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Cutler Bay axes Edgardo Defortuna’s plans for single-family development

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Edgardo Defortuna, an aerial of 18551 Old Cutler Road, and renderings of the project (Credit: Google Maps)

Edgardo Defortuna, an aerial of 18551 Old Cutler Road, and renderings of the project (Credit: Google Maps)

Edgardo Defortuna’s 16-year plan to build a new development along Biscayne Bay in Cutler Bay was shot down by the town council.

Defortuna, who leads Fortune International Group, sought to build 29 single-family homes on an 8.4-acre site south of Southwest 184th Street. The plan received heavy opposition from environmentalists and neighbors over concerns about traffic and wetland protection.

Defortuna’s subsidiary, Cutler Properties, initially purchased a 138-acre property in 2003. The development group was seeking to build 341 residential units as part of a mixed-use project on 40 acres and then would preserve the 93.15 acres bordering Biscayne Bay. The site, however, was never approved for an environmental permit by the South Florida Water Management District and the development group had to change its plans.

Cutler Properties then filed a lawsuit in 2008 against the water district but settled and agreed to only build on 8.4 acres. In 2016, the development group had to change its plans from a mixed-use project to low-rise, single-family homes. Ultimately, the plan was denied by the council in a 4-1 vote on Wednesday, according to Cutler Bay’s town clerk.

Fortune International Group declined to comment through a spokesperson.

Fortune International Group’s recent and current developments include condo projects such as Jade Ocean and the Ritz-Carlton Residences in Sunny Isles Beach, along with the Class-A office tower 1200 Brickell in Miami.

Cutler Bay in south Miami-Dade County is seeing more interest from developers. The homebuilder Lennar Corp. recently paid $19.5 million for a 58-acre lot near Southwest 104th Avenue.

Earlier this year, a Midtown Miami developer paid $7 million for the 39,000-square-foot Toys “R” Us building at 19525 South Dixie Highway in Cutler Bay.

The post Cutler Bay axes Edgardo Defortuna’s plans for single-family development appeared first on The Real Deal Miami.


Piecing together SoftBank’s disruptive real estate bets

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From left: WeWork’s Adam Neumann and SoftBank’s Masayoshi Son (Photo-Illustration by Nazario Graziano)

Masayoshi Son was widely regarded as an eccentric-but-gifted entrepreneur when, in 2014, he dazzled investors during an earnings presentation by showing them a picture of a large, brown-feathered bird.

“SoftBank wants to become the goose that lays the golden eggs,” Son told them, two years before launching a $100 billion Vision Fund that went on to anoint a crop of promising startups.

But over a turbulent six weeks starting in September, one of its biggest bets went south when WeWork scrapped plans for an IPO, saw its valuation plunge to less than $8 billion from $47 billion and ousted its co-founder and CEO, Adam Neumann.

The co-working company — which lost $900 million during the first half of 2019 — was on the brink of insolvency when SoftBank threw it a $9.5 billion lifeline.

In the wake of that spectacular downfall, many are now questioning Son’s strategy of dumping massive amounts of cash on unprofitable firms. Although cherry-picking startups and supersizing their growth made Son a kingmaker, the tactic is now facing harsh criticism, with some saying it’s stoked a trend of overvaluing companies.

Ed Zitron, founder of the San Francisco-based tech-focused PR firm EZPR, mocked Son right after WeWork’s implosion last month.

“Masa Son! I reach out to you with the greatest salutations! I would like to offer you a deal – one billion dollars of your soft bank [sic] fund and I will make a terrible company and lose all of the money!” he tweeted.

The playful needling underscores increased scrutiny on other companies SoftBank has backed — including Compass, Opendoor, Lemonade and Katerra.

“SoftBank’s Vision Fund has become the poster child for what many believe is a bubble in private market valuations of technology stocks,” Walter Piecyk, an analyst at research firm LightShed Partners, wrote in mid-October. “In fact, many blame SoftBank for driving up industrywide valuations across multiple verticals, whether SoftBank was an investor or not.”

SoftBank has, indeed, helped fuel other massive funding rounds in the venture world, where there’s now increased pressure to land a lottery-style win. Since the end of the financial crisis, investors have poured hundreds of billions of dollars into high-risk startups.

“The SoftBank/Vision Fund investing philosophy is the sharp tip of the spear,” said Hong Kong-based analyst Jeffrey Halley, explaining that it’s been the most aggressive investor in the field.

With too much dry powder, many venture capitalists have looked outside their typical investment parameters into high-risk deals, said Halley, who works at Oanda, the foreign-exchange firm.

“The market,” he added, “ignores realities and convinces itself in a massive groupthink that ‘this time it’s different.’”

“Embarrassed and impatient”

The timing of WeWork’s downfall couldn’t be worse for Son, who is trying to raise a second Vision Fund — this one for an estimated $108 billion.

In early October, some SoftBank executives reportedly urged him to delay the offering because he was struggling to raise the cash.

In September, at a five-star resort in Pasadena, California, Son told a group of entrepreneurs — whose companies were backed by SoftBank — that they need to become profitable soon, according to published reports.

And in recent weeks, Son has said publicly that he was “embarrassed and impatient” with SoftBank’s recent track record. During an investor call late last month, he apologized to investors in the first Vision Fund, according to Bloomberg.

LightShed’s Piecyk, however, said in his report that it’s not the “size of the possible investment losses at WeWork” that are most concerning. “It’s the ongoing damage to SoftBank’s reputation and how that might limit future investing,” he wrote.

The global stock markets share those concerns. SoftBank’s stock — down 30 percent since July — slid even more on news of the WeWork bailout.

“This sorry episode is also a searing indictment of SoftBank’s valuation and screening methodology which needs to shift towards being based on fundamentals rather than blue sky,” Richard Windsor, founder of the research company Radio Free Mobile, wrote in a research note.

While companies like Apple and Foxconn, the electronics manufacturer, are contributing to the Vision Fund 2, Abu Dhabi and Saudi Arabia — two of the biggest investors in SoftBank’s previous fund — haven’t confirmed their commitments.

SoftBank (and other companies) took flak for accepting money from Saudi Arabia after Washington Post journalist Jamal Khashoggi was killed at the Saudi consulate in Istanbul last year. But while some investors initially shunned Saudi leader Mohammad bin Salman bin Abdulaziz Al Saud (aka MBS), Son — who raised $45 billion from the kingdom for the first Vision Fund — stayed with him.

With that controversy behind it, sources said, SoftBank must now worry about its reputation among investors in the wake of WeWork’s failed IPO.

Although SoftBank’s first Vision Fund earned $1.5 billion on its investment in Flipkart, an Indian e-commerce company, Uber’s public offering was widely considered a flop.

Sources close to Son have reportedly said he’s considering a more cautious strategy for Vision Fund 2. The SoftBank chief will focus on companies with clear paths to profitability and is likely to slow the frenetic pace of investment. The first Vision Fund deployed roughly $80 billion within two and a half years; Vision Fund 2 will be deployed over four to five.

Some observers, however, said the WeWork bailout represents a second chance for SoftBank to make good on one of its biggest bets.

“These are grownups. These are all consenting adults,” said Rett Wallace, founder of Triton Research, who added that SoftBank can “well afford” these sorts of losses. “It makes sense for them to keep [WeWork] going rather than walk away from it, abandoned on the side of the road.”

How SoftBank will right-size the co-working giant remains to be seen.

After adding 6.3 million square feet of office space in the U.S. and Britain last year, the co-working firm was on track to take another 9.9 million square feet this year, according to data from CoStar Group. But it’s unclear whether WeWork will follow through on those lease commitments — or if some of the landlords it struck deals with will be left holding the bag. In mid-October, WeWork scrapped plans to lease an entire 36-story office tower in Seattle.

“If SoftBank turns WeWork around with the decks cleared … the fallout should be limited,” Halley said. “Much will depend on how the next few SoftBank-invested exits go over the next six months.”

Keeping distance

Amid WeWork’s reckoning, other SoftBank-backed firms have tried to distance themselves from the spectacle. In a company-wide email sent early last month, Compass CFO Kristen Ankerbrandt posited that it was hard to draw any parallels between the firms.

Compass and others have argued that unlike WeWork — where SoftBank holds an outsized stake — they have benefited from diverse investor bases. (Following the bailout, SoftBank, which has invested $13 billion in the company to date, held a roughly 80 percent stake in WeWork.)

By comparison, SoftBank has contributed just over a third of the $1.5 billion raised by Compass, company officials said. In an interview at the residential brokerage’s Manhattan headquarters last month, CEO Robert Reffkin also downplayed SoftBank’s role in determining Compass’ valuation of $6.4 billion, which he said was set by multiple investors including the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board, Dragoneer Investment Group and Glynn Capital Management.

“It’s a number of third-party investors, who are much smarter than I am, that do this for a living,” Reffkin said.

Katerra CEO and co-founder Michael Marks, meanwhile, told The Real Deal last month that his company is “not at all like WeWork.”

VCs that invested alongside SoftBank in Opendoor — the San Francisco-based iBuying startup that’s raised $1.3 billion in equity and $3.5 billion in debt financing since 2013 — are also downplaying SoftBank’s role. 

“SoftBank is a relatively small minority of capital Opendoor has raised,” said David Weiden, a partner at Khosla Ventures, which has invested an undisclosed amount in the company.

In March, Opendoor closed a $300 million round at a $3.8 billion valuation from investors including SoftBank, General Atlantic, Lennar Corporation, Fifth Wall Ventures and others.

SoftBank declined to comment, but a source close to the Vision Fund said it measures fair market value in accordance with international private equity, venture capital and accounting standards.

Yet amid increased competition, Opendoor began curtailing expenses this spring — laying off 50 out of 1,300 staffers and asking 200 to 300 others to relocate to Phoenix. The company also pulled the plug on free lunches.

And Compass halted launchings in new markets this year. Instead, it’s focusing on its existing markets. But in a pointed rebuke of Neumann’s $60 million private jet, Compass said all of its execs fly commercial. (Notwithstanding Chairman Ori Allon’s flight on a private plane to the Bahamas this year, according to his Instagram.)

On Oct. 17, Reffkin posted a selfie from what appeared to be the coach cabin of a flight from New York to San Francisco. “If anyone wants tips on how to fall asleep on a redeye,” he wrote, “I’m happy to give you some great tips!”

The SoftBank fallacy

SoftBank’s presence has turned the VC landscape on its head in the last few years. 

Amid stiff competition for the most promising deals, many investors simply overpaid by valuing companies based on metrics they expected to see in the future.

As of 2019’s third quarter, there were a record 180 VC-backed companies valued at over $1 billion, according to the data analytics site CB Insights. Helping fuel that were more than 120 companies that received over $100 million apiece during the second and third quarters.

The danger of inflated valuations, though, has become clear.

Tech startups that went public in 2019 have faced a cool reception in the public market.

In late October, for example, the stock price of instant-messaging firm Slack was down more than 47 percent since its June IPO, and Uber’s was trading at nearly 20 percent below the IPO price. Both were backed by SoftBank.

And it’s not just investors who were burned.

After SoftBank’s bailout, thousands of WeWork employees were bracing for mass layoffs, but those cuts were delayed because the company couldn’t afford the severance payments. In addition, under the bailout plan, employees who opt to sell their WeWork shares to SoftBank will do so for less than the paper value of the stock when it was issued.

“It is not unusual for the world’s leading technology disruptors to experience growth challenges as the one WeWork just faced,” Son said in statement at the time of the bailout.

Many WeWork employees were also irate over Neumann’s golden parachute (he got $1.7 billion to walk away from his board seat) and his reckless spending and self-dealing. “I don’t know why anyone was paying him for the word ‘we,’” one former executive told TRD in September. “The only word he knew was ‘I.’”

But the problem is bigger than Neumann.

Merritt Hummer, a senior principal at Bain Capital Ventures, said it’s become common for VCs to overpay for a stake in sought-after companies.

“It’s become not the exception but the rule for companies that are performing,” she said.

“The SoftBank fallacy, if you want to call it that, is that they’ve applied this methodology to companies that are mature,” she added. “That is risky to do when you’re the last capital in and the next decision-maker — in terms of a valuation of the business — is going to be the public market.”

David Jeans contributed reporting.

The post Piecing together SoftBank’s disruptive real estate bets appeared first on The Real Deal Miami.

The Flooring King buys a new palace in Miami Beach

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Antonio Sustiel and 266 South Coconut Lane (Credit: Facebook and Zillow)

Antonio Sustiel and 266 South Coconut Lane (Credit: Facebook and Zillow)

A former owner of Jungle Island sold his Miami Beach home to the self-proclaimed Flooring King for $5.8 million, property records show.

Bernard and Mary Levine sold the six-bedroom, 5,441-square-foot house at 266 South Coconut Lane on Palm Island to Ofer Sustiel. The Levines provided the buyer a $5.4 million mortgage.

Sustiel, who was featured on CNBC’s “Blue Collar Millionaires: Dirty Stinkin’ Rich,” owns The Flooring King, which he has called one of the largest closeout liquidators of laminate wood flooring.

A company led by Bernard Levine sold Jungle Island to ESJ Capital Partners for $60 million in 2017.

The Levines paid $1.4 million for their Miami Beach house in 2000, according to property records. It was last on the market in 2017 for $8 million. The home, built in 1972 and later expanded, sits on a 14,000-square-foot lot with 100 feet of water frontage, a Brazilian Ipe dock, and boat lifts.

Earlier this year, Brazilian developer Leo Macedo listed his Palm Island mansion at 30 Palm Avenue for $29 million.

The post The Flooring King buys a new palace in Miami Beach appeared first on The Real Deal Miami.

Major WeWork layoffs to begin today

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More than 4,000 people are expected to receive notice in coming weeks (Credit: iStock)

More than 4,000 people are expected to receive notice in coming weeks (Credit: iStock)

More than a third of WeWork’s 12,000 employees will likely receive notice this week that they no longer have a job. The layoffs are part of an effort by the struggling office-space company to cut costs, close ancillary businesses and narrow its offering to subletting office space.

WeWork chairman Marcelo Claure (Credit: Getty Images)

WeWork chairman Marcelo Claure (Credit: Getty Images)

In a company email sent by chairman Marcelo Claure, employees were told that layoffs will begin this week in the U.S., and that a planned all-hands meeting will be postponed from Tuesday to Friday, where Claure will present the company’s five-year plan.

“In the areas of the business that do not directly support our core business goals, we have to make some necessary job eliminations,” Claure said in the email, which was seen by The Real Deal. “We are going to eliminate and scale back certain functions and responsibilities, which will increase efficiency and also accountability.”

A person familiar with the matter told TRD that employees in the legal and human resources departments will begin receiving notice Monday.

WeWork declined to comment.

WeWork employees have waited weeks to hear notice of the layoffs, since the company abandoned plans for an IPO and had its valuation slashed from $47 billion to $8 billion. After CEO and co-founder Adam Neumann left the company in October, SoftBank, its largest investor, committed to a $9.5 billion lifeline to bail out the company, and installed a Claure to implement a turnaround strategy.

In sum, more than 4,000 people are expected to receive notice in the coming weeks, according to multiple people familiar with the matter.

Those include 1,000 maintenance workers who have been informed that their employment will be terminated on Dec. 9, according to a group of employees. The group, WeWorkers Coalition, formed in recent weeks and sent a letter to management earlier this month stating that they “don’t want to be defined by the scandals, the corruption and the greed exhibited by the company’s leadership.”

The group announced over the weekend that WeWork had reached an agreement with JLL to accept close to 1,000 maintenance and cleaning workers, many of whom would then be contracted to work in WeWork buildings.

However, the group raised alarm at the terms of the deal, and said that employees were told by WeWork to sign the terms of the contract by Monday, otherwise it would consider their resignations voluntary. The group said on Twitter that the contract has confused employees with pay discrepancies, and demanded a deadline extension.

In a separate tweet, the group added that WeWork “is not following through on its promise to treat employees with ‘dignity and respect’ during this restructuring process.”

Many employees and shareholders with stock options are also waiting to hear when a $3 billion tender offer by SoftBank will be launched, after being delayed for almost two weeks.

The post Major WeWork layoffs to begin today appeared first on The Real Deal Miami.

LI agents routinely discriminate against minority buyers, undercover probe finds

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The bombshell probe also found that minorities had to meet more stringent financial qualifications than white buyers. (Credit: iStock)

The bombshell probe also found that minorities had to meet more stringent financial qualifications than white buyers. (Credit: iStock)

A three-year undercover investigation by Newsday found 40 percent of Long Island brokers routinely discriminate against minority buyers.

Black testers experienced unfair treatment 49 percent of the time, Latinos 39 percent and Asians 19 percent. Black buyers were on average shown the fewest of an agent’s listings in majority-white neighborhoods, Newsday found.

The bombshell probe also found that minorities had to meet more stringent financial qualifications than white buyers. In seven cases, minority buyers without a pre-approved mortgage were blocked from home tours, but whites were not.

A quarter of the brokers directed white buyers to listings in majority-white communities, while black and Latino buyers were steered toward more integrated communities. Brokers spoke with white buyers about the racial or ethnic makeup of certain communities, which is illegal according to fair housing laws.

Newsday used paired-testing, a federally approved method for finding violations of fair housing laws. One white and one black, Asian or Latino tester would approach the same agent for help, providing similar financial details and identical preferences in home location and features.

Testers approached some of the island’s biggest brokerages: Douglas Elliman, Century 21 Real Estate LLC, Charles Rutenberg Realty, Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage on Long Island, Coach Realtors, Daniel Gale Sotheby’s International Realty, Laffey Fine Homes, Keller Williams Realty, the Corcoran Group, Signature Premier Properties, Realty Connect USA and RE/MAX LLC.

No unfair treatment was exhibited by agents from the Corcoran Group or Daniel Gale Sotheby’s International Realty, according to the study. [Newsday— TRD Staff

The post LI agents routinely discriminate against minority buyers, undercover probe finds appeared first on The Real Deal Miami.

Fund manager’s wife buys Boca Raton mansion for $13M

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249 West Alexander Palm Road and Kimberly Vassalluzzo

249 West Alexander Palm Road and Kimberly Vassalluzzo (Credit: Realtor)

The wife of an investment manager bought a waterfront Boca Raton mansion for $13 million, adding to the list of pricey sales this year at the Royal Palm Yacht and Country Club.

Kimberly Vassalluzzo purchased the 8,862-square-foot canalfront estate at 249 West Alexander Palm Road for $1,467 per square foot, records show. The home was built last year and sits on 0.34 acres in Royal Palm Yacht and Country Club.

Mikhail Avrutin, who is the owner and developer of Baltic Hotel Group, sold the property.

The house has six bedrooms and 10 bathrooms. The seller and the buyer were represented by David W. Roberts with Royal Palm Properties, according to Realtor.com.

Vassalluzzo’s husband, Scott J.Vassalluzzo, is the managing member of the Boca Raton-based investment firm Prescott General Partners. The firm has $2.5 billion in assets under management, according to a Securities and Exchange Commission filing.

The Royal Palm Yacht and Country Club has seen a number of big sales recently. Richard Templer, the owner of a professional horse racing stable, and his wife Diane Templer last month purchased a waterfront home at 190 Northeast 5th Avenue for $12.2 million.

Also last month, Robert Sheetz, the founder of the Sheetz convenience store and gas station chain, sold a waterfront estate at 133 West Coconut Palm Road in the Royal Palm Yacht & Country Club for $11.45 million.

In September, a group of executives tied to a West Palm Beach transportation company bought a 9,203-square-foot house at 300 East Key Palm Road for $12.1 million.

The post Fund manager’s wife buys Boca Raton mansion for $13M appeared first on The Real Deal Miami.

Russell Galbut wants to sell another Miami Beach hotel

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From left: Keith Menin and Russell Galbut, with the Domio Kaskades Hotel

From left: Keith Menin and Russell Galbut, with the Domio Kaskades Hotel

Miami Beach developer Russell Galbut and his nephew Keith Menin are looking to sell another Miami Beach hotel.

A company tied to Galbut and Menin is seeking to sell the 26-room Domio Kaskades Hotel in Miami Beach for $15.8 million or $607,692 per room. The property at 300 17th Street totals 18,725 square feet.

Marcus & Millichap’s Drew A. Kristol, Kirk D. Olson and Joseph Thomas represent the seller in the deal.

If the sale goes through, it will be the third Miami Beach hotel Galbut and Menin have sold since July. In August, companies tied to Menin and Galbut sold the shuttered Sanctuary Hotel at 1745 James Avenue for $14.4 million to Blue Road. A month earlier, Galbut sold the Bentley Hotel on Ocean Drive for $28 million. It was previously managed by Menin Hospitality.

In September, Menin and Galbut signed a 10-year lease with the short-term operator Domio to take over management of the Kaskades Hotel. Domio is a New York-based startup that aims to “professionalize the Airbnb space” by renting out apartments or hotels rooms on a short-term basis.

Domio expanded to South Florida in August when it signed a $1.45 million lease for 45 units at the beachfront Monte Carlo at 6551 Collins Avenue in Miami Beach. The company has more than 2,000 rooms in its portfolio, the bulk of which are in Chicago and New Orleans, according to its website.

The Kaskades Hotel was originally designed by architect Melvin Grossman in 1953. Grossman was known for his minimalist style and designed the historic International Inn in Miami Beach and worked on Caesars Palace in Las Vegas, according to his obituary.

Galbut’s company purchased the property for $2 million in 2013.

Galbut’s Crescent Heights is one of the most active developers in Miami Beach. The company is currently developing a 44-story, 519-foot-tall luxury residential building called Park on Fifth at 500 Alton Road, on the site of the former South Shore Hospital.

Recently, however, Galbut has turned his attention to Miami’s Edgewater neighborhood. Crescent Heights is in the planning stages for a mixed-use project between Northeast 29th to 32nd streets and between Northeast Second Avenue and Biscayne Boulevard. The Miami-based firm, led by Galbut, Sonny Kahn and Bruce Menin, plans to build 800 residential units and over 600,000 square feet of retail and office space on the assemblage.

The post Russell Galbut wants to sell another Miami Beach hotel appeared first on The Real Deal Miami.

Morgan Reed Group lists Rail 71 development for $33M

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Rail 71, Tony Arellano and Devlin Marinoff

Rail 71, Tony Arellano and Devlin Marinoff

Morgan Reed Group is looking to cash out on its investment in a Little River office development.

The company hired brokers Tony Arellano and Devlin Marinoff of Dwntwn Realty Advisors to list Rail 71, at 7205 Northeast Fourth Avenue, for $33 million or $258 per square foot, the brokers said. The flex creative office building is 89 percent occupied with 49 office, showroom and gallery tenants, including Dwntwn’s office, Saladino Design Studio, Fede Design, Bloom Miami and Bousa Brewing.

The 127,562-square-foot building, which backs up to the Florida East Coast Railway, was built on a 3.4-acre site west of Biscayne Boulevard. Rail 71’s annual net operating income is about $1.8 million, with average gross rents of $19.39 per square foot, according to the offering memo.

The building is part of the Little River business district, near Ironside, the Citadel and the MiMo District.

Arellano said Morgan Reed has been investing heavily in Old San Juan, Puerto Rico, and that the company planned to sell Rail 71 after completing a renovation and leasing up the building.

Nearby, a group of developers that includes Plaza Equity Partners and Tony Cho is planning the Magic City Innovation District, an 18-acre, $1 billion phased project at Northeast 62nd Street and Fourth Avenue. The development could have eight 25-story residential buildings, five 20-story office buildings, and an innovation tech center all employing roughly 7,000 people.

Landowners in Little Haiti including Magic City are pushing for a new Tri-Rail station to be built on their properties.

The post Morgan Reed Group lists Rail 71 development for $33M appeared first on The Real Deal Miami.


Last call for Purdy Lounge. Miami Beach bar announces closure

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Purdy Lounge in Miami Beach (Credit: Facebook)

Purdy Lounge in Miami Beach (Credit: Facebook)

Purdy Lounge in Miami Beach’s Sunset Harbour neighborhood will hold its last last call on February 8.

The popular bar and lounge, at 1811 Purdy Avenue, announced on Facebook that it would be closing early next year after operating for about 20 years.

“There is a lot you can do in 20 years, begin a new century, build a new business, develop a neighborhood, make new friends, strengthen bonds, dance, celebrate, cry, fall in love, and drink a few happy meals,” the post reads.

Residents, including the Sunset Harbour Neighborhood Association, have wanted the city to change Purdy’s closing time to 2 a.m. from 5 a.m. for nearly a decade, the Miami New Times reported last year.

Since it opened in 2000, the neighborhood has been developed into a high-end area with luxury condos, retail and office space. Last year, developer Scott Robins and former Miami Beach mayor Philip Levine sold a seven-building, 61,400-square-foot portfolio in Sunset Harbour for nearly $69 million to a North Carolina investment firm. Tenants there include Lucali, Flywheel Sports, Barry’s Bootcamp, Panther Coffee, Icebox Café and Stiltsville.

Brokerages such as Brown Harris Stevens and One Sotheby’s International Realty have opened offices in the neighborhood.

In October, the Miami Herald reported that Pubbelly, which opened in Sunset Harbour in 2011, had closed over the summer for repairs and decided not to reopen.

The post Last call for Purdy Lounge. Miami Beach bar announces closure appeared first on The Real Deal Miami.

Ten-X Commercial lays off nearly half its workforce

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Close to 100 employees were given notice on Monday morning (Credit: iStock)

Close to 100 employees were given notice on Monday morning (Credit: iStock)

Ten-X Commercial, an online real estate transaction platform, laid off half its workforce after efforts to sell the company fell through.

Close to 100 employees in offices in Texas, New York and California were given notice on Monday morning during a call with executives, according to people on the call and those familiar with the matter.

Thomas H. Lee Partners, the private equity firm that owns Ten-X Commercial, has been trying to sell the company since the start of the year. CoStar Group had been in talks for a potential acquisition until recently, according to former Ten-X employees.

Thomas H. Lee Partners declined to comment. Ten-X and CoStar did not respond to multiple requests for comment.

Ten-X says that more than $50 billion in real estate transactions have been conducted through its marketplace. It was founded in 2007 as Auction.com, a residential real estate deal platform. In 2016, it launched a separate platform known as Ten-X Commercial, which provided a marketplace for commercial properties. Along the way, it received investments from multiple firms, including Barry Sternlicht’s Starwood Capital, Stone Point and CapitalG.

In 2017, Thomas H. Lee Partners purchased a majority interest in Ten-X for close to $1.6 billion. The private equity firm quickly set about separating the two products — Auction.com and Ten-X Commercial — into siloed companies. Shortly after, Ten-X Commercial cut about 10 percent of its staff in early 2018.

Since the private equity firm began marketing Ten-X earlier this year, it attracted multiple suitors, including Newmark Knight Frank. Newmark declined to comment.

The post Ten-X Commercial lays off nearly half its workforce appeared first on The Real Deal Miami.

New York AG is investigating WeWork: report

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The New York State Attorney General’s office has launched an investigation into WeWork, Reuters reported.

The embattled office-space company, which is soon set to lay off thousands of workers, confirmed to the news outlet that it had received a request from the state’s AG office, led by Letitia James.

James’ office is reportedly looking into multiple transactions involving former CEO Adam Neumann that were scrutinized for potential self-dealing. One arrangement involved millions of dollars paid to Neumann by WeWork to lease buildings that he owned. Another transaction reportedly being examined is a $5.9 million payment to Neumann by the company to buy from him the trademark “We.”

The inquiry follows a Bloomberg report last week that stated the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission had launched a separate probe into WeWork, and pointed to the same transactions as potentially being examined by the agency. [Reuters] — David Jeans

The post New York AG is investigating WeWork: report appeared first on The Real Deal Miami.

These were the most expensive condo sales in Miami last week

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Miami condo sales again fell last week.

A total of 105 condos sold for $43 million in Miami-Dade County last week, compared to 139 units that sold for a combined $50 million the previous week. Condos last week sold for an average price of about $410,000 or $314 per square foot.

The priciest sale was at Murano Grande at Portofino. Unit 3403 sold for $3.85 million, or $1,172 per square foot, after 121 days on market. The listing agents were Bill Hernandez and Bryan Sereny, while the buyer’s agent was Luis Felipe Vieira De Souza.

Over on Bay Harbor Islands, unit 7G-N at Kai at Bay Harbor sold for $2.58 million. The unit traded hands for $793 per square foot. It was listed with Bragi Sigurdsson. Monica Cohan brought the buyer.

Here’s a breakdown of the top 10 sales from Nov. 10 to Nov. 16. Click on the map for more information:

Most expensive
Murano Grande at Portofino #3403 | 121 days on market | $3.85M | $1,172 psf | Listing agents: Bill Hernandez and Bryan Sereny | Buyer’s agent: Luis Felipe Vieira De Souza

Least expensive
Grove Enclave #1404 | 18 days on market | $780K | $332 psf | Listing agent: Michael Schnabel | Buyer’s agent: Suzanne Feanny

Most days on market
SLS Lux #4301 | 403 days on market | $1.03M | $918 psf | Listing agent: Ana Lagomarsino | Buyer’s agent: Jonathan Mann

Fewest days on market
Grove Enclave #1404 | 18 days on market | $780K | $332 psf | Listing agent: Michael Schnabel | Buyer’s agent: Suzanne Feanny

The post These were the most expensive condo sales in Miami last week appeared first on The Real Deal Miami.

Ten-X Commercial laid off half of its workforce, Miami professor who taught class on money laundering allegedly laundered millions

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Every day, The Real Deal rounds up South Florida’s biggest real estate news, from breaking news and scoops to announcements and deals. We update this page throughout the day. Please send any tips or deals to tips@therealdeal.com

This page was last updated at 9 a.m.

 

Ten-X Commercial laying off half of its workforce. Ten-X Commercial, an online real estate transaction platform, eliminated half its workforce after efforts to sell the company fell through. Close to 100 employees in offices in Texas, New York and California were given notice on Monday morning during a call with executives, according to people on the call and those familiar with the matter. [TRD]

 

Miami professor who taught class on money laundering allegedly laundered millions. University of Miami professor and author Bruce Bagley taught classes on corruption and money laundering, but federal prosecutors are saying that he also helped launder at least $3 million in money from Venezuela through his bank accounts, according to the Miami Herald. On Monday, the 73-year-old Bagley was arrested on one count of conspiracy to commit money laundering and two counts of money laundering. He could face 20 years in jail on each count. [Miami Herald]

 

The New York State Attorney General’s office has launched an investigation into WeWork. The embattled office-space company, which is soon set to lay off thousands of workers, confirmed to Reuters that it had received a request from the state’s AG office, led by Letitia James. [TRD]

 

Compiled by Keith Larsen

The post Ten-X Commercial laid off half of its workforce, Miami professor who taught class on money laundering allegedly laundered millions appeared first on The Real Deal Miami.

Proptech startup Eden completes $25M Series B

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Eden CEO Joe Du Bey (Credit: iStock)

Eden CEO Joe Du Bey (Credit: iStock)

Eden, a proptech startup that helps landlords manage parts of the workplace like scheduling cleaning services and ordering snacks, raised $25 million in its Series B funding round.

Soho-based venture-capital firm Reshape led the funding round, Eden announced Tuesday.

San Francisco-based Eden launched in 2015. Its technology is available in 25 major U.S. metro areas, the company said.

Eden targets “the enormous workplace market that we believe can be radically transformed,” Reshape partner Vik Patel said in a statement.

The company provides a platform building owners and tenants use to streamline different tasks that go in workplace management like HVAC repair. Eden’s clients include Convene and VTS, among others.

It has also received significant interest from real estate firms investing in proptech. Early investors include RXR Realty, Thor Equities, Mitsui Fudosan and Fifth Wall Ventures. So far, the startup has raised $40 million.

The post Proptech startup Eden completes $25M Series B appeared first on The Real Deal Miami.

Private equity giant scoops up mobile home park in Hollywood

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Orangebrook Mobile Home Estates and Carlyle Group co-CEOs Kewsong Lee and  Glenn A. Youngkin (Credit: Google Maps, Carlyle Group)

Orangebrook Mobile Home Estates and Carlyle Group co-CEOs Kewsong Lee and Glenn A. Youngkin (Credit: Google Maps, Carlyle Group)

The Carlyle Group purchased a mobile home park in Hollywood for $25.2 million, marking another example of private equity firms buying up mobile home communities.

Carlyle, based in Washington, D.C., bought the 344-site mobile home park at 301 Pembroke Road for about $73,000 per site. Orange Brook Mobile Home Estates Inc., which is led by Charles R. Smith of Pembroke Pines, sold the property. It spans over 24 acres.

Amenities include a heated pool and shuffleboard, according to its website. The community sits behind the Orangebrook Golf & Country Club and is geared toward residents aged 55 and older.

Increasingly, private equity firms and real estate investment trusts are buying up mobile home parks to own or redevelop. Investors see mobile home parks as a safe bet during recessions and economic downturns, as most low-income renters are unable to quickly up and move their properties.

In December, Sam Zell’s Equity LifeStyle paid nearly $50 million, or about $53,000 per lot, for a mobile home park near Riviera Beach. In 2017, Carlyle Group paid $45.52 million for a 437-unit mobile home community in Boynton Beach.

Carlyle Group is one of the world’s largest private equity firms with $212 billion of assets under management.

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After WeWork’s spectacular fall, it’s crunch time for Katerra

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Katerra CEO Michael Marks in Taipei in June

Katerra CEO Michael Marks strolled onto the Las Vegas stage, his name and title projected onto a giant black screen. In a style that’s become a cliché among Silicon Valley startups, he was about to unveil the construction firm’s new products to an audience of more than 200 people.

“We’ve been working hard, quietly behind the scenes for the last few years,” Marks said at the February event. “This is our coming-out party.”

At the time, the company had every reason to be a confident debutante: Just one month earlier, SoftBank Group’s Vision Fund had committed another $700 million to the startup — bringing the firm’s rumored valuation to more than $4 billion.

And since it opened its doors in 2015, the unicorn has grown rapidly through a series of acquisitions, reaching a staff of 8,000 globally and doubling down on cutting-edge forms of construction, including prefabrication and buildings made of engineered wood.

The company’s meteoric rise, however, hasn’t been without growing pains.

In its four years, Katerra, which is headquartered in the San Francisco Bay Area, has already had three CEOs and is now on its third chief financial officer. And according to a story late last month on the news site the Information, the company has pulled out of “at least half a dozen apartment and hotel projects in the U.S.”

The Information also reported that the company has laid off more than 100 staffers in three states.

Like other SoftBank-backed startups, including WeWork and Compass, Katerra has yet to turn a profit and has ambiguous plans for an initial public offering. And with WeWork’s recent implosion — the company abandoned its planned IPO and saw its valuation slashed by nearly $40 billion — Katerra and the other companies SoftBank has bet big on are facing heightened scrutiny.

SoftBank declined to be interviewed for this story, but told the Information that the company is approaching $2 billion in revenue this year. Marks, meanwhile, noted that SoftBank is not the company’s only investor — Foxconn and venture capital firm DFJ have also backed the company.

Katerra, he said, plans to turn a profit sometime in 2020 and is sufficiently capitalized, meaning it doesn’t need to go public, though it may do so after 2021. Marks said it’s healthy that WeWork’s issues have triggered introspection among other companies, but he argued that Katerra’s strategy doesn’t need revision.

“I don’t feel one iota of additional pressure,” Marks told The Real Deal in an interview. “We’re not at all like WeWork.”

Still, some sources said WeWork’s struggles could reflect poorly on the construction startup.

Miles Tabibian, co-director of real estate and construction at early-stage tech investor Plug and Play, said there’s already anxiety over tech valuations in Silicon Valley.

“There are always detractors,” he said. “I don’t think WeWork helped.”

At the same time, Katerra is taking on a sector in real estate that’s been one of the slowest to adopt technology. While the company’s strategy of being a one-stop shop — a designer, supplier and builder — allows it to ensure new technology is used at every layer of the construction process, it also means the firm is taking on far more risk both in terms of capital and liability.

John Fish, the CEO of Suffolk Construction, conceded that the construction industry has failed to embrace technology and is facing mounting pressure to evolve as a possible recession looms and costs rise — driven in part by the U.S.-China trade war. But, he said, VC-backed firms don’t necessarily have all the answers.

“The industry is at a crossroads,” he said. “[But] I don’t think Katerra’s strategy is a panacea for driving costs to the bottom.”

An unimaginative space

Until recently, the details of Katerra’s plans to become profitable might not have mattered much. But that may no longer be the case for companies that SoftBank has showered with cash.

“Given what happened with WeWork, profitability is going to become an issue. I would think before Katerra tried to go public, they’ll have to become profitable,” said Frank Sciame, head of the eponymous construction and development company.

Sciame, however, seemed to draw a distinction between the two startups.

“WeWork is in a class of its own,” he said. “They really were trying to redefine the real estate world.”

Katerra hasn’t faced the same level of scrutiny that WeWork and Compass have, but it doesn’t have as much direct competition as those firms.

Architect Michael Green — whose eponymous firm was acquired by Katerra last year — called WeWork a “completely different animal.” The co-working firm is more of a traditional landlord than a tech company.

In addition, Green said the $1 trillion-plus-a-year U.S. construction industry is due for disruption and noted that very few firms have the financial capability to make that happen.

“The space is such an empty, vacuous, unimaginative environment that those who do invest enough to be able to step in at scale are probably those who reap the benefits the most,” said Green, whose firm focused on buildings designed with mass timber. “I think it’s hard to compare a construction tech company to a traditional tech company in any way because you need more money, but you also have access to a lot bigger profitability down the road.”

Katerra built a 1,334-square-foot home in 48 hours in Saudi Arabia and won a contract there to construct 4,101 homes nationwide

Katerra has, indeed, been buoyed by soaring interest in construction-focused tech.

Since 2008, investors have poured more than $27 billion into the sector in the U.S., according to the global consulting firm McKinsey & Company. In the first half of this year, investment in the sector totaled $4.2 billion, putting 2019 on pace to exceed 2018’s $6.1 billion, according to the Wall Street Journal.

Katerra appears to be the dominant fundraiser in the space, though other unicorns have emerged. Procore, a construction management software company, is valued at $3 billion, and Uptake — which uses artificial intelligence to monitor repair needs at buildings — is valued at $2.3 billion.

Jeevan Kalanithi, CEO of OpenSpace — a company that uses artificial intelligence to create 360-degree, navigable maps of construction sites — said there’s an opening right now to change the landscape as a younger generation steps in and the industry copes with a shortage of skilled workers. 

“The industry lost 1 million people as a result of the 2008 financial crisis, and it never really came back,” said Kalanithi, whose firm has raised $17.5 million and is working with Tishman Speyer on the Spiral office tower in Manhattan.

Still, the construction tech sector has some maturing to do.

Kelly Benedict, head of Lendlease’s innovation department in North America, said there’s been a deluge of flashy new tools that, while impressive, amount to a “bunch of solutions looking for problems to solve.”

“There’s a graveyard of failure,” she said. “What tech is getting traction, what is emerging and what’s really going to stick?”

And traditional firms, like Lendlease, are also getting in on the action, either by launching their own tech-focused initiatives or investing in startups. Developers have also started doing more in-house. JDS Development, for instance, does its own construction, and the Related Companies owns a construction management arm and a glass manufacturing firm.

Among construction tech companies, there have been two main strategies: Either focus on one discrete problem — such as safety hazards on construction sites — or take on the entire construction process.

Katerra has favored the latter approach. In the past two years, the company has acquired at least eight construction, architecture and supply firms.

Katerra has more than 300 projects in its pipeline and, as of October, it had 22 U.S. projects under construction where it’s serving as the designer, supplier and general contractor. These projects include the Catalyst Building, a five-story timber office property in Washington state; a 97-unit multifamily project in Hayward, California; and Fort Apache, a 192-unit multifamily project outside Las Vegas. (It has yet to take on a project in New York City).

In September, the company opened its own factory for cross-laminated timber (CLT) — billed as an environmentally friendly alternative to concrete and steel — in Washington. It’s now manufacturing wooden components for buildings up to 18 stories.

Green said that the public’s comfort level with CLT has grown exponentially over the last few years, but there’s still a long way to go in educating key players about the material. In New York, for example, such structures are still limited to seven stories. 

Mihir Shah, co-CEO of JLL Spark — the venture capital and innovation arm of the commercial brokerage — said Katerra’s soup-to-nuts strategy makes sense for a fragmented industry like construction.

“In order to get something efficient, you have to get all members of the ecosystem to adopt technology,” said Shah, which isn’t invested in Katerra. “That’s why Katerra is taking a different approach. It’s like ‘You know what? We’ll be all parts of the stack.’ In construction, unless they’re all in that rhythm, it doesn’t really work.”

“They’ve basically bought every part of the ecosystem so they can do it all and experiment well,” Shah added.

Startup growing pains

Katerra was founded by three tech and finance veterans: Marks, Fritz Wolff and Jim Davidson.

Marks served as CEO of electronics company Flextronics (now called Flex) — which handles multiple aspects of the manufacturing and design of products — and did a stint as CEO of Tesla before founding private equity firm Riverwood Capital. Wolff was a top exec at his family’s real estate private equity firm, the Wolff Company. And Davidson founded tech investment management company Silver Lake.

Part of the impetus for launching Katerra, Marks said, was a suggestion from Wolff, a longtime friend and partner, to create another company that was vertically integrated like Flextronics.

“He said, ‘What you should do is you should create a Flextronics for the construction industry,’” Marks recounted.

In Katerra’s early days, the firm billed itself as a smart home-construction company. But by 2017, it was referring to itself — first and foremost — as a technology company. That’s perhaps not surprising for a SoftBank-backed company: Compass and WeWork have adopted similar branding strategies.  

Marks acknowledged that identifying as a tech-forward company is in vogue, but he said that in Katerra’s case, it’s not just lip service. He noted that Katerra has more than five dozen patents and develops custom robotics and artificial intelligence software. The firm doesn’t just deal with “a drone flying over a site and seeing how much dirt was moved” and then refer to itself as a tech company, he said.  

Still, like WeWork and Compass (to a lesser extent), it’s seen significant executive turnover. Marks replaced the company’s second CEO, Brad Knight, two years ago. In September, Katerra tapped its third CFO, Matthew Marsh. 

Marks said the changes, along with the layoffs, were made as part of the company’s growth strategy. “I think that’s healthy and natural. It’s not a sign of distress,” Marks said. “You don’t go from 0 to 8,000 [employees] without needing to make some changes in personnel.”

The Information reported, however, that on several projects, the company’s all-in-one model “couldn’t save as much money on construction as initially thought” and that there were cost overruns on dozens of projects.

Katerra focuses on offsite construction, meaning that while it manufactures prefabricated parts, the components are assembled at the building site. 

Daniel Timianko of Brooklyn-based FullStack Modular, which acquired Forest City’s modular operations in 2016, said that while Katerra is using new materials (wood) and manufacturing its own supplies, it employs a fairly traditional construction process.

While FullStack delivers an entire building superstructure that essentially snaps into place, Katerra provides prefabricated parts that are installed piecemeal. 

“What happens on the site is exactly the same as a general contractor. They are not disrupting the onsite construction trade,” he said. “They are using wood, so Katerra can’t build a skyscraper. We can.”

Modular construction has started to gain momentum in New York — the city is using it for affordable housing construction. But the method is far from mainstream, and one high-profile project that did use it, the B2 Tower at Forest City’s Pacific Park, was plagued with delays and other issues.  

But Katerra has demonstrated that its approach can lead to efficiencies.

In May, it inked a contract with Saudi Arabia to build 4,101 homes nationwide. The deal came after it won a contest to build a 1,334-square-foot home in 48 hours.

Go big or go home

In January 2018, Marks appeared on CNBC to discuss the $865 million funding round Katerra had just closed. At the time, SoftBank, which led the round, valued the firm at $3 billion. “We were actually hoping for a bigger valuation, but it’s fair,” he said. 

A year later, SoftBank’s additional $700 million brought that number up to over $4 billion. And some have reported that it’s valued at $5 billion.

But whether Katerra’s valuation will stand is a question that at least some are asking.

Public relations executive Ed Zitron, who founded the San Francisco-based tech-focused PR firm EZPR, said Katerra seems to have fallen into a “big sexy Valley trap,” noting that it’s raised a ton of money and is spending rapidly but has been forced to lay off staff. From a branding standpoint, he said Katerra and other companies need to stop following the “WeWork template.”   

“When there are comparables to WeWork, which are spending a lot of money without being profitable, laying off people, that’s when you start saying, ‘Huh, maybe there is a consistency with SoftBank’s investments,’” said Zitron. “If they don’t want to be associated with WeWork, maybe they should stop looking like WeWork.”

Jake Fingert, general partner at real estate venture firm Camber Creek, which isn’t invested in Katerra, said a highly capitalized company like Katerra poses a potential investment risk. The economics just don’t make sense yet, he said, noting that it will take a while for the firm to reach a scale where its massive investment in factory space is surpassed by revenue. Still, he said that Katerra has an edge because it has “patient capital in its corner.” 

“Having deep pockets and the ability to wait that out, in itself, is an advantage,” he said.  

And JLL’s Shah said future investors are not likely to be too deterred by WeWork’s recent problems, especially if Katerra shows a long-term profitability plan.

“I don’t think you can get too bent out of shape by one or two examples,” he said. “If you come to [Silicon Valley], are people a little more cautious? Are they thinking about profitability for later-stage growth? I think that’s true.”

Zach Aarons of MetaProp, also a proptech venture firm, said that while he doesn’t have direct knowledge of Katerra’s finances, companies that raise a ton of capital are playing “a numbers game” that threatens to “totally obliterate your ability to have a successful exit other than an IPO.” He noted that WeWork’s potential IPO raised questions about what it would trade at compared to a traditional real estate company. Katerra could face a similar challenge when it goes to market.

“When you think about Katerra, if they are trying to be a GC or they’re trying to be a lumber mill, what premium would they fetch as it relates to the valuation multiple?” he said. “It creates a go big or go home dynamic.”

The post After WeWork’s spectacular fall, it’s crunch time for Katerra appeared first on The Real Deal Miami.

Gables Residential sells dev site near Shops at Merrick Park

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 4601 Le Jeune Road, Jose Boschetti and Maurice Boschetti

4601 Le Jeune Road, Jose Boschetti and Maurice Boschetti

A national apartment builder sold a development site near the Shops at Merrick Park in Coral Gables to BF Group, a local developer. Development options for the property include a hotel and office building.

Atlanta-based Gables Residential sold the 18,748-square-foot assemblage at 4521 and 4601 Le Jeune Road to BF Group, led by Jose and Luis Boschetti. BF Group paid for $4.17 million for the property.

Maurice Boschetti of BH Realty represented the buyer in the off-market deal.

Jose Boschetti said BF Group will make a decision on what it plans to build on the site within three months. It’s considering building a 130-room limited service hotel, a medical or office building, and a boutique assisted living facility focused on memory care.

Across the street, Gables Residential built Gables Ponce, a 367-unit luxury apartment complex with retail on Ponce de Leon Boulevard and Le Jeune Road.

Property records show LG Ponce III, an affiliate of Gables Residential, acquired the lot it just sold as part of a larger deal that included adjacent land on Granello Avenue. In 2016, the Coral Gables City Commission approved Gables Ponce III, a nine-story, 190-unit residential building with retail space, at 363 Granello Avenue.

Jose Boschetti said BF Group had been chasing the lot for seven years. His company also owns the land at 4200 Laguna Street and 4311 and 4225 Ponce de Leon Boulevard.

Last year, Gables Residential completed Gables Columbus Center at 60 Minorca Avenue in downtown Coral Gables.

North of Merrick Park, Hersha Hospitality has proposed building a 135-room hotel at 4241 Aurora Street. GGP, which owns the high-end mall, sold the vacant site in late 2016 for about $3 million.

The post Gables Residential sells dev site near Shops at Merrick Park appeared first on The Real Deal Miami.

Copperline Partners closes on bulk co-op deal in Palm Beach

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Ambassador Hotel Cooperative Apartments (Credit: iStock)

Ambassador Hotel Cooperative Apartments (Credit: iStock)

A co-op in Palm Beach sold in a bulk deal for $35 million, and could be redeveloped by its new owner into a luxury hotel.

Copperline Partners purchased 69 of the 97 units at the Ambassador Hotel Cooperative Apartments in Palm Beach at 2730 South Ocean Boulevard. The sale closed in 69 transactions giving Copperline Partners secured a 76 percent ownership in the property.

The deal took about a year to complete and were complicated by a lawsuit filed by the board of the Ambassador Hotel Cooperative Apartments against the developer. The board sued over allegations that the developer, Adam Schlesinger, lied to the unit owners over the building’s physical state. The lawsuit was dismissed in June.

Greenberg Traurig’s West Palm Beach office led by David M. Layman represented Copperline Partners in the transaction.

The oceanfront Ambassador Hotel Cooperative Apartments is made up of two buildings built in the 1940s and 1980s. The buildings could be redeveloped into a luxury hotel, the Palm Beach Post reported in May.

New development opportunities are rare in the tony town of Palm Beach. The town has restrictive covenants on new buildings and there are only a few hotels on the island.

In May, the Palm House Hotel at 160 Royal Palm Way in Palm Beach sold to a U.S. affiliate of the private real estate investment firm London + Regional Properties for $39.6 million.

The post Copperline Partners closes on bulk co-op deal in Palm Beach appeared first on The Real Deal Miami.

Grove Isle developers face new lawsuit over proposed project

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Rendering of The Markers Grove Isle

Rendering of The Markers Grove Isle

Grove Isles Associates is facing another legal challenge to its plans for a new condominium complex in the waterfront luxury community in Coconut Grove.

This time, it’s a lone Grove Isle homeowner who owns a $26-million-a-year in sales metals manufacturing firm seeking to derail the project, known as The Markers Grove Isle.

For the past four years Grove Isle Associates has engaged in legal skirmishes with the community’s condo association, which represents unit owners in three residential towers, over the tearing down of a hotel and spa on the island to make way for The Markers, a five-building project. Most recently, the Grove Isle Association appealed a lower court’s denial of its petition to prevent the developer from getting its demolition permit.

According to the new lawsuit filed in Miami-Dade Circuit Court against Grove Isles Associates and the city of Miami, the developer’s current plans would create an “over-sized stadium-like structure” that would encircle Grove Isle Tower 3, where Robert Denholtz owns a three-bedroom unit. The new buildings would also cause significant danger to Grove Isle residents during tropical storms and hurricanes by creating a “Venturi effect,” which causes wind forces to increase as it passes through a narrow airspace between the existing buildings and the new structures, the complaint alleges.

The lawsuit was filed by Save Grove Isle, a shell company formed Oct. 31 that lists Denholtz as its manager and his unit as the corporate address. Denholtz is president of Durex, a metals manufacturer based in Union, New Jersey. On the same day, Save Grove Isle sued the city and Grove Isle Associates, seeking an injunction to stop the developer from obtaining any building permits to move forward with construction of The Markers.

“It is outrageous that the developer would attempt to construct a building in a manner that would jeopardize the health and safety of Grove Isle residents,” said Save Grove Isle’s lawyer Todd Legon. “What’s even more outrageous is that the city would let them do it.”

A city of Miami spokesperson declined comment, but Grove Isle Associates attorney John Shubin said the lawsuit is frivolous. “It will not prevent the developers from moving forward with demolition and construction,” Shubin said. “It is a desperate Hail Mary not brought in good faith to derail the project.”

The lawsuit claims the Grove Isle Association commissioned an engineering report that the potential for high wind velocities will increase dramatically when the new five-tower complex is completed. Save Grove Isle alleges the report concluded that 50 miles per hour wind gusts would speed up to 300 miles at the most narrow point between Grove Isle Tower 3 and the proposed project.

Aside from the alleged catastrophic wind forces, the lawsuit alleges the new project would create traffic havoc on Grove Isle as the community relies on a two-lane bridge to get in and out, and the new construction would interfere with a $24 million concrete restoration of the three existing condominiums slated to be completed in 2021.

The post Grove Isle developers face new lawsuit over proposed project appeared first on The Real Deal Miami.

CMBS loan for Starwood’s Mall at Wellington Green is in trouble

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Mall at Wellington Green Barry Sternlicht (Credit: Google Maps)

Mall at Wellington Green and Barry Sternlicht (Credit: Google Maps)

A $680 million commercial mortgage-backed securities loan for a Starwood mall portfolio that includes a large Wellington property has been sent to special servicing, according to Trepp.

The four-property portfolio is owned partly by Starwood Property Trust. Loans are generally sent to special servicing when they are either in default or when a property has lost a major tenant.

The Mall at Wellington Green, which lost Nordstrom as one of its main anchors earlier this year, is the largest of the four properties backing the loan. The portfolio also includes the MacArthur Center in Norfolk, Virginia, the Northlake Mall in Charlotte, North Carolina, and The Mall at Partridge Creek in Clinton Township, Michigan.

The loan was set to mature in November 2017, but it was extended until November 2019. according to Trepp. It was not paid back this month.

After it lost Nordstrom as an anchor, Starwood proposed redeveloping the Mall at Wellington Green, to include multifamily units, restaurants and entertainment space, and a hotel, according to the Palm Beach Post. The hotel would include a pool, deck and beach, and the project would be centered around a 3.5-acre Crystal Lagoon.

The Mall at Wellington Green, Wellington’s biggest taxpayer, saw its taxable value drop 32 percent this year to $150 million as a result of the Nordstrom departure, according to the Palm Beach County Property Appraiser’s Office.

Starwood’s Starwood Retail Partners bought the property in 2014 for $341.1 million, marking the largest real estate deal ever recorded in the county at the time.

The post CMBS loan for Starwood’s Mall at Wellington Green is in trouble appeared first on The Real Deal Miami.

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