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Cheesecake Factory Inks Lease On Miami Beach’s Lincoln Road

The Cheesecake Factory inked a lease on Miami Beach’s Lincoln Road in the former Sushi Samba space.

The publicly traded Cheesecake Factory, based in Calabasas, California, plans to open this fall at 600 Lincoln Road, according to Terranova Corporation Chairman Stephen Bittel. The restaurant group signed a 20-year lease, with renewal options, for the 7,000-square-foot corner space. It’s expecting to secure a building permit soon for an extensive interior buildout and could open in the fall, he said.

Second-generation restaurant spaces, meaning they have built out kitchens and grease traps, have been in high demand over the past year throughout the region.

“After really a treacherous 2020 in the restaurant business, restaurants have experienced a remarkable recovery in markets like South Florida that have been wide open the whole time,” Bittel said.

Sushi Samba closed in December 2019, just before the pandemic began.

Terranova owns the property with Morgan Stanley’s Prime Property Fund. A Terranova affiliate paid $108.6 million for the property with two addresses at 600 Lincoln Road and 1630 Pennsylvania Avenue in 2014. The building was completed in 1931.

Cheesecake Factory expects to lease outdoor space from the city of Miami Beach for outdoor dining in front of the restaurant, Bittel said.

 

Source:  The Real Deal

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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

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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

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Multifamily Developments In Pipeline Could Take Years To Finish

Feeding into a record-breaking in demand real estate market, multifamily developers have enough work in the pipeline to last into 2024.

With a tremendous amount of backlog, demand for multifamily development will not diminish any time soon, said Al Fernandez, president for ANF Group, a firm providing construction management in commercial, multi-family and education projects.

Like new multifamily buildings like St. Martin Place and Edison Place apartments in Miami, calls from either new developers or existing developers for multifamily projects in Miami-Dade will continue to be an increasing trend, he said.

“I would say that no one particular area in Miami-Dade has been isolated,” Mr. Fernandez said. “For these types of units (market rate rentals), I think they’re sprinkling it all over the county.”

In the past year, Miami delivered 7,400 units and had a net absorption of 13,900 units. The county also experienced year-over-year positive rent growth of 19.7%, according to CBRE Group’s multifamily end of 2021 market report.

Riding the multifamily construction trend wave is a soon-to-be luxury waterfront townhome community in North Miami Beach called Koya Bay.

Real estate firm Macken Companies has broken ground on the intracoastal waterway in the Eastern Shores neighborhood at 4098 NE 167th St. Koya Bay will feature 10 four-story residences in a gated community with three-, four- and five-bedroom floorplans ranging from 4,327-5,288 square feet.

With VCM Builders as general contractor, the project is expected to be completed in early 2023. Koya Bay is currently 60% sold and Macken predicts to sell out somewhere between $28 million and $32 million.

“We are thrilled to have reached this milestone and look forward to delivering an exceptional community to the City of North Miami Beach,” said Alan Macken, principal for Macken Companies.

Local developers are fortunate to be based in South Florida, which is the epicenter of growth, Mr. Fernandez added.

“I think that the reason that we’re having so much success with this multifamily product is because we have over 1,000 people a day moving to South Florida,” he said. “We’re going to continue to see this growth, even if there is a slowdown throughout the rest of our country, for several years to come.”

 

Source:  Miami Today

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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.

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Related Group, W5 Group Break Ground On Quarters Wynwood Co-Living Development

The Related Group and W5 Group have broken ground on Quarters Wynwood, a new co-living development coming to Miami’s hot Wynwood neighborhood, after the developers locked down a $29 million construction loan.

The building, which will be located at 33 NW 28th St., will feature shared living spaces and residents will rent bedrooms in shared apartments. The financing was provided by the Chicago-based MP Real Estate Capital and the property will be managed by Quarters, a Berlin-based co-living operator.

Quarters Wynwood is designed by Arquitectonica and will feature 63 apartments with 217 full furnished co-living bedrooms. Amenities will include a rooftop pool deck, fitness center, co-working spaces. The project will also bring 3,852 square feet of ground floor retail.

 

Source:  ProfileMiami

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$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

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New Downtown Miami High-Rise Project Seeks To Bring More Affordable Urban Living

A proposed new high-rise project in Downtown Miami will aim to to bring workforce housing — and potentially affordable housing — to the Miami Dade College Wolfson Campus to fill a need for more attainable living in the urban core. Three residential towers are expected to replace the seven-story College Station Garage at 190 NE Third St. After issuing a request for proposals late last year, the Miami Parking Authority selected a proposal on Tuesday from developers Related and Rovr over a proposal from Terra.

Three towers, between 39 stories and 48 stories, would sit on top of a new public parking garage with 1,350 spaces and retail on the ground floor.

The high-rise buildings will deliver a total of 1,200 units, including 180 workforce housing units and 780 market-rate units, according to the proposal. The component of 240 affordable housing units in the proposal may change or be eliminated based on further negotiations. The asking rents of the affordable housing units would be up to 50% of the area median income and the workforce housing units would be up to 140% of the area median income. The median household income is about $79,000 in the Central Business District, according to the last Miami Downtown Development Authority Demographics report published in 2018.

Related and Rovr’s proposal exceeded the Parking Authority’s minimum requirement of 8% workforce housing. Units range in layout from a 500-square-foot studio to an 1,100-square-foot unit with two bedrooms, two bathrooms and a den. Rents continue to rise across South Florida. But Downtown Miami has one of the highest year-over-year increases given the influx of firms relocating from across the Northeast to the urban core. The ZIP code 33132 has a median rent of $4,000, up nearly 74% from December 2020, according to year-over-year data from the rental housing site RentHub.

Thousands of affordable and workforce housing units are needed to ease the long-running affordability crisis in Miami, said Annie Lord, executive director of Miami Homes For All.

“You’re talking about the center of a community where you have the concentration of education, jobs, mass transit, that is where we absolutely need to focus mixed-income development,” Lord said. “The public has a right to demand a contribution for affordable housing to meet the needs of the people that live in the city. It is the number one need and we are in a state of emergency. If it was a crisis a year ago, we’re in a state of emergency today.”

The project is the first mixed-income development so far in Downtown Miami. The closest completed project, Lord said, is Brickell View Terrace in Miami’s financial district. Miami Dade College faculty and students will have priority for the affordable and workforce housing, said Oscar Rodriguez, principal of Rovr Development. His firm and Related will also focus on providing housing to “our middle class, who we believe need the most options, including nurses, teachers, emergency workers, municipal workers,” he said.

“We are at an inflection point in Miami,” said Rodriguez. “If we don’t start to work together to provide this type of opportunity to the people who have worked and are the backbone to our society, we are wasting an opportunity. We believe that the best project takes all the needs into account.” Negotiations start in two weeks regarding the final project plans, said Alejandra Argudin, CEO of the Miami Parking Authority.

Some project details might change, she said, over the next few weeks. Final details, she said, are still being ironed out.

“How can the authority make a decision that is so transformational? You don’t get those chances all the time,” said Argudin. “This was our one chance. We wanted to make sure we got it right. We thought it was important.”

Rodriguez said negotiations usually take about five months. Afterwards, the developers will focus on finalizing the design. The goal would be to start construction during the first quarter of 2023 and complete the first phase by the first quarter of 2024. Related and Rovr will land a 99-year lease agreement, said Argudin, and the Miami Parking Authority will earn all of the parking revenue and a portion of the commercial leases. In the first 30 years, she said, the Miami Parking Authority anticipates earning $116 million.

 

Source:  Miami Herald

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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

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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.)

 

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