No Comments

Blockchain.com To Open 22,000 SF Miami HQ In Wynwood

Blockchain.com, a major player in tech, is opening its Miami headquarters on the top two floors at Cube Wynwd in Miami, bringing the building to full occupancy.

Blockchain.com, which provides consumer crypto products, signed a 22,000-square-foot lease at Cube Wynwd, at 222 Northwest 24th Street, according to a news release from the building’s owners. The company, which announced in 2021 it is moving its base from New York to Miami, will soon start the design of its new space.

Peter Smith is the CEO of Blockchain.com.

Tricera Capital and Lndmrk Development, both based in Miami, bought the eight-story, roughly 100,000-square-foot Cube Wynwd for $28 million in April from the property’s developers, Redsky and JZ Capital Partners. The property includes ground-floor retail.

 

Source:  The Real Deal

 

No Comments

Mixed-Use Project With High Street Retail Planned As ‘Alternative To Aventura Mall’

Developer Dan Kodsi plans a major mixed-use project with apartments, offices, and high street retail in Aventura.

Kodsi’s Miami-based Royal Palm Companies, through an affiliate, paid a reported $39.1 million for 9.6 acres on the northwest corner of Biscayne Boulevard and Northeast 213th Street.

Reuven Tako and Jacqueline Tako of North Miami sold the properties through affiliates, according to deeds and state corporate records. Greg Greer of CRR Acquisition represented the buyer and sellers.

This is just the first portion of the assemblage, as more deals are on tap for nearby parcels, with the entire site for the planned development spanning more than 10 acres, Kodsi told The Real Deal. Royal Palm Companies could enter joint venture partnerships for the development.

Kodsi declined to name potential project partners or the total purchase price for all of the lots, only saying that the total project’s value would exceed $500 million.

The overall site currently consists of land and small residential buildings that Aventura-based Rieber Developments succeeded in getting rezoned to allow for 1.3 million square feet of mixed-use development, Kodsi said.

 

Source:  The Real Deal

No Comments

Crescent Heights Scores School Board Approval To Buy Downtown Miami Land For Mixed-Use Project

Real estate giant Crescent Heights secured approval from the School Board of Miami-Dade County to purchase a lot north of downtown Miami, capping a yearslong effort to acquire the site.

Crescent Heights, a Miami-based developer led by Managing Principal Russell Galbut, is expected to pay $20.6 million for the property at 1370 Northeast Second Avenue.

The deal still hinges on the extension of the ​​Omni Community Redevelopment Agency through 2045, which would have to occur by the end of this year, as well as zoning approvals. Crescent Heights is seeking tax incentives the CRA would provide for the Arts & Entertainment District site.

Crescent Heights would double the size of its assemblage with the acquisition of the school board’s 1.1-acre lot, to build a major mixed-use development designed by architect Rafael Viñoly, who designed the developer’s NEMA tower in Chicago. Crescent Heights owns the adjacent parcels immediately south.

The Miami project, called Casa Forma, calls for a 43-story, 1,100-unit residential tower on top of a podium with eight floors of parking and two floors of office space. The school board would receive roughly 100,000 square feet of office space and Crescent Heights would also provide about 1,100 parking spaces, half of which the school board would control. The build-out cost for the office space would be capped at $420 per square foot, according to the proposal.

The residential units at Casa Forma would likely be apartments, Galbut said. He expects to begin construction immediately after obtaining entitlements, and the project would take about 38 months to complete from groundbreaking. Crescent Heights plans to invest about $100 million into the project, he said.

 

Source:  The Real Deal

No Comments

Goldman Properties Proposes Office Building In Wynwood As Big Companies Descend On The Arts District

Goldman Properties, one of the pioneers of art and development in the Wynwood Arts District, has proposed a new office building in the Miami neighborhood.

Core Wynwood would total 140,000 square feet in nine stories at 390 N.W. 25th St., plus 375 and 391 N.W. 24th St. Goldman Properties affiliate 2425 Ltd. owns the total 22,838-square-foot property, which currently has two industrial buildings that combine for 10,470 square feet. Both buildings would be demolished to make way for the project.

Core Wynwood would feature 115,000 square feet of office space, 9,000 square feet of ground-floor commercial space, and a roof terrace with a food and beverage offering. The office floor plates would be about 19,000 square feet with 14-foot ceilings and private terraces. The design would include a nine-story spiral staircase encased in glass and visible from the street. It will include 116 parking spaces on site.

It would also have 30,000 square feet of murals on its exterior, curated by Jessica Goldman Srebnick of Goldman Global Arts.

The developer aims to break ground on the project in late 2022 and complete the building by 2024.

No Comments

$100 Per Square Foot? Rent For Prime Office Space Puts Miami On Par With New York

It’s a new record price for Miami office space — and it’s sending shock waves through the city’s real estate market, at a time when companies are still trying to figure out their return-to-work plans as the coronavirus pandemic drags on. Recent leasing activity at 830 Brickell, an office building under construction defined as Class A for its location, amenities and management services, has hit at least $100 per square foot, area real estate brokers say. That puts the property on par with pricing in New York City at places like the World Trade Center and offices in Midtown East and Soho.

While individual firms at the 830 tower are not disclosing their leasing terms, companies that have recently signed leases for offices there include Microsoft, private equity group Thoma Bravo and Canadian investment group CI Financial. AerCap, an Ireland-based firm that is the largest aircraft financing group in the world, just signed a lease this week, too, at the coveted Brickell office building.

“There’s a heightened demand for office space here, whether it’s new-to-market tenants or local tenants expanding,” said Ryan Holtzman, Miami-based managing director at Cushman & Wakefield real estate group. “$100 — that’s new in Miami’s history.”

 

Source:  Miami Herald

No Comments

3.4M-Square-Foot Tower Could Rise At Former Miami Arena Site

The former home of the Miami Arena in downtown Miami could be developed into a 3.38 million-square-foot project with residential, offices and retail uses.

WG 700 North Miami LLC, a partnership between New York-based Witkoff Organization and Chicago-based Monroe Capital, filed a municipal pre-application with Miami-Dade County officials for the 4.7-acre site at 700 N. Miami Ave. The developers are seeking feedback from county officials on several code variances before asking the city for approval.

The project would have three 57-story towers connected by a podium at the base. They would combine for 2,195 residential units, 540,000 square feet of offices, 49,999 square feet of retail and 2,457 parking spaces. There would also be a park along the railroad tracks on the south side of the property.

The site plan shows most of the retail would fit in a 40,000-square-foot box at the center of the property, potentially for a large store. There would be residential units in all three towers and office space in two of the towers.

From 1988 until it was demolished in 2008, the Miami Arena hosted teams such as the Miami Heat, the Florida Panthers and University of Miami basketball. The arena was torn down after all three teams built new venues.

In 2021, Witkoff and Monroe Capital paid $94 million for the property.

 

Source: SFBJ

No Comments

Offices On The Beach: Billionaires Bankroll Class A Office Space Near Their Homes

Since the beginning of the 20th century, when developers cleared away vegetation and alligators from a sandbar just off the coast of Miami, Miami Beach has been a retreat for the wealthy wishing to escape cold winters.

But now the wealthy don’t want to just play in Miami Beach; they want to work there, too. More wealthy executives, including those who arrived during the Covid-19 pandemic, are bankrolling buildings and leasing office space close to their sprawling mansions and luxury condominiums. It’s a burgeoning trend that could help change the perception of Miami Beach as a place just for fun and sun.

The city is poised to welcome its first top-of-the-line Class A office projects in years as officials are eager to fast-track office development to diversify the municipality’s economy beyond hospitality.

Stephen Rutchik, executive managing director of office services at Colliers, said the demand for Class A office space is driven by principal decision-makers and their employees who live in Miami Beach and want to avoid commuting on South Florida’s congested roads.

“Living and having an office on Miami Beach is a quality-of-life decision,” he said.

There are 4.9 million square feet of office space in greater Miami Beach – which includes Surfside, Bal Harbour, Bay Harbor Islands and Sunny Isles Beach – according to Colliers’ 2021 fourth quarter office market report. However, only 1.3 million square feet of that are the Class A spaces sought by companies hoping to encourage remote workers to spend more time in the office.

By comparison, downtown Miami has 5.1 million square feet of Class A space available, and the Brickell Financial District has 4.8 million square feet, the Colliers report stated.

Lyle Stern, co-founder of Miami Beach-based commercial brokerage Koniver Stern Group, said billionaires, technology and investment companies have been opening offices in Miami Beach for years, but that pace has quickened during the pandemic. However, hardly any Class A office space has been built since the early 2000s, he said.

“The vast majority of [wealthy] folks who moved down here during the pandemic want an office here; they just cannot find office space,” Stern said. “We are not just talking about someone sitting at home with a computer, but someone who has six, seven, eight, nine, 10 analysts working for him, as well.”

With vacancies at a considerable low in the city, some billionaires have sought to build offices of their own.

Barry Sternlicht, president and CEO of Starwood Capital Group, an investment firm overseeing $100 billion in assets, moved his company’s headquarters out of Lincoln Place at 1601 Washington Ave. after completing a new 144,430-square-foot building at 2340 Collins Ave. And energy investor and Miami Beach resident Wayne Boich is constructing a 15,997-square-foot office at 1910 Alton Road that will include a penthouse for him on the fifth floor.

Colliers’ Rutchik said he is negotiating per-square-footage rents in the low to mid-$100s for Eighteen Sunset, a mixed-use office project at 1733 Purdy Ave., which is slated for completion in 2023. The project is being developed by Marc Rowan, CEO of New York-based Apollo Global Management (NYSE: APO), and Bradley Colmer, managing partner of Miami Beach-based Deco Capital Group.

Colmer said he originally planned to build a residential building in Sunset Harbour. But he opted to build a Class A office project when he noted older office buildings in Miami Beach were snaring premium rents “for product that you would typically call Class B,” leaving money on the table for any developer willing to offer more amenities.

“We thought there was an opportunity there,” he said.

Diversifying The Economy

The Miami Beach City Commission already increased the height limits of office buildings to 75 feet on Terminal Island, western segments of Alton Road, and within the Sunset Harbour Overlay district. On Collins Avenue between Sixth and 16th streets, where height for new construction is maxed out at 50 feet, an urban plan designed by architect Bernard Zyscovich would include 75-foot-tall Class A office structures. The city also issued a request for proposals for developers interested in turning three city parking lots and the municipality’s 17th Street parking garage into Class A offices.

Rickelle Williams, Miami Beach’s director of economic development, said encouraging more Class A office development is part of a strategy to attract businesses in industries that employ a high-wage workforce. That includes technology and financial services firms, as well as companies willing to relocate corporate or regional headquarters, or expand existing offices. That mostly leaves out hospitality businesses, known for paying lower wages.

The city’s strategy includes expediting the permitting process for office projects and giving up to $60,000 a year for the next four years to companies with more than 10 full-time jobs that pay more than $69,385 a year. (The exact amount awarded depends on the number of jobs.)

 

Click here to read more about this story.

 

No Comments

Ex-Google CEO Owns Major Interest In South Beach Class A Office Project In The Works

A proposed five-story Class A building that is majority-owned by the former CEO of Google and his philanthropist wife is scheduled to come before the Miami Beach Planning Board on Jan. 25.

Eric and Wendy Schmidt own a 88% interest in 411 Michigan SOFI Owner LLC, the developer of the proposed building, at 411 Michigan Ave. Eric Schmidt was a top executive and adviser for Google and its parent company, Alphabet Inc., from 2001 until 2020. Wendy Schmidt is the president of the Schmidt Family Foundation, a Palo Alto, California-based nonprofit that holds over $1 billion in assets.

Lauren Pressman, director of investments for Hillspire, LLLC, the family office for the Schmidts and the Schmidt Foundation, has a 2% interest in the venture, according to city records. Sharing the remaining 10% interest are New York-based real estate developers Davide Bizzi, Saif Sumaida, and Amit Khurana, as well as New York entrepreneur Paramdeep Singh.

Called “Fifth and Michigan,” the planned 75-foot-tall building is slated to become the first project in the United States designed by Spanish architect Alberto Campo Baeza if the building can get the necessary approvals from the city, including a conditional-use permit from the Planning Board.

According to a memo from Planning Director Thomas Mooney, the building “as presented by the applicant” will be 41,377 square feet in size and include 38,252 square feet of office, 3,2125 square feet of retail, and mechanical parking. The project also involves moving and lifting a two-story structure built in 1933 and turning it into a cafe, the memo stated. A one-story structure on site is slated to be demolished.

 

Click here to read more about this story.

No Comments

Looking To Lease Office Space In South Florida? Here’s What You Can Expect To Pay

Despite remote work trends, South Florida’s office market showed signs of a full rebound as asking rental rates surpassed pre-pandemic levels, according to recently released data from Colliers.

Among the three counties, Miami-Dade County’s per-square-footage average asking rate of $44.72 was still the highest in the fourth quarter of 2021. That’s a 15.14% increase from the same quarter in 2019, before Covid-19 surges made working from home the norm for many companies.

In contrast, Broward’s average asking rate was $35.47 in the fourth quarter of 2021, which is 13.4% higher compared to two years ago. Palm Beach County’s was $37.25, up 13.29% from the fourth quarter of 2019.

In the Class A office category coveted by businesses wishing to recruit talent and encourage employees to return to the workplace, the rise in per-square-footage asking rates during pandemic times were more modest: up 9.84% to $50.58 for Miami-Dade, 5.9% to $40.30 for Broward, and 8.24% to $43.76 for Palm Beach County.

During that time, Palm Beach County’s office vacancy rate was 9.7%, the lowest of the three counties. In contrast, Miami-Dade had a vacancy rate of 11%, while Broward’s was 12.5%, Colliers reported.

Unlike the other three counties, Palm Beach County’s vacancy rate was even lower than the pre-pandemic fourth quarter of 2019, when it was at 10.7%. During that same quarter two years ago, Miami-Dade’s vacancy rate was 9.1% and Broward’s was 9.7%

“That’s because a growing number of financial companies are migrating from other parts of the United States and setting up shop in downtown West Palm Beach, particularly the substantially completed 270,000-square-foot 360 Rosemary that’s being developed by Stephen Ross, chairman of the Related Cos. in New York,” said Michael Falk, a managing executive director from Colliers’ West Palm Beach office.

These companies aren’t flocking to the area for a bargain: West Palm Beach’s central business district had an average asking rate of $66.07 a square foot ($70.50 for Class A), the highest rate of South Florida’s submarkets during the fourth quarter of 2021.

West Palm Beach’s office boom didn’t just benefit the downtown area. Falk said it had a positive “ripple effect” in other parts of the county, where offices are being repositioned and upgraded, resulting in higher rates and better product in other parts of the county.

“Trends are improving for Broward, too,” said Jonathan Kingsley, executive managing director of office services in Colliers’ Fort Lauderdale office.

He pointed out that Broward gained 218,822 square feet of newly filled tenant space in the third quarter of 2021, and another 150,917 square feet in the following quarter.

 

Click here to read more about this story.

 

No Comments

CRE’s Growth Forecast For 2022

ommercial real estate can be expected to perform well this year despite the prospect of higher interest rates, according to the National Association of Realtors.

While interest rates are expected to broadly rise by about 75 basis points, they will still be low compared to historical levels and should not cause a severe decline in investment activity and the ability of companies to service their debt.

Bottom line: CRE’s underlying demand fundamentals should more than mitigate the impact of the slightly higher interest rates in 2022, according to NAR’s 2022 Commercial Real Estate Outlook report.

Office Vacancy Rates to Tick Higher

Only the office real estate market will continue to see higher vacancy rates in 2022.  Ongoing construction is equivalent to 2.6% of the current inventory and it is expected to further raise the vacancy rate to 13.5% (12.2% in 2021) and cause a decline in office rent by 0.8% (-1% in 2021).

However, as seen in the 2021 trends, the high office vacancy rates will remain concentrated in the primary metro areas of New York, San Francisco, Chicago, Los Angeles, Washington D.C., and Boston.

Meanwhile, secondary markets with lower cost of living (home prices or rent) and lower office rents will continue to attract businesses and workers into the area.  Based on the level of under construction activity, developers/investors are bullish on secondary markets like Dallas, Austin, Atlanta, Charlotte, Nashville, Miami, and Salt Lake City.

COVID Will Drive Office Re-Entry

The timing of “the big re-entry” to the office is still dependent on the course of the COVID variants. However, it appears that the Omicron virus is not as deadly as COVID-19 with vaccinations reducing the risk of death.

Beyond the short-term effect of the re-entry on absorption, the long-term effect of the pandemic pertains to the need and use of office space (e.g., overall square footage and per employee square footage) and the allocation of office space for employees (fixed or hot desking/hoteling).

CBRE’s 2021 Occupier Survey reported that in the United States, 62% of employers expect to adopt a hybrid schedule with employees going to the office 2.5 days a week. A higher fraction of U.S occupiers expect a contraction of their office space, at 44%, compared to 29% that expect an expansion and 27% that expect no change.

Class B Office Conversions Could Draw Interest

However, the adaptive reuse of office space for other uses such as for lab science and multifamily housing could increase investor interest for office properties, especially the older properties with floor plates and design that are suitable for such conversions.

NAR’s analysis on office-to-housing conversions shows a strong potential for the conversion of Class B office units into housing in New York, Chicago, Los Angeles, and Boston but less potential in Washington D.C. and San Francisco.

Industrial Demand to Remain Robust

The demand for industrial space is expected to remain robust given that consumers have shown a preference for both online and in-store shopping.

With brick-and-mortars also providing online shopping services to complement in-store shopping, the demand for last-mile delivery services will drive the demand for warehouses and distribution centers.

About 460 million square feet of industrial space is under construction, or about 2.6% of the current inventory. NAR foresees that this construction will lead to slower industrial rent growth of 7.4% on an annual basis from the current rate of about 8.4% as of 2021 Q4 (6.7% in 2021). The vacancy rate is expected to slightly increase to 5% (4.9% in 2021).

In the retail brick-and-mortar market, growth will continue to be driven by smaller shops such as neighborhood centers, strip centers, and single-tenant stores. Given the current low vacancy rate at brick-and-mortar stores and with the rise of experiential retail that will drive foot traffic to the malls, vacancy rates are likely to decline further to 4.6%.

Higher Mortgage Rates to Boost Rental Demand

In the multifamily market, higher mortgage rates will boost rental demand as a mortgage payment becomes slightly more expensive. NAR forecasts that the vacancy rate will further tighten to 4.8% in 2022 (5.1% in 2021) and rent growth to average at 10% (7.8% in 2021).

Renters have started returning to the primary metro areas of New York, Chicago, Boston, Washington D.C., Los Angeles, and San Francisco, in part attracted by the huge rent discounts during the pandemic. However, asking rents are picking up strongly which will tend to drive renters to less expensive secondary/tertiary markets or to outlying suburbs of these primary metro areas, especially with the opportunity to work from home.

Rental demand is likely to continue to be strong in the West region and New England states where owning is more expensive than renting. Meanwhile, retiring Baby Boomers are likely to fuel demand in the Sunbelt markets, which will boost demand for commercial space (retail and small offices).

 

Source: GlobeSt.

© 2024 FIP Commercial. All rights reserved. | Site Designed by CRE-sources, Inc.