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Miami Beach Readies Four City-Owned Sites For Sale

The City of Miami Beach is preparing four city-owned properties for their potential sale to finance various unfunded capital improvement projects.

Two city-owned vacant lots have been removed from the list that included five properties and the North Shore Branch Library, located at 7505 Collins Ave., that could be sold by the city.

An 8,700-square-foot lot at 8100 Hawthorne Ave., which is valued at about $984,000, and a 31,808-square-foot lot on Sunset Drive, which could be worth $5.7 million, are now out of the list of properties to be potentially sold by real estate company CBRE Group.

The library, which is estimated to be valued at $75 million, received approval for a request for proposals and the city is waiting to issue it based on community engagement sessions held by city staff, according to the city’s spokesperson and director of communications.

The other properties are expected to have their offers submitted to the city by CBRE this month, the spokesperson said. These properties include a 15,313-square-foot lot at 226 87th Terrace valued at $4.6 million; a 12,105-square-foot lot on Pine Tree Drive valued at $3.4 million; and a 2,757-square-foot lot on Commerce Street, which could be worth $1.5 million.

Funds from the sales of these properties were considered to fund capital projects such as the 72nd Street Community Complex project in North Miami Beach, a project that includes a 7,500-square-foot library, a 50-meter competition pool and a 25-meter multi-purpose pool, among other amenities, and which had a budget shortfall of $16.1 million, according to the latest estimate.

At a city commission meeting, Jan. 20, Commissioner David Richardson laid out a plan to fund the community complex using allocations from other overfunded projects, revenue from the Seventh Street Parking Garage, funds from resort taxes and other avenues.

Nonetheless, other unfunded city projects need allocations, which a combined $9.5 million from these city-owned properties could help fund.

The city has already received interest from developers and representatives of the private sector and will review their offers, presented by CBRE, to discuss it with the city commission after planning analysis required for the sale of public property, according to the spokesperson.

“The potential funding of other capital projects,” the city spokesperson said, “will be addressed during our budget process this summer.”

 

Source:  Miami Today

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Offices On The Beach: Billionaires Bankroll Class A Office Space Near Their Homes

Since the beginning of the 20th century, when developers cleared away vegetation and alligators from a sandbar just off the coast of Miami, Miami Beach has been a retreat for the wealthy wishing to escape cold winters.

But now the wealthy don’t want to just play in Miami Beach; they want to work there, too. More wealthy executives, including those who arrived during the Covid-19 pandemic, are bankrolling buildings and leasing office space close to their sprawling mansions and luxury condominiums. It’s a burgeoning trend that could help change the perception of Miami Beach as a place just for fun and sun.

The city is poised to welcome its first top-of-the-line Class A office projects in years as officials are eager to fast-track office development to diversify the municipality’s economy beyond hospitality.

Stephen Rutchik, executive managing director of office services at Colliers, said the demand for Class A office space is driven by principal decision-makers and their employees who live in Miami Beach and want to avoid commuting on South Florida’s congested roads.

“Living and having an office on Miami Beach is a quality-of-life decision,” he said.

There are 4.9 million square feet of office space in greater Miami Beach – which includes Surfside, Bal Harbour, Bay Harbor Islands and Sunny Isles Beach – according to Colliers’ 2021 fourth quarter office market report. However, only 1.3 million square feet of that are the Class A spaces sought by companies hoping to encourage remote workers to spend more time in the office.

By comparison, downtown Miami has 5.1 million square feet of Class A space available, and the Brickell Financial District has 4.8 million square feet, the Colliers report stated.

Lyle Stern, co-founder of Miami Beach-based commercial brokerage Koniver Stern Group, said billionaires, technology and investment companies have been opening offices in Miami Beach for years, but that pace has quickened during the pandemic. However, hardly any Class A office space has been built since the early 2000s, he said.

“The vast majority of [wealthy] folks who moved down here during the pandemic want an office here; they just cannot find office space,” Stern said. “We are not just talking about someone sitting at home with a computer, but someone who has six, seven, eight, nine, 10 analysts working for him, as well.”

With vacancies at a considerable low in the city, some billionaires have sought to build offices of their own.

Barry Sternlicht, president and CEO of Starwood Capital Group, an investment firm overseeing $100 billion in assets, moved his company’s headquarters out of Lincoln Place at 1601 Washington Ave. after completing a new 144,430-square-foot building at 2340 Collins Ave. And energy investor and Miami Beach resident Wayne Boich is constructing a 15,997-square-foot office at 1910 Alton Road that will include a penthouse for him on the fifth floor.

Colliers’ Rutchik said he is negotiating per-square-footage rents in the low to mid-$100s for Eighteen Sunset, a mixed-use office project at 1733 Purdy Ave., which is slated for completion in 2023. The project is being developed by Marc Rowan, CEO of New York-based Apollo Global Management (NYSE: APO), and Bradley Colmer, managing partner of Miami Beach-based Deco Capital Group.

Colmer said he originally planned to build a residential building in Sunset Harbour. But he opted to build a Class A office project when he noted older office buildings in Miami Beach were snaring premium rents “for product that you would typically call Class B,” leaving money on the table for any developer willing to offer more amenities.

“We thought there was an opportunity there,” he said.

Diversifying The Economy

The Miami Beach City Commission already increased the height limits of office buildings to 75 feet on Terminal Island, western segments of Alton Road, and within the Sunset Harbour Overlay district. On Collins Avenue between Sixth and 16th streets, where height for new construction is maxed out at 50 feet, an urban plan designed by architect Bernard Zyscovich would include 75-foot-tall Class A office structures. The city also issued a request for proposals for developers interested in turning three city parking lots and the municipality’s 17th Street parking garage into Class A offices.

Rickelle Williams, Miami Beach’s director of economic development, said encouraging more Class A office development is part of a strategy to attract businesses in industries that employ a high-wage workforce. That includes technology and financial services firms, as well as companies willing to relocate corporate or regional headquarters, or expand existing offices. That mostly leaves out hospitality businesses, known for paying lower wages.

The city’s strategy includes expediting the permitting process for office projects and giving up to $60,000 a year for the next four years to companies with more than 10 full-time jobs that pay more than $69,385 a year. (The exact amount awarded depends on the number of jobs.)

 

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Ex-Google CEO Owns Major Interest In South Beach Class A Office Project In The Works

A proposed five-story Class A building that is majority-owned by the former CEO of Google and his philanthropist wife is scheduled to come before the Miami Beach Planning Board on Jan. 25.

Eric and Wendy Schmidt own a 88% interest in 411 Michigan SOFI Owner LLC, the developer of the proposed building, at 411 Michigan Ave. Eric Schmidt was a top executive and adviser for Google and its parent company, Alphabet Inc., from 2001 until 2020. Wendy Schmidt is the president of the Schmidt Family Foundation, a Palo Alto, California-based nonprofit that holds over $1 billion in assets.

Lauren Pressman, director of investments for Hillspire, LLLC, the family office for the Schmidts and the Schmidt Foundation, has a 2% interest in the venture, according to city records. Sharing the remaining 10% interest are New York-based real estate developers Davide Bizzi, Saif Sumaida, and Amit Khurana, as well as New York entrepreneur Paramdeep Singh.

Called “Fifth and Michigan,” the planned 75-foot-tall building is slated to become the first project in the United States designed by Spanish architect Alberto Campo Baeza if the building can get the necessary approvals from the city, including a conditional-use permit from the Planning Board.

According to a memo from Planning Director Thomas Mooney, the building “as presented by the applicant” will be 41,377 square feet in size and include 38,252 square feet of office, 3,2125 square feet of retail, and mechanical parking. The project also involves moving and lifting a two-story structure built in 1933 and turning it into a cafe, the memo stated. A one-story structure on site is slated to be demolished.

 

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AMAC Acquires 1800 Alton For $32.5M, Showcases Strength In Miami Retail

AMAC has acquired 1800 Alton, a trophy urban retail center in Miami Beach for $32.5 million from Saber 1800 Alton, LLC.

Acquired in partnership with Daniel Neary, a Miami Beach real estate developer, the property is prominently located in Sunset Harbour at the intersection of Alton Road and 18th Street with great visibility on one of Miami Beach’s busiest intersections.

Designed by award-winning, Miami-based architect Kobi Karp and built in 2018, the five-story urban center contains 31,840 square feet of class “A” retail and 136 parking spaces across the three-level parking garage. The property currently contains two long-term tenants and two vacant spaces on the ground floor measuring 2,233 and 1,803 square feet.

“We are thrilled to complete the acquisition of the class A property developed by Saber in one of Miami’s most desirable locations,” said Maurice Kaufman, Founding Principal at AMAC. “We are committed to the long-term future of Sunset Harbour and have already received strong interest in the property.” 

1800 Alton is ideally positioned in Sunset Harbour, the vibrant neighborhood at the gateway into South Beach, with many high-end residential buildings, retail spaces, and the Sunset Harbour Marina.

Jordan Gimelstein and David Spitz of the Koniver Stern Group were the sole brokers on the sale of 1800 Alton Road. Jordan and David are the Directors of the Investment Sales division at Koniver Stern Group and have been involved in many high street transactions throughout the Urban Core of Miami and Miami Beach.

 

Source: REW

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Black Lion’s South Florida Retail Shopping Spree Continues With $19M South Beach Deal

In a $19 million deal, Black Lion Investment Group purchased its fourth Miami-Dade retail site in a six-month span.

The Los Angeles-based commercial real estate investment firm picked up the ground-floor commercial condos in Marea, a six-story boutique condominium at 801 South Pointe Drive in Miami Beach’s South of Fifth neighborhood, according to a press release. Black Lion, led by Robert Rivani, paid roughly $995 a square foot for 19,100 square feet of retail.

The seller is Marea Retails, an entity managed by Domenico Albano and Americo D’Agostini, principals of Miami-based A&D Group Realty. Marea Retails sold the two commercial units for the same price the company paid in 2015, when developer The Related Group completed the building. The project’s 30 condos atop the commercial space were sold to individual owners.

D’Agostini called the off-market trade with Black Lion “a good deal.” Fabio Faerman and Sebastian Faerman of FA Commercial brokered the sale.

Existing commercial tenants include RED Steakhouse and KoSushi. In a statement, Rivani said Black Lion plans to lease about 9,400 of available space to other fine dining restaurants. Marea is about a five minute walk from the Yukon building where celebrity chef Gordan Ramsey is opening a Lucky Cat restaurant.

Since June, Black Lion has dropped a total of $57.9 million to acquire retail spaces in Miami and Miami Beach, including the two Marea commercial units. The company first acquired Wynwood Arcade, a nearly 23,000-square-foot retail and restaurant building in Miami’s Wynwood neighborhood for $13.3 million. The revamped warehouse is home to Salty Donut craft doughnut and coffee shop, and No. 3 Social rooftop lounge.

Also in June, Black Lion paid $12.1 million for Amara, a 12,300-square-foot restaurant operated by Michael Schwartz in Paraiso, another condo project by the Related Group in Miami’s Edgewater neighborhood.

In July, Black Lion bought a retail condo at the SLS Lux Brickell in Miami for $13.5 million. The space formerly housed Katsuya sushi restaurant and SBar.

 

Source:  The Real Deal

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Recently Renovated Miami Beach Office Building Sells For $26.5M

Integra Investments and Constellation Group turned a nice profit on a recently renovated office building in Miami Beach.

The 31,979-square-foot office at 1674 Meridian Ave. sold for $26.5 million.

The seller was 1674 Meridian Ventures LLC, a partnership between Miami-based Integra and Miami-based Constellation, and the buyer was a company led by Juan Jose Zaragoza of Miami-based Exan Capital. The price equated to $829 a square foot.

The building is 55% leased.

The developers acquired the building for $10.1 million in 2019 and performed a major renovation, creating more modern floor plates with spaces for collaboration, enhancing the façade, installing a new HVAC system, touchless elevators and face temperature camera telecoms.

The 5-story building was constructed on the 8,250-square-foot lot in 1959.

 

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Looming Tax Break Deadline Is Spurring Last-Minute South Florida Real Estate Deals

Time is running out for investors in South Florida seeking a tax break by investing in opportunity zones, which allows for investments in lower-income areas to have tax advantages.

The rush is fueling deals as the population continues to grow due to continued migration to South Florida. Developers hope to get deferred taxable gains on projects such as new hotels, branded residential properties and more.

Dec. 31 is the deadline for individual investors seeking qualified opportunity zone investments to help defer taxable gains. Tax benefits in the program include a 10% basis step-up and related gain exclusion. If investors take advantage of the opportunity, they can defer paying capital gains on their investment until Dec. 31, 2026.

Besides the temporary deferral, other advantages include the exclusion of taxable income on new gains on investments held for 10 years or more, and a 10% increase in the investment if the qualified opportunity fund is retained for five years and a 15% increase if the investment is held for seven years.

After the December 31 deadline, the investors have until June 30, 2022, to invest the funds in businesses located in an opportunity zone to comply with the regulations.  If they’re not, there’s a small penalty regarding the interest cost.

There are about 8,700 opportunity zones in the country with 123 opportunity zones in South Florida. Miami-Dade has 67, Broward has 30, and Palm Beach County has 26.

 

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Sellers Will Take Cryptocurrency For Miami Beach Properties

Developer Scott Robins and his partner, former Miami Beach Mayor Philip Levine, are accepting cryptocurrency for two properties they’re selling on South Beach’s Alton Road corridor.

Robins’ son Jared, founder of Miami Beach-based brokerage InHouse Commercial, said he’s partnering with FTX, a cryptocurrency exchange based in the Bahamas that purchased the naming rights of the former AmericanAirlines Arena in March and has an office in Brickell.

One of the properties for sale is the two-story Royal Media building and the adjacent one-story Reebok CrossFit Miami Beach studio.

The partners are seeking $25 million for the 23,810-square-foot Royal Media building, which was constructed at 960 Alton Road in 1975, and the 7,500-square-foot Reebok CrossFit studio, built at 930 Alton Road in 1948. Media Holdings Ltd. paid $1.6 million for 960 Alton Road in April 1996, and Media Holdings 930 LLC paid $1.42 million for 930 Alton Road in June 2010.

Since the Miami Beach City Commission increased the height limit to 75 feet, the property has development rights for a new 46,965-square-foot building, according to a brochure produced by InHouse Commercial.

The partners are asking $19 million for a three-story, Arquitectonica-designed retail complex built in 2014 at 1000 17th St. 17th St. Partners LLC bought the 8,000-square-foot lot the building stands on for $1.47 million in June 2007.

Jared Robins said the building is 81% leased, and the asking rent is $80 a square foot.

Cryptocurrencies, including Bitcoin, tend to swing widely in value. But Jared Robins said FTX’s ability to instantly exchange crypto into cash “really de-risks that whole aspect of it.”

 

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Five Class A Office Projects In The Development Pipeline For Miami Beach

Intent on diversifying its economy beyond tourism and nightlife, officials have heavily incentivized the construction of Class A office buildings in Miami Beach. The hope is that the new projects will lure tenants from the many technology, financial and venture capital businesses flocking to the area.

Those incentives include height increases in certain corridors, an office-friendly overlay district in Sunset Harbour, and a request for proposals for developers interested in building new offices on three city-owned parking lots by Lincoln Road. (The deadline for that RFP is Dec. 17).

As demand rises for workspaces on the multibillion-dollar sandbar, these are five Class A office projects in the pipeline to know about, according to a capital market list compiled by the Miami Beach-based commercial brokerage Koniver Stern:

Starwood Global Headquarters, 2340 Collins Ave.: A limited liability company connected to Starwood Capital Group took out a $76.2 million construction loan to build a six-story, 144,430-square-foot building that will serve as the headquarters for a real estate firm led by Barry Sternlicht. The firm has $100 billion worth of assets under management, employs 4,000 people in 16 offices worldwide, and controls the publicly traded mortgage investment company Starwood Property Trust (NYSE: STWD). Around 55% of the Starwood Global Headquarters office space will be used as the base of operations for 300 Starwood employees. The rest of the office building, which was co-developed by Miami-based Integra Investments, will be leased to third parties. The building will also have 8,000 square feet of retail, a 277-space parking garage, and “an array of outdoor wood-clad ‘cabanas’ on each floor,” according to a press statement issued by Starwood. Topped off in December 2020, the Starwood Global Headquarters is due to be completed by the end of the year.

The Bancroft, 1501 Collins Ave.: This hotel circa 1939 is being converted into Class A office space by Boca Raton-based Pebb Capital, Maxwelle Real Estate Group in downtown Miami, and Crescent Heights headquartered in Miami’s Edgewater. When the project is completed, The Bancroft will have 50,000 square feet of offices, four restaurants, and a 210-space underground parking garage.

One Island Park, 120 MacArthur Causeway: The Related Group scrapped its previous plans to construct a 90-unit condo at Terminal Island. Instead, the Coconut Grove real estate development company, headed by Jorge Pérez, will build an office complex totaling around 162,000 square feet in size with a rooftop restaurant, a four-level parking garage, a guard gate, and infrastructure to fuel up and service megayachts docked at the facility.

Eighteen Sunset, 1733 Purdy Ave.: This past November, developer Bradley Colmer of Deco Capital Group broke ground on the first brand new office building to be constructed within the Sunset Harbour Overlay District. The five-story project will include 40,000 square feet of offices, 17,000 square feet of retail, and a private penthouse residence with amenities that include an outdoor pool and hot tub.

944 Fifth St.: Two New York development firms, Sumaida + Khurana and Bizzi & Partners, are teaming up to build a 56,177-square-foot, Class A office building with high interior ceilings and a white façade. As previously reported by the South Florida Business Journal, this office building will also be the first to be designed by famed Spanish architect Alberto Campo Baeza. This project has yet to be named. It also has yet to obtain the 75-foot height limit it needs to move forward. Nevertheless, the development team aims to have the project completed by the summer of 2022.

 

Source:  SFBJ

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Deco Capital Breaks Ground On Mixed-Use Project In Miami Beach

Deco Capital broke ground on the Eighteen Sunset mixed-use project in the Sunset Harbour neighborhood of Miami Beach.

Sunset Land Associates LLC and SH Owner LLC, affiliates of Miami Beach-based Deco Capital Group, are building 40,000 square feet of offices, 17,000 square feet of commercial space and a massive 15,000-square-foot penthouse in five stories. The penthouse will also have 15,000 square feet of outdoor space.

On 0.77 acres at 1733-1759 Purdy Ave. and 1724-1752 Bay Road, Eighteen Sunset will overlook Maurice Gibb Park, giving tenants an unobstructed view of Biscayne Bay. It will be within walking distance of the popular restaurants and shops and Sunset Harbour.

 

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