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Construction Progress At Wynhouse Miami

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Wynhouse Miami now has nearly all its glass installed.

Construction on the 8-story building began last summer. A top off ceremony was held in March.

Wynhouse is planned to include:

  • 308 rental residences
  • approximately 26,000 square feet of ground floor retail
  • nearly 25,000 square feet of indoor and outdoor amenities
  • 107 parking spaces

The development also includes two pedestrian paseos that will encourage residents and the public to engage with the building, community spaces and ground-floor retail.

A $117.5 million loan provided by JP Morgan Chase and affiliates of Canyon Partners is financing construction.

Nichols is the architect, with interior design of residences by ID & Design International and amenities by Rockwell Group. Fisher Brothers is the developer.

Substantial completion is expected in January 2025.

 

Source:  The Next Miami

 

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Wynwood Arcade Being Redesigned As Wynwood Jungle

Wynwood Arcade-50 NW 24th St._Photo Credit Miami Today 1170x435

An old established building in the booming Wynwood Arts District is being reborn – again.

The former warehouse at 50 NW 24th St., first reborn as the Wynwood Arcade, is being repurposed once more into Bristol Republic at Wynwood Jungle.

The city’s Wynwood Design Review Committee has voted to recommend approval of the latest project, with several conditions.

In a letter to the city, architect Jorge Eduardo Gonzalez said the application proposed modifications to the north façade of the former Wynwood Arcade on Northwest 24th Street.

“The project involves adding an outdoor bar, a front kitchen, and integrating these elements with a proposed canopy structure designed to mimic the building’s existing façade,” wrote Mr. Gonzalez.

The latest design received unanimous support from the committee, recommending approval with a few conditions.

 

Source:  Miami Today

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JV Acquires 32K SF Ground Floor Retail Space In Wynwood For $700 PSF

Society Wynwood_Image Courtesy of Boardroom PR 1170x435

Ben Mandell, Alex Karakhanian and Michael Simkins joined forces to buy the ground-floor retail space of Society Wynwood, an almost completed mixed-use project,

A joint venture between Mandell’s Tricera Capital, Karakhanian’s Lndmrk Development and Simkins’ Lion Development Group paid $22.5 million for 32,000 square feet at the base of the nine-story development at 2431 Northwest Second Avenue that is currently under construction, a press release states.

The deal breaks down to $703 per square foot.

Society Wynwood’s developers, Miami and New York-based Property Markets Group, or PMG, and Toronto-based Greybrook, are the sellers.

Roughly 50 percent of Society Wynwood’s ground-floor retail space is pre-leased to Starbucks, Nacho Daddy, Chama De Fogo Brazilian Steakhouse and I Scream Gelato, the release states.

Society Wynwood will also almost 300 modern residential units, including co-living units, and a private parking garage.

 

Source:  The Real Deal

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Delilah Owner Eyes Venue On Miami Beach’s Lincoln Road

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The Hwood Group is looking to bring its celebrity touch to Miami Beach’s Lincoln Road with initial plans to open an upscale Nice Guy restaurant.

The L.A.-based hospitality group — best known for celebrity haunts like Delilah, a favorite of rapper Drake — is in the early stages of taking over the entire 7,500-square-foot building at 947 Lincoln Road, which abuts Michigan Avenue, according to a city filing. The Italian establishment would house 358 seats in total, including 96 booth seats and some bar seating.

The group has not yet signed a lease for the Miami Beach building, however it wants to cover some windows with “cypress paneling that will be used to cover these windows to provide privacy for patrons,” the application states. The Miami Beach Historic Preservation Board will consider the proposal May 14.

The group’s Nice Guy brand has restaurants in Dubai and L.A., which offers $24 margarita pizzas, $14 truffle fries, and $89 16-ounce, dry-aged ribeye steak. The Miami Beach restaurant would mark Hwood Group’s second location in the Miami area. Last year, it opened a Delilah in Brickell.

 

Source:  Commercial Observer

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CRE Company Plans $23M Redevelopment Of Aventura Shopping Center

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Regency Centers is investing $23 million in the redevelopment of three retail buildings totaling more than 28,000 square feet.

Located in Northeast Miami’s highly affluent Aventura suburb, Avenida Biscayne, a ground-up redevelopment, emphasizes an outdoor-oriented dining experience with large canopies situated adjacent to the restaurant locations.

Slated to open in 2025, the shopping center, located on a prime corner in a regional shopping trade area, will offer great visibility, ease of access and ample parking for the restaurants and upscale retailers and service providers.

 

Source:  SFBJ

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$40M Whole Foods Project In Miami Beach Gets Green Light

Whole Foods Rendering-1901 Alton Road South Beach_Photo Credit The Next Miami 1170x435

Russell Galbut’s plan for a $39.8 million Whole Foods Market-anchored retail building in Miami Beach is getting a kick start after nearly a decade of inactivity.

The Miami Beach Design Review Board on Tuesday approved the planned four-story project spanning 199,000 square feet at 1901 Alton Road. Miami-based Crescent Heights, led by Galbut, Sonny Kahn and Bruce Menin, is under contract to purchase the 1.3-acre site from Wells Fargo.

Crescent Heights would demolish the existing single-story building, currently occupied by a Wells Fargo branch. National grocer Whole Foods and a new Wells Fargo branch would occupy 38,100 square feet of ground-floor and mezzanine level spaces in the new building, documents filed with the city of Miami Beach show. The planned project would also have 277 parking spaces.

Crescent Heights also secured Whole Foods as the anchor tenant at Nema Miami, a mixed-use project in Miami’s Edgewater neighborhood that will have 50,000 square feet of retail space. In 2020, the national grocer signed a 20-year lease with six five-year renewal options, records show.

 

Source:  The Real Deal

 

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7-Story Hotel Proposed In Miami Beach

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On April 25, the Miami Beach’s Planning Board will take a look at the application for the 0.63-acre property located at 1509 and 1515 Washington Ave.

Currently, it consists of a thirteen-unit apartment complex constructed in 1948 and an 11,458-square-foot retail structure added in 1959. Playa Café, Charlotte Bakery, Cheese Burger Baby, and 123 Liquor are some of the recent tenants.

Current property owner Washington Gardens MB LLC has agreed to sell the development site to 1515 Washington Acquisition LLC, co-owned by Xaver Kriechbaum and Gavin Crescenzo of Aventura-based Keyah Real Estate Group, according to the application.

Under the proposal, the property would be developed with a 91,230-square-foot hotel featuring 238 rooms, a 5,677-square-foot restaurant on the ground floor, a pool deck with a small bar on the second floor, and a 3,525-square-foot restaurant on the top floor. There would be no parking on site.

According to the renderings, the property is labeled as a Cloud One Hotel, a European chain with one site in the United States right now, in New York City.

 

Source:  SFBJ

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Fisher Brothers Tops Off Wynwood Mixed-Use Development

Rendering of Eight-Story Midrise at 2200 NW First Avenue_Courtesy of Fisher Brothers 1170x435

Fisher Brothers recently topped off Wynhouse Miami, a mixed-use multifamily development in Miami’s Wynwood neighborhood. Delivery is set for the first quarter of 2025.  

The eight-story midrise at 2200 NW First Ave. will bring 308 rental units to market. Apartments will range from 474 to 1,405 square feet and feature a mix of studio, one- and two-bedroom floorplans, as well as penthouses. 

Community amenities will include 26,000 square feet of ground floor retail and paseo space and almost 25,000 square feet of indoor and outdoor amenities, including a lobby lounge, second-floor lawn area, fitness center, co-working lounge, entertainment space, rooftop pool and spa, outdoor entertainment space and barbeque area.  

“Wynhouse Miami is the most exciting project yet in Fisher Brothers’ House brand, which will bring a unique character designed to match and enhance the existing culture, history and energy of Wynwood,” Fisher Brothers Partner Winston Fisher said in a press release. “We look forward to the next phase of bringing Wynhouse Miami to life and finalizing its multitude of amenities and artistic details.” 

Nichols Architects designed the building, while Suffolk is the general contractor. Interiors were designed by ID & Design International, and Rockwell Group is handling the amenity spaces. 

“Today’s achievement celebrates a monumental step in our collaboration with Fisher Brothers to transform Wynhouse Miami from an idea into reality,” said Jay Fayette, president, Suffolk Florida East Coast. “Our industry-leading approach to construction and sophisticated technologies have made the construction of this unique mixed-use building seamless. We look forward to completing this project throughout the year and opening the doors for the Wynwood community to enjoy.”   

 

Source:  South Florida Agent

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First Phase Of Lincoln Road Makeover Funded

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A project is underway on Miami Beach to improve Lincoln Road’s 100, 200 and 300 block and first-phase funds are lined up.

“We started off with a plan for the 100 block, our first phase,” said Peter Kanavos, a partner of the Ritz Carlton Sagamore group. “We’re working subsequently on trying to do the same to revitalize the 200 and the 300 blocks.”

The process is in phases, said Mr. Kanavos. “The monies that we were able to get from the state are going to the first phase, in which we and the city are making equal contributions of $4 million and the state has kicked in about $4.85 million to put towards the reconstruction of the road…. We have something like 7,000 people a day that go back and forth from that beach entrance. It’s a little dilapidated, so we really want to clean that up and make it a beautiful place for people to enter the beach.”

Although the project is well underway, the timeline depends on multiple factors.

“We’re going through an appeal period right now where one of the neighboring hotels has – I think they’re the only people in the whole city that have had objections, which are kind of unclear why, but they’ve been staging an appeal, and that will probably last until sometime this summer,” said Mr. Kanavos. “They already failed with the special magistrate; the first stage of the appeal was this special magistrate. The city and us won that appeal and then I believe the next appeal will not be successful.”

“If we are able to really get over that appeal period, construction of the road would probably start sometime in the first quarter of 2025,” he said, “looking at perhaps 24 months to complete. That can slide. That’s all dependent on a number of factors.”

The improvement was spawned by an analysis he made, said Mr. Kanavos, that showed census statistics that Miami Beach has lost considerable population since 1990. This is most evident in the city center, between Fifth and 23rd streets.

“That has really contributed to a lot of problems, because the eastern end of Lincoln Road, the 100 blocks and 300 blocks in particular – although the whole district – but those areas in particular, are showing the effects of a dwindling neighborhood. We have issues of dereliction, homelessness, crime and so forth,” said Mr. Kanavos.

“What it told me was that we had to repopulate this area as a neighborhood and in order to do that, we have to start really cleaning things up,” he said.

“So the contribution that we made was number one: we reduced the number of our hotel rooms in order to be able to put up a residential condominium, which is going to be part of the Ritz campus.”

For a long time, the city has been living behind a façade of tourism, said Mr. Kanavos.

“That covers up a lot of the sins of a dwindling population,” he said. “If we had been in any other city, without the kind of strong tourist market that we have, and we’d been losing this much population, it would be a disaster.”

Tourism has covered up the issue, but tourists don’t behave like residents do, said Mr. Kanavos. They don’t worry about the crime or a neighborhood becoming seedy – that is, until it gets to the point in which they must go elsewhere to vacation.

“Residents, on the other hand, are engaged,” Mr. Kanavos said. “They have their eyes on the street. If you take a look at South of Fifth, for instance, you look at the character of that neighborhood. It’s clean, it’s neat, it’s safe, because it’s got such a strong residential population. “The first impulse that we had to start this whole thing off was: how do we make this more habitable to bring residential back and that would entail not just building a condominium, but also we wanted to improve the whole quality of the streets,” he said.

The beautification will improve different aspects.

Traffic patterns will be changed in order to make them safer, as currently there are unsafe points, said Mr. Kanavos. An entry monument will be included, inspired by the arts of famed area architect Morris Lapidus that he planned but was never able to effectuate.

“We want to put that entrance monument at the end of the street to mark the beginning of the beach path,” said Mr. Kanavos. “Of course, it’s going to be relandscaped, and we have an art walk planned. We want to be putting public art on both sides of the street – to be determined what – probably, some form of statuary or other forms of art which are to be determined, but we have that plan. It’s really going to become a showcase. And that’s for the 100 block.”

Subsequently, the plans to help the 200 and 300 blocks go through the same transformation are being worked on, said Mr. Kanavos, all part of an effort to turn an area that has been on the decline into a showcase of the city and attract new residents.

“It’s a necessary thing,” said Mr. Kanavos. “It’s been kind of a neglected part of the city even though it’s totally iconic. I mean, when people come to Miami, that intersection between Lincoln and Collins, and Lincoln and Washington, that stretch there has always been one of the most notable parts of the city that people identify Miami Beach with, but in the last few decades it hasn’t seen the kind of attention that it really should get and now we’re trying to rectify that.”

While working on the first phase, they are planning the second: the 200 and 300 block, said Mr. Kanavos. “In fact, we’ve actually already produced a conceptual plan and we’re at the point where we’re just about ready with the county and the city to effectuate the road closure; the ability to close the street off to vehicular traffic on the 200 and 300 block with the idea in mind making an extension of the pedestrian mall further to the west, Lincoln Road Mall.”

The plan is aimed to restore a strong residential component, he said, that will also help businesses thrive due to consistent business residents will provide the stores along Lincoln Road that now battle a fluctuating economy due to dependence on tourism.

“The store owners often tell me that they’re not really getting the kind of tourists that spend a lot of money there,” he said. “I guess you could say they’re underperforming; they’re surviving but underperforming. But we hope to really help the entire district economy by putting a permanent residential base in there that will be long-term residential – in other words, not subject to conversion to short-term rentals, Airbnb and things like that which we feel have really been harmful to the whole neighborhood structure of the central city.”

The project has had tremendous community support, said Mr. Kanavos, with almost universal support “for what’s going on and a great deal of enthusiasm in the city because, in all honesty, we kick-started something that probably should have been done decades ago, but the city often finds itself without the financial wherewithal to do things. They have a lot of demands on their funds.

“By us coming in and putting up monies and also securing, taking the responsibility to secure other monies from the state and so forth,” he added, “we’ve made it financially possible for the city to correct problems in a district that it’s desired to revitalize for some time now.”

Plans will continue to progress in order to finish the job.

“We have committed to actually pay for all the planning costs right through construction on the 200 and 300 block,” said Mr. Kanavos.

“The next steps that we’re working on are going to be to raise money and work … with the property owners in the city to develop a financial plan and other plans to revitalize the two blocks there,” he said. “In essence, for the 200 and 300 blocks, we’re sort of acting as the go-between for our fellow property owners in the city, in order to make the 200 and 300 blocks happen the way we made the 100 block happen.”

 

Source:  Miami Today

 

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Raccoon Coffee To Open At Wynwood Haus

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A coffee shop will open at the recently completed Wynwood Haus mixed-use project.

Raccoon Coffee leased 1,800 square feet at 23 Northeast 17th Terrace in Miami, marking the first retail tenant at the development, according to the landlords’ news release. Wynwood Haus is in the Arts & Entertainment District, which is south of Wynwood.

Raccoon Coffee will operate a full-service food truck in front of its space until the interior buildout of its new space is finished and the restaurant moves in by year-end, the release says.

The homegrown brand, started by the Di Frisco brothers, also has Miami outposts at 609 Brickell Avenue in Brickell and 330 Northeast 30th Street in Edgewater.

Black Salmon, led by Jorge Escobar and Camilo Lopez, as well as Bridge Investment Group and LD&D, which collaborated with IGEQ, completed the 20-story Wynwood Haus building this year with 224 multifamily units and 5,500 square feet of ground-floor retail space.

Black Salmon, LD&D and IGEQ are based in Miami. Led by Jonathan Slager, Bridge Investment is based in Salt Lake City, Utah.

 

Source:  The Real Deal

 

 

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