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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

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Craig Robins’ Dacra Buys Miami Design District Portfolio For New Mixed-Use Dev

Craig Robins has expanded his Design District fiefdom in Miami, buying a large chunk of the neighborhood that he helped make famous, the development’s owning entity, Miami Design District Associates.

Robins’ firm Dacra, together with several partners, bought a 15-building portfolio along NE 39th Street for nearly $200 million in a deal that closed December 22, according to people familiar with the transaction.

The sellers, Miami Beach-based Comras Company and Apollo Global Management‘s real estate trust, had signed furniture store Restoration Hardware to a portion of the portfolio last year, but the deal resulted in a lawsuit a year later and a store never opened.

Apollo, which originally provided a $220 million loan for the acquisition of the property, will provide seller financing in the deal, sources said. Apollo took over the property from the original owners, RedSky and JZ Capital, last year.

During an earning call this November, Stuart Rothstein, CEO of Apollo Commercial Real Estate Finance, said the trust was selling the portfolio, though he did not name the buyers.

The partners in the deal include Qatari firm Constellation Hotels Holding, developer Nadim Ashi’s Fort Partners, New York-based private equity firm Raycliff CapitalThe Real Deal first reported.

Most of the properties sit in an underdeveloped section of the neighborhood, located on the west end along Northeast 39th and 40th Streets from North Miami Avenue to Northeast First Avenue. The joint venture plans to build a mixed-use development that will be announced next year, said a spokesperson for Miami Design District Associates.

The deal gives Miami Design District Associates — a partnership between Craig Robins, L Catterton and Brookfield Properties — almost complete control of the district, which has become a mecca for luxury shopping in Miami, home to ChanelLouis Vuitton, and Gucci, among others.

 

Source:  Commercial Observer

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