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Miami-Dade judge hits Codina Partners’ affiliate with $6M in damages

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Codina Partners’ Armando Codina and Ana-Marie Codina Barlick with 5350 Park

Codina Partners’ Armando Codina and Ana-Marie Codina Barlick with 5350 Park (Codina Partners, Downtown Doral)

A Codina Partners affiliate is on the hook for $6.4 million in damages after a Miami-Dade judge found the developer wrongfully terminated Grycon, the general contractor that built the developer’s 5350 Park condominium project in Downtown Doral.

On Tuesday, following a non-jury trial, Miami-Dade Circuit Court Judge William Thomas ruled against 5350 Park LLC, the development entity managed by Codina Executive Chairman Armando Codina and the firm’s CEO Ana-Marie Codina Barlick. In 2020, Fort Lauderdale-based Grycon sued 5350 Park, alleging Codina Partners fired the general contractor without cause in order to avoid paying a final bill of $3.6 million. 5350 Park has a pending countersuit that was filed last year.

Coral Gables-based Codina will now have to pay nearly double what the developer allegedly owed, plus attorney fees and court costs, according to Thomas’ order. “The greater weight of the evidence establishes 5350’s termination of Grycon for cause was wrongful,” Thomas wrote.

“Judge Thomas ruled [Codina] didn’t have a right to terminate my client,” Grycon’s attorney Stuart Sobel said. “I don’t know what the real motivation is, but [Codina] has held off paying us a boatload of dough for almost three years now.”

In an emailed statement, Joe Jimenez, Codina Partners’ EVP, said the developer will appeal Thomas’ order. “We believe that the Appellate Court’s review of this case will reveal the legal and factual errors made by the trial court,” Jimenez said. “And further find that Grycon fell woefully short of its obligations and was properly terminated from the project consistent with the terms of the construction agreement.”

Armando Codina also provided a statement noting the Grycon lawsuit is the first time his firm has been involved in construction litigation during his 42-year history in the real estate industry.

“Codina Partners has an undisputed reputation for having fair and honest business relationships with its vendors, contractors, and customers, and we hold all our partners to the same standards,” Codina said. “We hold our integrity paramount, stand by our actions in this case, and fully intend to see this through.”

In his ruling, the judge found that 5350 Park’s defenses that Grycon allegedly caused construction delays, and that the condominium was not substantially completed when the termination occurred, did not jive with the facts.

For instance, 5350 Park fired Grycon on May 29, 2020, the same day the developer obtained a final certificate of occupancy for the 19-story, 251-unit tower, according to Thomas’ order. Codina Partners had also begun closings in February 2020, which included buyers signing documents that their units were completed, Thomas also noted.

“5350 [Park] could not identify what work remained at termination and produced less than a small handful of punch lists of units walked after termination,” Thomas wrote.

During the trial, Codina Partners President and COO Andy Burnham testified that Grycon did such a lousy job, that he noticed cracking drywall throughout the interiors of the new building, Thomas’ order states. “I was embarrassed to walk people through these corridors and get to their unit with the amount of cracking in the drywall,” Burnham testified, according to the order.

Thomas said he did not find Burnham’s statement “to be credible” because the Codina executive admitted the unit owner acceptance sheets that buyers signed stated that mostly “minor, incidental, immaterial items were left to be corrected.”

5350 Park is the third completed condominium project at Downtown Doral, a massive mixed-use community master developed by Codina Partners. Prices at 5350 Park started in the $200,000s when sales launched in 2016. The company plans to build five more condo buildings in Downtown Doral.

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The post Miami-Dade judge hits Codina Partners’ affiliate with $6M in damages appeared first on The Real Deal South Florida.


Miami Beach commission to soon determine fate of Steve Ross’ plan to develop Deauville site into two-tower Equinox project

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The existing Deauville Beach Resort with a model of the proposed project with Related's Stephen Ross and Akerman's Neisen Kasdin (Google Maps, Getty, Akerman)

The existing Deauville Beach Resort with a model of the proposed project with Related’s Stephen Ross and Akerman’s Neisen Kasdin (Google Maps, Getty, Akerman, City of Miami Beach)

Miami Beach commissioners soon will determine whether billionaire real estate developer Steve Ross’ plan to redevelop the historic Deauville Beach Resort can head to voters in November.

Ross, founder and chairman of New York-based Related Companies, is proposing a two-tower development of up to 375 feet tall with a 175-room Equinox hotel and 150 luxury condos at 6701 Collins Avenue. Model images of the proposed project were unveiled at Thursday’s Miami Beach Land Use and Sustainability Committee meeting.

The existing 540-key Deauville, built in 1957 and designed by architect Melvin Grossman, is being demolished. 

On Thursday, the land use board, composed of city commissioners, advanced the proposed zoning amendment to the commission. The commission will vote later in July on placing the item on the November ballot in the form of a referendum. Akerman attorney Neisen Kasdin, a former Miami Beach mayor, is representing the developer.

Related would build a hotel and beach club in one building and in the other, large luxury condos. The two towers would be separated by landscaping, according to the developer’s presentation Thursday.

Whether Ross, who owns Related and the Miami Dolphins, can make it all happen in time depends on everything going according to his plan — which it has so far. But voters will have to support a major increase in floor area ratio, or FAR, that would allow for a larger development.

Ross, who tapped starchitect Frank Gehry to design the proposed project, made an appearance at Thursday’s meeting. Gehry is expected to speak at the commission meeting later this month.

Ross referred to the success of the Four Seasons Hotel and Residences at the Surf Club in Surfside, where a unit resold for a record $5,775 per square foot earlier this year.

“What the Four Seasons has done for Surfside… Being a former Miami Beach resident, I gotta shake my head,” Ross said, implying a missed opportunity.

One other Equinox-branded hotel exists at Hudson Yards, the Related Cos.-developed mega project in New York City. Related also owns a stake in Equinox.

Related is in contract to buy the Deauville property from the Meruelo family, which has had an antagonistic relationship with the city. The Meruelos allowed the iconic resort in North Beach to fall into disrepair to the point where it was declared an unsafe structure.

Daniel Ciraldo, executive director of the Miami Design Preservation League, spoke out in favor of restoring the property. Commissioners shot him down, citing fears of being held in contempt by the judge who pushed the demolition forward. They urged him instead to work with Ross to incorporate historic features into the new project. (That judge, Michael Hanzman, is the same judge overseeing the Surfside collapse litigation.)

Related/Ross’ agreement with the Meruelos is contingent on Related securing the zoning changes. In a previous meeting, a commissioner said the Meruelos were rumored to be asking $500 million for the 3.8-acre property.

Mayor Dan Gelber, who first introduced the proposal at a commission meeting last month, joined the board on the dais at Thursday’s meeting.

The proposed legislation requires that Ross is the developer and the architect is Gehry. It would likely benefit the property owner to the north and south with an increase in FAR, though not nearly as high as the proposed increase to 4.5 FAR for the Deauville.

Attorneys Michael Larkin and Paul Savage, representing the owners of the Sherry Frontenac to the south and Urbanica developers Diego Colmenero and Charlie Porchetto to the north, are seeking equal treatment for their clients.

“We took the first risk here. We bought the property. Suddenly this new developer comes here and gets different FAR and I would like to understand why,” Porchetto said during Thursday’s meeting.

The commissioners/land use committee board members countered that Ross would be taking on the biggest risk.

Larkin, with Bercow Radell Fernandez, called it “a purchase and sale agreement masquerading as a zoning regulation.”

“It’s not fair that everybody gets the exact same thing in this case,” Commissioner David Richardson said.

[contact-form-7]

The post Miami Beach commission to soon determine fate of Steve Ross’ plan to develop Deauville site into two-tower Equinox project appeared first on The Real Deal South Florida.

Renting homes to the ultra-wealthy brings its own set of headaches

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Coldwell Banker's Danny Hertzberg (Jills Zeder Group, iStock)

Coldwell Banker’s Danny Hertzberg (Jills Zeder Group, iStock)

Talk about champagne problems.

Renting luxury homes to the rich and famous brings its own set of challenges, especially when the properties come up for sale, the Wall Street Journal reported. Tenants who can afford rents of $50,000 to $150,000 per month bring high expectations and lists of quirky demands.

High-end tenants, often celebrities, “have special requirements,” Miami broker Julian Johnston of Corcoran Group broker told the outlet. For one home Johnston helped sell last year, he had to sign a lease rider saying, “If I needed to go to the residence for any reason that I would not speak to, or look at, the tenant.”

Another unconventional request: Paying $20,000 to buy eight-foot-tall potted plants for a sea wall and bedroom balconies to shield tenants from offshore paparazzi.

“They expect the fridge to be stocked and massage therapists, chefs and drivers to be arranged,” Danny Hertzberg of Coldwell Banker Realty in Miami told the outlet. “They also want to know that the landlord has a professional management company that has the resources to respond at 4 a.m. on a Sunday morning for a leaky faucet.”

Leases for high-priced rentals can be complicated because some tenants demand unique clauses that could hurt the rights of the owner.

“In your average landlord-tenant relationship, the landlord pretty much dictates the terms, and the tenant will not have that much say,” Zachary D. Schorr, a real estate attorney in Los Angeles, told the outlet. “But when you get into these higher-priced leases, it’s not atypical for an attorney to negotiate the terms of the lease.”

A well-known Reggaeton artist that was renting property on Miami Beach’s Palm Island even had a security team that wouldn’t allow Hertzberg or other realtors on the premises to show the property to potential buyers.

“We lost a lot of buyers because they weren’t willing to jump through hoops,” Hertzberg said. Interested parties were allowed access only on certain days and had to sign a nondisclosure agreement that forbade taking photos of the home.

The house was listed for $20 million and sold for $15 million, Hertzberg said. “The seller left millions of dollars on the table as a result of the tenant.”

[WSJ] — Victoria Pruitt

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The post Renting homes to the ultra-wealthy brings its own set of headaches appeared first on The Real Deal South Florida.

Movers & Shakers: Fortune taps sales director at Nexo Residences

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Fortune's Maria Elena Plasencia, SROA's Lauren Weiss and Suffolk's Maureen Henson (Fortune, SROA, LinkedIn, iStock)

Fortune’s Maria Elena Plasencia, SROA’s Lauren Weiss and Suffolk’s Maureen Henson (Fortune, SROA, LinkedIn, iStock)

Fortune International Group announced that Maria Elena Plasencia will lead sales for Nexo Residences, a planned 254-unit condo project in North Miami Beach.

Blue Road partnered with Fortune to develop the short-term rental friendly 16-story, 254-unit building planned for the non-waterfront site at 13899 Biscayne Boulevard. The condo project is among the first in the city with no rental restrictions. Short-term rental condo developments have boomed in Greater Downtown Miami.

Plasencia has been involved in deals totaling $600 million in South Florida, according to a press release. She was the sales director for Shoma Group’s Ten30 South Beach, a condo project that sold out seven months prior to completion.

Boston-based Suffolk brought on Maureen Henson as vice president of people and culture for the company’s Southeast region. Henson joins the firm, one of Florida’s largest construction contractors, from her previous role as director of human resources for The Save Mart Companies in California.

SROA, a West Palm Beach-based private equity firm, hired Lauren Weiss as the company’s director of accounting, making her the second significant appointment in recent weeks. SROA recently brought on Kenneth Speegle as its new chief operating officer. The company invests in self-storage facilities under the brand Storage Rentals of America. Weiss was previously vice president of accounting at the Related Companies, where she oversaw a $50 billion portfolio.

The Corcoran Group welcomed two new faces: Zelda Freud and Michael Wiesenfeld. The married duo behind the Freud Team left South Beach Estates to join Corcoran’s Miami Beach office led by Corcoran’s senior managing director Lily Zanardi. It marks the second recent talent acquisition for Corcoran, which snapped up Darlene Streit, Sotheby’s International Realty’s top agent in the nation, early last month.

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The post Movers & Shakers: Fortune taps sales director at Nexo Residences appeared first on The Real Deal South Florida.

Lease roundup: Ritz Carlton’s yacht service leases in Fort Lauderdale, Hermès at 150 Alhambra

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Plaza 100 building and the Brickell Arch office tower (JLL, Brickell Arch, iStock)

Plaza 100 building and the Brickell Arch office tower (JLL, Brickell Arch, iStock)

Cruise Yacht Opco I Plaza 100 I Fort Lauderdale

Ritz Carlton’s luxury yacht service division Cruise Yacht Opco is moving its offices to the Plaza 100 building in Fort Lauderdale from Miami’s Coconut Grove neighborhood.

Cruise Yacht Opco leased the entire penthouse spanning 17,000 square feet at the building at 100 Northeast Third Avenue, according to a news release from the landlord’s broker. The office will accommodate 60 employees.

Doug Okun and Steven Hurwitz of JLL represented Zurich Alternative Asset Management. Keith Edelman and Scott Goldstein of CBRE represented the tenant.

Zurich Alternative Asset Management, formed in 2006, is Zurich North America’s dedicated alternative asset management platform that invests solely on behalf of Zurich affiliates worldwide, the release says.

Zurich Alternative Asset Management bought the 11-story, 175,510-square-foot Plaza 100 in 2016 for $46.5 million.

Existing tenants include U.S. Legal, Oppenheimer, Katz Barron and Mombach, Boyle, Hardin and Simmons.

In other recent Fort Lauderdale leases, Ivy Realty’s Tower 101 at 101 Northeast Third Avenue scored four tenants in May. They include Boston-based development services provider Reveneer, which took 18,392 square feet on the 17th floor, and Kentucky-based logistics firm Ryan Transportation, which took 4,600 square feet on the 12th floor.

Integral Group Solution, PartnerRe I Brickell Arch I Miami

E-commerce and sales services firm Integral Group Solution, and reinsurer PartnerRe are opening offices at Brickell Arch.

Integral Group took 2,098 square feet, and PartnerRe took 3,714 square feet at the 36-story mixed-use building at 1395 Brickell Avenue, according to a news release from the tenants’ broker.

Adam Talbot of Cresa Miami represented Integral Group; and Robert Orban and Zachary Talbot, also of Cresa, represented PartnerRe.

PartnerRe, which has more than $9 billion in capital, will move from the 701 Brickell Avenue building, a Cresa spokesperson said. Integral Group is a new-to-market firm.

Dallas-based Gaedeke Group, through an affiliate, bought the 36-story tower in 2015 for $145 million, property records show. The building also has a 225,000-square-foot Hotel AKA Brickell, which is owned by Mast Capital and private equity firm Angelo, Gordon & Co.; 116 individually owned condo units on the top 10 floors; 16,614 square feet of retail and a 12-story attached garage, according to Brickell Arch’s website. The office space spans 268,024 rentable square feet.

The Brickell Financial District has captured much of the influx from out-of-state companies.

New York-based insurance and financial services firm A-CAP will open its first Miami office in a full floor, 20,000-square-foot space at the 830 Brickell tower, which is under construction.

Alternative credit investment manager Vibrant Capital will open its first office outside its New York City headquarters in a 3,000-square-foot space at 1200 Brickell Avenue.

Hermès Parfum & Beauté Americas, more I 150 Alhambra I Coral Gables

The Spanish investors who own the 150 Alhambra office building in Coral Gables scored four new tenants, including French luxury design house Hermès Parfum & Beauté Americas.

Hermès Parfum will move into a 4,623-square-foot space at the 13-story Class A building at 150 Alhambra Circle, according to a news release from Blanca Commercial Real Estate.

Juan Ruiz and Jack Davidson of Blanca represented the landlord, MDR Americas.

Publicly traded electric motor manufacturer Regal Rexnord also leased 1,317 square feet, according to a spokesperson for the brokers. Law firm Sugarman Susskind Braswell & Herrera took 3,443 square feet, and management consulting firm PRI Management Group took 1,183 square feet, both for their headquarters.

All four tenants will open in the third quarter and are moving from elsewhere in South Florida.

Existing 150 Alhambra tenants include First Horizon Bank, IMG Worldwide and Caracol Televisión.

An MDR Americas affiliate, led by Spain-based investors Manuel M. Llarena, Maria Moratiel del Pilar Entrena and Emilio M. Moratiel, paid $34 million for the building in 2015. In 2012, the trio also partnered with Rilea Group on a Brickell development site, which now is The Bond condominium.

150 Alhambra has 108,959 rentable square feet and was constructed in 1984 on 0.8 acres, according to the release and property records. MDR Americas has invested more than $6.5 million in capital improvements since 2018.

In other recent Coral Gables leases for office space, The Consulate General of Barbados and New York-based investment firm Empirex Capital signed deals in January at Ofizzina at 1200 Ponce de Leon Boulevard.

CMA CGM I One Biscayne Tower I downtown Miami

Global shipping and logistics firm CMA CGM extended its lease at One Biscayne Tower in downtown Miami through 2031.

CMA CGM inked the deal for a 20,173-square-foot space at the 40-story building at 2 South Biscayne Boulevard more than five years before its existing lease is set to expire, according to a news release from the tenant’s broker.

Clay Sidner and Jeremy Hakala of Newmark represented CMA CGM. Brian Gale and Ryan Holtzman of Cushman & Wakefield represented the landlord.

Extending the lease early allowed CMA favorable economic terms to hedge against rising interest rates, Hakala said in the release.

The deal comes a year after a venture among CP Group and funds managed by Rialto Capital Management and Sabal Capital Partners purchased the 620,000-square-foot building for $225 million. The seller was multinational chemical producer Dow Chemical.

Although downtown Miami has not captured as much of the new-to-market influx as Brickell, it still has seen some activity.

In June, Aby Rosen’s 100 Biscayne scored fintech FundKite as a tenant, with the company moving its headquarters to the 30-story office tower from New York. FundKite leased 5,302 square feet at the building at 100 Biscayne Boulevard.

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The post Lease roundup: Ritz Carlton’s yacht service leases in Fort Lauderdale, Hermès at 150 Alhambra appeared first on The Real Deal South Florida.

Laurent Groll, partners flip waterfront Hibiscus Island lot for $14M in a month

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375 North Hibiscus Drive on Hibiscus Island

375 North Hibiscus Drive on Hibiscus Island

Miami Beach real estate investor Laurent Groll and his partners flipped a waterfront HIbiscus Island lot for $14 million — a 31 percent gain — in one month, The Real Deal has learned.

Groll and his partners Nelson Gonzalez and Alfredo Xiques sold the 0.4-acre lot at 375 North Hibiscus Drive in Miami Beach to Nb Hibiscus, according to the brokers involved in the deal. The partners bought the property through a trio of LLCs for $10.7 million last month. Xiques is a Miami-based real estate lawyer, and Gonzalez is a broker with Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices EWM Realty. Gonzalez represented the sellers, and Marc Tetzner of Intereal Group represented the buyer.

Nb Hibiscus is registered to Nicola Januschke-Bleicher, an Austrian businesswoman. Both Gonzalez and Tetzner declined to disclose the identity of the buyer.

With this latest sale, Groll and his partners are walking away with about a $3 million profit in a month.

Groll originally planned to develop a spec house on the lot, designed by Miami architect Kobi Karp of Kobi Karp Architecture & Interior Design. Groll bought the property with the Karp plans from Artefacto owner Paulo Bacchi, who had commissioned Karp for the design.

“Larry Groll had every intention of building this thing, to the point where he hired a builder. He was ready to put a shovel in the ground,” Gonzalez said.

Both Gonzalez and Tetzner confirmed the new buyer intends to build the Karp-designed house on the lot.

The rapid turnaround of this lot reflects voracious buyer appetite for waterfront properties, at a time when the supply of new homes is limited.

“There’s not a lot of spec building going on so the inventory is not really replenishing itself,” Gonzalez said. “At the high end, I don’t see that market replenishing, I don’t see prices coming down at all.”

Hibiscus Island, one of the luxury island communities in Miami Beach, has been a hot spot for high-end deals with eye popping prices. In May, a shipping tycoon flipped a waterfront teardown on the island for $17.5 million. A waterfront spec mansion sold for $29.1 million that same month.

Non-waterfront sales have also drawn unheard-of prices on the island. A24 film studio co-founder Matthew Bires purchased a pair of adjacent non-waterfront properties on Hibiscus Island last month for a combined $16 million.

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The post Laurent Groll, partners flip waterfront Hibiscus Island lot for $14M in a month appeared first on The Real Deal South Florida.

Mexican developer-led JV plans Brickell apartment tower

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Lucid Investment Group's Andrew Rasken with 143 Southwest Ninth Street

Lucid Investment Group’s Andrew Rasken with 143 Southwest Ninth Street (Loopnet)

A joint venture consisting of two Mexican firms making their U.S. debut and a Miami-based partner is betting on Miami’s booming apartment market with plans for a 24-story tower in Brickell.

Menesse International bought the development site at 143 Southwest Ninth Street from an affiliate of Miami-based Habitat Group for $23.5 million, according to the seller’s broker, Alfonso Jaramillo of Fortune International Realty.

Margarita Sanclemente of Douglas Elliman represented the buyer.

The property’s existing five-story, 39-unit rental building was constructed in 1968 on 0.7 acres, property records show. Habitat Group paid $14.5 million for the site in 2018, according to a deed.

Menessee International consists of Playa del Carmen, Mexico-based Menessee Condos;
Investee, which specializes in residential development in Mexico; and Lucid Investment Group, the Miami-based partner, according to Menessee International’s website.

The plan is for a Class A building with 350 rental units, ranging from studios to two-bedroom apartments, atop an eight-story podium with roughly 180 parking spaces and ground-floor retail, Andrew Rasken, Lucid Investment’s managing director, told The Real Deal. The Behar Font & Partners-designed project will include a full suite of amenities.

Construction is expected to start in the second quarter of next year.

Menesse Condos, which designs, builds and consolidates projects, has developed in Argentina and Mexico’s Riviera Maya and has a portfolio of 22 developments with more than 1,200 units sold, according to its website.

Investee, which also has focused on Riviera Maya and on Mexico City, is a partnership among Habitania Real Estate Group, Haiat & Amezcua, Grupo Quatro and IDE, Menessee International’s website says.

Lucid Investment has developed projects across asset classes, including student housing nationwide, and also is a brokerage and general contractor, Rasken said.

This is the trio’s first joint U.S. project. It also is the latest planned for the Brickell Financial District, which is seeing residential development boom alongside an influx of companies that is also prompting office construction.

Ken Griffin is among the tycoons in the financial services arena moving to Brickell. He announced in June his hedge fund Citadel and financial services firm Citadel Securities will move their headquarters from Chicago to an undisclosed office location along Brickell Bay.

In April, the Hollo family sold a 2.5-acre, bayfront development site at 1201 Brickell Bay Drive for a record $363 million to a mystery buyer, whom Bloomberg reported as Griffin and his Citadel, citing anonymous sources. Citadel has retained Chicago-based Sterling Bay to build the new headquarters.

In another planned Brickell office project, Swire Properties and Stephen Ross’ Related Companies plan One Brickell City Centre at 700 Brickell Avenue and 799 Brickell Plaza. At 1,000 feet, the tower at the mixed-use Brickell City Centre complex would be one of the state’s tallest.

Vladimir Doronin’s OKO Group and Cain International are building the 55-story 830 Brickell office tower, which has scored multiple leases. Canadian asset management firm CI Financial signed a 40,000-square-foot lease for its new U.S. headquarters.

More than a dozen apartment and condominium projects are in the pipeline that will add 6,000 units to Brickell in the coming years. Michael Stern’s JDS Development Group and Major Food Group plan the 90-story, 259-unit Major condo at 888 Brickell Avenue.

In March, Property Markets Group filed an application for a pair of residential towers with 803 units, combined, between Southwest Eight and Ninth streets and west of Southwest First Avenue and the Metromover tracks. The plans did not specify whether the 31-story and 46-story buildings will have condos or apartments.

Tel Aviv-based Gazit Globe Group’s U.S. subsidiary, Gazit Horizons, wants to build a 504-unit apartment tower at 90 Southwest Eighth Street that would rise 642.8 feet, which is over 50 stories.

OKO and Cain also are partnering on the 47-story, 135-unit Una Residences condo under construction at 175 Southeast 25th Road in Brickell.

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The post Mexican developer-led JV plans Brickell apartment tower appeared first on The Real Deal South Florida.

Lender sells foreclosed aviation maintenance site in Medley for $20M

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Terreno Realty's W. Blake Baird with 8050 Northwest 90th Street (LinkedIn, Google Maps)

Terreno Realty’s W. Blake Baird with 8050 Northwest 90th Street (LinkedIn, Google Maps)

Synovus Bank sold a foreclosed, defunct aviation maintenance facility in Medley to Terreno Realty for $20 million.

An affiliate of Terreno, a publicly traded, San Francisco-based real estate investment firm led by co-founder, Chairman and CEO W. Blake Baird, bought the 6.7-acre industrial property at 8050 Northwest 90th Street, records show. The site includes a 55,000-square-foot warehouse completed in 1981.

A Transwestern Real Estate Services team led by Ben Eisenberg and Walter Byrd represented Terreno in the off-market deal, according to a press release. Terreno also retained Transwestern to market the vacant property for lease.

The seller, Synovus Bank, paid $3 million for the site in a foreclosure sale in November, records show. A month earlier, the financial institution won a final judgment against the previous owner, an affiliate of Odyssey Engines, for $54.9 million, including interest, court costs and attorney fees, court records show. In 2020, Synovus sued the Odyssey affiliate and four other related companies for defaulting on five loans secured by the property, as well as a forbearance agreement.

Odyssey Engines, led by principals Joel Plasco and David Boyer, was an aviation maintenance and repair company that went belly up and liquidated its assets after its Chapter 11 bankruptcy petition failed last year, court records show.

Founded in 2009, Terreno focuses on acquiring industrial properties in Miami, Los Angeles, New York City, San Francisco, Seattle and Washington D.C., the release states. In February, the firm paid $73.2 million for two new warehouses at Countyline Corporate Park in Hialeah. Terreno also owns two other warehouses at Countyline that the company acquired for $50 million last year.

As demand for warehouse space remains sky-high across South Florida, institutional investors are zeroing in on Medley where they are finding properties with ample room for new development. Recently, Miami-based Basis Industrial paid $37.5 million for a mixed-use facility in Medley where the firm plans to add a 125,000-square-foot self-storage facility on a parking lot.

In May, Conshohocken, Pennsylvania-based Seagis Property Group paid about $23.7 million for two adjacent industrial buildings in Medley. Seagis plans on redeveloping one of the warehouses into a larger industrial facility.

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The post Lender sells foreclosed aviation maintenance site in Medley for $20M appeared first on The Real Deal South Florida.


Miami again ranks as nation’s least affordable housing market, followed by LA, NY

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(iStock/Illustration by The Real Deal)

(iStock/Illustration by The Real Deal)

Miami again topped the list of least affordable U.S. housing markets in July, ahead of Los Angeles and New York, according to RealtyHop.

Even though the median home price in Miami fell slightly in July compared to June, to $600,000, the city remained the least affordable based on a projected median household income of about $45,000. That means the average family would have to set aside a whopping 86 percent of its annual income to afford a home.

In a visit to a new affordable housing development last month, HUD Secretary Marcia Fudge called Miami “the epicenter of the housing crisis in this country.” Record rents and high occupancy rates have been fueled in part by out-of-state migration to Miami.

Traditionally, homeowners and renters should spend no more than 30 percent of their income on housing, though that is unrealistic for a majority of Americans. Overall housing affordability dropped to a 15-year low in May, according to a Zillow report from June.

Hialeah, which is in Miami-Dade County and northwest of the city of Miami, is making its way up RealtyHop’s list. The city ranked fifth-least affordable, with a median home asking price of $449,000 in July, and a projected median household income of just over $40,000. A family in Hialeah would have to contribute about 70 percent of its annual income toward home ownership costs.

The July affordability index takes rising interest rates into account and assumes buyers are financing their purchases with 30-year fixed-rate mortgages with 5.5 percent interest rates. It looks at the top 100 most populous cities.

Los Angeles moved up to the second least affordable housing market for buyers, based on a median home asking price of $969,000, requiring buyers to spend about 85 percent of their annual income on homeownership costs.

New York fell to No. 3 on RealtyHop’s index. New Yorkers would have to also spend about 85 percent of their median annual income of about $68,000 to buy a home. The median home asking price fell to $949,000 in July.

Newark was the fourth least affordable city in the country, where the median price for homes fell to $380,000. A family in Newark making the projected median income of about $39,000 would have to contribute about 76 percent of that income for mortgage payments and property taxes.

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The post Miami again ranks as nation’s least affordable housing market, followed by LA, NY appeared first on The Real Deal South Florida.

Elysee closing tops Miami-Dade’s weekly condo sales

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788 Northeast 23rd Street (Condo.com, iStock)

788 Northeast 23rd Street (Condo.com, iStock)

Miami-Dade County condo sales fell faster last week than Elon Musk’s interest in Twitter.
Dollar volume last week totaled $58 million, about one-third of the $179 million of the week before. Sales reached 113, compared with 240 the previous week.

Leaflet map created by Adam Farence | Data by © OpenStreetMap, under ODbl.

Condos sold for an average price of about $513,000, down from $744,000 the week prior.

The top sale was a $3 million closing at Elysee in Miami’s Edgewater neighborhood. Unit 1101 at 788 Northeast 23rd Street sold for $1,083 per square foot. Felise Eber with Coldwell Banker Realty represented the seller. Pedro Velasco with Global Luxury Realty represented the buyer.

The second most expensive sale occurred at Ocean Club in Key Biscayne. Unit 504 at 789 Crandon Boulevard sold for $2.8 million, or $1,120 per square foot. Liz Hogan with Compass Florida had the listing, and Elena Chacon with Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices EWM Realty represented the buyer.

Here’s a breakdown of the top 10 sales from July 3rd to July 9th:

Most expensive

Elysee, 788 Northeast 23rd Street, unit 1101 | 2 days on the market | $3M | $1,083 psf | Listing agent: Felise Eber with Coldwell Banker Realty | Buyer’s agent: Pedro Velasco with Global Luxury Realty

Least expensive

9 Island Avenue, 9 Island Avenue, unit 1905 | 90 days on the market | $1.2M | $833 psf | Listing agent: Brigitte Lina with One Sotheby’s International | Buyer’s agent: Freddie Baigen with Luxe Properties

Most days on market

The Alexander, 5225 Collins Avenue, unit 1221 | 189 days on the market | $1.3M | $694 psf | Listing agent: Evelyn Mackenzie with Aria Luxe | Buyer’s agent: Enzo Rosani with Barnes International Realty

Fewest days on market

Elysee, 788 Northeast 23rd Street, unit 1101 | 2 days on the market | $3M | $1,083 psf | Listing agent: Felise Eber with Coldwell Banker Realty | Buyer’s agent: Pedro Velasco with Global Luxury Realty

(Condo.com)

(Condo.com)

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Media company buys office building near FAU’s Jupiter campus for $19M

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From left: LRP Media Group's Ken Kahn and Gladstone Commercial Corporation's David Gladstone with 1395 University Boulevard

From left: LRP Media Group’s Ken Kahn and Gladstone Commercial Corporation’s David Gladstone with 1395 University Boulevard (LRP Media Group, Gladstone Commercial Corporation, Loopnet)

LRP Media Group bought an office building near Florida Atlantic University’s Jupiter campus for $19 million.

Gladstone Commercial Corporation, through an affiliate, sold the four-story property at 1395 University Boulevard to an entity tied to Ken Kahn’s LRP Media Group, according to a deed. The property is in Jupiter’s Abacoa neighborhood.

Colliers’ Derek Baker represented the seller, and Michael Falk, also with Colliers, represented the buyer.

Gladstone Commercial, based in McLean, Virginia, bought the 61,500-square-foot building in 2012 for $15.5 million, records show. The property was constructed in 2010 on just over an acre. It will soon be available for lease, according to a source familiar with the property.

Gladstone is a real estate investment trust that invests in industrial and office properties, its website says. David Gladstone is chairman and CEO.

LRP Media, based in Palm Beach Gardens, publishes print and digital magazines, books, pamphlets, newsletters, videos and online resources focusing on the education, law and tech industries, as well as on federal employment and human resources, according to its website. Khan is president and founder.

Jupiter, a city in northern Palm Beach County, has seen some office investment sales activity in recent months.

In October, an entity tied to Prime Group Holdings of Saratoga Springs, New York, bought the four-story property at 150 South U.S. 1 next to the Jupiter Yacht Club for $12.3 million.

In multifamily sales, Bainbridge Companies and TPG Real Estate Partners paid $161.1 million for the 304-unit Allure at Abacoa apartment complex at 1456 Cades Bay Avenue and 4515 Main Street in June.

Overall, Palm Beach County’s office market vacancy rate was 13.5 percent in the first quarter, and the average asking rent was $53.47 per square foot, according to a JLL report.

Activity has been largely concentrated in downtown West Palm Beach, an area that has attracted some of the influx of out-of-state companies to South Florida.

Stephen Ross’ Related Companies is building the One Flagler waterfront office building in West Palm Beach, and Jeff Greene’s One West Palm is nearing completion.

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Scott Huizenga buys next-door waterfront Miami Beach estate for $8M

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Berkshire Hathaway's David Soloman and Douglas Elliman's Ibrahim Guldiken with 5941 Pine Tree Drive (Douglas Elliman, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices)

Berkshire Hathaway’s David Soloman and Douglas Elliman’s Ibrahim Guldiken with 5941 Pine Tree Drive (Douglas Elliman, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices)

A scion of late billionaire businessman H. Wayne Huizenga paid $7.5 million for a waterfront Miami Beach home — next to one he already owns.

Property records show Redmayne Property, a Delaware entity managed by Josh N. Bennett, sold the house at 5941 Pine Tree Drive to H. Scott Huizenga.

The buyer is the son of the late former Miami Dolphins owner, who created several iconic businesses such as Houston-based Waste Management, Blockbuster Video and Fort Lauderdale-based AutoNation. Huizenga died in 2018 at age 80.

The seller’s entity is registered to a Fort Lauderdale-based law firm run by Bennett that bought the 0.33-acre property for $7.1 million in 2016, records show.

The property comes with a main home and separate guest house totaling 4,812 square feet. The main house has three bedrooms and three bathrooms and was built in 1929, property records show.

Ibrahim Guldiken with Douglas Elliman represented the seller, and David Solomon with Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices EWM Realty represented the buyer. Both agents declined to discuss their clients.

Guldiken said the home was originally designed by famed architect Russell Pancoast and was renovated in 2011. He said it has 75 feet of waterfront and a dock for boats.

Huizenga also owns the waterfront property immediately to the south at 5931 Pine Tree Drive, which he bought in 2012 for $1.8 million, records show.

Miami Beach, much like the rest of South Florida, has experienced a huge luxury housing boom during the pandemic, although experts caution that the market nationwide is headed for a slowdown.

This month, real estate investor Laurent Groll and his partners flipped a waterfront Hibiscus Island lot for $14 million. They bought the property a month earlier for $10.7 million.

Also this month, Russian mogul Ilya Karpov paid $13.6 million for a waterfront North Bay Road home in Miami Beach, his second purchase on the street this year.

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Here’s what happens to renters after developer converts Miami apartment tower to condos

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Property Markets Group’s Ryan Shear, Kevin Maloney, Dan Kaplan and Greybrook’s Peter Politis with rendering of The Elser Hotel & Residences (Property Markets Group, Greybrook, Levy PR, iStock)

Property Markets Group’s Ryan Shear, Kevin Maloney, Dan Kaplan and Greybrook’s Peter Politis with rendering of The Elser Hotel & Residences (Property Markets Group, Greybrook, Levy PR, iStock)

Prospective apartment tenants at Property Markets Group and Greybrook’s downtown Miami tower have restarted their housing search after the developer decided to instead sell the units as condos.

The developers returned their deposits, offered to give the prospective tenants the equivalent of one month of rent, and told brokers they would pay their commissions, according to PMG.

After testing the market with condo reservations, New York-based PMG, led by Ryan Shear, Kevin Maloney and Dan Kaplan, and Toronto-based Greybrook, led by Elias Vamvakas and Peter Politis, announced last week that Society Biscayne is now The Elser Hotel & Residences. The 49-story, 646-unit short-term rental-friendly condo building is nearly completed and units now start in the $600,000s. It’s at 398 Northeast Fifth Street, around the corner from the planned Waldorf Astoria Residences and just north of the X Miami rental building, both PMG-led developments.

Preleasing at Society Biscayne began in December. The building was about 20 percent reserved at the time of the switch to condos, according to PMG. It’s unclear how many renters had reserved units because it was designed as a co-living rental tower with multiple applications per unit. PMG declined to provide the number of applications that were canceled.

Prospective tenants who each put down $600 to reserve apartments told The Real Deal that while PMG was in the process of determining if the units would be sold as condos, between April and May, they could not get in touch with the leasing team. Eventually they had to start their housing search from scratch – a challenge in today’s housing market. Miami, now the least affordable housing market, has experienced record rent hikes over the past year-plus.

Though they didn’t have leases, applicants said they knew which units they would be moving into and adjusted their living situations based on construction delays with Society Biscayne, ultimately with the plan to move in as early as July. By signing on early, many locked in lower rates.

On May 12, PMG notified its prospective tenants that it was considering selling the units as condos, but that it hadn’t made a decision yet. Investors are hungry for new condos with few to no restrictions on short-term rentals, prompting a wave of new projects in Greater Downtown Miami.

“You may be aware that pre-leasing activity has been paused… That is due to the development team exploring the possibility of selling units in the building as condos,” PMG wrote in an email to prospective tenants.

On June 15, Society Biscayne said it had canceled all leasing applications, would return the $600 deposits and offered the would-be tenants one month of base rent, according to emails the developer sent.

PMG’s senior director of asset management, Yechiel Ciment, said the developer informed the building’s applicants of the potential change to give them more time to find new homes, and offered the one month of rent, even though PMG wasn’t obligated to do so. Ciment acknowledged there was miscommunication with the leasing agents and those selling units.

The developer also said that while it tried to facilitate apartments at other downtown rental buildings that weren’t affiliated with PMG, that ultimately did not work out.

“PMG’s reputation was very important to us and the community, and we really just wanted to do as right as possible,” Ciment said. “It was very important to the PMG principals to again go above and beyond for our applicants.”

Still, not everyone was satisfied. One reviewer on the Apartments.com listing said that the developer shouldn’t have accepted deposits if it was considering not moving forward with rentals.

“Totally unfair and unethical to people who have given them thousands of dollars. Those decisions should have been made before accepting people’s hard earned cash,” the reviewer wrote.

One would-be tenant, who previously lived at PMG’s Society Las Olas rental building in Fort Lauderdale, told TRD they were waiting to move into Society Biscayne after securing a reservation for a unit on a higher floor. The renter said they locked in a monthly rate of $2,400 a month for a one-bedroom unit, expecting to move in in May.

Another prospective tenant, who did not wish to be identified, understood that it was the developer’s prerogative to lease or sell the building, but criticized how the situation was handled. After signing on with Society Biscayne in March, he planned to move into a two-bedroom co-living unit in July. By mid-April, the leasing team stopped responding to him.

“Things started to get a bit desperate at the end of May. The portal wasn’t working. I couldn’t get into contact with anybody from Society Biscayne,” said the prospective tenant, who expected to pay about $1,650 a month for his share of the apartment. (Now, he’s paying more than $2,000 for a two-bedroom unit farther away from where he works.)

He ended up getting in touch with a real estate agent through WhatsApp in late May – but it wasn’t a member of the leasing team. “He told me he was trying to sell the building for condos, and I thought that was kind of weird,” the prospective renter told TRD.

“No one gave us a heads up. I put down my deposit… then I was left scrambling a month before I was expected to move to find a new place to move to,” he said. “I understand it’s their building… but they could have been more transparent with that.”

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RPT Realty buys Shops at Mary Brickell Village for $216 million

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From left: Rockpoint’s Bill Walton and Keith Gelb, 911 Southwest First Avenue and RPT Realty’s Brian Harper (Rockpoint, Google Maps, RPT Realty)

From left: Rockpoint’s Bill Walton and Keith Gelb, 911 Southwest First Avenue and RPT Realty’s Brian Harper (Rockpoint, Google Maps, RPT Realty)

RPT Realty picked up the Shops at Mary Brickell Village for $216 million, marking the latest major real estate deal in the Miami neighborhood.

New York-based RPT Realty, through an affiliate, bought the retail at 900 and 901 South Miami Avenue, as well as at 911 Southwest First Avenue, from an entity tied to Rockpoint, according to records.

The 200,000-square-foot shopping and dining district has a 29,000-square-foot Publix; a 38,000-square-foot LA Fitness; restaurants, including Balan’s, Novecento, P.F. Chang’s China Bistro and Shake Shack; Blue Martini and other venues; as well as stores and other businesses such as Blo Blow Dry Bar, AT&T and T-Mobile, according to Mary Brickell Village’s website. It has a roughly 800-space garage.

The deal excluded the residential portion at the complex.

Boston-based Rockpoint, led by co-founders Bill Walton and Keith Gelb, bought the mall in 2015 for $113.5 million from Montreal-based Ivanhoé Cambridge.

RPT Realty, a real estate investment trust, is an owner and operator of open-air shopping centers, with a portfolio spanning 57 properties and 12.4 million square feet, according to its website. Brian Harper is president and CEO.

RPT does not list any other Miami properties, although it owns five other retail centers across Broward and Palm Beach counties. They include the West Broward Shopping Center at 3809-3951 West Broward Boulevard in Plantation, the Coral Creek Shops at 6502-6588 North State Road 7 in Coconut Creek, the Mission Bay Plaza at 20401 South State Road 7 near Boca Raton, and The Crossroads at 1104 Royal Palm Beach Boulevard in Royal Palm Beach, property records show.

Its purchase in Brickell gives RPT a foothold in the booming neighborhood that has gained national recognition as a magnet for new-to-market firms, the most notable of which are Ken Griffin’s hedge fund Citadel and financial services firm Citadel Securities. In June, Griffin announced in a letter to staff that his companies are relocating their headquarters from Chicago without disclosing the location in Miami, although he said it would be along Brickell Bay

The neighborhood also nabbed two consecutive record deals this year. In April, the Hollo family sold a 2.5-acre development lot along Brickell Bay for $363 million to a mystery buyer, which Bloomberg tied to Griffin and his Citadel, citing anonymous sources.

Another mystery buying entity – led by Randall Davis, who also signed off on the buying entity for the Hollos’ lot – paid $286.5 million for the nearby office tower at 1221 Brickell Avenue. This was the biggest South Florida office deal since 2016 when Spanish billionaire Amancio Ortega paid $516.6 million for the Southeast Financial Center in downtown Miami.

Brickell also is seeing robust construction activity. Vladislav Doronin’s OKO Group and Cain International are building the 55-story office tower 830 Brickell; and a venture between Swire and Stephen Ross’ Related Companies wants to build a 1,000-foot tall office tower at 700 Brickell Avenue and 799 Brickell Plaza as part of the mixed-use Brickell City Centre. If completed, it would be the state’s tallest commercial building.

Residential projects in Brickell, both proposed and underway, abound. Among them: Menesse International wants to build a 24-story, 350-unit apartment building at 143 Southwest Ninth Street, and Michael Stern’s JDS Development Group and Major Food Group plan the 90-story, 259-unit Major condo at 888 Brickell Avenue.

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LoanDepot laying off thousands

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LoanDepot's Anthony Hsieh

LoanDepot’s Anthony Hsieh (iStock, LoanDepot)

Another lender is resorting to layoffs as the mortgage market shrivels.

Tucked in near the end of a business plan released Tuesday morning, loanDepot announced it would shed 4,800 people, or 42 percent of its workforce.

About 2,800 of them have already been sent packing as the firm slashes headcount to 6,500 from 11,300. With demand for mortgages dropping, the company plans to make between $3.5 million and $4.5 million in severance and benefits payments in the second quarter alone.

“After two years of record-breaking volumes, the market has contracted sharply and abruptly in 2022,” loanDepot CEO Frank Martell said in a statement. “We are taking decisive action to meet this challenge head on.”

The company expects to save $375 million to $400 million annually by the end of the year by downsizing and other cost-cutting measures, such as reducing marketing, third-party spending and office space.

Additional changes involve centralizing the management of loan originations and fulfillment.

LoanDepot is targeting a return to run-rate profitability by the end of the year. The company is expected to release its second quarter earnings on Aug. 9.

Layoffs in the home loan industry have become a regular occurrence as rising mortgage rates and home prices and a dearth of listings cooled demand for home loans.

Last week, Long Island-based Sprout Mortgage announced it was going out of business. That came only a week after Texas-based First Guarantee Mortgage essentially shut down operations after making deep cuts to its staff.

Other companies reducing their mortgage personnel include JPMorgan Chase, Wells Fargo, Keller Williams and Better.com.

Still, the optics of loanDepot’s layoffs are not good, as they follow loanDepot founder Anthony Hsieh’s $30 million purchase of a waterfront Miami Beach mansion in January. Hsieh also bought a unit at One Thousand Museum in Miami for $19.5 million.

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Miami-Dade may help renters in eviction court secure attorneys

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 Miami-Dade County Mayor Daniella Levine Cava, Attorney

Miami-Dade County Mayor Daniella Levine Cava (Wikipedia, iStock)

Laurel Pizarro had difficulty navigating the legal process when she tried to fight her eviction from a Miami apartment in March. She looks back on her day in court as hardly a fair one: She went on her own, but her landlord had an attorney.

Miami-Dade County is in the midst of an affordability crisis. Rent hikes in South Florida consistently outpace those in the rest of the nation, while incomes continue to lag, leaving many low-income renters to fight housing disputes without a lawyer.

“This is a problem not just for the families evicted. This is a problem for the entire community. Employers cannot get employees because they can’t afford to live here”

Miami-Dade County Mayor Daniella Levine Cava

On Tuesday, Miami-Dade County Mayor Daniella Levine Cava said that she will request that county commissioners budget funding for legal representation for these tenants in the next fiscal year. She made her announcement at a downtown Miami event held by the Miami Workers Center to push for help with attorney costs.

Levine Cava’s vow also comes as commissioner Eileen Higgins put in an item for the county’s July 19 commission meeting to direct the county to assess the need for a Right to Counsel program for tenants in the eviction process or in disputes with landlords. Altogether, the legal aid tool is the latest the county is considering after unleashing a salvo of initiatives to ease the affordability crisis.

“This is a problem not just for the families evicted. This is a problem for the entire community. Employers cannot get employees because they can’t afford to live here,” Levine Cava told The Real Deal after the event. “People are moving away. It is really a total crisis for Miami-Dade County.”

In a June visit to Miami, U.S. Secretary for Housing and Urban Development Marcia Fudge declared the county “the epicenter of the housing crisis in this country.”

South Florida rents rose 45.8 percent in May, year-over-year, marking the biggest hike nationwide, according to Realtor.com.

Details for Miami-Dade’s potential Right to Counsel-type program, such as how much the county could budget for legal aid and the income levels to qualify are yet to be hammered out.

Legal Services of Greater Miami, which provides free assistance to low-income residents, has been receiving roughly 80 calls a week from tenants in housing disputes, and is unable to take all the cases, as its nine attorneys already have full case loads, said Jeffrey Hearne, Legal Services’ director of litigation.

Legal Services generally targets tenants at 200 percent of the federal poverty level, Hearne said. That is an annual income of $27,180 for a one-person household; $36,620 for two people; and $46,060 for three people, according to the Health and Human Services Department.

Others that have vowed to provide tenant representation if the county funds a Right to Counsel program include the Cuban American Bar Association and advocacy law firm Community Justice Project, Hearne said.

An eviction proceeding can move quickly and if tenants don’t file the correct response, they usually automatically lose, he said.

“A lot of tenants write a letter to the judge thinking that’s enough, that they will get an opportunity to go see a judge, but it’s not,” Hearne said. “Then they lose automatically, and next thing they know there is a writ of possession on their door.”

Pizarro, who also wrote a letter to the judge, saw the court side with her landlord and she had to move out.

Levine Cava, a former Legal Services attorney, said part of the affordability crisis issue is tied to state laws that “are not really written in favor of the needs of tenants.”

Florida prohibits local governments from imposing rent-control measures, except in cases where a county provides a study showing why rates should be capped. Miami-Dade is in the midst of conducting research for its rent-control study, and any plan for rent control will require voter approval at a November referendum. Still, under state law, rents can only be capped for up to a year.

In other initiatives, the county in May implemented a Tenant’s Bill of Rights that affords renters a 60-day eviction notice period and the right to deduct unit repair costs from the rent if the landlord had not fixed the issue. In March, the county commission also approved a 60-day notice requirement for rent hikes of 5 percent or more.

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Penthouse at the Surf Club Four Seasons in Surfside trades for $29M

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Surf Club Four Seasons, Penthouse

Surf Club Four Seasons (Four Seasons)

A penthouse at the Four Seasons Residences at The Surf Club in Surfside changed hands for $29.4 million, about 40 percent more than it sold for four years ago.

Keyla Holdings LLC sold penthouse 2 in the south tower, at 9001 Collins Avenue, to EH 2022 LLC, property records show. Fort Lauderdale real estate attorney Josh N. Bennett manages Keyla Holdings and EH 2022 is managed by the East Hampton law firm Ackerman, Pachman, Brown & Goldstein LLP. The true buyer and seller are unknown.

The unit traded for just over $5,180 per square foot. Ximena Penuela, an agent with the developer Fort Partners, brokered the sale.

Records show the buyer took out a $20 million mortgage with JPMorgan Chase to finance the off-market purchase.

The 5,675-square-foot penthouse, with five bedrooms and eight bathrooms, previously sold for $20.8 million in 2018.

Fort Partners completed the Surf Club development in 2017 and it quickly became a magnet for high-profile residents and pricey sales. The development includes 150 condos, a 72-room Four Seasons hotel, and a restaurant by French Laundry founder Thomas Keller. The Surf Club originally opened in 1930 as an elite prohibition-era social club, under the direction of its original owner, tire tycoon Harvey Firestone. Its visitors included Winston Churchill, Elizabeth Taylor and Frank Sinatra.

Today, owners include Wonder Woman actor Lynda Carter, who dropped $15 million for unit 903 in the south tower last year. The “Queen of Latin Pop” and the former CEO of Sony Music Entertainment, Thalía and Tommy Mottola, flipped their Surf Club condo for $10 million a few months earlier. More recently, Miami Heat legend Pat Riley and his wife Christine sold their Surf Club condo for $22.8 million, a significant markup compared to the $8.1 million they paid for the unit in 2018.

Surfside has seen backlash to condo developments since the collapse of Champlain Towers last summer. A Surfside resident filed a lawsuit against the town last month for approving a condo development by Fort Partners near another aging condo tower.

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Registration is now open for TRD’s South Florida Showcase + Forum

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Registration is now open for TRD’s South Florida Showcase + Forum

Mark your calendar: Registration is now open for the Miami real estate event of the year.

The Real Deal’s annual South Florida Showcase + Forum returns to the Mana Wynwood on Nov. 10 for a full day of panels, networking and celebrating everything South Florida real estate has to offer.

Last year’s jam-packed event drew a standing-room-only crowd of more than 4,000 industry professionals, so secure your spot by Sept. 23 to lock in an early-bird discount. Better yet, subscribe to TRD for an additional 20 percent off your registration.

Whether you’re looking for a land grab, selling a spec mansion or just want to schmooze with a who’s who of the most powerful people in real estate, you won’t want to miss it.

We’re also thrilled to offer complimentary tickets to our beloved corporate subscribers. Just shoot an email over to your company’s account manager, and we’ll take it from there.

The 2021 edition of TRD’s South Florida fete brought together industry vanguards including developers Gil Dezer, Todd Michael Glaser and Jeffrey Soffer along with top dealmakers such as Dora Puig, Dina Goldentayer and Oren Alexander. It even convened political elites including Miami Mayor Francis Squarez, Miami-Dade Mayor Daniella Levine Cava and Fort Lauderdale Mayor Dean Trantalis.

Suffice it to say that TRD is well-connected, which is why we’re offering VIP tickets with access to the speakers’ lounge, where you can get up close and personal with the real estate titans appearing on stage. It’s the opportunity of a lifetime to learn from the best, and you won’t regret it. Plus, you’ll get some free merch.

Did we mention subscribers get a special discount? Not a subscriber yet? No problem! Become one today for just $1, et voila! Another 20 percent off!

In an industry where networking is everything, we couldn’t be more thrilled to facilitate an event of this scale each year. Stay tuned for speaker spotlights on this year’s crop of industry experts.

Until then, make sure to catch the early bird discount by Sept. 23 — it’ll be here before you know it, so register today.

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MSP Capital pays $50M for Davie office/warehouse complex

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MSP Capital co-founders and managing partners Murray McCabe and Max Lamont and the Pelican Bays office/warehouse complex at 4990 Southwest 52nd Street in Davie (Google Maps, MSP Capital Partners)

MSP Capital co-founders and managing partners Murray McCabe and Max Lamont and the Pelican Bays office/warehouse complex at 4990 Southwest 52nd Street in Davie (Google Maps, MSP Capital Partners)

A Dallas-based real estate private equity firm scooped up an office/warehouse complex in Broward County for $50 million.

An affiliate of MSP Capital Investments, led by co-founders and managing partners Murray McCabe and Max Lamont, acquired Pelican Bays at 4900-4990 Southwest 52nd Street in Davie, records show. MSP Capital paid $254 per square foot for eight buildings totaling 197,000 square feet.

Alan Levy and Josh Levy with Levy Realty Advisors represented the buyer. Norman Matus with Red Rock Realty represented the seller, a trust in the name of Charles Rowars, who developed the property, according to a press release.

Between 1987 and 1988, Rowars paid $1.2 million for two vacant lots and completed the buildings between 1988 and 1989, records show.

In a statement, Josh Levy said Pelican Bays has a long history of stable occupancy and currently has 120 tenants. MSP Capital tapped Levy Realty Advisors to manage and lease Pelican Bays, the release states.

The Broward office and industrial markets continue to show positive gains halfway through this year, according to recent Colliers reports. The vacancy rate in Broward’s office market dropped to 11.7 percent in the second quarter compared to 12.7 percent during the same period last year, Colliers found. Asking rents jumped year-over-year to $37.06 per square foot, compared to $34.50.

Broward’s industrial market experienced a significant drop in vacancies, clocking in at 3.6 percent in the second quarter, compared to 6.4 percent during the same period last year. Asking rents increased year-over-year to $11.56 a square foot, compared to $9.53 a square foot, according to Colliers.

A dwindling supply of land available for development coupled with high tenant demand is keeping South Florida’s industrial market at full throttle. Recently, San Francisco-based Terreno Realty paid $20 million for a foreclosed aviation maintenance facility in Medley. And Basis Industrial, formerly Miami City Self-Storage, acquired a mixed-use facility with an indoor go-kart track, offices and small warehouses in Medley for $38 million.

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Summer slowdown: Here are Miami-Dade’s top condo sales in June

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From top left to bottom right: Eighty Seven Park, Oceana Key Biscayne, Jade Signature, Porsche Design Tower

From top left to bottom right: Eighty Seven Park, Oceana Key Biscayne, Jade Signature, Porsche Design Tower (Condo)

South Florida’s condo market is showing signs of a summer slump.
Top condo sales for June totaled $219.1 million, $65 million less than May’s total of $284.1 million and lower than April’s total of $250.4 million.

MLS data from condo.com show June sale prices for the top 45 condos ranged from $1.5 million to $19.2 million, above May’s top sale of a $15.5 million Faena House condo in Miami Beach. That’s just about the only increase.

June’s top sale was a $19.2 million closing at Eighty Seven Park in Miami Beach. David Siddons represented the seller and Debra Golan the buyer. Both agents are with Douglas Elliman.

A $14.4 million closing at Porsche Design Tower clinched the second spot. Nelson Gonzalez with Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices EWM Realty had the listing, and Melissa Barragan with Dezer Platinum Realty represented the buyer.

June’s top 45 sales averaged $4.8 million, below May’s average of $6.3 million and April’s average of $6.1 million — and a far cry from March’s average of $7.1 million.

The average price per square foot came to $1,684 and ranged from $558 per square foot to $6,605 per square foot. This is also lower than the averages for the previous three months (May: $1,907 per square foot, April: $1,931 per square foot, March: $1,912 per square foot).

Leaflet map created by Adam Farence | Data by © OpenStreetMap, under ODbl.

Here’s a breakdown of the top 45 sales for June:

Most expensive

Eighty Seven Park, 8701 Collins Avenue, unit 1102/1106 | 165 days on the market | $19.2M | $3,541 psf | Listing agent: David Siddons with Douglas Elliman | Buyer’s agent: Debra Golan with Douglas Elliman

Least expensive

Biscayne Beach, 2900 Northeast Seventh Avenue, unit 507 | 61 days on the market | $1.5M | $935 psf | Listing agent: David Concheso with Related ISG Realty | Buyer’s agent: Sumita Sengupta with Douglas Elliman

Most days on market

Jade Signature, 16901 Collins Avenue, unit 5303 | 1,566 days on the market | $10.4M | $1,649 psf | Listing agent: Rita Collins with Fortune International Realty | Buyer’s agent: Fernando Alves with Charles Rutenberg Realty

Fewest days on market

Bella Mare, 6000 Island Boulevard, unit 2603 | 1 day on the market | $2.9M | $822 psf | Listing agent: Richard Goihman with Douglas Elliman | Buyer’s agent: Ronit Perez with Suma Luxury

The post Summer slowdown: Here are Miami-Dade’s top condo sales in June appeared first on The Real Deal South Florida.

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