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LIVWRK In Contract To Buy Wynwood Assemblage From East End Capital

LIVWRK, a Brooklyn-based development firm, is making its first foray into Miami commercial real estate, The Real Deal has learned.

The company, led by founder and CEO Asher Abehsera, is under contract to buy a 2.5-acre assemblage in Wynwood, according to sources. East End Capital is selling the properties at 2400 and 2500 North Miami Avenue in Miami. LIVWRK will partner with the neighboring property owner at 48 Northwest 25th Street

Abehsera confirmed that the deal is under contract. A source said the price is about $25 million, and the sale is expected to close in about a month and a half.

Abehsera said his company is interviewing architects from around the world to “do something that’s more elevated from a design perspective” than what has been built in Wynwood so far.

The assemblage could be developed into more than 650,000 square feet with a mix of residential, retail, hotel or creative office, Abehsera said.

East End Capital had planned to develop the North Miami Avenue properties into two mixed-use projects with co-living, micro units, coworking and traditional office space. The New York and Miami-based firm, led by founder Jonathon Yormak, secured approvals for the projects last year.

The other parcel is owned by 3 CI Holdings LLLP, an entity managed by Catherine DeFrancesco, owner of Sol Yoga, and Andy DeFrancesco. Alex Karahkanian and Cahane sold the office and retail building on that site to the DeFrancesco entity last year for $17 million.

In March, East End Capital sold a Wynwood retail property that was in foreclosure to Cahane’s Forte Capital Management and Jon Krasner’s 7G Realty for $11.8 million.

East End and its Australian investors were recently ordered to pay back a $5.5 million deposit tied to a failed sale of their office tower in downtown Miami.

In Brooklyn’s Dumbo neighborhood, LIVWRK and CIM Group are in contract to sell the rental portion of their luxury development at 85 Jay Street to RXR Realty for $220 million.

 

Source:  The Real Deal

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Fintech Startup Nirvana Technology Signs Lease In Wynwood

Miami will soon welcome a new Silicon Valley tenant.

Fintech startup Nirvana Technology, headed by tech veteran Bill Harris, signed a three-year lease for 3,700 square feet in Miami’s Wynwood district.

Asking rent for the office at 120 NE 27th Street was $38 per square foot, landlord Bill Rammos told Commercial Observer. The deal closed last month, and Nirvana is set to take occupancy this coming fall.

Other tenants of the two-story building include construction firms, Brodson and Plaza, and another California transplant, Crexi, a commercial real estate tech company.

“Millennials value the mix-use — where you have office spaces, good restaurants, good entertainment at night, and good housing. That’s all coming together in Wynwood,” said Rammos. These amenities help lure future tech employees, he added. 

The digital bank startup plans to hire 50 employees based in Miami by the end of the year, and 200 by 2022, according to a statement from Nirvana. The company aims to simplify the finances of everyday consumers.

“We’re bringing the fire of Silicon Valley — innovation, ambition and mission — to the new Silicon Beach,” Harris said in prepared remarks.

The executive has a long and impressive tech resume, which includes stints as serving the CEO of fintech giants PayPal and Intuit, and as a board member of web hosting company GoDaddy.

Since the pandemic hit, Miami has attracted high-profile companies, thanks to its pro-business mayor and the state’s low taxes.

New-to-market tech tenants have settled in Wynwood, a trendy neighborhood famous for its eclectic murals. Back in March, heavyweight venture capital firms Founders Fund and Atomic inked 10 leases at the Wynwood Annex, a 60,000-square-foot office complex. Apple is also said to be scouting offices in the neighborhood.

DWNTWN Realty Advisors’ Tony Arellanorepresented the landlord.

 

Source:  Commercial Observer

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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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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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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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Two Venture Capital Funds And StartUp Ink Leases in Miami’s Wynwood

Venture capital funds Founders Fund and Atomic, as well as the start-up OpenStore, signed three office leases totaling 22,000 sq. ft. in Miami’s Wynwood Arts District, at Wynwood Annex, a creative office building developed by Related Group and East End Capital.

Founders Fund is a major Silicon Valley venture capital firm with billions of dollars in capital under management. Co-founder Peter Thiel, who also co-founded PayPal, showed interest in Miami last year when he signed a short-term lease for office space before selecting Wynwood as home to its permanent Miami office.

Already home to popular tech companies Spotify and Live Nation and start-ups like the CodelittWyncodeASOFTIO Software, and now, OpenStore, some are beginning to refer to Wynwood as the epicenter of Miami’s urban core.

According to a release, the following recent announcements are also helping to solidify Wynwood as the creative hub of Miami:

  • Microsoft and SoftBank Group, one of the world’s largest tech investors, announced they are looking for 100,000+ sq. ft. of space;
  • Announced last week, Wynwood will host the world’s largest Bitcoin Conference in June 2021 where Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey will speak at Mana Convention Center.  The conference was previously held in Los Angeles, California; and
  • Miami Mayor Francis Suarez announced the City’s first-ever Chief Technology Officer and is currently considering a contract for employees to receive all or part of their salaries in Bitcoin, and for the public to have a Bitcoin option while paying for city services.    

 

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One Of The Oldest Churches In Miami-Dade County Sells

Gridline Properties announced the sale of a unique 28,947 square foot property located at 205 NE 87th Street for $5,425,000 after being vacant for more than 10 years.

Located in Miami’s Upper East Side and within the emerging El Portal Village, the building was formerly home to a Methodist church and school. Gridline Properties’ Principal and Broker Alfredo Riascos represented the sellers, real estate developers Seth Gadinsky of Gadinsky Real Estate, LLC and Samuel Soriero of Group 10 Capital Management, LLC.

The buyer, The Sanctuary LLC, a client of Elm Spring, Inc., plans to adapt the property into restaurant, retail and office space. The transaction was finalized on Friday, March 19.

The sellers acquired the property in 2016 for $3,200,000, and entitled the asset into a mixed-use retail, office and event space building. However, once Miami’s Little River and Upper East Side markets began showing substantial growth, they decided to switch gears and test the sale market – ultimately selling to a client of Elm Spring, Inc. given their intentions to pick up where they left off.

This prominent, mixed-use building, built in 1952, occupies two acres of Miami’s El Portal neighborhood – falling between North Miami and Downtown. Given its distinctive character, this charming church property, once known as the Rader Memorial United Methodist church, offers a main hall (former cathedral) that boasts dramatic high ceilings and 5,000 square feet of open space attached to a two-story structure (former school) that houses more than twenty rooms with perimeter windows and an impressive portico that overlooks the expansive courtyard and garden. The property’s location adds to the appeal of this space with its close proximity to notable Upper East Side landmarks such as The Citadel, MADE, Ebb + Flow and The Vagabond Hotel.

Gridline Properties has been instrumental to the growth of Miami’s Upper East Side, participating in the sale and leasing of projects such as Upper Buena Vista, 55th Street Station and Ebb + Flow amongst other notable projects and transactions.

“This sale further emphasizes the recent growth of the Upper East Side and demonstrates the growing investor demand in the area,” said Riascos. “We are excited to see how the development of this formerly vacant asset continues to uplift and add value to the surrounding area.”

This purchase along with many others, comes at a time of increased interest in the Miami market following a year of extreme uncertainty due to the Covid-19 pandemic.

“2020 brought so much ambiguity to the future of our market. However, the positive sales activity that we’ve seen throughout the first quarter of 2021 has marked a turning point and elevated Miami to one of the most attractive investment markets in the country,” said Riascos.

 

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Mixed-Use Buildings On Miami Avenue In Wynwood Win Urban Development Review Board’s OK

A sprawling mixed-use project designed to bring apartments, office space and more in two new buildings in Wynwood won a positive review from the city’s Urban Development Review Board.

The board unanimously recommended approval of the project, known as PRH N. MIAMI, after the developer made several changes to the plan in response to issues and concerns brought up by the review board and earlier by the Wynwood Design Review Committee.

PRH N MIAMI LLC plans to build the dual, complementary buildings at 2150 N Miami Ave.

The project is to include 317 residential units, 60,400 square feet of offices, 22,701 square feet of commercial-retail uses, and a garage for up to 534 vehicles.

The property has a principal frontage on North Miami Avenue, which bisects the property. The property fronts Northeast/Northwest 22nd Street to the north comprising secondary frontage, with Northwest Miami Court on the west being another secondary frontage.

The property is divided into two parcels, Parcel 1 to the west of North Miami Avenue and Parcel 2 to the east of North Miami Avenue.

The east parcel is to have retail at the ground level, a seven-level parking garage lined on the east façade with residential units up to the eighth level, and office space up to the 12th level.

The west parcel is to have retail at ground level, residential units up to the 12th level and amenity spaces for the residents.

Sandy Peaceman of CFE Architects went through many of the tweaks and changes made by the design team, with the goal of addressing the concerns of the Wynwood committee and the city board. Among them:

  • Increased connectivity and activation of the courtyard with new breezeways providing courtyard access for the west tower. Providing crosswalk connectivity between the two buildings, and a direct link between the east tower residential lobby and the west tower residential lobby and breezeway.
  • Modifications include chamfered corner along the entire northeast corner of the west tower.
  • The rooftop amenity deck has been redesigned to provide a more appealing lifestyle to the residents while creating a more intriguing skyline of the west tower.
  • Artificial green wall has been removed from the west façade of the west tower.
  • Faux brick has been removed from the ground level of the east tower and replaced with exposed concrete to create a more industrial feeling.
  • Residential lobby and office lobby have been made more prominent and inviting.
  • The long retail façade on 22nd Street has been broken down by stepping back a 33-foot-wide portion of the façade to be flush with the tower above. By doing so, it disrupts the perceived monotony along the retail wall.
  • Round balconies have been removed from the tower at the main corner at North Miami Avenue and 22nd Street to emphasize the floor-to-ceiling glass corner.
  • Garage screening and massing has been articulated with design elements that become part of the solution to the 60% roof covering requirements. Louvers have been provided where mechanical equipment will be utilized.

Board Chairman Willy Bermello and others commended the developer’s team for listening to the board’s concerns and making changes.

“You’ve done a good job in being very responsive and sensitive,” said Mr. Bermello.

Board member Ligia Ines Labrada said she appreciates that the developer and architect acted upon board recommendations.

“It makes for a much stronger project. The open breezeway makes it more inviting … the scale and language has improved in relating the two buildings,” she said.

Board member Ignacio Permuy said: “If we had a category of Most Improved Project, this would be one of the top ones. I commend you on a job well done … exceptional job. Night and day.”

 

Source:  Miami Today

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Sleepy No Longer, Downtown Miami Evolves Into Urban Hub

Once a place that emptied at 5 p.m., Downtown Miami is in the midst of a dramatic transformation. Overlooked no longer, the city’s central business district is getting denser, growing taller and attracting new attention.

The area has been poised for a breakout since the Great Recession, and its moment finally seemed to arrive during the pandemic. Out-of-state companies, most notably Blackstone Group, are opening offices downtown. And a widely noted study said Miami’s urban core has experienced the largest downtown population surge in the nation over the past two decades.

As Miami gains momentum, developers are making big bets on the city’s appeal to both employers and their employees.

“It’s like a snowball effect,” said Nitin Motwani, a developer of Miami Worldcenter. “Downtown Miami, over the past 10 years, has completely evolved into one of the great, 24-hour metropolises in the world.”

Motwani is part of a particularly ambitious project: Miami Worldcenter, a $4 billion mixed-use development, includes apartments, retail space, condos, hotels and offices spread across 10 blocks of downtown parcels.

Just south of downtown, OKO Group and Cain International are building 830 Brickell, a 640,000-square-foot tower that will test office tenants’ appetite for Manhattan-style rental rates. And the 13-story Nikola Tesla Innovation Hub, with 136,000 square feet of office space, is set to begin welcoming tenants next year.

“It feels like we’re on the precipice of something big,” said developer Ryan Shear, managing partner of Property Markets Group (PMG). “Downtown has so much potential, an untapped amount of it.”

PMG is developing the Waldorf Astoria condo and hotel project, which will be the highest tower south of New York, Shear said. PMG also expects to break ground this year on E11EVEN Hotel & Residences, a 400-unit condo project. The units are priced at $250,000 to $12 million.

The E11EVEN project quickly sold more than 70 percent of its units, reflecting what Shear sees as Downtown Miami’s move into the top tier of urban cores.

“Miami, for a long time, has been an undervalued city,” he said. “Miami has a lot of catching up to do.”

The flurry of investment offers a sharp contrast to downtown’s former vibe. For years, downtown boosters touted a vision of a thriving, round-the-clock urban core. And, for years, the city’s central business district remained a place that filled up at 9 a.m. but couldn’t sustain a nightlife.

Downtown workers who liked an urban vibe commuted from Miami Beach or Coral Gables. The rest of the labor force put up with gridlocked commutes from Kendall or Weston.

“Until 10 or 15 years ago, Miami was a city that existed in spite of its downtown,” said Andrew Trench, a managing director at Cushman & Wakefield. “Downtown had office space, and the Miami Heat played downtown, and that was kind of it.”

However, during a building boom before the Great Recession, developers inundated downtown and the Brickell district with high-rise residences. As new residents filled those units after the crash, Miami’s downtown population ballooned. This was the first signal that downtown couldn’t remain a mere business district forever.

According to research by Brookings, Miami had the fastest-growing population of any major downtown over the past two decades. Miami’s urban core posted population growth of 202.5 percent from 2000 to 2018.

The soaring head counts enticed new grocery stores, restaurants and bars downtown, fulfilling the vision of the district as something more than a place to leave at the end of the workday.

Whole Foods opened a store in Downtown Miami in 2015, and the crowds quickly became legendary. “You can barely move in the store,” a Whole Foods executive reported in a 2016 earnings call.

Trey Davis, an associate director at Cushman & Wakefield, lives on Brickell — downtown and Brickell are distinct neighborhoods, but both are part of the central business district — and walks to work and shopping areas.

“I barely use my car,” he said. “There will be times when I go three to four weeks without using it.”

While new residents have been plentiful, office users have proven more elusive. That’s changing, too.

In one noteworthy recruiting win, Blackstone Group last year signed a deal to open a 215-person office in downtown. The private equity giant leased a 40,000-square-foot office at 2 MiamiCentral, the office building adjacent to the Brightline train station.

Blackstone expects to pay its Miami workers an average salary of $200,000. Microsoft and hedge fund Citadel also are said to be shopping for office space in downtown.

Big-name companies, it seems, finally are taking note of Miami’s oft-repeated selling points: low taxes, a business-friendly climate, and comparatively affordable real estate costs.

Despite that pitch, the tenants from New York and California arrived in a trickle rather than a torrent. Then came the COVID-19 outbreak, and companies took a fresh look at their locations.

“The pandemic was the accelerator. We have a great migration happening right now,” said Alan Kleber, a managing director at JLL. “You have people thinking, ‘If we were ever going to move our headquarters, or move a component of our operation, now is the time to do it.’”

The new interest in Miami follows years of efforts by the city to pitch itself to financial firms in the Northeast and to tech players on the West Coast.

“We felt it was only a matter of time before this happened,” said Cushman & Wakefield’s Trench. “I never thought a pandemic would be the catalyst.”

The emergence of Miami as a corporate location spurred 830 Brickell’s decision to quote rental rates of $75 to $85 per square foot.

“These are the highest rates Miami has ever seen,” said Trench, who’s marketing the space.

Even so, 830 Brickell’s rates are lower than the typical rents for Class A space in San Francisco or Midtown Manhattan. The building is scheduled for completion in 2022.

Features will include a building-wide app that lets users order coffee or reserve a treadmill in the gym, Trench said. While work-from-home trends during the pandemic have reduced demand for office space, Trench expects a return to the office.

“As much as we’ve seen we can all work from home, it’s tough to be at home 24 hours a day,” he said.

Miami boosters are banking on a return to offices after the pandemic. In a bid to raise the city’s national profile, the Miami Downtown Development Authority (DDA) last year launched its Follow the Sun initiative, which pays incentives to businesses that move to the central business district.

To qualify, an employer must create at least 10 new jobs that pay at least $68,000 a year. In return, employers get $500 per employee, up to a maximum of $50,000 a year, and up to $150,000 over three years.

In February, the DDA said eight companies won grants that will bring 684 jobs downtown. In all, the companies will receive $560,000 from the initiative.

One of the recipients is Blackstone. Other grant winners include an unnamed California wellness company and a Connecticut hedge fund, along with a number of employers moving from elsewhere in South Florida.

Downtown developer Motwani is a member of the board of the DDA. He said the incentives aim to make employers feel welcome, especially those from markets, such as New York and California, where business owners often complain about red tape and bureaucratic mazes.

“It’s more of a gesture,” Motwani said. “What can we do?”

The idea for Follow the Sun started in 2013. Miami had embarked on a marketing campaign aimed at hedge funds and other financial firms in Manhattan and Greenwich, Conn. The DDA pitched itself as a sunny and carefree destination, a place with lower taxes and a more welcoming business climate.

The Follow the Sun initiative is funded from property taxes collected by the DDA. Motwani said the outlay will be more than repaid as hundreds of high-earning workers take jobs downtown.

Some also will live in the district. Even those who commute from other areas will still spend money at downtown restaurants and support cultural institutions. What’s more, some of the incentive money will be pumped into building improvements as the new tenants set up shop downtown.

“They’re giving back more than they’re taking,” Motwani said. “We want the jobs. We want the diversity to our job base.”

 

 

Source:  Commercial Observer

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