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Boynton Beach-based real estate lender closes its first New York deal

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Brett Forman

Boynton Beach-based commercial real estate lender Trez Forman Capital Group completed its first transaction in New York.

Brett Forman, president and CEO of Trez Forman, arranged the apartment construction loan, which closed on Nov. 20.

“Our team is aggressively monitoring the market for additional opportunities in New York and throughout the tri-state area,” Forman said in a prepared statement.

Trez Forman closed a loan of nearly $7 million to fund construction of a 20-unit apartment building in the Astoria neighborhood of Queens in New York City.

The apartment building at 30-38 29th Street in Queens will feature a virtual doorman, package locker, roof deck, bike storage, laundry facilities and 10 underground parking places.

Trez Forman, a joint venture between Forman Capital and Vancouver-based Trez Capital Group, expects to close more than $500 million in deals this year.

In addition to lending for real estate development and construction, Trez Forman also offers equity investment opportunities to private and institutional investors. – Mike Seemuth


Margaritaville Holdings and Destin-based developer plan hotel in Panama City Beach

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Margaritaville Holdings CEO John Cohlan (Credit: TravelWeekly.com)

Palm Beach-based Margaritaville Holdings and Destin-based Premier Development Group plan to develop a resort hotel in Panama City Beach called Margaritaville Beach Resort.

John Cohlan, CEO of Margaritaville Holdings, said his firm and Premier Development hope to finish construction of Margaritaville Beach Resort by the spring of 2021.

The developers plan to build a full-service hotel and a two-acre, water-themed park on a 13-acre site near the intersection of Hutchinson Boulevard and Front Beach Road in Panama City Beach.

Margaritaville Holdings and Premier Development did not release the number of rooms or other details of the planned hotel. The two-acre park would have several swimming pools, private cabanas, a “lazy river” ride, and a children’s splash area.

The planned Margaritaville Beach Resort development is pending city approval, according to Charles Silky, senior planner for Panama City Beach.

In May, Margaritaville Holdings, St. Joe Company and Minto Communities announced plans to develop Latitude Margaritaville Watersound, a 55-and-older residential development near Panama City Beach. [Panama City News Herald]Mike Seemuth

Affiliate of developer takes over marketing for 20-story Mystique condo in Naples

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Mystique construction site in the Pelican Bay area of Naples

Investment firm Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Co. L.P. and the Gulf Bay Group of Companies appointed a new brokerage firm to market a 20-story condominium they are building in Naples.

Gulf Bay Marketing Group, a brokerage affiliated with Gulf Bay Group, will handle sales and marketing for Mystique, a 72-unit condominium under construction in the Pelican Bay area of Naples.

Premier Sotheby’s International Realty previously was the exclusive listing agency for Mystique.

Construction of Mystique started in July 2017, and the developers expect to get a certificate of occupancy for the condominium in March.

Crews broke ground for Mystique after pre-construction sales of the condominium’s four penthouses totaled more than $32 million.

The development’s “estate” units range from 4,003 square feet to 5,280 square feet of air-conditioned space, and they are priced from more than $3 million to more than $7 million.

The “Jardin” units at Mystique range from 1,370 square feet to 2,396 square feet of air-conditioned space, and they are priced as high as $2.2 million.

Pelican 1 Owner LLC, the developer of Mystique, is an equal partnership between New York City-based Kohlberg Kravis Roberts and Naples-based Gulf Bay Group of Companies. [Naples Daily News]Mike Seemuth

California-based Passco Companies buys Destin apartment complex for $63.3M

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Sea Glass Apartments in Destin

A Southern California investment firm bought a new apartment complex in northern Florida for $63 million.

Irvine, California-based Passco Companies paid just under $220,000 for Sea Glass Apartments, a five-building rental complex in Destin that opened last year.

“The property leased up at a record pace, reaching 100 percent occupancy in less than seven months with no concessions,”Colin Gillis, vice president of acquisitions for Passco, said in prepared remarks. 

Gillis credited employment growth in Destin and nearby Crestview and Fort Walton Beach, citing “large increases in military spending benefiting the three military bases in the area … and defense contractors such as Boeing, BAE Systems, Lockheed Martin and L3 Technologies.”

Sea Glass Apartments at 4320 Commons Drive West in Destin has one-, two- and three-bedroom units and studios. Tenants share a breakfast bar, swimming pool, gym, club room with billiards, and package concierge. The property is directly across from Henderson Beach State Park and near retail destinations.

Matt Wilcox, Jubeen Vaghefi and Denny St. Romain of JLL Capital Markets brokered the sale of Sea Glass to Passco by Atlanta-based Catalyst Development Partners. [Multi-Housing News]Mike Seemuth

Jacksonville issues $81M of bonds for a buyer of 4 low-income rental properties

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Eureka Gardens rental housing complex in Jacksonville (Credit: News4Jax)

With financial help from the city, an Ohio company paid about $52 million for Jacksonville apartment properties for low-income tenants and plans to spend about $44 million on renovations.

Cleveland-based Millennia Housing Development Ltd. paid about $69,000 per unit for 768 units across four apartment properties.

Millenia is financing the acquisitions and renovations with the proceeds of an $81.6 million issue of multifamily housing bonds by the Jacksonville Housing Finance Authority.

Millenia had been managing the apartments for the seller, GMF-Jacksonville Pool LLC, based in Cordova, Tennessee.

The rental complexes previously had been owned by an organization called Global Ministries Foundation, which spent little on the maintenance of the properties and triggered a city code-enforcement raid.

The Cleveland-based company will renovate and rename the four apartment properties, which range in size from 74 units (at Southside Apartments) to 400 units (at Eureka Gardens).

The general contractor for the renovation work will be NEI Contracting Inc. of Ocoee. [Jacksonville Daily Record]Mike Seemuth

LA will be home to the largest U.S. building occupied exclusively by cannabis tenants

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From left: architect Matthew Rosenberg of M-Rad; developer Sean Beddoe, president of Bow West Capital (Credit: M-Rad, LinkedIn)

When selling and smoking marijauana was illegal, having a dealer in the neighborhood didn’t boost property values, but that could change now that marijuana is licit in California.

In Downtown Los Angeles, Bow West Capital will open its Green Street Building development in a month’s time, according to Forbes. Located in the Jewelry District, the project will be occupied exclusively by businesses in the cannabis industry. The Santa Monica-based developers are hoping the building will help transform the neighborhood.

The seven-story, 67,000-square-foot building at 718 S. Hill Street is named after the Green Street Agency, a branding company and the building’s anchor tenant. There’s also a Vincente Sederberg LLC, nicknamed The Marijuana Law Firm. Around a dozen cannabis startups are occupying space in the building’s co-working floors. The cannabis-dedicated complex will be the largest of its kind in the country.

Matthew Rosenberg, CEO and founder of the architecture firm that designed the building, M-Rad, said that bringing in “some of the biggest players in the industry… will bring in high-level clientele and investors who may feel encouraged to invest in the development of the area.”

Cannabis industry tenants have pushed up property values in other parts of L.A. County, partly because of the low supply of landlords willing to take on tenants and the high demand among tenants for space. In Lynwood, rents jumped from the low $100s to more than $300 per square foot.

L.A.-area businesspeople have jumped at the opportunity to get in on the growing cannabis industry. At least two local real estate funds — Pelorus Equity Group and Inception Company’s REIT — have cropped up that cater specifically to cannabis companies. [Forbes] – Dennis Lynch

Century Homebuilders breaks ground on mixed-use project in Miami

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Rendering of 850 Le Jeune and Century Homebuilders’ Sergio Pino

Sergio Pino’s Century Homebuilders Group has begun construction of 850 Le Jeune, a new mixed-use project near Miami International Airport.

The developer and its partner, Pactia USA, are building 230 multifamily units and about 200,000 square feet of office space at 850 Northwest 42nd Avenue (also known as Le Jeune Road). The project will consist of two, five-story office buildings; a six-story apartment building and a parking garage on a 4-acre site.

Pino said he began site work on the first office building and apartment building recently. Construction on the second office tower will likely begin in the next six to nine months, he said.

The partners expect to score financing in the next quarter. Pino said they’re in talks with Capital Bank for the office portion and HSBC Bank for the multifamily portion. Pino declined to disclose an amount but the said the total project cost is $96 million.

The project is slated to be completed by 2020. Pino said he’s owned the property since 2005 and had previously planned a 327-unit condo building on the site called Century Plaza.

850 Le Jeune is near David Beckham and the Mas brothers’ planned $1 billion MLS soccer stadium project. It is also near Ocean Bank and Magic City Casino.

Century Homebuilders and partner Pactia USA are also building a 118-unit rental project near the Shops at Merrick Park in Coral Gables.

Azerbaijani billionaire sells Palazzo Del Sol condo for $8.5M

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From left: Boris Reznik, Palazzo Del Sol and Aras Agalarov

UPDATED Dec. 3, 11:10 a.m.: Azerbaijani developer Aras Agalarov just sold his Fisher Island condo for $8.46 million.

Records show the buyer of the Palazzo Del Sol unit is a company controlled by Boris Reznik, who founded the research company Biorasi. Reznik and his wife Larisa also own a unit in the Hamptons South condominium in Aventura, as well as another Fisher Island condo at Seaside Village.

The deal for the most recent four-bedroom, 4,738-square-foot Fisher Island condo breaks down to about $1,786 per square foot. The deed does not include $930,000 in furnishings, which brings the total cost to $9.4 million.

Dora Puig, owner of Luxe Living Realty, represented both the buyer and seller.  Records show the unit previously sold for $10.7 million in 2016.

Agalarov, a friend of Vladimir Putin and President Trump, is a billionaire who founded one of Russia’s leading development firms, the Crocus Group. Forbes now values his net worth at $1.6 billion.

His son and business partner, Emin Agalarov, also has ties to the Trumps. His publicist admitted helping to arrange a meeting between Donald Trump Jr. and a Russian lawyer promising information on Hillary Clinton, according to published reports. In addition to aiding his father, Emin Agalarov is also a well-known pop singer in Russia and his home country of Azerbaijan,

Boris Reznik’s Biorasi company was founded in 2002 in Aventura and focuses on helping pharmaceutical companies receive approval for drugs and medical devices.

Reznik joins other wealthy owners at Palazzo Del Sol, including Danish tennis star Caroline Wozniacki, and Yard House founder and CEO Steele Platt.

Palazzo Del Sol was completed in 2016 as the first condominium project to be built on exclusive Fisher Island since 2007. The 10-story building has 43 units and six cabanas. The tower was designed by Kobi Karp, with landscaping by Enzo Enea.

The developer, PDS Development, plans to complete construction of Palazzo del Sol’s sister 50-unit condominium, Palazzo Della Luna, in the summer of 2019.


Ari Pearl sues, alleging Chetrit affiliate owes him buyout settlement

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Rendering of the Miami River project

UPDATED, Dec. 3, 11:45 a.m.: A longtime partner of the Chetrit family in South Florida is suing the company behind the Chetrit’s $1 billion planned development along the Miami River, alleging he’s owed a piece of his exit settlement.

Developer Ari Pearl is suing Miami River JV LLC in Miami-Dade Circuit Court for $1.125 million, the third and final payout as part of a settlement between the two. According to a buyout agreement dated in July 2017, Pearl and the Miami River LLC terminated their relationship regarding Pearl’s work as a consultant on their riverfront project.

As part of that agreement, according to the suit, Pearl was owed a total of $2.25 million in three pieces: $500,000 that Pearl previously received, $625,000 that Pearl would receive upon signing the agreement, and $1.125 million a year later – the latter of which Pearl alleges he did not receive. He also agreed to “continue to cooperate with JV in the effort to obtain approval of any pending zoning or land use applications” … within 12 months from the date of the agreement, according to the suit.

By paying Pearl the $2.25 million, the joint venture, a Delaware company, agreed to release and waive all claims against the joint venture, including “his employment by JV or his acting as a consultant to or on their behalf,” according to a 2017 contract that’s attached to the suit as an exhibit.

As part of the contract, Pearl also agreed to never work for or do business with “Robert Wolf, Stuart Podolsky, Jay Podolsky, Stephen Dupoux (or the RYC Restaurant) … without the express written consent of Jacob Chetrit and Joseph Chetrit” for a period of three years, according to the suit.

Joe Chetrit and Pearl did not respond to requests for comment. Both were also working together on their Collins Park hotel redevelopment in Miami Beach, but it’s unclear if Pearl is still involved.

New York-based Chetrit and JDS Development Group have said they plan to build the mega mixed-use Miami River project at 401 Southwest Third Avenue in Miami. The five-phase development would have 1,678 residential units, 330 hotel rooms, 266,000 square feet of retail and office space, and more than 2,000 spaces.

In 2016, the developers hired Fortune International Group to handle condo sales – which did not launch – and the project was also slated to bring on a major hotel flag, but that also did not come to fruition. They closed on a $49 million pre-development loan in late 2016, but there has been little activity since then.

Plans for the site include four towers, a hotel, shops, restaurants, and a public river walk with boat slips. Phase one will have a 56-story building with a 207-room hotel, 334 condos, 42,100 square feet of retail and a parking garage.

JDS and Chetrit were seeking $130 million in EB-5 financing for their Miami River project.

Renters Warehouse buys online marketplace for rental homes

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Renters Warehouse CEO Kevin Ortner

Property management company Renters Warehouse acquired OwnAmerica Real Estate, an online marketplace for the sale of single-family rental homes.

Renters Warehouse already manages around 22,000 rental houses across the U.S., often on behalf of institutional owners, Bloomberg reported. By buying OwnAmerica, the company is expanding the range of services it offers to customers. Renters Warehouse is already the country’s biggest third-party manager of single-family rental homes, according to the report.

“A lot more institutional capital is coming out and saying we want to get into the SFR (single-family rental) space but we don’t want to do anything as far as building an operation or building an acquisition team,” the company’s CEO Kevin Ortner told Bloomberg. “We’ve been approached by a number of folks that have said, ‘Can you help us acquire and liquidate assets?’ and the answer was really, no.”

OwnAmerica claims to have sold $490 million worth of homes through its platform.

The deal comes five months after Roofstock, another online marketplace for single-family rental homes, bought the property management company Streetlane PM. In October, Roofstock raised $35 million in a Series C funding round, looking to cash in on growing interest in single-family rental housing.

Those single-family rentals have been experiencing a resurgence. Institutional players are acquiring homes and converting them into rental. One in 10 homes sold by startups like Opendoor and Offerpad were acquired by such institutional investors so far this year. [Bloomberg] — Konrad Putzier 

Affordable housing developers plan senior project in Overtown

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Rendering of Father Marquess-Barry Apartments and Matt Rieger

UPDATED, Dec. 3, 1:40 p.m.: Miami-Dade County filed plans for a new affordable housing development in Overtown geared toward seniors.

A permit application filed with the city of Miami calls for a three-story, 60-unit apartment project at 301 Northwest 17th Street, next to Williams Park. The estimated cost of the 44,460-square-foot building is $7.8 million.

The county commission approved a 99-year ground lease agreement with Rainbow Housing Corp. in February, records show. Rainbow Housing, a nonprofit, is working with Miami-based Housing Trust Group to build the project.

The development, called Father Marquess-Barry Apartments, will have a mix of tenants making 28 percent or less of the area median income, up to 60 percent. It will also have market-rate units, and will be limited to tenants 62 years old and up. Rent will range from about $413 a month to $1,450 a month, according to a spokesperson for HTG.

The project, near the new $25 million Lotus House expansion, will also include a 6,000-square-foot community room for residents and functions, a gym, media center, lockers, outdoor garden, generator and bike storage.

Construction will start in the third quarter of 2019 and will take about a year to complete. HTG and Rainbow Housing are financing the development with a 9 percent low income housing tax credit and have applied for $2 million of HOME funding. They’re also planning to use a conventional loan and are seeking additional funds from the county, city and community redevelopment agency, according to a spokesperson.

The project is named after Richard Marquess-Barry, former pastor of The Historic St. Agnes Episcopal Church in Overtown. Barry, a financial partner in the apartment building, will be the long-term owner of the development, according to Housing Trust Group.

Miami is among the least affordable cities for renters in the country, although some officials are trying to encourage affordable housing. Last month, the Miami City Commission approved an ordinance on first reading that would give developers in the Arts & Entertainment District density and floor lot ratio bonuses if they build workforce or affordable housing.

An earlier version of this story misidentified the number of units. 

Developers reel in Flagler Village site of iPic-anchored project

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Steve Hudson, Charles Ladd, iPic movie theater

Longtime Fort Lauderdale developers Steven Hudson and Charles Ladd just completed an assemblage in Fort Lauderdale with plans to bring a mixed-use project with an iPic movie theater.

Property records show companies managed by Edmund Waterman sold 10 properties between Federal Highway and Northeast Seventh Street near Flagler Village to Hudson and Ladd’s company, Flagler Sixth, for $23.5 million. The developer is planning 150,00 square feet of retail and office space and 180 luxury apartments on the site, according to a previous release.

In March, the luxury theater company iPic announced it planned to expand in Fort Lauderdale at 601 North Federal Highway. The 400-seat theater will include a 4,200 square-foot rooftop bar and lounge. It’s expected to open in the fall of 2020.

Hudson leads the Fort Lauderdale-based investment firm Hudson Capital Group. In 2008, Hudson and a group of partners bought the Bimini Boatyard Bar & Grill in Fort Lauderdale, which is now called Boatyard. Ladd founded Barron Real Estate in 1991 and brought a Fresh Market to Flagler Village.

Ladd and Hudson did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

Flagler Village is seeing increasing interest from developers as millennials and working professionals are seeking to live close to downtown Fort Lauderdale.

Boca Raton-based iPic currently has two locations in South Florida, one in Boca Raton and one in North Miami Beach.

Amazon HQ2 coming to NYC could signal rise in rental to condo conversions

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(Credit: Tableau and iStock)

Long Island City is slated for a new wave of residential projects — and the Amazon move may help push more developers toward condominium projects in the rental-heavy neighborhood.

Over the last few years, LIC has been shedding its industrial past as more residential developments crop up in the neighborhood. Amazon’s plans for a campus in the area have put a spotlight on LIC, which has predominantly been a rental market. While the current pipeline of projects stills skews toward rentals, the tech giant’s announcement could sway developers to add more condominium projects to the mix.

The Real Deal’s analysis of Department of Buildings filings found that active multifamily projects in Long Island City contained 6,566 units, of which 1,250 — 19 percent — were associated with condo plans filed with the state Attorney General’s office. By comparison, condos made up just 11 percent of the 9,300 residential units completed in the neighborhood since 2015.

“LIC has had a lot of tailwinds going toward it for a long time,” said Matthew Baron, president of Simon Baron Development. “And this announcement adds a huge gust of wind that will last a long time.”

With 802 condo units, Chris Xu’s 67-floor Skyline Tower alone will account for 70 percent of the condo pipeline. Modern Spaces is marketing the property. The brokerage’s CEO Eric Benaim said Xu approached the firm — and they worked together to build a complete team, including Hill West Architects, for the project.

The brokerage was consulting on the project for two to three years, and now is wrapping up its branding and marketing efforts, he said. At 964 feet, the glass tower is to set to be the tallest in Queens — and also slated to be the borough’s first billion-dollar-plus condo. Benaim previously said units start at slightly more than $600,000 for a studio on the third floor, and go up to $3.04 million for a two-bedroom on the top floor.

The pitch process itself hasn’t changed much for them because their projects are largely based off existing developer relationships, Benaim added. Because Modern Spaces has been in the neighborhood for a decade, Benaim said that experience and market knowledge gives the firm a leg up.

With millions of dollars on the line in fees, the landscape is competitive. Without mentioning them by name, Nest Seekers’ Adrian Lupu took a shot at Modern Spaces, arguing that their success has created conflicts of interest.

“We’re seeing this effect for brokerages that represent too many developments and in direct competition with each other,” he said.

Nest Seekers was one of the first Manhattan brokerages to set up shop in Long Island City around 2006, he added. Benaim was a broker at Nest Seekers before founding Modern Spaces, and the two brokerages still occupy adjacent offices on Vernon Boulevard.

(Nest Seekers and Modern Spaces offices sit side by side on Vernon Boulevard. Credit: Google Maps)

Both agents and developers said they haven’t seen a significant change in the brokerage landscape in the neighborhood yet — partly because most of the major firms had an existing presence in the area and partly because it’s not easy to break in without previous experience and relationships there.

“It’s always competitive, and you’ll certainly get interest from other people who now want to be part of it,” said MNS CEO Andrew Barrocas.

Similarly, Baron said there will be new agents wanting to take advantage of the boom, but, especially for large projects, the contracts are primarily relationship based.

“I’m sure there are brokers aggressively going after projects, but we haven’t really felt that,” he said. “It’s a nuanced thing coming into any new neighborhood.”

Though there’s a significant amount of inventory in the works, there’s also enough demand to assuage any supply concerns, Baron said. Amazon’s move will not only bring its own 25,000 jobs — half of which are in tech — but also those of other companies that will want to locate near the campus, he said.

“Now you know you have a pipeline in the next few years of well-paying jobs coming into LIC,” Baron said. “That’s going to be a real sort of buffer for demand.”

The developer launched leasing at its massive rental project, Alta LIC, in May. The 43-story tower contains 14 floors of co-living units, with rents ranging from $1,380 to $2,063 per month. The 467-unit project is nearly 70 percent leased.

Including projects that have yet to be filed, Citi Habitats has estimated that 10,000 rental units will be added to the area by 2022.

The level of activity is driving up home prices as well as land costs, Lupu said. It’s pushed development outward into Court Square, Queens Plaza and Astoria – and Sunnyside and Greenpoint could be next.

“The land is drying out in Long Island City,” he said. “You have very few pieces left over. Asking prices are shooting toward $400-600 per square foot.”

Lupu, Benaim and Barrocas all said they’ve been consulting with developers in this environment. Barrocas has spoken to developers who are now considering condo and rental projects. He’s also seen landowners who were sitting on the sidelines, waiting for inventory to be absorbed — but are now contemplating development.

Despite the flood of interest, Barrocas said MNS is trying to be measured and selective about how many projects it takes on.

“Developers are not short-sighted,” he said. Taking on as much as possible may work out in a robust market, but “when the market turns, you lose these clients, and they don’t come back.”

Developers in LIC are catering to a younger demographic and many first-time homebuyers, said Thomas Ryan, head of Greystone Development.

The firm is developing a 23-story rental tower at 24-16 Queens Plaza South. The building is largely studio and one-bedroom units, with a slate of amenities such as a billiards room and a theater. The design and unit mix was decided with younger buyers in mind, in case the firm opts to convert to condos in the future.

“The price point is going to be palatable with smaller units and first-time homebuyers,” he said.

Ryan also predicts the rental market will be stronger by the time the building is leasing in about a year. Today, Greystone would have to offer concessions of two months free plus the broker fee, he said. A year from now, he sees the worst-case scenario being one month free plus a broker fee. For future projects, Greystone is keeping an eye on further rezoning in the area.

As the area has evolved, the Amazon news may be the needed push for future development to add more condos, developers and brokers said.

“I thought there was a point where we’d be a predominantly rental company,” said Modern Spaces’ Benaim. “The discussion is more condos now than it was three or four years ago.”

In part, that’s because LIC city evolving and maturing. For people who have already been renting there and may be looking to buy, the for-sale options are much slimmer, said Stephen Kliegerman, president of Halstead Property Development Marketing. In the next one to five years, more projects will be condos.

“Everyone has to realize this is long-term,” he said. “It’s the same trajectory we’re seeing in Brooklyn.”

Vontae Davis’ South Florida home hitting the market

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12750 Kapok Lane and Vontae Davis (Credit: Getty Images)

Former NFL cornerback Vontae Davis is looking to sell his South Florida home.

Davis, who abruptly retired from the NFL during a game earlier this year, will list his waterfront 4,896-square-foot house at 12750 Kapok Lane in Davie, according to an email from a Compass spokesperson. It’s hitting the market with Ben Moss and David Carrion of Compass for $1.25 million.

Davis most recently played for the Buffalo Bulls, and before that spent five seasons with the Indianapolis Colts and three seasons with the Miami Dolphins. He paid $1.1 million for the four-bedroom home in 2010, while going into his second season with the Dolphins, according to property records.

The house sits on a nearly 1-acre lot on a canal and features marble flooring, a chef’s kitchen, master bathroom with a steam shower/spa, a wine cooler, outdoor summer kitchen and resort-style pool.

Davis retired during a Bills vs. Los Angeles Chargers game in September.

A number of NFL players have recently sold their South Florida homes. In August, three-time Super Bowl winner Tajuan “Ty” Law sold his lakefront home in Plantation for $1.89 million.

Retired Dolphins player Jason Taylor sold his Weston home last year for $3.2 million after buying it in 2006 for $3.6 million.

Benderson buys shuttered Toys “R” Us store in Palm Beach Gardens

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3195 PGA Boulevard and Randy Benderson

Benderson Development Company just bought a former Toys “R” Us store in Palm Beach Gardens, as the bankrupt retailer continues to sell off its entire real estate portfolio.

Property records show Benderson Development paid $6.5 million for a 36,890-square-foot building at 3195 PGA Boulevard. The deal gives Benderson control of more than 4 acres of land along PGA Boulevard, just south of the The Gardens Mall.

Toys “R” Us paid $3 million for the property in 1992, the same year the building was built, records show.

University Park, Florida-based Benderson Development owns and manages more than 700 commercial properties in 38 states, according to its website. Earlier this year, it made one of the highest offers for a Toys “R” Us store when it outbid Federal Realty with a $15.6 million offer to acquire a store in Emeryville, California. It has since leased the space to the French sporting goods retailer, Decathlon Group, according to its website.

The firm has also picked up a former Toys “R” Us store in North Miami Beach for $1.5 million and another in Amherst, New York, for $110,000.

Toys “R” Us joins a list of big-box merchants that have filed for bankruptcy and announced they will shutter all of their stores, including Sports Authority and Gander Mountain. Other retailers that have filed for bankruptcy include Sears, HH Gregg, Claire’s Stores and more recently, Mattress Firm.


Airbnb to start designing homes next year with new “Backyard” business

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(Credit: iStock)

Airbnb is officially getting into the business of home design with a new initiative called Backyard.

Prototypes of the housing developed for Airbnb Backyard will be revealed in 2019 and the models are expected to range from guest houses to single-family and even multifamily homes, according to Fast Company.

Airbnb’s chief product officer and co-founder Joe Gebbia, who also leads the company’s futures division, Samara, said Backyard will focus on designing prototypes of a living “system” in addition to the physical structures.

“Backyard isn’t a house, it’s an initiative to rethink the home. Homes are complex, and we’re taking a broad approach–not just designing one thing, but a system that can do many things,” Gebbia told Fast Company. “Backyard investigates how buildings could utilize sophisticated manufacturing techniques, smart-home technologies, and gains vast insight from the Airbnb community.”

Backyard’s prototypes will reportedly support short-term rentals and co-living concepts, but Gebbia said the company’s homes are not exclusively tailored to Airbnb hosts.

The Samara division was started by the company years ago to develop new lines of business for Airbnb. Samara built its first house back in 2016 in Japan called the Yoshino Cedar House. It was designed by architect Go Hasegawa and houses a community center and Airbnb rentals. [Fast Company] — Erin Hudson

Cirque du Soleil co-founder lands $65M loan for Miami properties

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300 Northeast 60th Street and Guy Laliberte

UPDATED, Dec. 4, 9 a.m.: Cirque du Soleil co-founder Guy Laliberté closed on a $65 million loan for properties near the Magic City Innovation District and a waterfront home in Miami’s Morningside neighborhood.

Property records show Heiva Holdings USA LLC took out about $12.4 million of a larger revolving line of credit from the National Bank of Canada for three warehouses at 300 Northeast 60th Street and an estate at 5851 North Bayshore Drive. Robert Blaine, co-CEO of Groupe Lune Rouge and president of Laliberté’s family office, manages the LLC.

Laliberté’s company paid $6.9 million in cash for the three connected warehouses in Little Haiti about a year ago. The Canadian theater impresario is partnering with Magic City Innovation District developers Tony Cho, Bob Zangrillo and Plaza Equity Partners on the planned $1 billion mixed-use project.

Montreal-based Lune Rouge, which Laliberté co-founded as well, develops and invests in projects tied to technology, arts, entertainment and real estate.

In November 2017, Heiva Holdings paid $5.5 million for the six-bedroom, former home of Royal Caribbean CEO Michael Bayley, also secured by the mortgage.

A spokesperson for Laliberte said the warehouses are used for office space for Lune Rouge Entertainment.

Compass hires AI specialist from Microsoft and Amazon as CTO

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From left: Maëlle Gavet, Ori Allon, Robert Reffkin, and Joseph Sirosh

It took nine months, but Compass has a new chief technology officer.

The SoftBank-backed brokerage said Tuesday that it has tapped Joseph Sirosh — a machine-learning and artificial intelligence expert who’s worked at Microsoft and Amazon — to fill the key role. Sirosh starts today, reporting to Compass COO Maëlle Gavet.

Sirosh will be the six-year-old firm’s second chief technologist, following the departure of Liming Zhao, who left to start his own company in March.

At Microsoft, Sirosh was CTO of artificial intelligence, where he led the expansion of Microsoft’s cloud AI and data products. Prior to Microsoft, Sirosh built up machine learning applications at Amazon, where he was vice president of the e-retailer’s global inventory platform.

At Compass, Sirosh will lead the engineering team to develop new AI-powered products for the company’s 7,000-plus agents, the firm said Tuesday.

In a statement, Compass chairman Ori Allon said Sirosh’s expertise in machine learning and cloud computing would “accelerate” Compass’ technology roadmap and help the company “build out our product stack,” namely the industry’s “first-ever end-to-end platform” for real estate.

Over the past few months, Compass has rolled out several new tools for agents — including an enhanced CRM system, digital marketing services and an illuminated brokerage signs. But over the summer, Compass was forced to pull the plug on its first technology licensing deal with a Massachusetts-based brokerage.

Despite that misstep, Compass continues to grow dramatically and has acquired firms like Pacific Union to breach new markets.

To date, Compass has raised $1.2 billion from investors, including $400 million from Softbank and Qatar Investment Authority in September, which valued the brokerage at $4.4 billion. That round has fueled the company’s focus on new technology; in the last six months, Compass said it’s increased the size of its technical team, which now numbers 170.

Sirosh is the latest Compass hire from some of the biggest technology companies: Earlier this year, Compass also hired chief marketing officer Khurrum Malik from Spotify and chief revenue officer Matt Rosenberg from Eventbrite.

Last month, Compass also tapped Kristen Ankerbrandt, a former Carlyle Group executive, as its chief financial officer. Former CFO Craig Anderson, who came from Flywheel, lasted seven months before he was pushed out in March 2018.

Venezuelan siblings allegedly scammed $2.9M to fund Miami real estate purchases: lawsuits

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Home at 2305 Lake Avenue and Mint

A pair of investor brothers entangled in a Venezuelan petroleum scandal allegedly misappropriated about $2.9 million from a Caribbean bank to help pay for their local real estate purchases, including a Todd Michael Glaser-built Miami Beach mansion, according to court documents from a series of lawsuits filed between September of last year and early this month.

In the most recent lawsuit, filed on Nov. 5 in Miami-Dade Circuit Court, Zuma Bank is going after Inversiones Y.A.M.R., a Florida corporation managed by Miguel A. Lauricella. The bank originally sued Miguel Lauricella and his brother Franco Lauricella on Sept. 28, 2017. Headquartered in Dominica, Zuma also filed three other lawsuits in July naming as defendants a Venezuelan company controlled by the Lauricellas, a third brother named Jose Lauricella and Joseline Rodriguez, another relative.

“My client is out of pocket almost $3 million,” said Zuma Bank’s lawyer, Carlos Sardi. “We are trying to recover the money from the individuals and related entities that were recipients of those funds. There are also questionable business practices by these individuals.”

Simon Ferro, the attorney for the Lauricellas and their companies, did not respond to email and phone messages seeking comment.

According to the lawsuits, Jose Lauricella opened an account at Zuma Bank on July 25, 2014 on behalf for Comercializadora Frainjo C.A., a Venezuelan company controlled by Miguel and Franco Lauricella. A year later, after Comercializadora Frainjo had established good standing with the financial institution, Zuma granted a request from Franco Lauricella to overdraw his account by $500,000. At the time, the company had passed more than $17 million of transactions through the Zuma account.

On Sept. 11, 2015, Franco Lauricella applied and was approved for a short-term loan in the amount of $2.45 million while still owing Zuma $524,960 in overdraft funds, the complaint states. Zuma claims Franco Lauricella told the bank the loan was to pay off suppliers and that he agreed to pay it off 70 days later at a 6.5 percent annual interest rate.

Frainjo subsequently transferred $1.87 million into two BB&T accounts in Miami, including $250,000 into an account belonging to a company called Transporte Urbano Fermin C.A.; $200,000 into a Citibank account in Miami under the name Maria Alejandra Barrios Borges; and $450,000 to a Frainjo account in Curacao, the Zuma complaint states.

The lawsuits allege that Transporte Urbano Fermin C.A. is part of a Venezuelan conglomerate embroiled in a corruption scandal along with its principals in Venezuela. The principals — Esteban, Enrique and Eduardo Urbano Fermin — have been indicted by Venezuelan authorities and are currently fugitives residing in the U.S., according to the lawsuits. They are accused of “over-invoicing” for products and services that resulted in a $35 billion loss to Venezuela’s treasury,  Zuma alleges.

“These recent events unfolding from the scandal raise doubts about the legitimate business purpose of the wire transfers made by Frainjo,” the complaint states.

The short-term loan was due on Jan. 15, 2016, but Frainjo has not repaid it or the more than $500,000 in overdrawn funds, Zuma claims in the suit. The bank alleges the Lauricellas stopped responding to collection calls and emails and that Zuma executives recently found out that Frainjo had ceased operations in 2016 and that the Lauricellas had moved to Miami.

Zuma accuses Franco Lauricella of using the bank funds to pay for his lavish lifestyle and maintain multimillion-dollar investments in Miami real estate properties. Inversiones Y.A.M.R in 2014 purchased a spec mansion by Glaser at 2305 Lake Avenue on Sunset Island III for $14.25 million. At the time, the company was managed by Miguel Lauricella and Yvan Martinez Rengifo, a Venezuelan-born real estate investor and broker. In 2016, Rengifo was removed from Inversiones Y.A.M.R’s Florida incorporation records.

That same year, the property was listed for $19.5 million. And then for $22.7 million in March of last year, according to Realtor.com. Inversiones ultimately sold the 9,904-square-foot home at a loss for $11 million in April. The lawsuits also mention the Lauricellas’ interest in unit 4802 in the Mint Condo at 92 Southwest 3rd Street and a vacant lot at 3080 North Bay Road in Miami Beach.

Real estate VR tech firm Matterport taps former eBay exec as new CEO

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Matterport new CEO RJ Pittman

Matterport, which provides 3D virtual reality tours of listed homes for buyers and renters, named a former eBay executive and technology veteran as its new CEO.

RJ Pittman, the former chief product officer at eBay, will replace outgoing CEO Bill Brown who will continue to serve in an advisory role at Matterport, the company said Monday.

Sunnyvale, California-based Matterport, which has built a library of 1.4 million 3D models, has become popular among real estate agents as a way to do virtual walk-throughs of listings.

At eBay, Pittman oversaw product, design, engineering, mobile, payments, and brand. Before that, he led the global e-commerce platform for Apple’s online store, and has worked at Google. He is a co-founder and former CEO of Groxis, the advanced search engine technology company.

The company, which had $66 million in venture funding as of early 2018, was founded seven years ago.

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