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New Design Submitted For 2000 Wynwood

New plans have just been sent to Miami’s Wynwood Design Review Committee for an apartment building in Wynwood.

Previously, plans for the site were submitted to the UDRB for project with a similar unit count.

The new plans show that the 12-story project is now proposed to include:

  • 310 residential units
  • 9,416 square feet of retail
  • 308 parking spaces

The parking garage is lined on three sides with residential. There were 5 walk-up residential units on the ground floor in the previous plan which have been removed.

Leo A Daly is now the architect. Arquitectonica was the architect for the first submittal.

The developer is Clearline Real Estate.

In February, the developer signed a deal for water and sewer utilities for 310 apartments, 1,000 square feet of full service restaurant, and 8,300 square feet of retail.

The WDRC hearing is scheduled for June 20.

 

Source:  The Next Miami

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Developers Plan Apartments On Allapattah Auto Dealership Site

A buildable property was purchased by Biscayne Companies and Etienne Equities in Miami’s Allapattah district.

The $3.5 million cash sale was completed last month. Used auto dealership Ocean Auto Sales presently occupies tge 0.7-acre location at 2951 NW 27th Avenue, just west of Melrose Park.

According to records, the dealership paid $2 million for the land in 2006.

The new owners want to start construction on a multifamily building with a retail component in two years. 114 units are permitted on the site.

The sale takes place as development in Allapattah, a working-class neighborhood west of Wynwood, is booming in response to Miami’s increasing real estate prices over the previous three years.

The proposal by NR Investments to construct a mixed-use complex at the GSA building at 1950 NW 20th Street is one of the largest projects currently under development. The designs call for 2,500 homes, a 300-room hotel, as well as shops and offices.

Longtime Allapattah developer Lissette Calderone suggested constructing a 1,250-unit rental complex in March, closer to Miami International Airport and just west of the neighborhood.

 

Source:  Commercial Observer

 

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Newmark Arranges $91 Million Financing Of Kushner Companies, Block Capital Group’s Wynwood 27 & 28

Newmark announced it has arranged a $91 million loan on behalf of Kushner Companies and Block Capital Group for the refinancing of Wynwood 27 & 28. The property is on NW 27th Street (adjacent to NW 2nd Ave) in Miami’s highly trendy Wynwood submarket.

The Newmark team was led by Jordan Roeschlaub and Dustin Stolly, Co-Presidents of Debt & Structured Finance, along with Executive Managing Directors Christopher Kramer and Nick Scribani, as well as Senior Managing Director Danny Matz from the Miami office, who provided regional support on the transaction. Valley National Bank and Israel Discount Bank provided the loan.

The project commenced construction in Q4 2021 and recently obtained its certificate of occupancy. At completion, the development will deliver 52,000 square feet of commercial office space, 33,000 square feet of ground-floor retail, 152 residential units and parking for 232 vehicles. Wynwood 27 & 28 rivals any asset in the area regarding product quality, build construct, design appeal and offering diversity. The property has been creatively designed and constructed with a modern style driven by smart, leading-edge amenities, including a full-scale garage, high-energy retail with innovative cuisine and fashion-driven qualities, spacious mid-rise apartments, modern open floor office configurations and outdoor terrace availability.

Wynwood 27 & 28 are surrounded by a diverse package of public amenities and attractions at the center of Wynwood – directly adjacent to the famous Design District and proximate to all major Miami destinations and minutes from primary beaches, Edgewater, Brickell, Downtown and Miami International Airport. The site location is highly advantageous, on a desirable plot seamlessly becoming an instant focal point of the popular submarket. Wynwood has emerged as a cultural epicenter, offering the trendiest locales and destinations for the new-era urban consumer.

 

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Wynwood Dev Site Goes On The Block For $30M

Doug Levine is listing three Wynwood retail buildings primed for redevelopment, with an asking price of $30 million.

The Crunch Fitness founder and real estate investor is looking to sell the fully leased properties at 2324-2328 North Miami Avenue and 36-38 Northwest 24th Street, according to an offering.

Levine paid a combined $5.9 million for 0.7-acre assemblage in 2013 and 2014, records show. The buildings were completed in 1928 and 1950.

The three buildings, totaling 25,855 square feet, are fully occupied, but the majority of tenants have expiring leases, the offering states. Tenants include 305 Degrees Burger Bar and Back Door Monkey bar nightclub.

The site also comes with a liquor license.

Potential buyers can redevelop the properties into an eight-story to 12-story mixed-use project with either 108 residential units or  216 hotel rooms, the brochure states. Under Wynwood’s zoning overlay, developers can also obtain bonuses to build an additional 54 residential units or an additional 108 hotel rooms.

Levine is also willing to provide seller financing of up to 50 percent of the portfolio’s value, according to the offering.

 

Source:  The Real Deal

 

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Miami Beach South Of Fifth Projects Could Score More Density

In Miami Beach’s South of Fifth neighborhood, more density is the carrot. And three hotel owners are the rabbits.

And at least one of those hospitality landlords, an affiliate of Miami-based Key International, is eyeing that carrot.

The Miami Beach City Commission on Wednesday approved a measure that would encourage South of Fifth hotel owners to redevelop their properties into condominiums or multifamily projects. By agreeing to convert their land from transient uses such as hotels, hostels and short-term rentals to residential use, the owners would get an increase in the allowable floor area ratio, or FAR, to 2.75 from 2.0, according to a city memo.

Key International owns the Marriott Stanton South Beach at 161 Ocean Drive, through its affiliate Komar Investments, records show. The Key International affiliate is interested in exploring possible redevelopment of the 224-room hotel and taking advantage of the density bonus, said Christopher Penelas, an attorney for the hotel owner.

The legislation, sponsored by Miami Beach city commissioner Alex Fernandez, was mandated by Miami Beach residents. In November, 66 percent of voters approved a referendum directing the city to enact the legislation.

In order to receive the density bonus, property owners must pledge that any new projects will not allow rentals shorter than six months.

 

Source:  The Real Deal

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Rishi Kapoor’s Co-Living, Micro-Unit Project In Miami Beach Scores Approval

Miami Beach commissioners tweaked city development regulations to benefit Rishi Kapoor’s planned co-living and micro-unit project on Washington Avenue.

Commissioners voted 6-1 on Wednesday to give final approval to an ordinance that allows for the development of co-living units on the east and west side of the North Washington Avenue district between 15th and 16th streets. Under the new code, developers have to vow that at least 20 percent of the apartments would be priced as workforce housing and that projects won’t be hotels or hostels.

Kapoor, who leads Coral Gables-based Location Ventures, is under contract to purchase the properties at 1509 and 1515 Washington Avenue. While he has previously declined to share project details, his attorney shed light on the plans during the commission meeting. It’s for 46 co-living apartments, which residents rent by the bedroom but have access to common areas; 48 micro-units that span 275 square feet; and 24 micro-units that span 448 square feet, attorney Michael Larkin said. The micro-units will include kitchens.

The vote stirred a discussion on the dais over the type of housing the city wants to provide, whether micro-units and co-living units truly address the lack of affordable housing, and if the project would amount to party houses.

After some debate, commissioners imposed a minimum lease term of six months and a day. That’s longer than the three-month to four-month terms that Larkin argued for on behalf of Kapoor, though the attorney reluctantly agreed to the longer lease term.

“There are seasonal workers who come here,” Larkin told commissioners. “We greatly prefer to have less than six months.” 

Mayor Dan Gelber said during the meeting that six months and a day would at least allow “all those New Yorkers who come down” to get their tax benefit.

Commissioners Ricky Arriola and David Richardson countered that the project would offset illegal Airbnb rentals in other parts of the city that are fueled by demand from seasonal workers and others who only need to stay in Miami Beach for a few months.

“I think it would actually present some good competition to Airbnbs, and it would put some of those Airbnbs out of business,” Arriola said. 

The ordinance also sets a three-year time limit for Kapoor to apply for a building permit.

The developer already has approval for a six-story co-living project at 1260 Washington Avenue, which is in the South Washington Avenue district. The new ordinance gives him a year to apply for building permits for that project.

 

Source:  The Real Deal

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Multifamily May Outperform Expectations in Q2

It is looking possible that multifamily’s fundamentals in the second quarter will finish stronger than a year ago. It is even possible that the quarter overall may outperform expectations. This is according to CoStar Group, which is basing this premise on April’s rental numbers that are showing every sign that the sector is beginning to stabilize.

“National year-over-year asking rent growth slowed to 2.1% at the end of April from 2.6% at the end of March, vacancy rates held steady and 34,000 units were absorbed, signaling a strong start to the second quarter,” says Jay Lybik, National Director of Multifamily Analytics at CoStar Group.

It is welcome news for the category, which CoStar had put on alert about a month ago that the following 90 days were critical for apartments. The firm’s hope was that absorption can match deliveries by the end of the second quarter to help stabilize this sector, Lybik said at the time. Yet, there’s no guarantee since risks are prevalent, including a potential weakening in the labor market and tighter financial conditions, he noted.

One month later and it appears multifamily may be over the hump.

“With the peak leasing season now underway, multifamily conditions started to show signs of stabilization,” Lybik said.

National average rents rose by 4% to $1,656 from $1,650 last month’s April, according to CoStar. And Heartland Indianapolis showed the highest year-over-year rent growth by a much bigger climb to 6.1%, which was ahead of the nearby Midwestern cities of Cincinnati, Columbus, St. Louis. In fact, the Midwest region took six of the top 10 rent growth spots in April. Fifth in place was San Diego, followed by Chicago, Boston. Northern New Jersey, Cleveland and with Miami coming in tenth.

In other markets, however, year-over-year rent growth slowed as demand for multifamily weakened. Among those are some in the Sun Belt where the uptick is headed down after those markets grew quickly when renters relocated in recent years.

 

Source:  GlobeSt.

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Kushner, Faith Group And Immocorp Capital JV Plan Mixed-Use Apartment Project In Wynwood

Kushner Companies entered into a joint venture to develop a mixed-use apartment complex in Wynwood, as the New York firm completes its first projects in the neighborhood.

The latest development, to include 325 apartments and roughly 20,000 to 25,000 square feet of retail space, would rise on the Soho Studios event space site at 2136 Northwest First Avenue. The joint venture, which was finalized last month, is with the Faith Group and Immocorp Capital, according to sources. Faith and Immocorp are both based in Aventura.

Faith Group’s Soho LLC has owned the main parcel since 2009. Property records show Soho LLC secured an $11.3 million mortgage in March that can be increased to $22.5 million. Faith will likely transfer the site to an entity that includes all three partners. Construction could begin in 2025, a source said.

Kushner is also working with Immocorp Capital and Faith Group on the multifamily component of a large site south of Steve Ross’ Hard Rock Stadium in Miami Gardens. Gilbert Benhamou, CEO of Immocorp, said the partners plan to break ground on infrastructure work in the third quarter. Construction on the first phase, a 252-unit apartment project, is expected to begin by the end of the year.

The three partners are looking for more opportunities in South Florida, Benhamou said. He called the planned Wynwood development an “out of the box” project.

The Faith Group, led by founder Kevin Faith who represents other members of the Faith family, added to the site in recent years with the corner property at 2159 Northwest First Court. The assemblage totals 1.7 contiguous acres. It includes a 50,000-square-foot building that was constructed in 1929 and expanded in 1964; and a nearly 13,000-square-foot building constructed in 1962.

Kushner made its first investment in Wynwood in 2019. The firm, led by Charles Kushner, his daughter Nicole Kushner Meyer, and Laurent Morali, partnered with the Miculitzki family’s Block Capital Group to build Wynd 27 and 28. The two-building apartment, office and retail project is nearly completed and is being leased. In a separate deal, Kushner and PTM Partners plan a 1,300-unit, two-tower apartment development in Edgewater. In Broward County, Kushner and Aimco also recently sold a piece of their three-lot assemblage near downtown Fort Lauderdale’s Brightlight station for $18.3 million.

Development has exploded in Wynwood for new condominiums, thousands of apartments, office projects and ground-floor retail throughout the neighborhood. Investment has also spread to Wynwood Norte, which underwent a zoning overhaul in 2021 meant to encourage affordable housing development, preserve the area’s character, and create economic opportunities for small businesses and residents.

 

Source:  The Real Deal

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Miami Beach Imposes Regulations For Fractional Ownership Homes

Companies offering fractional ownership of luxury properties in Miami Beach will have to follow new city regulations.

The Miami Beach City Commission on Friday unanimously approved an ordinance that requires condominiums and single-family homes that are owned by investors that buy shares of a property to abide by the city’s law that bans short-term rentals in some neighborhoods.

The fractional ownership ordinance largely targets Pacaso, a San Francisco-based tech company that allows investors to purchase as little as a one-eighth interest in second homes.

In Miami Beach, Pacaso is offering investment opportunities in a condominium and two single-family homes on the Venetian Islands and on Alton Road, according to the company’s website. The minimum investment for the three properties ranges from $385,000 to $867,000.

The new ordinance requires Pacaso and similar firms to have a local manager, available 24 hours a day, for each fractional ownership property in Miami Beach, as well as to comply with a code of conduct. Fractional ownership property managers will also be required to sign affidavits that condos and houses will not be rented on a short-term basis.

City staff worked with the fractional ownership industry to draft the ordinance, Miami Beach commissioner Alex Fernandez said at the commission meeting. Fernandez sponsored the measure.

“We can’t prohibit [fractional ownership,]” Fernandez said. “But this is what we can do.”

In a statement, Pacaso CEO Austin Allison said his company will adhere to the new ordinance.

Pacaso expanded into South Florida in 2021. The company sets up limited liability companies for joint ownership and collects maintenance fees from clients. Pacaso manages more than $200 million of real estate and has annualized revenue of $330 million, according to a press release.

Miami Beach has some of the toughest short-term rental restrictions in South Florida that come with hefty fines for owners who violate the city’s regulations. Sometimes, the city’s crackdown has led to favorable outcomes for property owners. In 2021, the city settled a lawsuit brought by an affiliate of Miami-based Safe Harbor Equity, which owns a four-bedroom house at 3098 Alton Road. Safe Harbor sued the city over short-term rental fines assessed on the property.

Miami Beach agreed to pay Safe Harbor $250,000, as well as waive about $200,000 in fines.

 

Source:  The Real Deal

 

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Apartment Rents Forecast To Grow 0.8% Next Year

If you’ve been dismayed by this year’s apartment rent growth trajectory, brace yourself for 2024. Next year, multifamily rent growth will clock in at 0.8%, according to a new forecast by Markerr, compared to this year’s relatively robust 4%.

The 2024 prediction marks the lowest rent growth since 2020, or shortly after the pandemic began.

But because markets reflect regional differences, a closer look at different areas is important. For example, in 2023, Sunbelt and Tertiary markets are expected to outperform the top100 average, while Coastal and Rustbelt areas will underperform the same group. But within a year, the Rustbelt and Tertiary markets are expected to outperform the top 100 average.

At the top of the MSA forecasts for this year is Albuquerque which is projected to climb to 7.4%, followed by Wichita at 7.3%, Tampa at 7%, North Port, Fla., at 6.9%, Spokane at 6.9%, El Paso at 6.5%, Tulsa at 6.4%, Ogden, Utah, at 6.2% and Palm Bay, Fla., at 6.1%. Then, come 2024, the MSA forecasts shift dramatically with Augusta, Ga., in the lead at 4.1%, followed by Albany, N.Y., at 3.9%, Syracuse at 3.8%, Baton Rouge at 3.8%, Sacramento at 3.6%, Grand Rapids at 3.4%, Jacksonville at 3.1%, Chattanooga at 3.1%, Cleveland at 3% and Harrisburg, Penn., at 3%. And the top10 markets from 2023 are expected to fall to an average rank of 73 out of 100 in 2024.

When MSAs are calculated on a two-year compounded growth basis, Winston-Salem, N.C., North Port, Fla., and Chattanooga are forecast to lead the top 100 markets at 8.6%, 8% and 8 % respectively.

Winston-Salem wasn’t in the top markets in either 2023 or 2024. But it’s expected to jump into first place with the largest contributors to its rent growth being home prices, multifamily permits, job growth and occupancy rate. According to Markerr, “Said differently, home prices, multifamily permits, job growth and occupancy rate are driving the forecast higher while median gross income is forcing the forecast lower.”

In contrast, New York City was in the bottom 10 of the compounded two-year growth forecast at -0.4% because of unfavorable conditions of population growth, historical multifamily rent growth and median gross income.

 

Source:  GlobeSt.

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