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Hialeah leads list of top 10 US cities to own a home: ranking

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(Credit: iStock)

(Credit: iStock)

If you are looking for a home, you might not have much luck in the Northeast.

Nine of the 10 best cities to buy or own a home are either west of the Mississippi River or in Florida, according to a study by GoBankingRates. With a median home value of $483,900 and a state income tax rate of 5.53 percent, Jersey City was the only metro area in the Northeast to make the cut, clocking in at No. 5 on the ranking.

The online personal finance company ranked the 10 best places based on criteria that included affordable home prices, rising property values and low taxes based on information from Zillow and the 2017 American Community Survey by the Census Bureau.

Cities in Florida and Nevada dominated the list, with Hialeah, Florida, taking the top spot with a median home value of $286,300 and a state income tax rate of 0 percent.

St. Petersburg, Florida followed with a home value of $216,400, and Tampa ranked sixth. North Las Vegas ranked third, at $261,500 and a state income tax of 0 percent. Reno was seventh and Las Vegas eighth.

Fremont, California, was No. 4, Dallas No. 9 and and Salt Lake City No. 10.

Home values have increased 5.4 percent over the last year and are expected to jump 2.5 percent the next, according to Zillow data. [CNBC] – Mike Seemuth


Asking $65M, Jackie O’s Martha Vineyard compound looks to break a record

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Jacqueline Kennedy and Red Gate Farm (Credit: Getty Images)

Jacqueline Kennedy and Red Gate Farm (Credit: Getty Images)

Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis’s 340-acre Martha Vineyard’s compound is now on the market for $65 million.

Should the secluded beachfront property sell for its ask, the deal would shatter the island’s current residential record of $32.5 million, the Wall Street Journal reported.

Onassis’s daughter, Caroline Kennedy, told the Journal that her three children are now adults, leading her to sell the compound.
LandVest’s Thomas E. LeClair and Gerret C. Conover have the listing.

An aerial view of the 340-acre Red Gate Farm

An aerial view of the 340-acre Red Gate Farm

The estate, which was refurbished by Kennedy and her husband Edwin Schlossberg, comes with a main 6,456-square-foot, five-bedroom home and a guesthouse with four more bedrooms. Most of the rooms have ocean views.

The compound also comes with a tennis court, pool, freshwater ponds and more than a mile of private beach.

Onassis had married shipping mogul Aristotle Onassis five years after the assassination of President John F. Kennedy, whose summer White House was located not too far away, in Hyannis on Cape Cod.

But for Onassis, Martha’s Vineyard felt more private, according to the Journal. The first lady bought her property, dubbed Red Gate Farm, in the 1970s for $1 million.

“She loved exploring the Cape, sailing Nantucket Sound with my father, and being part of all the family activities in Hyannis Port,” Caroline Kennedy told the publication. “But when my brother and I were grown, she wanted a place of her own.”

[WSJ] — Mary Diduch

Even with $155M in price cuts, this is still the most expensive home listing in LA

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Jerry Perenchio and the Chartwell Estate

Jerry Perenchio and the Chartwell Estate

The massive Bel Air estate of late media mogul Jerrold Perenchio just got another deep discount.

Once a $350 million pocket listing, the 10-acre Chartwell Estate got a price cut of $245 million when it hit the Multiple Listing Service last fall. Now, it’s asking $195 million, according to Variety.

Even with the haircut, it remains the most expensive home listed in Los Angeles County on the MLS.

Multimillion-dollar discounts aren’t unusual in the world of high-end L.A. real estate. Agents often start properties with high asks to later drop them to more realistic levels, drumming up media coverage and attracting buyers with each discount.

The high-end market overall hasn’t performed well this year. Prices continue to climb, but sales have slowed.

The Chartwell Estate dates back to 1933. Perenchio purchased it in 1986 along with a handful of neighboring lots and steadily expanded the estate.

The 25,000-square-foot main home has 11 bedrooms, 18 bathrooms, a ballroom and a 12,000-bottle wine cellar. There’s a 75-foot swimming pool, guest house, covered parking for 40 cars and a tennis court on the meticulously landscaped grounds.

The former talent promoter and Univision CEO built up a large portfolio of real estate in L.A. during his storied career and some of those properties hit the market after he passed away in 2017.

Malibu purchased a 30-acre property in the city from Perenchio’s estate for $42.5 million last year. A beach house Perenchio owned in the city hit the market around the same time for $14 million. [Variety]Dennis Lynch

WATCH: Here’s the shit real estate agents really say

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[video_embed][/video_embed]

From negotiating with buyers to tidying up their client’s listings, there are a few sentiments real estate agents share across the board.

The Corcoran Group’s Sarah Fearon brought together her two specialities, real estate and comedy, to encapsulate a day in the life of a real estate agent in parody form.

Aside from selling properties for her clients in Manhattan, Fearon is an actress, comedian and playwright. Her one-woman show, “2B” — which is debuting at the Players Theatre from April 25 to May 12 — is based on her experiences as a real estate agent.

Watch the video above, starring Fearon as her character “Snazzy Peabody,” to see what real estate agents really say.

Community resistance may keep Broward hotel from crossing street to touch the beach

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Rendering of proposed hotel in Lauderdale-by-the-Sea (Credit: Sun-Sentinel)

Resistance from town residents may lead developers to redesign a proposed 207-room hotel that would close part of an existing street along the beach in Lauderdale-by-the-Sea.

Many in an audience of about 100 people criticized the proposal last week at a Town Hall workshop because the developers want to build the hotel on part of El Mar Drive, which is parallel to, and east of, State Road A1A.

The developers, Fort Lauderdale-based TLG Investment Partners LLC and Marietta, Georgia-based Concord Wilshire Capital LLC, proposed closing the southern end of El Mar Drive so their planned hotel could extend from A1A to the beach.

But Elliot Sokolow, the vice mayor of Lauderdale-by-the-Sea, said many residents oppose the proposed closure of the southern end of El Mar Drive, which provides access to homes and lodging.

Sokolow also told the Sun-Sentinel that the planned hotel “would be a great addition to our southern border” and that Concord Wilshire is a “credible developer with a great track record.” Nate Sirang, president of Concord Wilshire, did not respond to phone messages.

A joint venture of Concord Wilshire and TLG signed a contract in February to acquire the hotel development site: A former Holiday Inn at 4116 Ocean Drive and 4108 and 4110 El Mar Drive, the former location of a now-demolished hotel known as Villa Caprice. The owner of the property is Florida Development Group South. [Sun-Sentinel]Mike Seemuth

Miami house with acclaimed minimalist design listed for $2M

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The award-winning minimalist Miami home hits the market for the first time

The award-winning minimalist Miami home hits the market for the first time

The Brillhart House, an award-winning minimalist home and a rare example of architectural restraint in look-at-me Miami, is up for sale for the first time.

The Balinese-style house, which resembles a remote resort spa, is listed for $2 million by Gary Feinberg of Compass Florida, according to Forbes.

Five-year-old home was featured on the Netflix/BBC series “The World’s Most Extraordinary Homes.”

Two architects, Jacob and Melissa Brillhart of Brillhart Architecture, built the acclaimed house, winner of honor awards from the AIA Florida (2015) and AIA Miami (2016).

The Brillharts used a utilitarian approach to design a compact house that would minimize construction costs and ecological impact.

They built the one-level residence on a half-acre lot beneath a canopy of tropical foliage, beyond the view of neighbors. The property has 1,581 square feet of flexible living space, or 2,300 square feet including the front and back porches.

The two-bedroom, two-bathroom house features glass-and-steel facades and wood shutters. “Four sets of sliding glass doors allow the house to be completely open to nature,” Feinberg told Forbes.

Its central location in the historic Spring Garden district in Miami puts Brillhart House within easy driving distance of such destination as Miami International Airport, Miami Beach, Brickell and Wynwood. [Forbes] – Mike Seemuth

Opportunity Zone in Jacksonville is site of bank-financed apartment development

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San Marco Crossings rendering (Credit: Jacksonville Daily Record)

Two developers announced plans to build 486 apartments in Jacksonville on a nine-acre site in an Opportunity Zone.

Arlington, Virginia-based EJF Capital LLC and Jacksonville-based Chance Partners plan to start construction of the $86 million project in the third quarter and open the property in the fourth quarter of 2020.

The developers will cover construction costs with $51 million of financing from Ameris Bank with participation from Stifel Bank.

The three-parcel development site near downtown Jacksonville and the city’s Southbank area is part of an area certified as an Opportunity Zone under the federal Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017.

The location of the two-building apartment project, called San Marco Crossings, is on the outskirts of the historic San Marco area of Jacksonville.

Another appeal of the location is its proximity to more than 23,000 health care jobs that pay an average annual salary of $63,000.

“Jacksonville is resilient real estate market that has exhibited favorable demographic trends and a strong business climate,” Asheel Shah, senior managing director of EJF Capital, said in a prepared statement.

Since 2010, the population of Jacksonville has grown 12 percent, which is faster than Atlanta, Miami or Tampa-St. Petersburg, EJF Capital said in press release. – Mike Seemuth

Some men in the lives of “Real Housewives” star in their own dramas

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Mauricio Umansky (Credit: Public Domain Pictures)

Some women who star in the Real Housewives television shows on the Bravo channel have husbands and ex-husbands who make less money but stir up a comparable amount of mayhem – from identity theft and tax evasion to lawsuits and loan defaults.

Guiseppe “Joe” Giudice (married to Teresa Giudice, New Jersey) faces possible deportation for a felony conviction. He and his wife did not pay taxes from 2004 to 2008 yet got $4 million of mortgage loans using falsified tax returns, spent the money, then filed for bankruptcy. Joe pleaded guilty to fraud charges and got a 41-month prison sentence. Teresa served a sentence of about a year.

Frank Catania (ex-husband of Dolores Catania, New Jersey) was disbarred in 2017 for misappropriating $25,000 of client funds and escrow funds. A court rejected his claim that a client whom he nicknamed “Bones” had permitted him to borrow funds. His ex-wife, Dolores, learned about the $25,000 scam from the show’s executive producer Andy Cohen when he mentioned it during a reunion episode.

Apollo Nida (ex-husband of Phaedra Parks, Atlanta) was part of an identity theft ring accused of stealing $2.3 million. At his 2014 sentencing hearing, Nida said he stole to sustain “the lifestyle that TV creates.” He pleaded guilty to conspiracy to defraud a bank, got an eight-year prison sentence, and is scheduled for release in October.

Mauricio Umansky (married to Kyle Richards, Beverly Hills) is a broker facing a lawsuit filed against him by the owner of an ultra-upscale seaside mansion. Umansky allegedly arranged for an associate to buy the mansion at a price well below its market value, $33 million, then shared the profit after the associate flipped the residence a year later for $70 million. In court, Umansky denied the allegations in the suit and claimed the lower $33 million price reflected the run-down condition of the property.

Paul Kemsley (married to Dorit Kemsley, Beverly Hills) is an English real estate developer who has been sued at least three times since 2012. Long before appearing on Real Housewives of Beverly Hills to give his wife a Bentley for her 40th birthday, Kemsley filed bankruptcy in 2012. In a ruling against him, a New York judge called Kemsley “a bankrupt who does not live like one.” Kemsley told the New York Post in May that he won one suit over gambling debt and settled another. In court, he denied allegations that he failed to pay a business partner in Beverly Beach, his wife’s line of swimwear.

Tom Girardi (married to Erika Girardi, Beverly Hills) was slapped with a suit in May alleging he failed to repay a $5.1 million loan to his law firm. His case against Pacific Gas & Electric Co. made him famous and served as inspiration for the movie Erin Brockovich. The lender that filed the suit accused Girardi of misusing the loan to his firm to personally benefit him and his wife, to “sustain their lavish lifestyle and maintain their glamorous image.” Girardi denied the allegations in a statement to Blast, a celebrity news site. Another lender sued him in January, alleging that Girardi owed $15 million. Erika Girardi downplayed the litigation, telling Us Weekly, “Listen, we’re in the lawsuit business, baby. We sue and get sued.” [Bloomberg] – Mike Seemuth


Putting proptech to the UX test: the tools that work and the ones that don’t

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The lobby of the Coral Gables theater is jammed with dozens of real estate techies. Some of them are the brains behind South Florida-based startup companies searching for capital and clients. The rest are brokers, developers, real estate investment managers and other industry executives looking to get in on the ground floor of the next big real estate software application. More than 400 attendees showed up for the May 14 Future of Real Estate Tech Summit, an all-day conference that featured a competition among 10 real estate tech startups to win about $61,000 worth of digital and legal services and co-working space at the LAB Miami, which held the event.

But the real prize could come from a $50 million real estate tech fund that would provide at least $500,000 each for up to 25 companies with monies from investors looking to bank off technology software and products for real estate and construction.

The establishment of the fund by the LAB Miami owners is a sign that real estate tech fever has reached the shores of South Florida even as experts warn the sector is reaching bubble proportions. But a correction may be coming: Research firm CREtech found that venture capital investment in the real estate tech sector nationwide totaled $9.6 billion last year, which was down 23 percent from $12.6 billion in 2017.

Dustin DeVan, founder and CEO of BuildingConnected, who was on a summit panel, said there is still so much capital being thrown at real estate tech startups that it’s hard to tell which companies are creating the products and applications with staying power. His San Francisco-based firm, which provides builders with a cloud-based subcontractor bidding system, has raised $57.2 million in four funding rounds, according to Crunchbase.

“There is so much money flooding into real estate tech that it is hard to differentiate solid businesses from the ones that are too early to depend on as a platform,” DeVan said.

To get a handle on South Florida real estate tech firms that are gaining users and scoring with investors, The Real Deal interviewed local developers, brokers, office tenants and landlords that are testing out software and applications in their daily routines.

 

Technology: VIMO SENSOR
Software developer: Motionloft
Who’s it for: Retail tenants and landlords
What it does: The sensor tracks the number of people entering and leaving a commercial space and how long they stay. From that data, the software generates analyses that quantify the total number of visitors, whether a particular entry and exit point has more foot traffic than others and peak times for a commercial space.
User’s experience: Jessica Goldman Srebnick, CEO of Goldman Properties, started using Motionloft’s application and ViMo sensors in late October when a prospective tenant made using the software part of the lease terms. Since then, Goldman has been using Motionloft to track the foot traffic at all the properties her company owns in Wynwood. For instance, Motionloft provided data showing people were still congregating at Wynwood Walls, at 2520 Northwest Second Avenue, during early evenings on Sundays, she said. That led to her decision to change Sunday’s closing hours for the property’s restaurant, Wynwood Kitchen and Bar.

“Now we stay open after 5 p.m. on Sundays,” Goldman said. “It is super helpful for the restaurant business. And the food and beverage component in Wynwood is becoming a strong driver.”
Tech support: Joyce Reitman, CEO of San Francisco-based Motionloft, recently told Digital Journal that the company’s application brings clarity to commercial real estate transactions. “The data, as with retail, informs decisions around site selection and helps owners and developers attract quality tenants,” she said. Civil libertarians have warned, however, that people-tracking technologies such as Motionloft are creating new forms of surveillance and further eroding individuals’ expectations of privacy, and some activists have called for a ban on them.

Technology: ZONEIQ
Software company: Gridics
Who’s it for? Developers, commercial brokers
What it does: The program creates three-dimensional models of potential development sites, customized according to the zoning codes within their geographic location. The technology allows small to medium-sized developers to produce potential site plans in minutes, as opposed to days or sometimes weeks.
User’s experience: Avra Jain, founder of the Vagabond Group, was an early investor in Miami-based proptech firm Gridics and said she’s already seeing some ROI with the use of the firm’s software. With a few clicks, the developer found out what affordable housing she could build on parking lots behind a commercial building she owns at 3415 Northeast Second Avenue in Miami. Jain was able to play with several possible ideas using the software. “We did massing studies that showed we can go 36 stories,” she said. “With bonuses for being located in a transit zone, we can go 60. It showed us what we could fit on top of seven floors of parking, which sometimes dictates the size of a project.”

ZoneIQ allows her to produce three-dimensional models of what neighboring property owners could build on their land based on the Miami 21 zoning code, Jain said. “When you are building and you see a parking lot next to your development, you wonder what that owner can build and will it block my view,” she said. “Gridics’ platform lets you see what can be built around you.”
Tech Support: Jason Doyle, CEO of Gridics, said his firm just completed its expansion into Fort Lauderdale after launching its zoning analytic software in New York City and Miami in 2015, when the company was founded. “By the end of the year, we will have added 10 more markets on the system,” he said. “In addition to developers, commercial brokers are using our platform to quickly produce reports for their marketing materials.”

Technology: VERA
Software Company: Truss
Who’s it for? Office tenants, commercial brokers, landlords and co-working firms
What it does: Vera is a bot that customizes commercial listing searches for small and medium-sized businesses, in order to cut down on the amount of time it takes to find a new office, while comparing pricing for different properties. The data is inputted by Truss brokers, as well as commercial brokers, co-working firms and landlords that place listings in the Truss online marketplace.
User’s experience: Michael Abraham, executive director of professional engineering fraternity Theta Tau, created a Truss account about a month before he moved from Austin, Texas, to Miami. He needed to find an office in his new city. “It was extremely convenient for me to do my searches at my leisure without physically having to be there,” Abraham said.

Vera was able to take Abraham on virtual tours and show him the actual pricing per square foot, which saved him at least three trips to Miami to physically tour spaces, he said.

Abraham selected five sites and set up a trip to meet with Truss’ South Florida team of brokers, who added a sixth site for him to consider that was not on his short list.

“The folks at Truss looked at my search pattern and identified a site that I had initially looked at, but didn’t include,” he said. “It was the one I ended up leasing after looking at two other sites that were on my list.”
Tech support: Ken Silberling, senior regional vice president of Truss, said the company expanded its online marketplace for commercial leasing into South Florida last year. “We have been operational for about 10 months and are starting to catch traction now,” he said. 

The technology is geared to small to medium-sized firms that don’t have in-house real estate teams or use commercial brokers, Silberling noted, adding that a few national corporate tenants have used Truss to find satellite office space.

Technology: REAL AI MACHINE LEARNING
Software company: Real AI
Who’s it for: Real estate investment firms and funds
What it does: The artificial intelligence tool researches properties on and off the market to pinpoint the best possible chances of closing a deal, expected profit margins, possible rent growth and other financial data. The software uses a predictive price algorithm, a database of properties, ownership information, demographics and property expense level information to underwrite and deliver deals that match an investors’ criteria.
User’s experience: Nelson Stabile, principal of real estate development firm Integra Investments, said a couple of months back he received an email that he believed was sent by a sales executive at Real AI, an Austin-based tech firm that has developed a commercial real estate acquisition platform that runs on machine learning and big data. The email pitched Stabile on how Real AI could source, evaluate and close investment opportunities for their clients with hardly any human interaction. “It took four or five email messages going back and forth to realize I was communicating with artificial intelligence,” Stabile said. “It knew what to ask to keep me engaged.”

Ultimately, Stabile said, he did not sign up for Real AI’s services because the off-market listings the artificial intelligence pitched were not in Florida and not the type of properties Integra likes to pursue. “I saw the value in what Real AI is offering, but it was hard for me to make any use of it because we do boutique projects,” he said. “If one day we end up rolling out on a bigger scale, I would definitely give them a try.”
Tech support: Travis Farese, CEO and founder of Real AI, said during a recent podcast called “Investor Connect” that his firm’s technology helps buyers and investors get equal footing with sellers and commercial brokers by pulling data on a wide spectrum of 90,000 off-market properties across the country. “Investors are left on their own to figure out a process and a strategy to acquire assets,” Farese said. “More shots on goal equals more deals.”

Opendoor, a $3.8B iBuyer start up, fires staffers, asks others to move to Phoenix HQ

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Opendoor CEO Eric Wu and Pheonix (Credit: Resolute Ventures and iStock)

Opendoor CEO Eric Wu and Pheonix (Credit: Resolute Ventures and iStock)

The $3.8 billion iBuyer startup Opendoor is shaking things up internally.

The company started firing about 50 of its roughly 1,300 employees in June, and it has asked between 200 and 300 employees throughout the country to move to its Phoenix location, according to Bloomberg. It is also scaling back on its free lunch policy, a common perk at startups.

Opendoor plans to double its Phoenix employees to more than 500 next year and will keep hiring in all of its other markets as well, a spokesperson told the publication It will also still offer subsidized lunches in all of its offices with more than 100 people.

The firm was most recently valued at $3.8 billion. It announced a new $300 million fundraising round in the spring that brought its total equity funding to more than $1 billion. SoftBank’s famed $100 billion Vision Fund is among its investors.

The company has experienced executive turnover recently: Co-founder JD Ross left in December; CFO Jason Child left in May; and vice president of engineering Bali Raghavan left recently as well.

Opendoor has faced growing competition since it was founded in 2014. The platform lets homeowners upload information about their home, and the company then makes a cash offer within 48 hours. They make minor repairs and put it on the market if the seller accepts and charge a fee slightly higher than what a traditional broker would charge.

But the firm still leads the pack with about 7,200 home sales last year, more than double what its closest competitor OfferPad managed. [Bloomberg] – Eddie Small

BH3 plans retail project in Miami Design District Opportunity Zone

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BH3 Co-Founders Greg Freedman Daniel Lebensohn

BH3 Co-Founders Greg Freedman Daniel Lebensohn

BH3 is planning a nine-story retail development in Miami Design District’s Opportunity Zone, The Real Deal has learned.
The $55 million, 86,000-square-foot project at 3801 North Miami Avenue will have retail and showroom space, with 25-foot high ceilings on the ground-floor and 14-foot high ceilings on levels two through nine, according to Greg Freedman, co-founder of BH3.

BH3 is in the process of finalizing entitlements, which should be completed this summer, Freedman said. No variances are needed. He expects to break ground in the second quarter of 2020 and start pre-leasing at the end of the summer.

BH3 paid $15.1 million for the properties at 3801 and 3819 North Miami Avenue in 2017, before the Opportunity Zone legislation came out, he said. “We love the site regardless of any tax benefits associated with it,” Freedman said. But the Opportunity Zone designation does make the project “more saleable” to prospective investors, he added.

The entire Miami Design District is an Opportunity Zone.  The program was part of President Trump’s tax plan, and was designed to encourage investment into low-income and distressed areas. The benefit for developers and investors in an Opportunity Zone is the ability to defer and potentially forgo paying capital-gains taxes.

The Design District development is not the first Opportunity Zone project for BH3. In Delray Beach, the company won a request for proposals to buy three city blocks, from 600 to 800 West Atlantic Avenue, where it plans to build a $100 million mixed-use development called Alta West.

The project will have 165 apartments, a 30,000-square-foot grocery store, 40,000 square feet of retail, plus 20,000 square feet to 30,000 square feet of office space. The Community Redevelopment Agency, which will sell the land to BH3 for $10, assembled the property which currently includes vacant parcels and vacant buildings. In exchange for the land, the developer is building 30 workforce housing units, 18 of which will be delivered this summer adjacent to the property.

Washington, DC parking garage mogul snags a spot at The Bristol

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Irwin and Ginne Edlavitch and a rendering of The Bristol

Irwin and Ginne Edlavitch and a rendering of The Bristol

Washington, D.C. parking garage mogul Irwin Edlavitch and his wife paid $5.6 million to snag a spot at The Bristol in West Palm Beach.

The Edlavitchs purchased unit 1203 at 1100 South Flagler Drive from the development group Flagler Investors, records show.

Irwin Edlavitch owned and operated Atlantic Garage, which owns parking garages across the Washington, D.C area. Edlavitch and his wife Ginny are also large donors to Jewish nonprofits and organizations in the area.

The 25-story, 69-unit Bristol tower has units ranging from 3,600 square feet to 14,000 square feet that are priced from about $5 million to more than $40 million.

The Bristol is the first new luxury condo in West Palm Beach in over a decade. Flagler Investors is led by Al Adelson and Gene Golub. Adelson previously told The Real Deal that the luxury condo is nearly sold out, except for two units that it will sell at a later date.

A large portion of the sales have come from former estate owners in the town of Palm Beach who were looking to downsize or wanted to move into a condo, according to Adelson.

Buyers at the Bristol include beauty mogul Sydell Miller, who closed on a full-floor penthouse for $42.6 million in March.

Blackstone bets on Broward County with hotels purchase

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Blackstone CEO, 14500 Hotel Road and 14700 Hotel Road, 130 North University Drive

Blackstone CEO, 14500 Hotel Road and 14700 Hotel Road, 130 North University Drive

Blackstone scooped up three Broward County hotels for $43.2 million, signaling the private equity company’s growing footprint in South Florida.

The New York-based company bought two hotels in Miramar — a 125-room Courtyard by Marriott and a 130-room Residence Inn — along with a 138-room Residence Inn in Plantation. The two Miramar hotels are adjacent to each other at 14500 Hotel Road and 14700 Hotel Road, while the Plantation hotel is at 130 North University Drive.

A company tied to Bethesda, Maryland-based RLJ Lodging Trust sold the three hotels, records show. The properties last traded between 2006 and 2007.

Blackstone and other institutional investors are increasingly buying properties across South Florida. In May, Blackstone paid $208.8 million for a pair of neighboring apartment complexes in Doral: Doral View at 901 Northwest 97th Avenue, and Town Fontainebleau Lakes at 1062 Northwest 87th Avenue. The portfolio deal marked the largest multifamily deal in South Florida so far this year.

Earlier this year, the Blackstone Group closed a $20 billion private-equity real estate fund, its largest fund to date.

In South Florida, thousands of new hotel rooms are hitting the market, which is driving down occupancy rates. In the first quarter, the hotel occupancy rate in Broward County fell to 83.5 percent, about a percentage point drop from last year, according to hospitality industry monitor STR.

Demand for apartments reaches 5-year high across US

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Chicago and Houston skylines (Credit: Unsplash)

Chicago and Houston skylines (Credit: Unsplash)

Across the nation demand for apartments is now at a five-year high, a consequence of slow home sales and economic uncertainty.

The number of move-ins during the second quarter shot up 11 percent compared to last year, according to the Wall Street Journal, citing data from RealPage. That surge caused the national occupancy rate to hit 95.8 percent, according to the report.

In Chicago and Houston, demand grew particularly strongly, as move-ins outpaced new construction by an almost 3 to 1. Smaller metro areas saw big rental price increases as well, including Wilmington, N.C., where rents jumped by 7.4 percent, and Huntsville, Ala., where they rose by 6.4 percent.

Apartment construction is nearing a 30-year high, but most of the products are for higher-income earners, leaving the market for affordable rentals significantly tighter. In Chicago, where demand for rentals continue to be strong, investors are buying up condominiums and deconverting them into apartments.

The housing market is also rough for buyers right now. The asking price for homes is going up at a faster rate than income, and the volume of existing homes for sale has fallen for 15 months straight. [WSJ] — Eddie Small

Developer sells hotel site in Wynwood, plans retail project nearby

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A rendering of the retail project planned for 300 Northwest 29th Street (Credit: Shulman + Associates)

A rendering of the retail project planned for 300 Northwest 29th Street (Credit: Shulman + Associates)

Red Group sold a development site in Wynwood — where it had planned to build a modular hotel — to a former Related Group project manager.

With the profits from the land sale, Red Group plans to build a 10,000-square-foot retail and restaurant project nearby in Wynwood, according to the company’s chief financial officer, Samuel Raccah.

Red Group sold the lots at 50 and 58 Northwest 26th Street to Jeffrey Grossfield, who was previously with Related, for $3.2 million. That’s $900,000 more than what Red Group paid in June 2018. Raccah said the group had planned to build the first short-term rental-friendly building in Wynwood on the 26th Street property, but “the buyer made an offer that we couldn’t refuse.”

Grossfield reportedly plans to build a container-style hotel on the site. He did not immediately respond to a request for comment. The vacant property totals 10,400 square feet and it sold for $308 per square foot.

A rendering of the container-style hotel at 50-58 Northwest 26th Street

A rendering of the container-style hotel at 50-58 Northwest 26th Street

That site is across the street from the Bradley, a mixed-use apartment development that Related and Block Capital Group are building at 51 Northwest 26th Street. The 175-unit project, with interiors by Lenny Kravitz, is expected to be completed by the end of this year.

Red Group plans to build the commercial building at 300 Northwest 29th Street, at the entrance of the neighborhood’s planned woonerf. A woonerf is a Dutch-inspired shared street design aimed at slowing down traffic.

Shulman + Associates is designing the building, with retail on the ground floor, a restaurant concept on the second floor, and a third-floor rooftop concept that will be a bar at night and a workout studio during the day. Red Group expects to break ground on the building by the first quarter of next year and complete it at the end of 2021.

The project will be built without parking, thanks to new legislation that relaxes parking requirements for single-lot owners.

Gabriele Izsak, president of GB Seven Investments and Red Group, was recently added to the Wynwood Business Improvement District’s board.

Last year, the Miami City Commission approved contracts to develop a streetscape and tree canopy master plan for Wynwood. The neighborhood’s future streetscape could include a bicycle and wellness loop, pocket parks, lush landscaping, and more woonerfs.


This is not your imagination: Imagine School in Coral Springs sells for $19M

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Stuart Ellis, CEO of Charter School Capital and Imagine School at Broward

Stuart Ellis, CEO of Charter School Capital and Imagine School at Broward

The school may be called Imagine, but the sales price is real.

Portland-based Charter School Capital sold the Imagine School at Broward for $19.3 million to Imagine at Broward, which is managed by MBAF principal Brian Schlang. The school sold for 15 percent more than its last trade in 2016.

The 71,935-square-foot campus at 9001 Westview Drive in Coral Springs sold for $268 per square foot, records show. The school was built in 2001.

The buyer secured a $19.1 million loan from Zions Bancorp to acquire the school.

Imagine Schools is a national nonprofit network of 63 public charter campuses with more than 30,000 students in 11 states and the District of Columbia, according to its website. The tuition-free Broward school ranges from kindergarten through eighth grade.

Charter School Capital funds and finances charter schools throughout the country. In the past 10 years, Charter School Capital has invested more than $1.8 billion into more than 600 charter schools, according to its website.

Investors and developers are betting big on charter schools across South Florida.

In May, Aventura-based ESJ Capital Partners sold the Sunshine Elementary Charter School & Paragon Academy of Technology at 502 North 28th Avenue in Hollywood for $6.7 million. At that time, the firm had 23 charter and privately-owned schools within its portfolio, with a value of more than $350 million.

Last summer, Jeffrey Miller, the brother of Stuart Miller, the executive chairman of Lennar, bought a charter school in Opa-locka for $8.45 million.

WATCH: Miami’s biggest concrete pour for Aston Martin Residences

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[video_embed][/video_embed]

Construction crews poured the last of 14,000 cubic yards of concrete at about noon on Sunday, marking the end of the foundation spread for the Aston Martin Residences condo tower in downtown Miami.

The marathon concrete pour began at 9 p.m. on Friday at 300 Biscayne Boulevard.

G&G Business Developments, led by the Coto family of Argentina, is developing the 66-story, 818-foot, 391-unit luxury tower. Coastal Construction is the general contractor.

Cervera Real Estate is handling sales and marketing of the building’s units, which range in price from $750,000 to $50 million for the largest penthouse. Presales are currently at about 50 percent, Alicia Cervera Lamadrid said.

Developer German Coto, CEO of G&G Business Developments, said in a release that he was happy with the progress of construction and sales.

The steel piles, which were installed in December, run 15 feet deep. Vertical construction is expected to begin this week.

The developer secured a $200 million construction loan from Brazilian lender Itaú BBA International in November.

Casa Hotels adds to South Florida portfolio with boutique Miami Beach hotel

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1420 Collins Avenue

1420 Collins Avenue

Casa Hotels Group, a Chilean investment firm, paid $7.3 million for a boutique hotel in South Beach.

The Odyssey of South Beach LLC, led by Ronnie Menashe, sold the 27-key Odyssey Hotel at 1420 Collins Avenue in Miami Beach to Casa Hotels Group, property records show. The Art Deco property traded hands for about $270,000 per key.

The 9,600-square-foot hotel marks the fifth that Casa Hotels Group has purchased over the past year in South Florida, said Valerio Spinaci of Opera Real Estate Investment. Spinaci and his partner Federico Maria Ionta represented the buyer. Marcus & Millichap’s Scott Sandelin, David Cohen and Alejandro D’Alba represented the seller.

The other properties that Casa Hotels Group bought include 334 Ocean Drive, The Mint and the Coral Reef hotels in Hollywood, and Casa Sofi, which is under construction in Miami Beach.

The Odyssey, built in 1930, was on the market for nearly $7.5 million. It last sold for $6.5 million in 2014.

According to the offering memo, the boutique hotel was 98 percent occupied in 2018 with an average daily rate of about $144 a night, and an average revenue per available room of $141 per night. The net operating income last year totaled more than $516,000.

Eric Gonzalez and Antonio Roca of the law firm Roca Gonzalez PA also worked on the deal.

The buyer plans to rebrand its properties under the Casa Hotels Group name, and offer both hotel rooms and short-term rentals, Spinaci said.

A number of boutique hotels and apartment buildings in South Beach have sold in recent months. In June, investor Adam Hyatt bought the SoBe Hostel at 235 Washington Avenue for $10 million, with plans to upgrade the property to a hotel.

Also last month, Miami developer Amanda De Seta closed on the apartment building at 221 Collins Avenue, which has flexible zoning.

Private equity firm pays $15M for Delray Beach apartments

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The Residences at Latitude Delray Beach and Marlena Demenus (Credit: LinkedIn)

The Residences at Latitude Delray Beach and Marlena Demenus (Credit: LinkedIn)

An entity tied to a private equity firm paid $14.75 million for the Residences at Latitude Delray Beach, with plans to convert the apartment complex to annual rentals.

PDE Latitude Delray LLC, managed by Marlena Demenus, the managing partner of New York-based Sky Lake Partners, bought the 42-unit multifamily property at 225 and 3130 South Latitude Circle.

Currently, half of the units are rented out as furnished vacation rentals, but Demenus plans to convert them to annual rentals, according to Brad Kuskin of Keller Williams Commercial Real Estate, who represented the buyer, along with Katie Rawnsley, also of Keller Williams Commercial Real Estate.

Newmark Knight Frank’s Avery Klann, Hampton Beebe, Tyler Minix and Jonathan Senn represented the seller, JKM Developers.

Built in 2017, the Residences at Latitude Delray Beach features units with one bedroom to three bedrooms plus a den, with monthly rents ranging from $1,900 to $3,300, Kuskin said. Amenities include a pool and cabana, basketball court and putting green.

JKM Developers paid $1.65 million for the site in 2014, and spent $8.65 million in construction costs, Kuskin said.

JKM Developers remains active in South Florida. Last year, the firm scored a $28 million construction loan for its planned Tamarac Village, a mixed-use project in Tamarac.

Sky Lake Group is a private equity firm specializing in multifamily and mixed-use real estate investments, according to Demenus’ LinkedIn page. Sky Lake recently sold nine buildings in New York City and is reallocating more than $40 million into South and Central Florida, Kuskin said. This deal is the first to close in South Florida.

The biggest deals within South Florida’s Opportunity Zones from the last 6 months

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It’s one of the hottest topics of the commercial real estate world, and in South Florida, Opportunity Zones have inspired investors to put their money where their mouths are. The federal program has promised to be a game changer for lenders, developers and others looking to cash in on the legislation, enacted as part of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017. The new rules allow investors to delay paying capital gains taxes on projects built in the designated zones — “economically distressed communities” — if they hold the investment for at least 10 years. In April, federal guidance on how the program will work was finally issued, allowing many to move forward with their plans.

The Real Deal dove into property records in Broward, Miami-Dade and Palm Beach counties to learn about the biggest deals for properties within Opportunity Zones that closed between December 1, 2018, and May 15, 2019. This is not a comprehensive list; only fee simple sales were included and REIT-share sales excluded. TRD used the Economic Innovation Group’s Certified Opportunity Zones map tool to determine whether sales occurred in Opportunity Zones.

—Additional reporting by Nicholas Severin.

 

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Miami-Dade County

1. $32.38M
1100 West Palm Drive, Homestead
Seller: GREC Homes
IX LLC
Buyer: Brickless Developer Group Corp.
Property Use: Land
Closed: March 6, 2019

2. $25M
7200 Northwest 25th Street, Miami
Seller: Cofe Properties
Buyer: AEW Capital Management
Property Use: Industrial
Closed: April 29, 2019

3. $22M
21440 Biscayne Boulevard, Miami
Seller: Aventura Center No. 21440 Land Trust
Buyer: Jasmin Investments
Property Use: Land
Closed: March 8, 2019

4. $15.5M
3801 Northeast
Second Avenue, Miami

Seller: J. Safra Real Estate
Buyer: Nader Hakakian; Daniel Hakakian
Property Use: Retail
Closed: February 8, 2019

5. $12.15M
16175 Northwest 49th Avenue, Hialeah
Seller: Tamel
Properties
Buyer: Sunway Holdings
Property Type: Industrial
Closed: December 3, 2019

6. $12M
301 Southeast Sixth Avenue, Homestead
Seller: Treevita Group
Buyer: Jeremy Bronfman
Property Type: Multifamily
Closed: April 9, 2019

7. $6.79M
453 Northwest Third Street, Miami
Seller: Omni New York
Buyer: Atlantic Housing Foundation
Property Type:
Multifamily
Closed: March 12, 2019

8. $6M
5796 Southwest 58th Terrace, Miami
Seller: EFC Holdings
Buyer: Ca Ventures
Property Type: Multifamily
Closed: March 5, 2019

 

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Palm Beach County

1. $11.7M
3541 Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard,
West Palm Beac
h
Seller: Silverman Group
Buyer: Harry Spitzer
Property Type: Industrial
Closed: March 4, 2019

2. $10.03M
1700 Avenue L, West Palm Beach
Seller: Silverman Group
Buyer: Genet Property Group
Property Type: Industrial
Closed: December 21, 2019

3. $9M
1220 Tangelo Terrace, Delray Beach
Seller: Beaver Properties
Buyer: Levy Realty Advisors
Property Type: Industrial
Closed: December 20, 2018

4. $8.7M
1601 Hill Avenue, West Palm Beach
Seller: Barbara Gaeta, Kristen Gaeta
Buyer: Alliance HSP
Property Type: Industrial
Closed: April 11, 2019

5. $6.05M
5028 Okeechobee Boulevard, West Palm Beach
Seller: Brightwork Real Estate
Buyer: Joel D. Horowitz
Property type: Retail
Closed: April 3, 2019

 

Broward County

1. $11.45M
1801 Northwest 49th Street, Fort Lauderdale
Seller: Goddard Investment Group
Buyer: Broward County
Property Type: Office
Closed: February 24, 2019

2. $9.1M
2011 Northwest 55th Avenue, Fort Lauderdale
Seller: Michael Rand
Buyer: Eli Ran
Property Type: Multifamily
Closed: February 12, 2019

3. $6.8M
999 and 1007 West Prospect Road, Fort Lauderdale
Seller: USA Pro Realty
Buyer: Schulman Properties
Property Type: Multifamily
Closed: December 14, 2018

4. $6.05M
205 Northwest 12th Street, Pompano Beach
Seller: Ferrari of Fort Lauderdale
Buyer: Xtreme Manufacturing
Property Type: Office
Closed: January 11, 2019

5. $3.2M
513-599 Sistrunk Boulevard,
Fort Lauderdale

Seller: Felipe Yalale
Buyer: Fuse Funding
Property Type: Land
Closed: April 10, 2019

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