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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

 

Source:  SFBJ

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Commercial Real Estate Trends And The Call For Creativity

The ripple effect of the pandemic’s impact on the commercial real estate (CRE) market is going to have a lasting effect on several market sectors. The remote workforce genie isn’t going back in the bottle, and the reliance on e-commerce and advances in technology for home delivery will continue to disrupt retail. However, there is reason for optimism, but not across all sectors, and there’s still a lot of emperors without clothes out there talking about how everything is going to be just fine. There are thriving CRE sectors, some that need only pivot to adjust to the new normal, and others that will have to completely reinvent themselves.

Multifamily Real Estate: On The Rebound

As a leader in providing property management technology to the apartment industry, my company has seen firsthand how the multifamily real estate market has made a faster recovery than expected compared with other real estate sectors. It’s arguable that some markets felt almost no impact at all, and some sectors are actually stronger coming out of the lockdown. Yes, government aid has helped, but the overall market has gotten back on its feet quickly and will continue to do so in 2022. The multifamily market is seeing strong growth with low vacancies, steady rental rates and robust development for next year.

Investors agree: Recent data puts sales volume of market-rate apartments at $46.6 billion in the first half of 2021, which was up by 35% from a year ago. This is on pace with the average growth rate for the past five years. Apartments in secondary markets or further from major cities may benefit from this remote work trend since employees no longer need to be near their physical office location.

Industrial Real Estate: Thriving During Distress

The industrial market saw a huge boost during the pandemic due to the growth in e-commerce, and it looks like this will keep rolling through 2022. Year-over-year e-commerce growth surged to 44.5% in Q2 from 14.8% in Q1, which put pressure on retailers, wholesalers and third-party logistics companies (3PLs) to lower transportation costs. There is still healthy demand for industrial real estate, with 367.8 million square feet of industrial property under construction. Completions for 2021 are forecasted to top 250 million square feet, slightly above 2019’s total.

Rent increases were most significant in or adjacent to port areas where there was increased demand due to shipping problems exacerbating supply chain challenges. Vacancies remained steady at 6.1% compared to March 2020. Strong vacancy and rent growth figures show new space has easily been absorbed.

Office Real Estate: In Dire Trouble

Since approximately 50% of U.S. workers worked remotely during the pandemic, flexible work location is no longer a nice-to-have but often a requirement. Businesses have shifted from “always in-person” to a remote workforce, and a vast majority of that workforce likes it. In my opinion, this trend isn’t going anywhere; about 74% of the workforce is planning to permanently be working remotely. This spells a significant reduction in demand for office space. Companies are not re-upping leases and are significantly reducing their square footage, all signals of troubling trends for the CRE market. Not surprisingly, I’ve noticed that CRE owners aren’t talking about this exodus and are telling all who will listen that everyone’s coming back. They may even talk about the need for flex space but not about how flex space will require less space overall.

An overwhelming 72% of companies anticipate modest office space reductions, and 9% of large companies plan to make their office space “significantly smaller” in the next three years. Perhaps some CRE owners are working behind the curtain to stem the tide of companies leaving their buildings or designing new uses, but they have a cash crunch ahead to meet loan payments. Loans to keep CRE businesses afloat can be difficult or impossible to service because a reduction in 20% of topline revenue due to loss of tenants severely impacts a commercial loan, which is typically levered at 75-80%. Cash is only going to get tighter.

Adaptive Re-Use Will Be Key

One of the saving graces for the struggling office and retail real estate markets is the shift to a mixed-use property because apartments in a mixed-use environment command 13.9% higher rents than apartments that are not. I believe that this is the most significant opportunity in CRE and where one strong sector can bolster the struggling one.

There are a number of creative ways that CRE real estate executives can reuse a vacant structure to give a neighborhood a boost. Converting unused office space or retail buildings into apartments or nursing care facilities, for example, can make the best use of space and tap into needs in the market. You can add apartments on top of malls or earmark warehouse storage on the back of office spaces. Key factors that determine optimal reuse in a property include location, building structure, cultural significance, sustainability and ROI.

Cities and counties have also put into place adaptive re-use ordinances making permitting easier and construction easier and cheaper. In Los Angeles, for example, where my company is headquartered, CIM Group took advantage of the new adaptive re-use ordinance to renovate a downtown high-rise building.

One component to assist with the success of adaptive repurposing commercial real estate property is technology, which has grown by leaps and bounds over the course of the pandemic. Once considered a “tech-hesitant” industry, it is now embracing everything from automation software for remote property operations to AI that scans for changes in state and local code and compliance regulations. A recent survey showed that 80% of real estate owners and operators claimed new technology was already having a positive impact on their operations.

While some office building owners are awaiting a mass re-entry of people back into offices, others are thinking creatively to re-envision a future that combines the best of both worlds, solving a housing shortage and enlivening office and retail space.

 

Source:  Forbes

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Wynwood Just Got A Little More Vibrant

the gateway at wynwood_mural 3As the The Gateway at Wynwood building nears completion, the long-awaited exterior garage cladding, which depicts a vibrant mural, has been fully installed just in time for Art Basel next month. Additionally, the rooftop deck has been completed and signage is going up around the building.

The Class A office building, developed by R&B Realty Group and designed by renowned Miami architect Kobi Karp, has helped turn Wynwood into a mini-city.

The office building, which found inspiration in Wynwood’s innovative spirit and modern vibe, will allow Wynwood’s new residents to walk to their offices and shops without having to get in their cars. Wynwood, which used to be home to neglected warehouses, is seeing a construction boom of condos and apartments and, now, office buildings as well.

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 at the intersection of Wynwood and Midtown. This summer, R&B Realty Group announced the building’s first office lease signed with biotech company Veru Inc. 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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Deco Capital Breaks Ground On Mixed-Use Project In Miami Beach

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

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

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

 

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Real Estate Wins in Miami’s Mayoral Elections

Real estate-friendly candidates and initiatives came out victorious across Miami in Tuesday night’s election, particularly in the mayoral races in the high-profile cities of Miami and Miami beach.

In Miami Beach, Mayor Dan Gelber handily won reelection, capturing 62 percent of votes for this third term. The Democrat had tied his campaign to a controversial referendum to curb partying in South Beach. The referendum proposed rolling back the last-call time to serve alcohol at establishments along famed Ocean Drive, to 2 a.m. from 5 a.m.

The majority of voters agreed with Gelber, with 56 percent approving the non-binding measure.

Proponents say the initiative will help curb disorderly conduct and crime at the wee hours of the night.

“They don’t have to have a 24-hour party. Our residents cannot be held captive to a business model that creates disorder,” Gelber said last night.

Real estate is also at play. Endorsers believe the measure will help revive a historic but shabby part of town, and soften its wild-party image incongruent with the expensive condominiums that surround it.

As Miami attracts corporate giants, developers, including Jorge Perez of the Related Group, say Miami Beach has fallen behind, partially because of the perception of mayhem. Related is looking for a marquee name to fill its One Island Park office development in Miami Beach.

Last month, a tape leaked of Gelber talking with unidentified developers about creating a Political Action Committee to fund city commission candidates that support redevelopment, according to the Miami New Times, which first reported about the tape. The mayor also said he could put initiatives on the ballot favored by developers as a way of bypassing the commission approval.

“In politics, money plays a big part …” Gelber is heard saying. “Tell us what you need to reimagine the areas we know need to be reimagined.”

A Political Action Committee supporting the Ocean Drive measure earned donations from Starwood Capital Group’s Barry Sternlicht and developer Alex SapirThe Real Deal reported.

Critics, like the Citizens for All a Safe Miami Beach, say the measure will cost as much as $40 million in lost tax revenue and drive up unemployment, which will only worsen crime in the area.

Across Biscayne Bay in Miami, Mayor Francis Suarez also cruised through reelection, winning nearly 79 percent of the vote. The Republican elected official was a shoo-in, having raised millions of dollars.

Suarez’s crowning achievement has been to rebrand Miami into the “Wall Street and Silicon Valley of the South” by courting companies to relocate while embracing cryptocurrency. Many took note. Corporate heavyweights BlackstonePoint72 Management and Microsoft, just to cite a few, signed office leases in Miami this year.

Developers have reaped the benefits of the corporate migration. Office landlords have kept rates high thanks to the new-to-market demands. Residential rents and home prices have skyrocketed over the past year due to the influx of moguls and high-earning workers.

Suarez will undoubtedly continue to lobby companies — now with voters’ blessings. “Today we embark on a new chapter to finish what we started,” Suarez said last night. (Representatives for the mayor did not immediately respond to a request for comment.)

The mayoral race in Sunny Isles Beach, a town littered with new oceanfront high-rises, will go to a runoff since no candidate captured more than 50 percent of the vote. Real estate attorney and town commissioner Dana Goldman will face another commissioner, Larisa “Laura” Svechin. 

Down south, Homestead Mayor Steve Losner squeezed out a victory, winning by 68 votes.

Out west in Hialeah, Esteban “Steve” Bovo, who earned an endorsement from former President Trump, won the mayor’s race.

 

Source:  Commercial Observer

 

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New York Developers Unveil Plan For South Beach Office Project

Two New York-based development firms are teaming up to build a Class A office project in Miami Beach.

Sumaida + Khurana and Bizzi & Partners are planning a five-story building with 56,177 square feet at 944 5th Street and 411 Michigan Avenue in the city’s South of Fifth neighborhood, according to a press release. An entity managed by principals of both firms bought the two vacant lots for a combined $8.9 million in June, records show.

The joint venture tapped renowned Spanish architect Alberto Campo Baeza to design the building, and hired Miami-based Cube 3 as the project’s executive architect.

The South of Fifth office project would be Baeza’s first building in the Miami area, and his first commercial building in the U.S., according to the release. Over the last decade, developers have enlisted world-renowned architects like Renzo Piano, Bjarke Ingels, Rem Koolhaas and the late Zaha Hadid to design luxury condominiums in South Florida.

The proposed office building will be made of white concrete, glass, and marble, featuring high ceilings, open and flexible floorplans, private outdoor terraces and floor-to-ceiling windows. The building is planned to also have a fitness center, multiple food and beverage venues, a large atrium and a private rooftop with water views.

The two development firms are collaborating on a wide range of commercial buildings across the U.S., focusing on office projects, the release states.

Founded in 2000, Bizzi & Partners focuses on developing high-end commercial and residential properties in Europe, the U.S. and Brazil, according to the company’s websites. Bizzi developed Manhattan’s 565 Broome SoHo and co-developed Eighty Seven Park in Miami Beach.

Sumaida + Khurana, which developed condos at 152 Elizabeth Street and 611 West 56th Street in New York, and its affiliates are currently developing more than 300,000 square feet of ground-up residential projects in Manhattan, with a total projected sellout of about $700 million, according to the firm’s website.

Demand for office space is rising in Miami Beach. The city’s vacancy rate was 8.2 percent in the third quarter, compared to 10.7 percent for the overall Miami-Dade office market during the same period, according to Colliers. The average asking rent hit $51.57 a square foot compared to $44.59 for the overall Miami-Dade market in the third quarter.

Last month, Pebb Capital and Maxwelle Real Estate Group formed a joint venture with Miami Beach developer Russell Galbut to convert the shuttered Bancroft Hotel at 1501 Collins Avenue into a high-end office property. The partnership bought the site for $47 million from a Galbut-related entity. Galbut submitted plans for the conversion to the city of Miami Beach in April.

In August, an entity tied to Scarsdale, New York-based Greenacres Management bought a renovated office building at 1688 Meridian Avenue near Lincoln Road in Miami Beach for $49.5 million.

 

Source:  The Real Deal

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Miami’s Tallest Tower Due In 2022

The Okan Tower is still on track to be finished in mid 2022, according to Okan CEO Kasim Badak. The $300 million project was put on hold because of the pandemic.

“The pandemic affected us,” Mr. Badak said. “But it affected everyone around the world. We stopped any operations, but we are back in business.”

Bekir Okan, a Turkish billionaire businessman, is building what would be the tallest tower in Miami and first for Okan in the US from the ground up. The building was designed by Behar Font and Partners Miami architecture firm to represent a tulip, the flower of Turkey. It is to rise at 555 N Miami Ave. and stand 70 stories tall, with 64,000 square feet of Class A office space, 294 rooms by Hilton Hotel & Resorts, 149 condominium residences and four penthouses.

In its 890 feet of height, the Okan Tower is still planned to include three pools, one outside on the 70th floor, a spa, an outdoor lounge, a fitness center, a gastro kitchen, a children’s play center, a wine cellar, a rooftop restaurant, a movie theater and a cigar room.

“We are celebrating an extraordinary person, Mr. Okan,” Miami Mayor Francis Suarez said at the Okan Tower launch party at the Perez Art Museum on May 21, 2018. “We open our arms to you and we know your project is going to be very successful.”

They had already sold 30 condos and condo-hotel units by May 2018.

When Mayor Suarez asked Mr. Okan why he loved Miami, he answered, “I love the weather, I love the casual lifestyle, but most importantly I love the people.”

Miami’s tallest tower today is the Panorama Tower, standing 868 feet.

 

Source:  Miami Today

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Four-Building Office Complex Trades In Off-Market Deal

Julian Huzenman, Vice President of Leasing & Brokerage with FIP Commercial Realty, arranged the sale of a four-building office complex located at 1515 NW 167th Street in Miami Gardens, Florida.

KEI Properties, led by Kenneth Israel, paid $9.1 million to 1515 NW 167 Street LLC, an entity tied to Niznik Behavioral Health, for the Plaza Executive Centre North, a 51,000-square-foot, single-story asset. The deal represents a sale-leaseback with additional office tenants. The acquisition also represents a value-add with future redevelopment opportunities.

Huzenman represented both the buyer and seller in the transaction. The deal closed September 24.

“This was a unique opportunity for the buyer, who has other assets in the area, to acquire a single-story office park with a great parking ratio, which is a rare asset,” commented Huzenman.

KEI Properties focuses on office and warehouse real estate in Fort Lauderdale, North Miami, Aventura, Coral Springs, Pompano, Hollywood and Hallandale Beach, according to its website, and owns other assets within close proximity of Plaza Executive Centre North including a 66,439-square-foot warehouse/office-flex/showroom property at 900-1000 Park Centre Blvd,

Built in 1972, the property is within the Golden Glades area with close proximity to the Golden Glades Interchange and 15 minutes from Aventura, Sunny Isles, Miami Beach, Golden Beach, Hollywood and Hallandale. It features gated parking with a 5/1000 parking ratio.

 

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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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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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