the hope is the new zoning will encourage more building to welcome new residents and businesses.

 

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