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Former Rothstein investor gets $9.4M for Miami Beach house

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Aerial of 135 Palm Avenue

Aerial of 135 Palm Avenue

One of the biggest investors in Scott Rothstein’s Ponzi scheme got $9.4 million for his home on Miami Beach’s Palm Island.

Ira Sochet sold the 135 Palm Avenue residence in a transaction recorded last week, according to Miami-Dade County records. Sochet paid $2.1 million for the waterfront property in January 2001. The seven-bedroom, 8,100-square-foot home was constructed in 1972.

Petrus AS LLC of Oslo, Norway is the buyer. The company is managed by Petter Hagland, who is now based in London, according to state corporate records. No financing was recorded.

Disbarred attorney Rothstein is serving a 50-year prison sentence for orchestrating a $1.2 billion Ponzi scheme that was discovered by federal investigators in 2009. Sochet reached a $25 million settlement with the bankruptcy attorneys overseeing Rothstein’s defunct law firm in 2011. He invested nearly $150 million in the scheme.

Sochet kept the Palm Island listing in the family, as Vision Realty’s Adam Sochet was the listing agent. The buyer was represented by Prestige Realty Group. — Eric Kalis


Bellini at Williams Island approaches $75M in condo sales

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Bellini at Williams Island (inset: Peter Zalewski)

Bellini at Williams Island (inset: Peter Zalewski)

Veteran developer Martin Margulies has sold nearly $75 million in new condo units in his recently completed Bellini at Williams Island tower in Aventura.

Some 10 months after completing the 24-story tower, Margulies has sold 49 units (four units were combined into two massive condos) in the 70-unit building located on the last developable waterfront site in the gated community of Williams Island, according to Miami-Dade County records.

New condo units at Bellini have sold for an average of nearly $600 per square foot, with individual deals ranging from about $425 per square foot for a residence that transacted in December 2013 to nearly $830 per square foot for a deal that traded in late July.

(For disclosure purposes, a company that I was involved with has consulted for Margulies in the past but was not involved with the Bellini project.)

The minimum asking price for a new developer condo unit at Bellini is nearly $655 per square foot as of Monday, according to the Southeast Florida MLXchange.

A new condo project – the 160-unit Privé – is planned for a site on a vacant island that can be reached by road by driving through the Williams Island community, according to the preconstruction condo projects website CraneSpotters.com.

The minimum presale asking price for a unit in the Privé project is $800 per square foot, according to the CraneSpotters.com Developers Price Survey for August 2014.

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

About 90 condo units are up for resale in the Williams Island community for an average asking price of about $455 per square foot. In the first seven months of the year, buyers acquired nearly 90 Williams Island units at an average price of $326 per square foot, according to the Southeast Florida MLXchange.

Based on the current sales pace of nearly 13 transactions monthly between January and July, Williams Island has about seven months of available resale condo inventory.

A healthy condo market is thought to have about six months of supply. More months of resale inventory typically suggests a buyer’s market, and fewer months of inventory indicates a seller’s market.

Of the condo resales being marketed in Williams Island, a pair of units in the Bellini At Williams Island tower is currently available at an average asking price of nearly $760 per square foot by new owners who are attempting to retrade their residences at a premium.

The unanswered question going forward is what will happen if more of the early buyers of Bellini units attempt to resell their condos at the higher prices currently being sought in today’s 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.

Elvis Dumervil picks up Coral Gables house

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Elvis Dumervil

Elvis Dumervil

Baltimore Ravens linebacker and Miami native Elvis Dumervil paid $1.7 million for a Coral Gables home, The Real Deal has learned.

Dumervil acquired the three-bedroom house at 5555 Oakwood Lane in a transaction recorded on Thursday, according to Miami-Dade County records. He did not obtain financing for the purchase. The 3,550-square-foot home was originally constructed in 1947 within the city’s Snapper Creek Oaks neighborhood.

Barbara Namon sold the property to Dumervil. County records do not indicate what she paid for the house.

In April, Dumervil sold a Parkland residence for $2.2 million. He paid $2.3 million for the house nine months before selling it.

An eight-year National Football League veteran, Dumervil grew up in Miami’s Liberty City neighborhood. After attending the University of Louisville, the linebacker spent seven seasons with the Denver Broncos before joining the Ravens for the 2013 season.

South Florida listings rise, pending sales dip for the week

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South Florida housing inventory (Credit: Condo Vultures)

South Florida housing inventory (Credit: Condo Vultures)

Active listings for housing inventory in the South Florida region increased last week to 42,008, according to weekly data from Condo Vultures.

For the seven-day period ending Monday, pending sales dipped from 20,211 to 19,920 week-over-week. Over the past four weeks, pending sales declined by 535.

South Florida — including Broward, Miami-Dade and Palm Beach counties — saw 41,883 active listings during the week ending Aug. 4. — Eric Kalis

Carl Fisher’s family blasts Miami Beach church lease, Engel & Völkers expands in Palm Beach County … and more

A look at Jade Signature’s $29M penthouse

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Jade Signature

Jade Signature

Construction on Herzog & de Meuron’s 57-story Jade Signature condo tower in Sunny Isles Beach is shaping up, after work kicked off last year.

Roughly 80 percent of the units are already under contract, although it is still available for $29 million, according to Curbed.

The upper level of the penthouse consists of two separate pieces at the north and south of the building, which are reached by different sets of stairs.

The 11,661-square-foot penthouse features an additional 7,571 square feet of exterior space, a bar that connects directly to the ‘playroom’, two studies, a library, master baths on both levels of the two-level master suite wing, a mini pool on the balcony, sauna and steam rooms. [Curbed]Christopher Cameron

Multifamily sector sees best sales in eight years

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The Miami skyline

The Miami skyline

During the first half of 2014, South Florida’s multifamily market posted more sales than it has since 2006, according to a report from the CBRE South Florida Multifamily Investment Properties team.

The report, which tracks sales in the $1 million to $20 million range, showed 172 multifamily sales totaling more than $515 million in the first two quarters of the year – the most in eight years.

In 2013, there were 9,558 net units absorbed in South Florida, according to CBRE’s report cited by GlobeSt. In the previous four years, the region averaged around 4,500 net absorbed multifamily units each year.

“Above-average population growth in South Florida is driving the demand for multifamily product,” says Ken Krasnow, CBRE South Florida managing director. “According to the Florida Bureau of Economic and Business Research, South Florida’s population is expected to increase by 2.4 million people, or 29%, between 2013 and 2040.” [GlobeSt.] Christopher Cameron

Palm Beach home starts on the rise

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Homebuilders

Homebuilders

Home construction is up 9 percent in Palm Beach County from a year ago, according to the Metrostudy research firm.

Over the past four quarters, builders have started 2,224 homes, townhomes and villas, compared with 2,034 over the same period the year before, according to the Sun-Sentinel.

In the second quarter alone, there were 639 starts countywide, up 27 percent from the second quarter of 2013.

“The market wants to live in Boynton, Delray and Boca and Palm Beach Gardens and Jupiter,” said David Cobb, regional director for Metrostudy in South Florida. “In the next few years, those are the submarkets that will be built out.” [Sun-Sentinel]Christopher Cameron


Iris on the Bay launches sales at Normandy Shores

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Iris on the BayNormandy Shores

Iris on the BayNormandy Shores

Iris on the Bay is offering 43 four-story townhomes under construction in Normandy Shores at a discount, with prices starting at $350 per square foot. That works out to $824,000 for the lowest-priced unit.

David and Jeff Spear of Spear Group, together with Braddock Financial, acquired the two-acre site in 2012, according to GlobeSt.

“In this cluttered and largely inflated market, we’re proud to bring a new product offering that answers the needs of the buyer and presents a tremendous value,” Jeff Spear said. The townhomes come fully-furnished with private elevators, balconies, rooftop terraces and two-car garages.

The project, located between South Beach and Bal Harbour, offers a waterfront promenade and 15 boats slips that can accommodate vessels up to 36 feet, an 18-hole golf course, tennis courts, a children’s playground, and green space. [GlobeSt.] Christopher Cameron

Top stories

Miami Beach board denies church project opponents

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Miami Beach Community Church

Miami Beach Community Church

Construction of a mixed-use building on the courtyard of the Miami Beach Community Church is moving forward.

The city’s Historic Preservation Board unanimously denied a request for rehearing on TriStar Capital’s two-story project. David Edelstein’s firm has a 50-year lease for the property that was approved by the church in December 2013. Opponents claimed the proposed building is not compatible with surrounding structures, but the board disagreed.

Proceeds from the $100 million development are to be used for the church’s operating costs, charitable endeavors and the preservation and repair of church facilities.

In a written statement released through a spokesperson, Edelstein blasted project opponents for conveying “harmful misinformation” about $500,000 previously given to the church. According to Edelstein, the money was for a “legitimate, non-refundable” rental payment.

“All payments provided by TriStar under the terms of the lease were reviewed and approved by the church’s legal counsel, accountants, board and congregation.” — Eric Kalis

O Residences planned in Bay Harbor Islands

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O Residences rendering (inset: Claudio Stivelman)

O Residences rendering (inset: Claudio Stivelman)

S2 Development announced plans to build a waterfront residential project in Bay Harbor Islands.

The Aventura-based firm intends to construct the 41-unit O Residences at 9821 East Bay Harbor Drive, according to a written statement. Each floor would have six units. The one, two and three-bedroom residences range in size from 1,060 square feet to about 1,470 square feet.

Project amenities include a zero-edge pool, bayfront water deck, hot tubs, cabanas and a “natural eco atrium.”

S2 hopes to finish O Residences by 2016. The Real Estate Club, led by Ian Ludmir, is handling sales and marketing for the project.

“O Residences will transform the Bay Harbor area with its sleek architecture and innovative design,” S2 CEO Claudio Stivelman said. — Eric Kalis

Downtown Miami hotel trades for $57.5M

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b2 Miami Downtown

b2 Miami Downtown

A joint venture between Carlyle Group and InSite Group generated a substantial profit on the sale of a downtown Miami hotel, The Real Deal has learned.

The venture, CRP/InSite Biscayne, got $57.5 million for the 243-room b2 Miami Downtown and an adjacent retail building in a transaction recorded on Monday, according to Miami-Dade County records. Washington, D.C.-based Carlyle and Weston-based InSite paid $13.5 million for the 136 and 146 Biscayne Boulevard properties in September 2011. The previous owner, a partnership between New York developers Aby Rosen and Ian Schrager, bought the hotel for $31 million in 2005 and operated it as the Continental Hotel Bayside.

HHR EAT Downtown Miami is the buyer. The company is tied to Tempe, Ariz.-based Investment Property Exchange Funding. No financing was recorded.

The hotel was originally built in 1926. It includes the Biscayne Tavern restaurant and 1,000 square feet of meeting space, according to b2’s website.

Consultatio has flurry of Oceana Key Biscayne unit sales

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Oceana Key Biscayne rendering and Eduardo Costantini

Oceana Key Biscayne rendering and Eduardo Costantini

Consultatio took in nearly $48 million in 10 deals at its Oceana Key Biscayne condo since beginning closings less than two weeks ago, The Real Deal has learned.

Eduardo Costantini’s firm completed the sales in transactions recorded between Friday and Monday, according to Miami-Dade County records. Eight of the 10 units sold for between $3 million and $5.2 million with one condo selling for $1.5 million. The most expensive individual deal was the $10 million sale of a lower penthouse in the 142-unit complex at 350 Ocean Drive in Key Biscayne.

ACCAA LLC is the buyer of the more than 5,000 square foot lower penthouse. The company is managed by Abram Szajman of New York.

Consultatio is also building the 240-unit Oceana Bal Harbour on the former site of the Bal Harbour Beach Club. It received a $332 million construction loan from a consortium of lenders led by HSBC in April.

Hotel developer picks up West Brickell site

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Emile Farah and George Befeler

Emile Farah and George Befeler

A hotel developer picked up a 30,000-square-foot site in Miami’s West Brickell neighborhood for more than $6 million.

Hotelex Brickell acquired four vacant properties in two transactions recorded at the beginning of August, according to Miami-Dade County records. The parcels are adjacent to the Homewood Suites Miami-Brickell under construction at 1750 Southwest First Avenue. The buying company is tied to William Hammani, a Venezuelan developer who recently relocated to Miami.

Valle at West Brickell sold the land to Hotelex. It paid about $3.2 million for the properties. Local businessman Nelson Rodriguez is the company’s manager.

The Farah Group of USA Lending & Realty arranged the transaction, led by Emile Farah, Jean Kelly and Zena Bardawell. Miami attorney George Befeler handled the closing and is identified is state corporate records at Hotelex’s manager. — Eric Kalis


Inside Terra Group’s Coconut Grove condo projects, Miami Subs plans major expansion in South Florida … and more

Bal Harbour mansion on market for $22M

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88 Bal Bay Drive

88 Bal Bay Drive

A Bal Harbour mansion dubbed “Villa Bougainvillea” is on the market with a $22 million asking price.

The 12,341-square-foot Mediterranean Revival home is located at 88 Bal Bay Drive. It was designed by architect Cesar Molina and constructed in 1962 on a one-acre property. Lourdes Alatriste of Engel & Völkers has the listing.

Features include wooden pergolas, a courtyard with a fountain and 200 feet of Biscayne Bay frontage, according to Curbed. The mansion’s nickname comes from the red bougainvillea located throughout the property. [Curbed]Eric Kalis

Broker expects big purchase price for Royal Palm property

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Douglas Kirlan

Douglas Kirlan

Douglas Kirlan, owner and president of Douglas James Kirlan, P.A., hasn’t been officially hired to market the 151-acre vacant site on Crestwood Boulevard, but he’s still pitching the property.

“This is a great piece of property and it’s in a great location,” Kirlan said of the former wastewater treatment site at the north end of Crestwood Boulevard. “It’s going to be very desirable and a place where builders will want to be.”

Recently, the village tapped Kirlan’s firm to market the Royal Palm property, but a contract has yet to be signed, according to the Palm Beach Post.

The village hopes to sell the site so it can develop up to 302 single-family homes there.

“It could be 750 homes,” Kirla said. “But there will not be 750 homes. The village has made it very clear they don’t want any multi-family homes or attached product on the site.” [Palm Beach Post]  Christopher Cameron

Miami Worldcenter in talks to swing parking deal with city

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Miami Worlcenter

Miami Worlcenter

The developers of Miami Worldcenter may be nearing a deal to create a public-private partnership with the Miami Parking Authority.

Both side hope to create thousands of new public parking spaces downtown, according to Miami Today.

“We’re talking, yes,” Deputy Mayor Edward Marquez, said. “Worldcenter asked for participation from the city, county and the [Community Redevelopment Agency]…. Numbers were presented to us and we’re taking a look.… As to what the government participation could be and should be, it’s very preliminary.”

According to Miami Parking Authority CEO Art Noriega, the developers are asking for tax increment financing via the redevelopment agency to help pay for parking, roads and a planned convention center. [Miami Today] Christopher Cameron

Lantana Town Council OK’s zoning for Cenacle property

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 Lantana Town Council

Lantana Town Council

Lantana’s Town Council has approved a final zoning — along with comprehensive plan changes — at the Cenacle property. The council disagrees, however, about just how the 1400 South Dixie Highway site should be developed.

The council changed the zoning from commercial low density to waterfront mixed use, with Mayor David Stewart voting against it and Vice Mayor Lynn Moorhouse absent, according to the Palm Beach Post.

“I hope you saw a little bit of just how this council’s working, so when you go back to finesse the next proposal, please keep in mind our codes and how we deal with them in Lantana,” council member Philip Aridas said to developer Trinsic Acquisition.

Trinsic is under contract to buy the 10-acre Cenacle property and because of council disagreement the developer withdrew the plan. Trinsic will soon return with a new proposal for the site, which would be named Aura Seaside.

The most recent plan called for two-story commercial buildings on Dixie Highway and multi-story residential buildings, with 319 rental units. [Palm Beach Post]Christopher Cameron

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