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Moishe Mana makes big downtown Miami purchase

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777 International Mall (inset: Moishe Mana)

777 International Mall (inset: Moishe Mana)

A company controlled by Moishe Mana picked up 107,000 square feet of retail space on downtown Miami’s Flagler Street in three transactions totaling more than $21 million, The Real Deal has learned.

Mana’s 141 East Flagler LLC acquired a trio of retail properties, including the 73,000-square-foot 777 International Mall, in deals recorded on Monday, according to Miami-Dade County records. The seller is 777 International Mall Inc., which is managed by Marlon Avneri. The Miami-based company gave 141 East Flagler a $14 million mortgage as part of the transaction.

The 777 International building at 141 East Flagler Street is anchored by Payless ShoeSource. It was originally constructed in 1947 as the Miami Theatre. Mana’s acquisition also included a 9,000-square-foot building at 130 East Flagler Street and more than 25,000 square feet at 134 East Flagler Street.

Downtown Miami’s main block, Flagler Street is poised for a major revamp after Miami-Dade commissioners approved funding nearly half of a $13 million improvement plan last month. The City of Miami is matching the county’s contribution, with downtown property and business owners covering the remaining $1 million.

Mana is also active in Miami’s Wynwood neighborhood, where he is planning a large arts-oriented project on 25 acres. The Israeli entrepreneur is in the midst of heated litigation with former business partner Tony Cho, the founder and president of Metro 1. The two are suing each other over a Wynwood property sale.


10,150 South Florida condos already ‘sold’ during this boom

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Miami skyline (inset: Peter Zalewski)

Miami skyline (inset: Peter Zalewski)

Developers have already “sold” nearly 10,150 new condo units proposed for the South Florida coastal region during this latest preconstruction boom that began in 2011.

The preconstruction sales total represents about 29 percent of the nearly 35,000 new condo units announced to date for sites located east of I-95 in Miami-Dade, Broward and Palm Beach counties, according to the preconstruction condo projects website CraneSpotters.com.

(For disclosure purposes, my firm operates the website.)

The presale total represents more than 60 percent of the nearly 16,200 preconstruction units that are currently being marketed for purchase by condo developers in coastal South Florida. Most of the other proposed preconstruction condo units have not yet launched presales.

Current presale figures were collected by researchers at CraneSpotters.com as part of a monthly “Developers Price Survey” of listing brokerages that are exclusively marketing preconstruction condo projects in South Florida.

To be considered “sold” in today’s South Florida preconstruction condo market, the proposed units must be under presale purchase contracts or – better yet – already sold to the buyer in closed transactions.

In purchasing a presale condo unit in coastal South Florida, buyers are typically asked to commit to a series of deposits that ultimately total about 50 percent of the contracted purchase price.

By comparison, developers collected deposits of as little as 10 percent during the last South Florida condo boom, triggering what some contend was widespread speculation that resulted in some 49,000 units being developed east of I-95 in the region’s seven largest markets.

Developers claim the higher deposit requirements today ensure that only those well-capitalized buyers who can fulfill their preconstruction contracts can purchase during today’s South Florida condo boom.

The higher preconstruction deposits do not appear to be stopping condo buyers from purchasing units at a steady pace.

A closer look at the presale statistics reveals that many of the announced projects that are marketing units for presale are experiencing success in South Florida.

At least 23 new condo towers with a combined 1,775 units have reportedly sold out. An additional 25 new condo towers with 3,370 units are said to have sold at least 90 percent of their proposed units.

Additionally, nine new condo towers with nearly 1,700 units are at least 80 percent presold, while another 21 towers with nearly 2,400 units reportedly entered into contracts for at least 70 percent of their planned inventory.

Overall, more than 90 new South Florida condo towers have reportedly sold at least 50 percent of their 11,500 units planned for South Florida.

The unanswered question going forward is whether enough preconstruction condo buyers with 50 percent deposits are around to purchase the remaining 25,000 units that have been announced for the coastal South Florida market.

Peter Zalewski is real estate columnist for The Real Deal who founded Condo Vultures LLC, a consultancy and publishing company, as well as Condo Vultures Realty LLC and CVR Realty brokerages and the Condo Ratings Agency, an analytics firm. The Condo Ratings Agency operates CraneSpotters.com, a preconstruction condo projects website, in conjunction with the Miami Association of Realtors.

Downtown Dadeland’s retail space trades for $39M

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Downtown Dadeland

Downtown Dadeland

The retail component of Miami’s Downtown Dadeland complex changed hands for $39 million.

DHPI Dadeland of Boca Raton acquired 127,000 square feet of retail and restaurant space at 7270 North Kendall Drive in a transaction recorded on Friday, according to Miami-Dade County records. The company is managed by Shane Hillsley. It received a $25.5 million loan from Principal Real Estate Investors for the purchase.

Downtown Dadeland Retail of Irving, Texas is the seller. Goldman Sachs vice president Richard D. Case signed the deed as president of the selling company.

The mixed-use Downtown Dadeland was constructed in 2006. The complex is located across the street from Dadeland Mall. Its retail portion includes Chili’s, Panera Bread and West Elm. — Eric Kalis

Steven Nicklaus gets $8.3M for Bear’s Club mansion

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176 Bears Club Drive (inset: Jack Nicklaus)

176 Bears Club Drive (inset: Jack Nicklaus)

About two weeks after purchasing a Palm Beach Gardens home, Steven Nicklaus sold a mansion located on the seventh hole of his father’s signature golf course at Jupiter’s The Bear’s Club for $8.3 million.

Nicklaus and his wife Krista sold the 12,000-square-foot home at 176 Bears Club Drive in a transaction recorded last week, according to Palm Beach County records. The couple paid $2 million for the property in January 2006. The six-bedroom mansion was constructed three years later.

H.B. and Cecilia Wehrle of West Virginia are the buyers. No financing was recorded.

Listed for $10.9 million, the home includes six full bathrooms, a library, theater, game room, swimming pool and spa. Mark Griffin of Coastal Sotheby’s International Realty was the listing agent.

Steven Nicklaus was the only one of Jack Nicklaus’ four sons to not play golf professionally. Instead, he played football at Florida State and worked for the family-owned Nicklaus Companies.

Last month, Steven and Krista Nicklaus paid about $1.1 million for a four-bedroom house in the Frenchmans Creek community of Palm Beach Gardens. — Eric Kalis

Venetian Islands home under construction linked to former Google CEO, New York multifamily lender expands into Miami market … and more

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Rendering of Venetian Islands home via Curbed (inset: Eric Schmidt)

Rendering of Venetian Islands home via Curbed (inset: Eric Schmidt)

1. Venetian Islands home under construction linked to former Google CEO [Curbed]
2. New York multifamily lender expands into Miami market [GlobeSt]
3. Downtown parking lots closed in advance of All Aboard Florida station [exMiami]
4. Greenacres church gets approval to take over vacant retail space [Palm Beach Post]
5. Local P.F. Chang’s part of credit card data breach [South Florida Business Journal]Eric Kalis

Pointe Group buys rival property management firm

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Pointe Group CEO Peter Gardner

Pointe Group CEO Peter Gardner

The Miami-based property management firm, Pointe Group Advisors, has acquired its rival, Americas Property Management.

The acquisition will add 4.7 million square feet of management contracts to Pointe Group’s portfolio, which already exceeds 10 million square feet, according to the South Florida Business Journal. All of Americas Property Management’s 10 employees will be retained.

“We are excited to announce the acquisition of Americas Property Management, which has an impressive list of clients and a roster of employees that includes veterans in the South Florida real estate market,” Pointe Group CEO Peter Gardner said in a prepared statement. “The acquisition is part of Pointe Group’s strategic expansion to continue increasing our South Florida footprint and to broaden the asset classes that our firm focuses on.” [SFBJ] Christopher Cameron

Miami Beach strip club bought by NYC buyer

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1780 State Road 9

1780 NE 5th Avenue

A North Miami Beach strip club, known for lascivious acrobatics and risque boxing matches, has quietly been sold to a New York interest.

King of Diamonds, located at 17800 NE 5th Avenue, was purchased for roughly $6 million by New York-based KODRENYC LLC, according tot the Daily Business Review.

The property features a 60,622-square-foot structure on a 4.75-acre triangle located between an I-95 overpass and the Amtrak railroad. The company that owned the club was also sold for an undisclosed sum to a different entity dubbed, Ak “n” Eli LLC.

Both Ak “n” Eli and KODRENYC are managed by New York developer Elliott “Eli” Kunstlinger and financial services adviser Akiva “Ak” Feinsod, according to the Business Review. [DBR] Christopher Cameron

Historic Boca Raton home hits the market at $2.7M

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1240 Cocoanut Road

1240 Cocoanut Road

An area known as the Estates, tucked away between Camino Real’s Intracoastal Waterway bridge and the beach side’s multifamily buildings, is one of Boca Raton’s oldest and least altered coastal neighborhoods. And one of the largest homes in the area has just hit the market for only the third time in 75 years.

The property, known as Dickenson house, features crown moldings, three fireplaces, oak floors and nearly an acre of land, according to the Sun-Sentinel.

The home is also one of just nine Boca Raton structures listed on the U.S. National Register of Historic Places.

However, Jennifer Dickenson, a real estate agent who is showing the home for her in-laws, said most of the prospective buyers have one question about the house, listed at $2.65 million.

“Most people ask me if they can tear it down,” she said. [Sun-Sentinel]Christopher Cameron


Palm Beach home of Alexander Haig sells for $8M

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244 Via Las Brisas and

244 Via Las Brisas and Alexander and Patricia Haig

A house in Palm Beach’s North End that was owned by the late Gen. Alexander Haig Jr. sold for $8 million.

Haig served as secretary of state during the Reagan administration and purchased the five-bedroom house, located at 244 Via Las Brisas, in 2008, according to the Palm Beach Daily News.

The buyer was the Las Tres Brisas Trust, but no other information about the trust or anyone else connected to it was immediately available.

The Mediterranean-style house boasts 11,624 square feet. Kim Raich of Sotheby’s International Realty had the listing. Ashley Copeland of Brown Harris Stevens represented the buyer. [PBDN] Christopher Cameron

Top stories

Swire’s Megan Kelly set to retire

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Megan Kelly

Megan Kelly

Swire Properties executive vice president Megan Kelly is set to retire on Nov. 7 after 25 years with the company.

Kelly had a major role in Swire’s development of 12 towers on Miami’s Brickell Key and the $1.1 billion mixed-use Brickell City Centre, which is under construction. She relocated to Miami from New York in 1989 to join the company. In a written statement released on Tuesday, Swire cited Kelly’s desire to travel and ramp up her civic contributions to Miami.

Swire has not chosen a successor to Kelly, according to the Miami Herald.

Launched in Miami 35 years ago, Swire is a wholly-owned subsidiary of publicly-listed Hong Kong company Swire Properties Ltd. [Miami Herald]Eric Kalis

Surf Club developer scores $290M loan

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Surf Club rendering and Nadim Ashi

Surf Club rendering and Nadim Ashi

The developer of the Surf Club Hotel and Residences just got a whopping $290 million loan for the luxury Surfside project, The Real Deal has learned.

Several companies tied to Nadim Ashi’s Miami-based Fort Capital Management obtained the financing for the 9011 Collins Avenue development in a transaction recorded on Friday, according to Miami-Dade County records. BREDS II Loan Holdings of New York is the lender. The company is managed by Blackstone Real Estate Debt Strategies.

The transaction included the refinancing of an existing $25 million loan and a future advance of $260 million.

Ashi recruited prominent architects Kobi Karp and Richard Meier to design the project, which incorporates a historic building designed by Russell Pancoast. Plans for the nine-acre oceanfront property include two residential towers, a private club, two restaurants, four swimming pools and more than 40 beach cabanas. In January, Fort Capital announced a deal with Four Seasons to brand and manage the 80-room hotel.

The developer aims to complete the project in early 2016.

WCI nears Heron Bay completion

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Heron Bay

Heron Bay

Homebuilder WCI Communities is closing in on the completion of the 1,700-acre Heron Bay community in northwest Broward County.

WCI announced on Tuesday that it is developing the last two neighborhoods in master-planned Heron Bay. The Hawthorne and Estuary subdivisions will have a combined 106 homes along Hillsboro Boulevard. Prices for the three, four and five-bedrooms homes range from the $500,000s to more than $1 million.

Once Hawthorne and Estuary are finished, only a few individual parcels for custom homes will be left to build out at the Heron Bay site, WCI division president Jon Rapaport told the Sun-Sentinel.

“I don’t want to say it’s the end of an era, but it’s a big deal, because this was an important community when it started,” Rapaport said. “A lot of the kids who were born in this community are now in and out of college.”

WCI built most of the nearly 3,000 homes at Heron Bay, which opened during the late 1990s. The builder filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy reorganization in 2008 and emerged one year later. WCI resumed the development of Heron Bay in 2011. [Sun-Sentinel]Eric Kalis

BBX, New Urban Communities start Lauderdale project

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Village at Victoria Park model home rendering

Village at Victoria Park model home rendering

A joint venture between BBX Capital Real Estate and New Urban Communities is slated to begin construction on Fort Lauderdale residential project The Village at Victoria Park on Thursday.

BBX and New Urban plan to build 30 two-story cluster homes on a 2.3-acre site that was the original BankAtlantic headquarters in the city’s Victoria Park neighborhood, according to a written statement released by a project spokesperson. BBX Capital Real Estate is a division of BBX Capital Corp., the former parent of BankAtlantic.

The three and four-bedroom homes at the 936 Victoria Park Road project will include two-car garages and private courtyards. Buyers have the option of incorporating plunge pools and summer kitchens.

BBX is partnering with Codina-Carr company CC Devco Homes to build 394 single-family homes within the master-planned Bonterra community in Hialeah. — Eric Kalis

Empire World Towers site sale gets judge’s approval, Genting updates Miami commissioners on public baywalk … and more


Billionaire wants to add large U.S. flag to Miami skyline

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Mike Fernandez

Mike Fernandez

Downtown Miami’s evolving skyline could include a 500-pound American flag atop the tallest flagpole in the nation if billionaire Mike Fernandez gets his wish.

Fernandez arranged a Wednesday tour of several potential Miami sites for the flag with a Commissioner Frances Suarez and City Manager Daniel Alfonso. The chairman of Coral Gables-based MBF Healthcare Partners prefers a location between AmericanAirlines Arena and the Perez Art Museum Miami. The 400-foot flagpole would cost between $5 million and $10 million to construct.

“It’s a gift that I’d like to consider giving to our country and to our city,” Fernandez told the Miami Herald.

The former head fundraiser for Florida Gov. Rick Scott, Fernandez is a major Republican Party donor. He came to U.S. from Cuba in 1964. [Miami Herald]Eric Kalis

New York developers take aim at Wynwood

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David Peretz and Jonathon Yormak

David Peretz and Jonathon Yormak

A Madison Avenue-based real estate investment firm founded by developers Jonathon Yormak and David Peretz is aiming to transform a wholesale shoe warehouse in Miami’s Wynwood neighborhood into a trendy retail plaza with a rooftop lounge.

The proposed 23,500-square-foot project by East End Capital and Yellow Side Ventures is among several retail developments being proposed by New York investors, who believe Wynwood is fast becoming Miami’s version of some of their city’s trendiest neighborhoods.

“We see it as the next Meat Packing District, Soho and Williamsburg,” Yormak told The Real Deal. “We believe we are coming in during the second inning of a nine-inning game. What you are seeing now is just the beginning of what Wynwood will be in 10 years.”

Yellow Side is a partnership between New York developers Chaim Cahane and Dan Arev.

Local retail operators and potential tenants from New York and Los Angeles have shown interest in the 8,500-square-foot of the East End project that includes the rooftop lounge and restaurant, according to SKH Realty real estate advisor Shane Davis. SKH was hired by East End to find tenants for the space. East End has Metro 1 Properties marketing the project’s 15,000 square feet of retail space.

Considering the price East End paid for the land, the owners must expand the potential tenant base beyond Miami. Industry experts say only national retailers are in a position to afford the potential rents at projects like East End’s.

In February, East End spent $5.3 million on the property, which is located on Northwest 23rd Street, just west of North Miami Avenue. The seller, Mega Shoes Inc., paid just $268,000 in 1997. In May, East End bought a 20,911 square foot warehouse a half-block away at 2214 North Miami Avenue for $4.7 million.

For New York investors like East End, an opportunity to “create something unique” exists in Wynwood, said Charles Penan, director of real estate finance specialist Aztec Group. Land remains much more affordable than areas like Edgewater, despite a steady increase in Wynwood property sale prices.

Penan recently represented New York’s Atlas Real Estate Partners in its $3.5 million acquisition of a 13,853-square-foot warehouse at 2301 North Miami Ave.

“They have already leased two of the three bays to a furniture dealer and an art gallery,” Penan said.

New York players started flocking to Wynwood after developer David Edelstein staked a claim in the neighborhood last year, when he purchased a 1.75-acre site at 2801 Northwest Third Avenue, according to local broker and developer David Lombardi, one of Wynwood’s pioneers. Edelstein is planning a mixed-use development that includes 264 residential units, 39,000 square feet of retail space and 19,200 square feet of office space. In May, he added to his Wynwood portfolio by scooping up two properties at 2701 Northwest Second Avenue and 187 Northwest 27th Street for $4 million.

“Edelstein is 15 minutes of ahead of everybody,” Lombardi told TRD. “In 1998, people thought he was crazy when he was buying property on Lincoln Road at $300 a square foot. Today, he’s selling it off at $2,500 a square foot and buying in Wynwood at $300 a square foot.”

Since Edelstein ventured into Wynwood, Harvey Krasner’s Brooklyn-based Forte Capital bought a 22,462-square-foot building at 48 Northwest 25th Street for $5.3 million in November 2013. Krasner is planning a mixed-use project with retail and restaurants.

Lombardi warned that some investors are rushing into Wynwood without really understanding the neighborhood, however.

“This is not Brooklyn,” he said. “We need more residential to fuel retail and commercial. Some of these guys think they can put high-end retail in Wynwood. It’s craziness.”

Some residential development is on its way. New Yorkers Marc Kovens and Shawn Chemtov recently announced plans to build Wynwood Central, an eight-story condo that will also include some ground-floor retail at Northwest Second Avenue between 24th and 25th streets. Fortis Developments is also looking to build a condominium at 250 Northwest 24th Street.

But Lombardi believes the number of proposed residential units doesn’t justify how many retail developments are in the pipeline.

“We need a few thousand units to really achieve the dream,” Lombardi said. “I think in five years, Wynwood will be a different place.”

Until then, the neighborhood should grow organically and retain its creative appeal, he said.

“I think we are a great location for tech companies and creative agencies that need office space,” Lombardi said. “But with the prices investors are paying for land, they need to get $50 to $60 a square foot in rent. I don’t think it is sustainable.”

Regulator looking into Ocwen Financial’s ties to insurer

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realestateforclosureNew York’s Department of Financial Services is investigating an alleged scheme by West Palm Beach-based Ocwen Financial Corp.

The investigator has issued a letter questioning an arrangement that “appears designed to funnel as much as $65 million in fees annually from already distressed homeowners” to a spinoff company doing minimal work, according to the Palm Beach Post.

In a letter to Ocwen General Counsel Timothy Hayes, New York Superintendent of Financial Services Benjamin Lawsky has asked for more information regarding the mortgage servicing firm’s involvement with “related company” Altisource Portfolio Solutions regarding forced-placed insurance.

Forced-placed insurance can cost five to 10 times more than a typical plan and is charged to borrowers whose policies lapse as they fall behind on mortgage payments.

In a statement, Ocwen said it will “continue to cooperate with the New York Department of Financial Services and provide the information requested, as we have done with all previous requests from the department.” [PBP]Christopher Cameron

NeutraLogistics inks 50,363-square-foot lease in Doral

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8578 NW 23rd Street in Doral

8578 NW 23rd Street in Doral

The logistics and freight management firm NeutraLogistics signed a 50,363-square-foot lease to relocated its operations to a warehouse at 8578 NW 23rd Street in Doral, the firm announced.

NeutraLogistics’ current location is a 31,000-square-foot space in Doral’s Prologis Beacon Centre. The terms of the lease have not been disclosed.

Executive Vice President Juan Ruiz of Blanca Commercial Real Estate represented NeutraLogistics in the transaction. George Pino and Ed Lyden of State Street Realty represented Prologis. – Christopher Cameron

Menin Hospitality overseeing major renovations on Miami Beach hotels

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Gale South Beach and Bentley South Beach

Gale South Beach and Bentley South Beach

Two Miami Beach hotels are preparing to unveil new renovations.

Gale South Beach is expanding with a new 87-room wing called Gale Suites at Kaskades, which it plans to open in December. The $35 million renovation by Menin Hospitality, which is currently still underway, will also add a gym, a 5,000 square foot rooftop bar and pool deck.

The hotel’s Dolce Italian Restaurant and cafe, Regent Cocktail club and Rec Room, located at 1690 Collins Avenue, are also all seeing renovations, according to the South Florida Business Journal.

Menin Hospitality is also wrapping up design plans for Bentley South Beach, which will include larger rooms, a fully renovated rooftop with a pool, modern room amenities and upgrades to its Bellini Restaurant. [SFBJ]Christopher Cameron

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