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New Office Tenants And New Development Balance Out Vacancy In Miami

While the economy has had a turbulent few years — with a global pandemic, record inflation and political drama — the vacancy rate in Miami’s office market has remained fairly static, as the horde of new-to-market tenants was balanced by new development, according to second-quarter research from Colliers.

In the second quarter of 2022, Miami-Dade’s vacancy rate stood at 11 percent across its 1,693 buildings totaling 94.3 million square feet, per the report. That marks the highest rate since the first and second quarters of 2021 when it reached 11.3 percent.

That’s above the pre-pandemic baseline in the second quarter of 2019, when the vacancy rate registered at 9.2 percent — on 91.7 million square feet of office space citywide.

Andrew Hellinger, co-principal of Urban-X Group, has been the beneficiary of national and local businesses coming to set up shop in Miami. For example, his investment in the mixed-use River Landing, along the Miami River, has paid off.

“The Health District, where River Landing is located, historically had a 0 percent vacancy rate. With the opening of the offices at River Landing, we introduced much-needed space to a tight market, which has leased much faster than we expected,” Hellinger said in a statement to Commercial Observer

The vacancy rate has remained more or less the same in Miami-Dade County despite the lingering concern that COVID-19 could stifle the return to office just as more office space was being added, Jonathan Kingsley, executive managing director at Colliers, pointed out.

“There is significant growth into South Florida combined with organic growth of existing companies who are expanding their footprints and upgrading the quality of the buildings and spaces in which they operate their businesses,” Kingsley said in a statement. “This has kept a healthy balance to offset companies and firms who are downsizing due to remote and/or hybrid work models.”

Developers have been building more in the last three months than they were in 2019 with 3.2 million square feet of office space under construction currently, compared to the 2.8 million being built in the second quarter of 2019.

Within Miami-Dade, the highest office vacancies were in the Wynwood District at around 27.7 percent and Downtown Miami with 22.4 percent — both popular areas that have seen recent deliveries. Class A suffered the highest vacancies as well, with Wynwood’s top spaces sitting empty at about 54.1 percent and 25.7 percent in Downtown.

Meanwhile, Hialeah Gardens saw the lowest vacancies in Miami-Dade, with the up-and-coming district having only 2.4 percent of its 792,137 square feet of office space — all Class B and C — available in the second quarter. Medley came in a close second with 2.9 percent of its 2.4 million square feet vacant.

In South Florida’s two other counties, vacancy rates weren’t too far off. Palm Beach County, with its 1,268 buildings and 52 million square feet of office space, had a vacancy rate of 9.1 percent, according to Colliers, while Broward County had an 11.7 percent vacancy rate within its 62 million square feet of 1,488 office buildings.

But recent hiccups in the economy are beginning to ripple through the market, particularly on the investment sales side.

“There are growing challenges on the capital markets/investment sales transactions for office buildings in recent weeks. Many buyers are forced to re-price (i.e. reduce) their offers based on increasing interest rates and cost of equity and debt,” Kingsley said in a statement. “Likewise, many owners who were considering sales of their office assets, are pausing until the debt markets settle and buyers return to more aggressive offers to purchase.”

 

Source:  Commercial Observer

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Plans Submitted To FAA For Massive Redevelopment At Miami Arena Site

Plans for a massive redevelopment at the former Miami Arena were filed with the Federal Aviation Administration this month.

The development is planned to become the biggest residential project by unit count in downtown Miami’s history, while also including a large amount of office space, according to a pre-application submitted to Miami-Dade County planners in January.

There will be a total of three towers, the January pre-application said.

On June 17, preliminary building heights were filed with the Federal Aviation Administration. The new filing states. that there will be multiple tower heights, ranging from 673 feet to 700 feet above sea level.

Preliminary plans from January show the three towers will rise up to 57 stories and include:

  • 2,351 residential units
  • 540,000 square feet of office space
  • Ground floor retail, including a possible supermarket
  • 2,457 parking spaces

The buildings will have a geometric green wall façade with plants and greenery, the January filing said.

Witkoff Group is the developer.

 

Source:  The Next Miami

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County May Seek Bids In July To Redevelop 20 Acres Of Downtown Miami

County staff is still working on putting together a bid solicitation to be out in July to redevelop over 20 acres of county-owned land in downtown Miami.

“It seems like we’re pretty close to a July release,” confirmed Commissioner Eileen Higgins, who has been working to present an item to the commission for the redevelopment for over a year and a half.

Different county departments have moved forward on the necessary steps prior to putting out a solicitation, such as the water and sewer capacity analysis, electrical capacity analysis and goals for resiliency. A consultant is working on the specifications for a transit terminal.

The project aims to better use county-owned lands and meet community needs. Thus, it would include affordable and workforce housing, market-rate housing, open spaces such as parks, office space, a new library, a new historical museum, and a downtown intermodal terminal to provide bus bays for all buses terminating in the Government Center area.

As for resiliency goals, Commissioner Higgins said the Office of Resiliency is looking at LEED certification of buildings, water usage specifications, and green spaces.

“I’m not expecting to be that specific,” said Ms. Higgins when asked about the location of the parks. “I’m going to allow the private sector to be creative.”

Although all the requirements the county would provide will officially be known when the bid is published, staff expects it could take 10 to 15 years to complete the redevelopment.

The only element still in the works that could take longer to define is the transit terminal, Ms. Higgins told Miami Today. The intermodal terminal is a $35 million project that is part of the People’s Transportation Plan (PTP) FY 2022-2026, approved by county commissioners Feb. 2.

“It’s exciting to create a new neighborhood centered on affordability, centered on transit,” Ms. Higgins told Miami Today in a February interview. The downtown Government Center is already a hub of the county’s transit system, with the Metromover, Metrorail, bus system, and Brightline already providing services in the area.

As Miami Today previously reported, efforts to redevelop the Government Center area date to 2014, when county commissioners directed the mayor to provide a report for the plan, development, and maintenance of the county-owned property in downtown Miami.

In 2017, former Mayor Carlos Giménez presented a report on the county-owned properties, the redevelopment potential of some lands and assets, vacant parcels, and the potential opportunities. Since then, the county has been adopting rezoning ordinances to place the Government Center area in Transit Oriented Development (TOD) zoning.

“We’re going to be creating a hub downtown to live, work, and learn,” Mayor Daniella Levine Cava said in an April interview.

 

Source:  Miami Today

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Wynwood Buildings More Than Quadruple In Value

A pair of warehouses converted to office space along the railroad tracks in Miami’s Wynwood Arts District sold for $18.75 million, more than quadrupling in value.

Wynwood Spaces LLC, managed by Martin Miculitzki of Block Capital Group in Miami, sold the buildings of 8,060 square feet at 100 N.E. 28th St. and 15,270 square feet at 85 N.E. 27th St., plus an adjoining parking lot, to WellMeaning Spaces LLC, managed by Eduardo Pelaez, CEO of Miami-based WellMeaning Investments, a family real estate office. W Financial REIT provided an $11.5 million mortgage to the buyer.

The buildings were constructed in 1971 and 1925, respectively. The site covers 33,320 square feet.

The buildings last traded for $4.6 million in 2014.

 

Source:  SFBJ

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Leasing Activity Heats Up At The Gateway at Wynwood

As Miami continues to experience a post-pandemic boom, The Gateway of Wynwood – the newest office building in the Wynwood area – announces tech start-up OpenStore’s expansion and the growth of its impressive roster of tenants with the addition of two new leases.

Aron Rosenberg, the developer behind The Gateway at Wynwood, has signed a lease with OpenStore for an approximately 26,000-square-foot expansion, bringing the company’s total footprint in the building to over 40,000 square feet. At the same time, The Gateway at Wynwood signed a new lease with Baseline, a vertically integrated platform investment company, for 5,000 square feet of office space. It also signed a lease with Mediterranean-Asian-Fusion Steakhouse concept DALIYAH and MIZU Rooftop Garden for approximately 6,000 square feet of ground-floor restaurant space plus the nearly 3,000-square-foot rooftop area.

The Gateway at Wynwood was represented by Colliers’ Executive Managing Director Stephen Rutchik, Managing Director Tom Farmer and Director Tyler de la Pena in the office lease transactions. CBRE’s Alex Cesar, First Vice President of Retail Advisory and Transaction Services, and Drew Schaul, Senior Vice President of Advisory and Transaction Services, represented The Gateway at Wynwood in the retail lease.

“Leasing activity has ramped up since the building’s opening, and we are excited to welcome these new tenants and see a current tenant expand so fast at The Gateway at Wynwood,” said Shelby Rosenberg, R&B Realty’s Head of Development and Acquisitions, Asset and Property Manager, US Portfolio. “Our building continues to remain a hub for new-to-market tenants, expansions and relocations to Wynwood, the ‘place-to-be’ for companies looking for a live-work-play environment. We are proud of the role we have played in the transformation of this community into one of Miami’s hottest neighborhoods.”

The Gateway at Wynwood, which opened in 2022 as the first tenant took occupancy in January, recently achieved LEED Gold Certification. The building implemented practical and measurable strategies and solutions in areas including sustainable site development, water savings, energy efficiency, materials selection and indoor environmental quality. Green buildings allow companies to operate more sustainably and give the people inside them a healthier, more comfortable space to work.

OpenStore, the building’s first tenant to officially move in, is a platform that allows entrepreneurs with Shopify businesses to sell their companies and receive liquidity for what they’ve built. Founded by Keith Rabois of Founders Fund, Jack Abraham of Atomic, and Michael Rubenstein, the former President of AppNexus, OpenStore connects merchants and customers into a single unified shopping experience through access to data, information, and capital. The company announced in July that it raised $30 million in Series A funding, with a valuation of $250 million. OpenStore’s goal is to offer instant liquidity for eCommerce entrepreneurs.

Baseline is focused on developing and operating short and long-term single-family rentals. Baseline’s principals have delivered over 4,000 market-leading vacation rentals and 20,000 single-family homes with an aggregate value of over $7 billion. This will be the Orlando-based company’s first Miami office.

DALIYAH and MIZU Rooftop Garden’s concept was created by DZYNE Hospitality and OPSO Group, which are partnering with Canada’s A5 Hospitality. DZYNE Hospitality, led by Derrick Orosa, aka “DZYNE,” is working with OPSO Group, the company behind some of Miami’s trendiest restaurants, including Midtown’s MAÜ MIAMI and KAVO MIAMI, on the new concept. Founded by Alexandre Besnard and Patrick Hétu, A5 Hospitality has been a leading player in Montreal’s hospitality industry for 15 years. A5 has a varied yet targeted offering, ranging from high-end Japanese dining to large-scale entertainment projects, specializing in the development and operation of restaurants and bars. MIZU Rooftop Garden is set to open first, in time for Art Basel 2022, with the downstairs restaurant, opening by Summer of 2023.

The_Gateway_at_Wynwood_Rooftop

“Our Rooftop Garden has the most amazing views of the entire Miami Skyline, South Beach, Brickell, Downtown, Midtown, Design District and of course, Wynwood”, said DZYNE of DZYNE Hospitality. “Our high-end Mediterranean Japanese Steakhouse will be situated in between all the action of Wynwood, making it the ideal destination location, where you can have amazing Japanese cuisine with disco, retro and high energy music playing throughout the restaurant or take our private elevator directly to the Rooftop Garden and lay back for some specialty cocktails, bottle service, Japanese Krudos, fresh sushi and cold Japanese dishes, as well as Wagyu and Kobe BBQ.”  

The Gateway at Wynwood offers about 195,000 square feet of leasable Class A office space and nearly 25,900 square feet of prime street-level retail space. Designed by renowned architect Kobi Karp, the environmentally responsible building features flexible floorplans, a private rooftop terrace, gym, unique bay window system, 24/7 on-site security, vibrant exterior cladding, and 2:1,000 on-site covered parking. The Gateway at Wynwood announced the building’s first office lease with biotech company Veru Inc in the summer of 2021. The eight-year, 12,155-square-foot lease will serve as the company’s global headquarters and triple Veru’s current office space.

 

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RFR Buys Third Building On Miami Block For $451 PSF

The 99-year-old Bayside Office Center in downtown Miami sold for $25 million, apparently as part of RFR Holdings’ move to acquire most of a full block in downtown Miami.

Bayside Office Center LLC sold the 44,431-square-foot office building at 141 N.E. Third Ave. The buyer was 141 NE Third LLC, which state records show is affiliated with New York-based RFR Holdings. The price equated to $451 a square foot.

The same family group has owned this building since 1978, when it traded for $580,000.

Rising 12 stories, the building was constructed on the 5,297-square-foot site in 1923 and renovated in 1986.

RFR appears to be positioning itself for a major real estate investment in a prime site opposite Bayfront Park.

 

Source:  SFBJ

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Strong Demand For Office Space At Wynwood Plaza, Utilities Deal Inked

The developers of The Wynwood Plaza have signed a deal for water and sewer utilities.

Active negotiations for 75,000 square feet of office space at the project are now underway, according to a release last month by representatives of co-developer Carpe Real Estate Partners.

Some of the world’s “most creative companies” are among those who have expressed interest in the new project, Carpe said.

Records show that the developer signed a deal for water and sewer utilities at the site late in late March. Demolition is already underway there.

According to the newly signed utilities agreement, Wynwood Plaza will include:

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

Plans previously submitted to the city also show a landscaped 25,000 square-foot outdoor public plaza, and a parking garage with 668 car spaces and 954 bike spaces.

 

 

Source:  The Next Miami

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South Beach Office Building Sells For $52M

East End Capital and GreenOak Real Estate offloaded a South Beach office building for $52.3 million, property records show.

The four-story building, located at 555 Washington Avenue, is in a district known for its party scene, just a block from both 5th Street and nightlife mogul David Grutman’s popular Goodtime Hotel.

The 137,579-square-foot property offers 243 parking spots, 46,000 square feet for offices and 22,000 square feet of street-level retail, most of which is leased to CVS.

For the buyer, the Boston-based Davis Companies, the purchase appears to be its first office foray in South Florida.

The sellers paid $38 million in 2018 for the mixed-use property, built in 2001. The $14 million profit in just four years reflects Miami Beach’s growing appeal for top executives.

 

Source:  Commercial Observer

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Miami Beach Leaders Want Office-Housing Towers Off Lincoln Road. Will Locals Approve?

If Miami Beach residents approve, two development projects would convert three parking lots off Lincoln Road into apartments, plus office and retail space. The city-approved plans are part of a larger effort to diversify the community’s economy amid South Florida’s migration of professionals working largely for tech and financial services companies.

Miami Beach voters will decide in either August or November whether the city should enter into public-private partnerships with two development teams, said Miami Beach Commissioner Ricky Arriola, sponsor of the plan to build on the three surface parking lots. The city needs at least 50% of voters to approve it. Developers proposed two buildings with 43 apartments, 187,000 square feet of office space, 33,000 square feet of retail and 715 parking spaces, more than double the number of existing spaces. The buildings would rise up to 80 feet.

Miami Beach officials approved two bids in February after receiving 18 submissions. The move comes two years after the commission first issued a request for proposals in late 2020 and later issued a formal call for bids. Lincoln Road Property Owners — comprised of Integra Investments, Starwood Capital Group and the Comras Company — plan to redevelop the lot between 17th Street and Lenox Avenue and 1040 Lincoln Road into two buildings with office and retail space. The Peebles Corporation, Scott Robins Companies and former Miami Beach Mayor Philip Levine aim to convert the lot at 1664 Meridian Ave. into a building with apartment rental, office and retail space.

“The city is doing everything it can to diversify the local economy,” Arriola said. “We are taking surface parking lots that are not the best use of public land into something that will make it into an economic engine for the city.”

Developers would undergo the site plan and design review approval steps once receiving support from residents, Arriola said. Construction would start in 2023 and the developments would be completed in 2026. The Lincoln Road Property Owners said in a joint statement, “This development will position Miami Beach to attract new businesses, create sought-after jobs, spur additional private sector investment and create new revenue that will enable Miami Beach to continue investing in infrastructure and quality of life initiatives.” The housing piece will benefit the community, Scott Robins Companies President Scott Robins said, because “people want to live close to their office.” Demand in Miami Beach is anticipated to remain high for office space. “The world that we live in is full of risk,” but “we are not talking about a ton of space,” said Bob Orban, principal in the Miami office of commercial real estate market analytics firm Cresa. Businesses will benefit from an increase in the daytime population, said retail expert Beth Azor of Azor Advisory Services in Weston.

Some Lincoln Road business owners are looking at the long-term gain, despite a potential shortage of parking spaces during construction, including V&E Restaurant Group CEO Matias Pesce. His firm owns restaurants Vida & Estilo, Havana 1957, La Cerveceria de Barrio and Cortadito Coffee House. “The shortage of parking may have an impact on guest traffic,” Pesce said, “but we know it will be for the best.” Another challenge would be a lack of affordable and workforce housing, Orban said. Robins said he and his partners are in talks with the Beach officials to possibly include affordable or workforce housing. “For the people that work for these financial services firms that are going to answer phones and type documents,” Orban said, “it would be more attractive in terms of having something affordable close to their place of work.”

 

Source:  Miami Herald

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8-Story Sister Wynwood Office Buildings Get OK

As the popular Wynwood Arts District evolves it is enjoying a boom in new office space, including a large mixed-use project that will bring a working campus of two 8-story sister buildings at Northwest Fifth Avenue and 27th Street.

WYN ON 5TH NORTH, at 2701 NW Fifth Ave., and WYN ON 5TH SOUTH, at 2661 NW Fifth Ave., are proposing together nearly 250,000 square feet of offices.

Developer-applicant RAL Tricap Wynwood LLC presented the project March 16 to the City of Miami’s Urban Development Review Board, which recommended approval.

The northern building is to offer 106,414 square feet of offices and 6,961 square feet of commercial-retail use, along with 268 parking spaces and 33 bike spaces. The southern building is designed with 139,254 square feet of offices, 15,999 square feet of commercial-retail use, along with parking for 377 vehicles and 36 bike spaces.

The buildings will total 578,325 square feet of floor area.

Each building will have an enclosed garage and an activated roof deck.

The developer seeks several waivers:

  • Increase maximum lot coverage to 35,254 square feet, or 88.6%, where up to 80% is permitted.
  • A less than 30% reduction in total required parking spaces for a project within a transit corridor area.
  • Above-ground parking on a secondary frontage to extend into the second layer beyond 50% of the length of the frontage.
  • Parking contained within a mezzanine space.
  • Extensions above the maximum height for stair, elevator, mechanical enclosures, habitable space, or non-habitable rooms.

The board voted to recommend approval with a recommendation to study alignment of the entrances at street level, and a condition to study the proposed artwork on the façade at street level to have it be more Wynwood-like.

 

Source:  Miami Today

 

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