No Comments

Aromatherapy Supply Store Aromoa360 Inks Deals For 33,500 SF In Wynwood

aroma360 miami showroom_photo credit aroma360 1170x435

Aromatherapy supply store Aroma360 opened offices, and storage and production outposts in Wynwood neighborhood.

Aroma360 took 4,000 square feet at 10 Northwest 24th Street; 7,500 square feet at 31 Northwest 23rd Street; 2,000 square feet at 51-53 Northeast 24th Street; and 20,000 square feet at 38 Northwest 24th Street, according to a company spokesperson. The outposts, which are open, are not storefronts.

Founded and led by Benzion Aboud, Aroma360 has collaborated with brands such as Ferrari and Cipriani, as well as celebrities such as Dwyane Wade and Dr. Dre.

Miami-Dade County real estate investor Doug Levine, through affiliates, owns the buildings, property records show.

The deals mark an expansion for Aroma360, which already leases a 50,000-square-foot warehouse at 1148 Northwest 72nd Street in unincorporated Miami-Dade.

 

Source: The Real Deal

 

 

 

 

No Comments

12-Story Office Tower At Wynwood Plaza Tops Out

wywood plaza_photo credit the wynwood plaza dot com 1170x435

L&L Holding Co. and Oak Row Equities, with project partner Shorenstein Properties and co-investor Claure Group, have completed the vertical construction of a 12-story office tower situated within The Wynwood Plaza, a 1 million-square-foot mixed-use campus underway in Wynwood.

Upon completion, the office development will total 266,000 square feet and will feature touchless entry and elevator systems, a dedicated parking garage, fitness club, bar lounge, conference and collaboration spaces and an expansive rooftop. Tenants will include Claure Group and law firm Weitz & Luxenberg, which will occupy 25,400 and 18,000 square feet, respectively.

Located at 95 N.W. 29th St., Wynwood Plaza is scheduled for completion in the first quarter of 2025 and will feature 509 residential units, as well as 32,000 square feet of shops, cafes and restaurants.

 

Source:  RE Business

 

 

 

 

No Comments

RH Proposes $150M Project To Replace Nikki Beach Club

nikki beach club_photo courtesy of nikki beach club 1170x435

Furniture retailer RH, formerly known as Restoration Hardware, has proposed a development that’s set to cost at least $150 million to replace the famed Nikki Beach day club in Miami Beach.

The property, at 1 Ocean Drive in South Beach’s ritzy South of Fifth neighborhood, covers 4.1 acres. Married couple Lucia and Jack Penrod have leased the two-story building on the oceanfront site from the City of Miami Beach since the 1980s, first operating it as a club called Penrod and since 1998 as Nikki Beach, which has become an international brand.

But in recent months, Nikki Beach owners and Miami Beach officials have been feuding. Some objections stem from noise complaints coming from the day club. More broadly, the municipal government is trying to rein in Miami Beach’s party image.

Earlier this year, the city’s commission awarded the 30-year lease to Boucher Brothers, a company that has a contract with Miami Beach to provide beach concessions, and to hospitality powerhouse Major Food Group, the operator of celebrity hotspot Carbone. The deal would begin in 2026 when the Penrods’ deal expires.

In response, Nikki Beach owners sued the city, accusing it of executing a “backroom deal.” The suit prompted officials to open up the bidding process, and three other groups — AkermanTao Group Hospitality, and RH — submitted proposals, which officials will hear privately. The Penrods missed the deadline to put forth an offer by 15 minutes.

So far, only RH has made its plan public through a press release. Under the proposal, the California-based furniture retailer would construct two low-rise buildings whose footprints would cover 0.6 acres; create a 17,000-square-foot public sculpture garden; and replace the 77,000-square-foot surface parking lot with a 94,000-square-foot subterranean parking structure.

RH estimates the development will cost between $150 million to $170 million. The company is seeking a 30-year lease term with a starting base rent of $7 million, increasing at a minimum of 3 percent annually, resulting in an average base rent of $11 million, equating to $333 million over the term of the agreement.

Source:  Commercial Observer

No Comments

‘Bullish on Allapattah’: Miami’s Next Frontier Of Development

No. 17 Residences in Miami's Allapattah neighborhood 1170x435

At 4.6 square miles, Allapattah is an eclectic landscape of warehouses, single-family homes, apartment buildings, hospitals, justice facilities, restaurants, shops, and art museums.

In recent years, the predominantly working-class Miami neighborhood has become something else: the next frontier of real estate development.

Real estate insiders said Allapattah won’t have the same fate as Wynwood, with office and retail rents are among the highest in South Florida. For one thing, it is more than three times the size of Wynwood. For another, real estate investment there has been at a moderate tempo, at least so far, said Francisco “Paco” De La Torre, an artist who transformed two Allapattah industrial buildings into arts studios and offices.

“It’s been a slow and steady growth,” he said. However, since the onset of the Covid-19 pandemic, that growth has manifested at a “stronger, steadier pace.”

Among Allapattah’s agents of change are Don and Mera Rubell and their son Jason. The family of prominent art collectors moved their collection’s exhibition site from Wynwood to a 100,000-square-foot warehouse building at 110 N.W. 23rd St. in Allapattah in 2019. Since then, the Rubells have converted two other neighboring warehouses to display their art. Their most recent acquisition is the 45,711-square-foot former Rex Discount Wholesale warehouse at 1090 N.W. 23rd St., purchased for $10.7 million in 2022.

In 2019, Jorge Pérez, founder of Miami-based Related Group, turned a 28,000-square-foot warehouse at 2270 N.W. 23rd St. into an art exhibition space called El Espacio Twenty Three.

On the multifamily apartment front, Neology Life Development Group, led by Lissette Calderon, completed No. 17 Residences, a 13-story, 192-unit market-rate apartment building at 1569 N.W. 17th Ave., in 2021. Two more 14-story apartment complexes – the 237-unit Fourteen Allapattah Residences and the 323-unit The Julia – will be finished in six months, she said.

Alfredo Riascos, principal of Miami-based Gridline Properties, said most of Allapattah’s warehouses will either remain industrial uses or be converted into office or art-related uses. But along its major vehicular corridors, developers will have an incentive through the Live Local Act to replace warehouses with workforce housing projects.

“Allapattah is a [desirable] market, given its location in the Miami urban core and the vicinity to downtown Miami, Wynwood and the Medical District,” he said.

 

Source:  SFBJ

No Comments

French-Style Cafe From New York To Make Florida Debut In Wynwood

maman_photo credit maman dot com 1170x435

Maman, the popular French cafe started in New York, is making its way south, with plans to open three locations across South Florida, Commercial Observer has learned.

The first — and largest — location on the docket will be at the Sentral Wynwood residential development, according to Brand Urban, the real estate brokerage that represented Maman. Located at 51 NW 26th Street, the 4,202-square-foot restaurant is slated to open this winter and will function as a flagship location, housing an all-day cafe and bakery, as well as a pastry production kitchen for the South Florida region. The asking rent stood at $80 per square foot.

Founded by husband-and-wife duo Benjamin Sormonte and Elisa Marshall in New York’s SoHo neighborhood nearly a decade ago, the all-day cafe concept has grown to 31 locations across the Northeast and Canada. Maman, which means “mother” in French, sells quiches, salads and pastries. The Florida cafes mark the brand’s first venture into the South.

Maman will also open locations in Coral Gables and West Palm Beach.

 

Source:  Commercial Observer

No Comments

Azora Exan Fattens Its Miami Beach Portfolio With Retail Building Acquisition

1000 17th st miami beach 1170x435

Azora Exan expanded its Miami Beach commercial portfolio by acquiring a retail property near Lincoln Road.

An affiliate of Azora Exan, a joint venture between Madrid-based Azora and Miami-based Exan Capital, paid $16 million for the three-story building at 1000 17th Street, according to a press release and the brokers who worked on the deal.

Jordan Gimelstein and David Spitz with Miami Beach-based InHouse Commercial represented the seller. Mike Sullivan and Sam Singer with Vertical Real Estate represented the buyer.

The seller, an entity managed by Miami Beach commercial real estate developers Scott Robins and Philip Levine, paid $1.4 million for the property in 2007, and completed the nearly 19,000-square-foot building in 2014, records show. Levine was also Miami Beach mayor from 2013 to 2017.

The building hit the market earlier this year with an asking price of $19 million, said Jared Robins with InHouse Commercial. The seller received offers from two other bidders from New York.

 

Source:  The Real Deal

No Comments

Oldest Public Building In Miami Beach Gets New Life

Carl Fisher Clubhouse 1170x435

Miami Beach’s oldest surviving public building, most recently called the Miami Beach Municipal Golf Course Clubhouse, has been restored as the Carl Fisher Clubhouse along with an adjoining annex building as part of the Miami Beach Convention Center complex.

The clubhouse, opened originally in 1916, and the annex, opened in 1937, have been restored as a single entity by R.J. Heisenbottle Architects and now host a restaurant and meeting space.

Under the management of Spectra Venue Management, the 5,000-square-foot clubhouse offers public parking and public transportation accessibility on Washington Avenue. The new Rum Room restaurant and Venu meeting space opened this year in the restored structures.

The clubhouse was constructed in 1916 for flamboyant promoter Carl Fisher, the developer of Miami Beach, and was designed by August Geiger, a prolific Miami architect. Records from the time say “the clubhouse was designed in an eclectic revival style with Spanish and Dutch Colonial elements.”

The City of Miami Beach brought in the Heisenbottle firm in 2016 to restore the clubhouse after years of neglect. In 2018, the city approved clubhouse renovations for more than $3.2 million.

“It’s a great historic building in Miami Beach that can continue to be enjoyed by generations to come thanks to its new use,” Mr. Heisenbottle said in a written release.

That use is Venu, which the Heisenbottle firm describes as “a newly renovated space for elegant private events and upscale meetings” in the clubhouse and the Rum Room, in the annex building, “a 1920s restaurant with an enticing tapas-style menu and local South Florida rums.”

 

Source:  Miami Today

No Comments

Iconic New York Pizzeria To Open Its First Florida Location In Miami Beach

roberta's pizzeria 1170x435

New York staple Roberta’s, a Michelin Bib Gourmand restaurant from co-founder Brandon Hoy and two-Michelin-starred chef and co-founder Carlo Mirarchi, has been announced as a tenant at its luxury Miami Beach condominium 72 Park. The Miami Beach outpost will be the iconic brand’s first location in Florida.

Established in 2008, Roberta’s started in a modest cinder-block warehouse in Brooklyn. The restaurant quickly became a neighborhood icon, capturing the hearts of foodies across the state with its diverse menu of artisanal plates and seasonal dishes curated with local, international and homegrown ingredients from its rooftop garden. The success prompted the owners to open a handful of locations across New York City. The brand has since expanded globally with a variety of eateries, from full-service restaurants to more casual concepts.

“We are very excited to introduce Roberta’s to the vibrant city of Miami,” said Roberta’s chef and co-founder Carlo Mirarchi. “The energy and diversity of Miami’s food scene resonates deeply with our commitment to providing fun and memorable dining experiences for our guests. With its rich cultural tapestry, Miami provides the perfect canvas and 72 Park the perfect home for Roberta’s first step into the Florida market.” 

In addition to the restaurant, the Roberta’s team will also be bringing some of their popular programming.

“We love the neighborhood,” added Roberta’s co-founder Brandon Hoy. “And can’t wait to not only serve this community, but to also add some Brooklyn charm to the city’s culinary landscape.”

Roberta’s will wrap around the northwest corner of 72 Park, a brand-new residential building located at 580 72nd St. The eatery will occupy 3,000 square feet of 72 Park’s approximately 10,000 square feet of prime, ground-floor retail space. The 22-story tower is slated for completion in Summer 2024 and will feature luxury residences ranging from 410 to 2,200 square feet, with prices starting in the $700,000s.

Designed by Built Form, 72 Park is centrally located within a pedestrian-friendly neighborhood where residents and guests can enjoy the best of both worlds: a peaceful, charming beachside community alongside the excitement of Miami Beach with instant access to recreation, restaurants, retail, music, arts and culture.

 

No Comments

3-Story Food Hall Planned For Aventura

Aventura Food Hall Planned For 2777 N.E. 185th St_Image Credit Architectonica 1170x435

An affiliate of Cabi Developers is planning to build a three-story food hall on a vacant site in Aventura.

The developer filed an application with city officials concerning the 1.45-acre site at 2777 N.E. 185th St. The developer acquired the property for $5.77 million in 2007. It’s located behind the Walgreens and Wild Fork Food stores.

The development design for a retail and restaurant establishment with both indoor and outdoor dining space is being modified by Cabi. On the ground floor alone, plans include various restaurants with a combined indoor space of 14,091 square feet, plus extra space on the second and third floors, according to the preliminary site plan by Miami-based Arquitectonica. A drop-off area and a modest parking garage would be present.

The food hall, dubbed L’Isola, will include select restaurants and vendors with a varied selection of international cuisine, as well as a rooftop restaurant and cocktail lounge, according to Miami-based attorney Brian S. Adler, who represents the developer in the application. He stated that there would be 19,200 square feet of internal area, in addition to rooftop and outdoor eating.

 

Source:  SFBJ

 

No Comments

Construction Permit In Process For 289-Unit Wynwood Urby, Contractor Named

The Wynwood Urby Apartment and Retail Project Planned At 60 N.E. 27th St., Miami 1170x435

The permit was applied for in May, with the full plans filed on June 27 and now in review.

The hard construction cost is estimated on the permit at $69,800,000. Beauchamp Construction is listed as the contractor.

The project was first reviewed by the Wynwood Design Review Committee in April 2022.

A total demolition permit to clear the site was applied for last July. Then in August, a utilities deal for water and sewer was signed.

Wynwood Urby is planned to include:

  • 289 apartments
  • 8,000 square feet of full service restaurant
  • 9,200 square feet of retail
  • 1,450 square feet of office
  • 193 parking spaces

Urby is a joint venture between David Barry and Brookfield Properties.

Amsterdam’s Concrete is the design architect, with 5G Studio the architect of record.

 

Source:  Next Miami

© 2023 FIP Commercial. All rights reserved. | Site Designed by CRE-sources, Inc.