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Miami Beach Votes Down Big Real Estate Projects

Miami Beach voters on Tuesday nixed three major real estate projects proposed by industry heavyweights Stephen RossBarry Sternlicht, and Don Peebles.

Some 53.4 percent of voters rejectedRoss bid to exceed the current building-size regulations, effectively halting his plans to redevelop the historic Deauville Beach Resort, a MiMo-style property.

The New York-based developer wanted to increase the floor-area ratio, a method of regulating a building’s size, for the Deauville lot at 6701 Collins Avenue and two adjacent parcels. Had the ballot measure passed, Related would have developed an Equinox-branded complex with two luxury towers, featuring 125 condos and 175 hotel rooms. (Related owns Equinox.)

The development seemed like a passion project for Ross, who partly grew up in town.

“As a native of Miami Beach, this project is personal to me. I know what this site means to the people of Miami Beach,” Ross said when announcing his purchase bid in May. 

The billionaire developer enlisted world-renowned architect Frank Gehry to design the new complex. In July, Ross also spoke at a Miami Beach city commission meeting, where he mapped out his plans for “a world-class project.” Yes For A Safe and Strong Future, a political action committee tied to Related Companies, spent over $1 million in favor of the referendum.

Ross’ plans for the Deauville site are unclear following the defeat. The sale was contingent on voters approving the height increase. When reached for comment, Ross and Related representatives provided a statement from Yes For A Safe and Strong Future.

“While we are disappointed with the outcome, we know North Beach deserves an economic engine, not an eyesore. We appreciate the tremendous support we received from thousands who backed a real vision for a better North Beach and still believe there’s a brighter future ahead,” the statement reads. 

Regardless of Tuesday’s vote, the Deauville property will be demolished. The resort has been closed since 2017, following an electrical fire. It fell into such disrepair that a Miami Beach official deemed the resort structurally unsafe and ordered it to be knocked down last January. A Miami-Dade circuit judge later upheld the order. The demolition is scheduled for this Sunday.

No More Offices on Lincoln Road

Ross wasn’t the only developer to lose in Miami Beach.

Ventures led by Sternlicht’s Starwood Capital and Peebles’ Peebles Corporation both sought 99-year leases to build competing office-heavy, mixed-use projects on city-owned land near Lincoln Road, a pedestrian shopping street in Miami Beach. As with Ross, voters rejected each of the proposed leases by 53 percent.

Had they been approved, the leases together would have generated $355 million for the city over 99 years, as stated on ballots. Developers saw an opportunity to build boutique offices in Miami Beach in part to serve billionaires, who relocated to the island town during the pandemic and now seek offices near their residences.

At 1688 Lenox Avenue and 1080 Lincoln Lane North, Starwood’s plans with partners Integra Investments and The Comras Company called for a 100-foot-tall structure that would feature office space, ground-floor retail (including 1,000 square feet leased to a nonprofit rent-free) and a public parking lot to replace the existing surface lot.

Just three blocks east, at 1664 Meridian Avenue, Peebles — along with two partners, local developer Scott Robins and former Miami Beach Mayor Philip Levine — wanted to develop a six-story building with Class A office space, 43 market-rate residential apartments, ground-floor retail space, and public parking to replace the existing 151 spots.

“We will consider working with the city to make some adjustments to our proposal and consider presenting it to the voters again without such a crowded and controversial group of ballot questions. That would give the voters the opportunity to focus on the many public benefits from our proposal,” Peebles said in a statement.

The Ones That Passed 

Miami Beach residents did approve some referendums related to real estate — those which weren’t directly tied to developers.

Voters agreed to boost the floor-area ratio for oceanfront hotels in the South of Fifth neighborhood that want to convert to residential buildings. Residents also greenlighted a floor-area ratio hike for certain office and residential properties east of Washington Avenue between First and Second streets if the owner agrees to prohibit hotels and short-term rentals on the property.

Residents also passed a ballot initiative that asked voters whether the municipality should seek voter approval before selling or leasing city-owned properties for over 10 years. The measure affects properties between West 43rd Street and West 40th Street, and from Pine Tree Drive on the east to Alton Road on the west.

Unlike in Miami Beach, Developers Win in Miami

Across the bay in Miami, developers had better luck Tuesday. Sixty-four percent of voters approved a 99-year lease extension for a waterfront site in Downtown Miami, paving the way for a $1.5 billion development.

Hyatt Hotels and Miami-based developer Gencom plan to tear down the James L. Knight Center and build three skyscrapers. Called Miami Riverbridge, the development would include 1,542 rental apartments in total, along with 615 hotel rooms and 264 serviced apartments. The annual rent will jump from $250,000 to at least $2.5 million. The joint venture has also vowed to make a $25 million contribution to affordable housing initiatives, the details of which have not yet been released.

“Miami Riverbridge will improve access to and from the Hyatt Regency Miami site, activate the Miami riverfront, and meet growing demand for housing, hotel rooms and more meeting space in our downtown,” James Francque, global head of transactions for Hyatt, and Phil Keb, executive vice president of development for Gencom, said in a joint statement.

 

Source:  Commercial Observer

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Shvo Wants To Redevelop Aging Lincoln Clock Tower Building

Shvo is betting big on Miami Beach.

Michael Shvo’s firm is seeking to redevelop a 13-story office tower at 407 Lincoln Road, according to plans filed with the city.

The aging tower is one of the tallest office buildings in Miami Beach and is known for its clock display on the top. It sits directly in front of SoundScape Park.

The tower would mark Shvo’s third office project in the city.

But first Shvo’s firm has to acquire the property. An entity called EuroAmerican Group owns the building, which is split into 12 office condos, according to property records. Shvo’s filing with the city likely means a sale will soon be finalized. Shvo declined to comment and Michael Shvo could not be reached for comment.

Shvo tapped Foster + Partners and Kobi Karp as architects. Shvo will seek to completely renovate the exterior of the building and renovate the lobby, elevators and clock display, plans show. The renderings of the building look unrecognizable from the building’s current design.

Wealthy people have long flocked to Miami Beach, but mostly to live, not work. In recent years, developers have sought to capitalize on the wealth migration by building more office space for family offices and headquarters, as well as for the influx of tech and financial firms to the Miami area.

In addition to the Lincoln Road project, Shvo is building a six-story office building on Washington Avenue, and a 250,000-square-foot office building on Alton Road, both in Miami Beach. Shvo’s plans follow two major, controversial Miami Beach office proposals, one by Don Peebles, former Miami Beach mayor Philip Levine and Scott Robins, and another by Integra Investments, Barry Sternlicht’s Starwood and Michael Comras’ The Comras Company. The proposals, to be built on city-owned parking lots under 99-year leases, are heading to a referendum on Nov. 8.

An entity tied to Key International founder Jose Ardid bought the Lincoln Road office tower from the Financial Federal Savings & Loan Association in 1982, records show. In 2003, Key International sold the property to EuroAmerican Group, which lists Ivan Gonzalez Ruiz as president.

Shvo’s other major project in Miami Beach is the redevelopment of the oceanfront Raleigh and two other neighboring hotels. Shvo is planning to redevelop the historic Raleigh and build a 44-unit luxury condo tower. Rosewood Hotels & Resorts was tapped as the branding partner for the hotel.

 

Source:  The Real Deal

 

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Michael Shvo Plans Second Miami Beach Office Project

Michael Shvo is doubling down on Miami Beach’s office market.

Fresh off obtaining city approval for an office project along Alton Road, Shvo has filed plans for a six-story office building at 1665-1667 Washington Avenue, according to city records.

The Kobi Karp-designed development would have 21,000 square feet of offices on the top five floors, 58 parking spaces, a 1,000-square-foot ground-floor coffee shop and a 5,500-square-foot rooftop amenity deck. The site is just over a quarter of an acre.

The Miami Beach Planning Board is expected to vote on the proposal Sept. 20.

Shvo’s eponymous New York-based company, through an affiliate, bought the property at 1665 Washington for $4.5 million in February, property records show. It currently houses a three-story office building spanning 10,000 square feet. The vacant lot at 1667 Washington Avenue was included in Shvo’s $103 million purchase of the Raleigh Hotel in 2019.

In his other South Beach office development, Shvo wants to build a 250,000-square-foot project that will include retail on the site of a commercial strip at 1656-1680 Alton Road — including the former home of Epicure Gourmet Market & Café — as well as an adjacent parking lot at 1677 West Avenue.

In June, the Miami Beach Planning Board approved vacating an alley to allow the project to proceed. The Alton Road building still needs design approval from the city.

Shvo’s office projects come as South Beach approaches a crossroads. Developers and some city officials are calling for office construction that would help shed the area’s party image. Yet, others are pushing back over traffic concerns and questions regarding demand to lease the space.

In November, Miami Beach voters will cast ballots on plans by two development teams — one led by Don Peebles, and the other by Integra Investments and including Barry Sternlicht as a partner — to build offices on separate sites near Lincoln Road.

Shvo, who started out as a broker before becoming a developer in New York, initially set his sights on Miami Beach’s oceanfront hotel market, with plans for redevelopment. He and his partners, Turkish investor Serdar Bilgili and Deutsche Finance, bought the Raleigh, South Seas and Richmond hotels for a total of $243 million in 2019. The partnership hit rough patches, with heated lawsuits erupting between Bilgili and Shvo. The suits were settled, with Shvo and Deutsche pursuing their plans for the hotels.

They plan to restore the properties and develop a 17-story, 44-unit condo tower on part of the Raleigh site. The high-end Rosewood Hotels & Resorts will manage the Raleigh and brand the new tower.

 

Source: The Real Deal

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Construction Permits Filed At High-Tech Lynq Wynwood Office Campus

A construction permit application has been submitted to Miami’s Building Department for the Lynq Wynwood office complex (formerly knows as Wyn on 5th).

The developers have previously said the project would be the most high-tech office campus in Miami.

The project consists of a north and south building  across the street from each other, both at 8-stories. The two buildings will have a combined 36,000 square feet of ground floor retail space, and 331,000 square feet of office space. Each building will also have an enclosed parking garage, with 370 spaces in the south garage and 265 spaces in the north garage.

According to a May press release, the developers secured the necessary approvals to proceed with construction of the buildings. The project was reviewed by the Wynwood Design Review Committee and the Urban Design Review Board in February and March.

The full construction permits are in pre-screening with Miami’s Building Department since July 22, meaning that the plan sheets have yet to be filed. The developer is opting to use a private reviewer to expedite the process, the permit shows.

Juneau Construction Company is listed as the contractor.

DERM records show that permits were also filed in late July for drainage wells at both the north and south tower construction sites.

RAL Development and TriStar Capital are the developers. Arquitectonica is the architect.

 

Source:  The Next Miami

 

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Wynwood Plaza Submitted To FAA, With Construction Permit Getting Closer

The developer of The Wynwood Plaza has submitted the project to the FAA for review as it moves closer to obtaining a construction permitting.

According to the July 26 submission to the FAA, the tallest height of the project is planned to reach 212 feet above ground, or 225 feet above sea level.

A construction permit application was submitted to Miami’s Building Department in September 2021, listing an estimated hard construction cost of $130 million, and Moss Construction as the contractor.

City records show that the permit was moving through multiple reviews by Miami’s Building Department as of July.

In April, the developers said there was strong demand for the office component, with 75,000 square feet said to be in negotiation.

According to a water and sewer utilities deal the developers signed in April, The Wynwood Plaza is planned to include:

  • 509 apartments
  • 212,962 square feet of office space
  • 25,550 square feet of retail

The project is also planned to include a landscaped 25,000 square-foot outdoor public plaza, and a parking garage with 668 car spaces and 954 bike spaces.

Gensler is listed as the architect of record on the construction permit.

 

Source:  The Next Miami

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Brick & Timber To Buy Cube Wynwd Office Building For $60M

Brick & Timber Collective plans to purchase its third Wynwood building.

Glenn Gilmore’s Brick & Timber put the Cube Wynwd offices at 222 Northwest 24th Street under contract for over $60 million. The seller is a joint venture of Tricera Capital and Alex Karakhanian’s Lndmrk Development, which will retain a 20 percent stake, two of the sources said.

In March, Brick & Timber paid $49 million for Wynwood Annex at 215 Northwest 24th Street, across the street from Cube Wynwd. The deal marked the San Francisco-based firm’s debut in South Florida. On the heels of that deal, Brick & Timber bought the three-story office and retail building at 2724 and 2734 Northwest First Avenue for $9 million in May.

Cube Wynwd is almost fully leased, one of the sources said.

The eight-story, roughly 100,000-square-foot building was completed in 2019. The developers, Redsky Capital and JZ Capital Partners, sold it to Tricera and Lndmrk for $28 million in the spring of last year.

 

Source:  The Real Deal

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NR Investments Files Proposal To Build Mixed-Use Complex In Allapattah

NR Investments wants to develop a massive mixed-use complex on Miami’s General Services Administration site in Allapattah.

Ron Gottesmann and Nir Shoshani’s development company filed a proposal for a 99-year lease and redevelopment of the city-owned 18-acre property at 1970 Northwest 13th Avenue and 1950 Northwest 12th Avenue, according to the application. The property is just south of the Santa Clara Metrorail station.

NR Investments wants to build 2,500 apartments; 300 hotel keys; 200,000 square feet of office space; and 100,000 square feet of retail, the plans show. As part of the multifamily portion, 500 units will be workforce housing for households earning from 100 percent to 140 percent of the area median income. The proposal calls for roughly 5 acres of open public greenspace.

The application does not specify the heights of the buildings, but does say the project won’t require changes to the site’s existing zoning. Currently, towers of up to 30 stories, or buildings with eight stories for podiums and 22 stories for the main portion of the towers, are allowed.

NR Investments’ submitted the application in late May as an unsolicited proposal for the public property, meaning the city has to allow other developers the opportunity to file redevelopment plans.

On Thursday, Miami commissioners unanimously voted to accept NR’s application, a symbolic decision showing they are not rejecting it, and agreed to issue formal requests for proposals. The official RFP will be issued in 45 days and allow another 45 days for applications submittals.

NR’s project envisions various public spaces, such as a “study house” for after-school, continuing education and job-training programs, as well as a community market with a stage for public events, and a promenade with food and retail stands, the application shows. The redevelopment also would breathe life into the Santa Clara station, which NR said has the lowest ridership out of all Metrorail stops.

The 5 acres of public parks will include a dog park, community gardens and possibly an urban farm.

DPZ CoDesign is the project’s architect.

NR proposes rental payments to the city that would add up to $1.5 billion for the land lease over the 99 years, the filed materials show.

The Miami GSA site currently is used for city services such as printing, and for the storage of trucks. It also has a fire rescue station on the northeast corner of the site. Under NR’s plan, the station would be moved elsewhere along Northwest 20th Street.

Among the issues commissioners discussed is that the GSA site is one of several locations designated for the creation of public park space to make up for the greenspace that will be lost by the development of Miami Freedom Park soccer stadium. Under city rules, a developer that builds over park space has to recreate it elsewhere.

NR’s proposal calls for slightly less than the 6.8-acre greenspace that must be recreated on the site to make up for what is lost from the Miami Freedom Park project.

Overall, this is something that can be fixed as the redevelopment plans move forward, some of the commissioners said.

“I don’t think that at this moment we need to determine down to the inch,” said commission chair Christine King.

Miami-based NR is among the firms that redeveloped the city’s Arts & Entertainment District. Its projects there include the 38-story Canvas condominium at 1630 Northeast First Avenue, and Filling Station Lofts, an 81-unit rental building at 1657 North Miami Avenue.

This year, NR started building the 29-story Uni Tower with 252 workforce and affordable rental units at 1642 Northeast First Avenue.

 

Source:  The Real Deal

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Starwood Cancels Purchase Of Miami Beach Office Building

Days before it was slated to close on the purchase of an office building in Miami Beach, Starwood Capital Group has pulled out of the deal, according to a source directly involved in the matter.

Miami Beach-based Starwood, one of the largest real estate investors in the world, was under contract to purchase The Lincoln, at 1691 Michigan Ave., for $92.5 million from CLPF Lincoln LLC, in care of Washington, D.C.-based Clarion Partners. The Miami Beach City Commission approved the assignment of the ground lease for the property July 20, clearing the way for the purchase. The price of the pending deal was disclosed in city records.

However, Starwood terminated the contract July 26, according to a source close to the deal. That means Starwood will likely lose the $2.5 million deposit it made when the property went under contract. If Starwood had pulled out of the deal only a week earlier, it could have recovered that money, according to the source.

The Lincoln consists of 118,658 square feet of office space, 43,166 square feet of retail and a 709-space parking garage.

Source:  SFBJ

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Miami’s CBD Is Getting Mind-Boggling Office Rent Increases

For the first time in history, the average asking rent for office space in Miami skyrocketed to more than $50 per SF in Q2.

Brickell is dominating the market — its 42% year-over-year rent increase surpassed Manhattan and Los Angeles, according to a JLL report.

Migration of America’s top talent to Miami is the main factor driving high rents and making Miami’s office market the hottest it has ever been, Blanca Commercial Real Estate founder and owner Tere Blanca told Bisnow.

“[Miami] is a place where you can attract talent, and the talent has migrated in big numbers during the pandemic and today,” Blanca said. “With a very diverse, educated workforce and population, companies are excited to be in a city that is growing in many ways [and experiencing] a business expansion.” 

Florida added 10,522 new tech jobs last year, the second most in the country, according to the Computing Technology Industry Association. CompTIA ranked the Miami metro fourth in the U.S. for net tech jobs added, and LinkedIn reported a 30% year-over-year increase in IT and software jobs in Miami in 2021.

Blanca CRE has been a player in the industry for over 35 years. According to the firm, office development is being spurred in Brickell and Wynwood by remote work and zoning improvements.

“Brickell and Downtown have experienced a lot of this dynamic … of new people moving and choosing to live in the urban core,” Blanca said, adding that the pandemic accelerated a workforce migration that industry leaders “felt would happen sooner or later.”

The Wynwood Rezoning project, approved in 2015, led to an explosion of interest from developers. As office buildings joined residential, corporate users and investors began flocking in.

Blanca CRE was the agent when Blackstone purchased two office buildings in Miami in 2021, and Blanca said its acquisition spurred more office activity.

“That unleashed an activity that was unprecedented in terms of companies coming here, many in the financial services sector and then later the tech industry and fintech industry,” Blanca said.

Heavy hitters such as Apollo, Babylon and Citadel have come to Brickell in recent years.

Other blue-chip, out-of-town tenants moving in include Microsoft Corp. and Marsh, a subsidiary of Marsh & McLennan Agency, which both moved into 830 Brickell. For coworking firms like WeWork and Industrious, the demand is at an all-time high.

“They have waiting lists, so there are many companies that have entered into licensed agreements with WeWork, IWG, Industrious and so on because they are recruiting talent, they are growing their accounts here and waiting for their permanent spaces to be delivered,” Blanca said. “We expect there is going to be tremendous demand for space on a longer-term basis as each company expands and as the executives choose where they are going to reside.”

As that happens, office demand may spill into other neighborhoods, she said.

For WeWork, this has meant finding new ways to maximize its “inherent flexibility” to accommodate the surplus of out-of-town tenants.

“We continue to see strong demand in Miami where, as shared in our Q1 2022 earnings report, we saw over 90% occupancy and accounted for 9% of commercial office leases despite representing approximately 1% of the market stock,” WeWork Territory Vice President Suzie Russell told Bisnow via email. “As a result, we have waiting lists in most of our Miami locations.” 

Russell said demand is broad-based across company sizes and industries, including tech and finance.

Initial Q2 key findings provided to Bisnow by Blanca Commercial Real Estate show that the flight-to-quality trend is positioned to continue into the foreseeable future, especially in Brickell, Wynwood, Miami Beach and the Miami Design District. That will continue driving pricing up and vacancy down.

Asking rents at 830 Brickell, considered the top-tier building in Brickell, are between $125 and $150 per SF, a $25-per-SF increase over Q1.

“This trend is extremely prominent in Tier 1 Brickell office buildings where rents increased 7.2% from the previous quarter with some landlords increasing rents between $5.00 – $7.50 per SF,” Blanca CRE said in a report. “This growth will be especially prominent in Miami’s CBD where 40% of new to market tenants are looking for space.”

Miami’s office vacancy rate is at its lowest level in eight quarters.

 

Source:  Bisnow

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Office Project Could Replace Gas Station In Miami Beach

Arkadia Property Group plans to redevelop a gas station in Miami Beach into an $11 million mixed-use project centered on office space.

The city’s Planning Board will consider the application July 26 for the 0.36-acre site at 1840 Alton Road. The property belonging to Alton Road Supreme Services, owned by Mario Suarez in Hollywood, currently has an Exxon service station and cash wash.

It would be developed by 1840 Alton Road Partners LLC, co-owned by David M. Aaron and Richard Kilstock, the managing principals of Bal Harbour-based Arkadia Property Group.

With an estimated cost of $11 million, the project would total 67,641 square feet in five stories. It would consist of 3,300-square-foot of ground-level retail, 36 parking spaces on the second level, 17,113 square feet of office space on the third and fourth floors, and a fifth floor containing an 8,000-square-foot live/work unit.

 

Source:  SFBJ

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