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Rilea, Promanas Buy Wynwood Dev Site, Plan Short-Term Rentals

A short-term rental project with 127 units is coming to Miami’s Wynwood neighborhood.

Developers Rilea Group and Promanas Group bought the site on the southwest corner of Northeast 29th Street and the Florida East Coast Railway tracks for $12.2 million, with plans to build The Rider, according to a release from Rilea and Promanas.

The properties at 94 and 100 Northeast 29th Street and 101 Northeast 28th Street total 0.6 acres, records show. Seller 101 NE 28 St LLC ties to Jeffrey Miller of Krillion Ventures.

Alfredo Riascos and Yonatan Missika of Gridline Properties represented the buyers. Liana Rivera of LLV Realty represented the seller.

The area still lacks hotels, which prompted the developers to build a short-term rental project, Rilea’s Diego Ojeda said in a release.

Plans call for a 12-story project with 8,500 square feet of ground-floor retail, a rooftop restaurant and a pool bar, according to the release. Construction is expected to start in 2023.

Units at The Rider, near a planned passenger commuter train station, will be rented through short-term rental sites such as Airbnb and VRBO, according to the release.

 

Source:  The Real Deal

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Psychedelic Therapy Clinic To Open First Florida Site In Wynwood

Field Trip Health, a psychedelic therapy company, picked one of Miami’s trippiest neighborhoods for its first location in Florida. The Toronto-based company plans to open in Wynwood.

Field Trip inked a lease for a 7,500-square-foot space at The Wynwood Annex, an office building that the Related Group and East End Capital built at 215 Northwest 24th Street, said Jonathon Yormak, who leads East End Capital. The eight-story, 65,000-square-foot building was completed more than three years ago and is now fully leased.

Field Trip is part of a wave of new psychedelic therapy companies that have raised tens of millions of dollars to invest in the treatment of depression and post traumatic stress disorder with drugs such as ketamine. Ketamine is the only hallucinogenic that’s currently legal for patients outside of a clinical study in the U.S., the New York Times reported.

Two bills proposed in the Florida Legislature would direct the Florida Department of Health and the state’s board of medicine to study the efficacy of ketamine, MDMA and psilocybin, the Daytona Beach News-Journal reported last week. Oregon was the first state to legalize the therapeutic use of psilocybin, the substance found in magic mushrooms. Other cities and states have decriminalized the drug or are considering similar legislation.

Field Trip has locations in New York, Toronto, Los Angeles, Chicago, Atlanta, Houston, Seattle, Amsterdam and Fredericton, Canada, according to its website. Forbes reported in July that Field Trip plans to have 20 clinics by the end of this year and 75 by 2024.

Yormak said Field Trip has been interested in the Miami market, and the company approached the developers to lease a space at the Annex. Other tenants in the building include venture capital firms Founders Fund and Atomic; Live Nation; and e-commerce company OpenStore.

Tony Arellano of Dwntwn Realty Advisors represented the landlord in the majority of leases at the Annex, including Field Trip. Miles Glascock at JLL represented Field Trip.

Modified gross rents have exceeded $62 per square foot, Yormak said.

The Annex is reportedly on the market. Yormak said that the partnership has not made a decision whether to sell, but confirmed that potential buyers have made offers to acquire the property.

 

 

Source:  The Real Deal

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Julia Apartments Break Ground In Allapattah

Neology Life, led by developer Lissette Calderon, broke ground on an apartment complex in the Allapattah neighborhood of Miami after obtaining a $78.2 million construction loan.

The Julia Apartments, named for Miami founder Julia Tuttle, will have 323 units. Construction on the 12-story building at 1625 N.W. 20th St. is expected to be completed by mid-2023.

Units in the Julia will range from 586 to 892 square feet. Amenities will include a pool with cabanas, a rooftop garden, a fitness center, a coffee bar, and a dog park.

Trez Capital provided the mortgage to TCG Allapattah, an affiliate of Neology Life, for the 1.7-acre lot.

“When we evaluate lending opportunities, we focus on the needs of a community and the track record of the developer,” said Ben Jacobson, a managing director at Trez Capital. “Partnering with Lissette and understanding her vision, we think Allapattah is perfectly positioned to attract nearby working professionals and families who desire a certain level of luxury living but are priced out of places like Brickell, downtown and Wynwood.”

 

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Moishe Mana Adds To His Allapattah Holdings, Plans E-Commerce Logistics Center

Mana paid $6.2 million for a development site at 634 Northwest 22nd Street in Allapattah, where he could build an e-commerce logistics center.

Mana, downtown Miami’s biggest private landowner and a major investor in nearby Wynwood, purchased the property as he sells off his assets around the world, according to a statement provided by his firm, Mana Common. He is using the funds to invest in Miami, the statement says.

The Allapattah purchase, a roughly 1.4-acre assemblage, has been in the works for nearly two years, including a period in which it fell apart during the pandemic, said listing broker Carlos Fausto Miranda of Fausto Commercial.

An eight-story building with signage fronting I-95 can be built on the industrial site.

Property records show a company led by Javier Lumbreras, a Spanish financier and arts collector, sold the assemblage.

In Allapattah, Mana’s holdings include the former McArthur Dairy site at 2451 Northwest Seventh Avenue. The site is zoned T6-8-0, which allows for 150 units per acre.

 

Source:  The Real Deal

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David Edelstein, Related And Partners Plan Resi Project On Former RedSky Property In Wynwood

David Edelstein’s TriStar Capital, Related Group, Alex Karakhanian’s Lndmrk Development and Tricera Capital paid $26.5 million for a development site where they plan to build a residential project.

Chinese firm Seven Valleys, led by real estate moguls Zhang Xin and Pan Shiyi, sold the nearly 1.3-acre property anchored at 2700 Northwest Second Avenue in Miami’s Wynwood neighborhood. Seven Valleys had been the lender for the property, which previously belonged to RedSky Capital and JZ Capital Partners, whose planned developments never came to fruition.

TriStar and its partners plan to build “well over” 300 residential units on the site, Edelstein told The Real Deal. They could break ground in about 10 months, he said. The venture secured a roughly $20 million loan from Comerica Bank.

Edelstein said the market for new development in Wynwood is “on fire” and that there is very little undeveloped land left.

The development site sold at a loss compared to its $31 million sale to RedSky and JZ in 2016. The previous owner, Wynwood pioneer Goldman Properties, had planned a mixed-use development with 72 residences, 68 hotel rooms, about 11,000 square feet of ground floor retail and 47,000 square feet of offices.

In Wynwood, Related, Karakhanian and Tricera are partnering to develop another project, called the Dorsey Wynwood, at 2801 Northwest Third Avenue. They broke ground earlier this year. The project will have more than 300 rental apartments, commercial space, office space and amenities.

 

Source:  The Real Deal

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Five-Property Assemblage Near Miami Beach’s Iconic Lincoln Road Hits The Market

A five-property assemblage and redevelopment opportunity at 1656-1680 Alton Road, a premier location in Miami Beach, has hit the market.

Totaling 1.38 acres on the block running up to the iconic Lincoln Road, the portfolio includes 1.21 acres or 52,500 square feet of contiguous developable lots with an existing 55,516-square-foot mixed-use/retail structure along Alton Road and an additional 0.17-acre or 7,500-square-foot parking lot on the West Avenue side.

Avison Young Principals John K. Crotty, CCIM; David Duckworth; Michael T. Fay, who is also Managing Director of the firm’s Miami operations; Vice President Brian C. de la Fé; and Associate Berkley Bloodworth will spearhead the sale on behalf of Alton Road Invest, LLC. Avison Young Principal George Vail is available for debt and equity discussions.

“Investor-developer interest remains high for prime location opportunities,” said Crotty. “There is currently no other property on the market in the area like this Alton Road portfolio, considering its development potential and proximity to Lincoln Road retail and the beach.”

Several investment scenarios are possible with the asset. In-place zoning permits redevelopment into residential and hospitality uses, which would be supported by the major Lincoln Road shopping destination. Nearby projects with similar zoning, such as the recent 17 West to the north and the high profile 1212 Lincoln Road to the south, were recently redeveloped to include residential, hospitality, or retail uses. Additional investment options include a covered land play with the existing retail structure or the in-place retail use. Ace Hardware and Elevation Fitness are current tenants at the property.

“We expect the strongest interest from potential buyers seeking to redevelop and maximize the use of the property and location,” continued Crotty. “The asset will also receive significant attention from investors attracted to high retail values on and near Lincoln Road, a tourist hotspot and primary outdoor mall in Miami Beach.”

Lincoln Road sees a retail spend in excess of $1 billion and more than 11 million visitors annually.

 

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Aventura Office Park Could Be Rezoned For Mixed-Use Project

Part of the Aventura Corporate Center could be redeveloped into a mixed-use project that includes apartments.

The City Commission and its Local Planning Agency on Sept. 23 will consider a zoning change for the 10.5-acre site at 20801, 20803, 20805 and 20807 Biscayne Blvd. The 8.6-acre office park there is owned by Aventura Opportunity Owner LLC while the AC Hotel on the remaining land is owned by Norwich Aventura II LLC. The development would take place on the office parcel.

Aventura Opportunity Owner, in care of Atlanta-based Stonecutter Capital Management, acquired the office park for $140 million in August. It currently has 251,773 square feet of leasable office space in three buildings.

The application seeks to change the zoning from “business and office” to “town center.” Miami-based Zyscovich Architects was hired to create the site plan.

According to a site plan letter sent to Aventura officials by Aventura Opportunity owner on Sept. 16, the plan is to demolish the easternmost office building and keep the two other office buildings. The office would be replaced with 208 multifamily units, plus five townhouses on the ground floor and 24 live-work units on the southwest corner of the property. In addition, the developer would redevelop the parking garages along Biscayne Boulevard to add offices, retail and live-work units. This would create 370,143 square feet of offices and 42,254 square feet of retail.

 

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Real Estate Primed for Further Growth in Greater Miami’s Evolving Neighborhoods

The state of real estate development today in Miami-Dade is fueled by expectations of strong returns. One need only look at the number of cranes dotting our regional high-rise commercial and residential zones of Miami, Miami Beach, Coral Gables and elsewhere to recognize the intensity. Currently, metropolitan Miami has the third tallest skyline in the country, and nearly every commercial neighborhood has construction of some kind occurring.

The great challenge and opportunity for developers and investors has been twofold since most are seeking near-term returns that satisfy their investors. Generally, there are two considerations on their minds: when is the right time to purchase and develop property, and what barriers to entry are manageable. Although some local developers have the cash and strategy to be more patient and wait for two to 10 years to move forward with projects on land they own, that is not commonplace.

The key success metrics for many developers is tied to the highest and best use of their capital for mixed-use, residential, office, etc. Here are some market conditions and signals that may tip the prospect of successful development in one direction or another:

First, the macro conditions of the market, including inflation and monetary policies affecting access to capital, tax incentives, and the cost and availability of construction labor and materials, are key success factors for any developer.

Second, sea-level rise and climate change are ground zero in Miami-Dade. Our proximity to the bay and ocean, and the prospect of lifestyle disruption from rising tides, hurricane storm surge, and in some neighborhoods the very existential issue of structures within flood zones, create an urgency and massive investment of federal, state, and local government resources in the billions. We are already witnessing both institutional and noninstitutional lenders refusing long-term financing for certain locations, and that prospect will continue and become more prevalent this decade and beyond. Upland neighborhoods and districts, ones that will not witness flooding in the next two decades, are thus naturally more attractive.

Lastly, the story of Miami, over the past 125 years, has been one of three steps forward and one step back when it comes to development. We have witnessed growth cycles greater than most American cities, but we also tend to be on the frontline of overdevelopment and vacancy when recessions occur. Yet, the sophisticated real estate investor and developers, like those who may have battle scars from the crash and burn of 2008-2010, or who have the wisdom to know that markets ebb and flow, recognize that Miami leads with its entrepreneurial opportunity.

So, based on predictors, trending and conditions, beyond neighborhoods we would call currently “hot” where developers are executing on major projects, what are the next group of neighborhoods ripe for major development in the next decade?

Certainly, areas like Little River are enticing because of their historic position in the marketplace. Assemblages around the immediate commercial corridor along 79th Street are a good play because there is precedent for taller buildings, some of which are targets for repositioning.

We could witness more infill projects in East Little Havana, but the challenge there is tied to limited densities and parking requirements on properties that can make development cost prohibitive. Investors must buy right to make the numbers work. If commercial use is on their mind, they have to work with neighborhood residents in advance to quell concerns over noise at eateries, bars and clubs. That can be costly and time consuming, but if done right could yield great results.

There was an innovation in parking requirements, which shifted it to the street in Little Havana, but that applied to small residential buildings, which fit the small-scale profile of existing residences. Another play might be to buy a handful of these small building complexes or a portfolio of the same, which can be held as prices rise or flipped in three to five years for a nice return.

The key to development in places in the city of Miami north of the central business district is the rezoning of some properties with outdated or limited infrastructure to prepare the land to be flipped or developed. There are opportunities for four-parcel assemblages for small residential development that can produce acceptable returns with low beta.

A good partner in Miami may be its community redevelopment agency, which is looking to bid properties they own and provide tax incentives to developers and investors interested in building housing in these communities.

Lastly, there are ever greater opportunities that should be considered near Metrorail stations and along the US-1 corridor, which are zoned for higher density, with the city of Miami and Miami-Dade County incentivizing opportunities for builders. Noise is a challenge, but that is the point–managing challenges can yield good pricing on land and nice margins upon development.

Going forward, more developers will look to commercial with barriers to entry they can remove to stake their real estate project.

 

Source:  GlobeSt.

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Global Consulting Frim To Expand In Miami’s Wynwood, Hire Hundreds

Slalom, a $2.4 billion global consulting firm, will expand its Miami presence with a new office in Wynwood.

Seattle-based Slalom signed an 8,000-square-foot lease in the 545wyn office tower, recently built by Sterling Bay. After entering South Florida with temporary space in 2019, Slalom has grown to 50 employees here. It aims to hire several hundred more employees.

“Unlike typical consulting firms, Slalom consultants live in and are committed to the cities in which we work,” said Beau Williamson, general manager at Slalom. “We’re proud of our commitment not only to this premier office space in Wynwood, but also to the people of Miami as we hire locally to build out our business and create a positive impact on this community.”

 

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City Of Miami Beach Board Approves Redevelopment Plan Along Prime North Beach Beachfront

On September 13th, the City of Miami Beach Historic Preservation Board approved the Ocean Terrace Holdings (OTH) redevelopment plan and Ocean Terrace streetscape masterplan. Led by OTH principals Sandor Scher and Alex Blavatnik, the redevelopment plan includes a 20-story, 75-unit residential building, new restaurant and retail options, and a 127-room hotel that incorporates the carefully renovated and unified historic Broadmoor and Ocean Surf properties. Following years of community outreach and negotiations with the City, the approval of OTH’s redevelopment plan will revitalize this underutilized area in North Beach along Collins Avenue, between 74th and 75th Street.

“The approved plan for Ocean Terrace is more economically viable, will attract a world-class hotel operator, and will incorporate a beautifully-designed oceanfront greenspace for the entire community to enjoy,” said Scher. “We look forward to getting to work on our long-awaited project, which will restore the street-level historic architecture, transform Ocean Terrace into a lushly-landscaped oasis and give new life to this cherished beachfront.”

The approved plan includes a few recently added enhancements that will elevate the project’s hotel and residential components. To help attract a world-class hotel flag to the project, the plan adds a new hotel building with 72 rooms that will be built within previously approved height restrictions.  The hotel will be managed as one operation with the historic Broadmoor and Ocean Surf hotel buildings. The hotel will include restaurants, bar, meeting rooms, fitness, spa, outdoor pool and deck, rooftop lounge, and on-site parking.

With an historically inspired design, the residential component will feature curvilinear designs reflective of MiMo style, such as curved balconies and eyebrows. Units will range in size from 2 to 5 bedrooms and feature a full complement of luxury amenities. The masterplan also calls for approximately 15,000 square feet of commercial space along Collins Avenue and approximately 3,000 square feet along Ocean Terrace.

“We are grateful to the North Beach community and City of Miami Beach for working together with us to create a vision for Ocean Terrace that incorporates historic preservation, activation of the oceanfront, and economic revitalization,” said Alex Blavatnik, principal of Ocean Terrace Holdings, LLC. “We are excited to now be able to bring that vision to life, starting with an iconic and activated public space that will belong to the City for future generations.” 

The first stage of the redevelopment plan will focus on a new $15 million, five-acre public greenspace along Ocean Terrace designed by world-renowned landscape architect Raymond Jungles. The asphalt street will be converted into an active, pedestrian-focused greenspace with native trees that will provide much-needed shade. A public-private partnership with the City of Miami Beach, the streetscape plan will also offer new walking trails, water features, public seating, and a covered pavilion. A mid-block open breezeway in the Ocean Terrace development will also connect Collins Avenue retail to Ocean Terrace, allowing enhanced public access to the oceanfront. OTH will fully fund the park, with no cost to taxpayers, and will deliver the greenspace on an expedited timeline.

Construction on the public greenspace is set to begin in the third quarter 2022.  Pre-construction sales for the residential building are also estimated to launch in 2022.

 

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