Posts Tagged ‘club membership’

Miami Beach hotel prices top Vegas

December 10th, 2011

Hotel prices in Miami Beach are often as much as twice as high as similar properties in Las Vegas, according to an analysis by Strategic Advisory Group. The study was done on behalf of the city of Miami Beach. It comes in light of a recent vote against a potential casino resort in the city, and amid growing concerns over the impact of the addition of thousands of potential hotel rooms in downtown Miami. “If you put 5,000 hotel rooms in downtown they will suck out everything surrounding them,” said Stuart Blumberg, the former head of the Greater Miami and the Beaches Hotel Association. “It will take 19 years for the current hotels to break even. They’re going to destroy the market inventory.”

South Florida foreclosures begin picking up

December 8th, 2011

After a long lull, South Florida foreclosure filings are beginning to pick up, despite another decrease last month.

The improvement is not readily apparent in the numbers, but upon closer examination, the rate of decline slowed considerably last month, according to data from RealtyTrac.

While the number of properties with foreclosure filings in South Florida fell 27 percent last month compared to November 2010, the November 2011 figure is a drastic reduction from a nearly 60 percent average drop each month since the summer, and 41 percent in October.

“I would say that’s a significant shift,” said RealtyTrac spokesperson Daren Blomquist. “We had a 14 percent nationwide year-over-year decrease in activity, and that was the lowest year-over-year decrease we’ve seen this year.”

Statewide, Florida saw a 7 percent increase in initial default notices compared to November 2010, the first time in 20 months that the state had an increase in that number.

“That is another sign to me that the lenders are ramping up and processing some of those delayed foreclosures,” Blomquist said.

The foreclosure slowdown came in large part due to the freeze imposed by banks following the robo-signing and fraudulent document scandal of a year ago. 

There were a total of 9,157 properties with some form of foreclosure filing in South Florida last month, led by 4,044 properties in Miami-Dade County.

Broward County had 3,196 properties with foreclosure filings, and there were a total of 1,917 in Palm Beach.

Former Versace mansion owner files lawsuit against German bank

December 5th, 2011

A German bank is the target of a RICO lawsuit by the owner of the Casa Casuarina, the former Versace mansion, alleging that the bank schemed to commit a series of fraudulent actions. The bank, WestLB, holds the mortgage on the property. “WestLB took signature pages and slapped them on a loan document that was never agreed to by the parties, and pretended like this was a finalized loan document when it wasn’t,” said Adam Steinberg, a lawyer representing Casa Casuarina. “And there was a post-closing agreement that it executed and it says the parties will sit down and agree to a finalized loan document … and they never did.” The property is now the Villa by Barton G.

Marriott Harbor Beach’s ground lease interest nets $49M

December 4th, 2011

U.S. Realty Advisors acquired the ground lease interest on Marriott Harbor Beach Resort & Spa for $48.6 million, according to the South Florida Business Journal.

The 16.5-acre oceanfront parcel is located at 3030 Holiday Drive in Fort Lauderdale and contains the 15-story, 650-room hotel. The hotel is controlled by Host Hotels and Resorts, which has more than 93 years remaining on the leased fee interest. The ground lease previously belonged to Northwestern Mutual which tapped Holliday Fenoglio Fowler to market the property.

The hotel has direct beach access, three restaurants, a 22,000-square-foot spa and a 100,000-square-foot function space.

South Florida home prices fall slightly

December 1st, 2011

Home prices in the tri-county area fell 0.7 percent in September compared to August, and 4 percent compared to the same period in 2010, according to the Standard & Poor’s/Case-Shiller Home Price Index, released yesterday. “The plunging collapse of prices seen in 2007-2009 seems to be behind us,” said David Blitzer, chairman of S&P’s index committee, in a statement. “Any chance for a sustained recovery will probably need a stronger economy.”

Source: http://therealdeal.com/miami/articles/south-florida-home-prices-fall-slightly

Condos get new life as rentals

November 14th, 2011

A modified Florida law making it easier to dissolve condominium associations has led to a number of condos being converted back into rental apartments, especially in the state’s suburban areas, according to the Sun Sentinel. “Most people see this as a way out because it should not have been a condo in the first place,” said Jennifer Drake, an attorney for Becker & Poliakoff in Fort Lauderdale. At least 36 condos in Broward and Palm Beach counties have been changed back into apartments in the last three years. But the movement is finding opposition. “I don’t want to live in a rental community; that’s why I bought a condo,” said William Bush, a board president in Weston. “I think people would be dead-set against it.” [Sun Sentinel]

Today’s priciest new listing

November 13th, 2011

The priciest new listing to hit the market is a four-bedroom, five-bathroom single-family home at 240 Harbor Drive in Key Biscayne that’s listed for $8.8 million, according to Condo Vultures. The home, which was built in 1995, has ocean and city views and three levels of living space. Brigitte Nachtigall of Great Properties International has the listing. (Data includes condos and single-family listings in the main metropolitan areas of Miami, Fort Lauderdale, and West Palm Beach, as well as Monroe County that are newly listed. Listings are taken from the South Florida MLS.) — Alexander Britell

Source: http://therealdeal.com/miami/articles/today-s-priciest-new-listing–26

More casino opposition grows

November 7th, 2011

The Florida Retail Federation has come out against proposed casino resorts in Florida, arguing that retailers would lose sales growth in areas where the new casinos would exist, according to the South Florida Business Journal. The organization’s board, whose members include Walmart, Disney and the Seminole Tribe’s Hard Rock International, said casino resorts tend to “cannibalize” existing activity, according to research. “Florida has a healthy and vibrant retail economy that is driven by residents and visitors alike,” said Retail Federation President and CEO Rick McAllister. “We don’t believe new resort casinos will help our state’s retail economy grow.”

 

Source: http://therealdeal.com/miami/articles/more-casino-opposition-grows

The heat is on!

October 27th, 2011

Summer was hardly a vacation for those in the business of selling Miami real estate.

“I didn’t go to St. Tropez because of this,” says developer Gil Dezer, whose Sunny Isles Beach condo projects include the 384-unit Trump Royale and the three-building, 813-unit Trump Towers.

Dezer reports that he sold more than $100 million in Trump units during June, July and August ($50 million alone in August, including a $29 million, 34-unit bulk deal). He’s closed more than $1 billion in Trump condos overall and has only about 75 units left.

Recent Trump sales have been priced at about $525 per square foot. That’s significantly less than the $1,000-per-square-foot contracts buyers walked away from in 2009 after the financial crisis hit, but Dezer, who’s paid off the construction loans for all four buildings, seems satisfied. (Donald Trump participated in a ceremonial Trump Royale mortgage-burning ritual, lighting the document on fire himself, in January.)

The downturn “made the job challenging,” Dezer says. “Every day was a battle. But when you’re winning, it’s fun.”

Winning could also be used to describe the situation at Icon Brickell. That nearly 1,800-unit downtown colossus, built by the Related Group with designs by Philippe Starck, seemed to be in peril not long ago, and two of its three towers were deeded back to its lenders in May 2010. But Icon Brickell’s now nearly sold out, with more than 1,500 units closing for a total of more than $700 million. When you factor in units in contract, only about 30 condos remain.

“I think the market has consumed the inventory in a much more rapid way than I and probably everybody thought,” says Related Group chairman and CEO Jorge Perez, who adds that most buyers have been foreign. “The Latin American economy has been strong.”

“The forecast was that we would sell all the units in three years at an average price of $350 per square foot,” says Edgardo Defortuna, president of Fortune International Realty, which started selling Icon Brickell in June 2010.

Less than a year and half later, Fortune is almost done and seeing prices at about $400 per square foot.

Demand has been so strong that Perez is now building another downtown development. The 192-unit MyBrickell is a couple years away from completion, but Related’s received “over 60 reservations” for condos before officially launching sales. Unlike Icon Brickell, MyBrickell isn’t on the water, and Perez is “passing on the cheaper construction costs and the deal we got on the land” to offer units, with interiors by Karim Rashid, for about $300 per square foot.

Defortuna, meanwhile, is now selling downtown’s Paramount Bay, a 346-unit building resurrected out of foreclosure by owners iStar Residential and ST Residential. Musician Lenny Kravitz’s Kravitz Design firm is working on the building, where prices are about $400 per square foot.

South Beach, with significantly pricier properties, is seeing lots of action, too.

“The summer was uncharacteristically busy,” says Vanessa Grout, president of Douglas Elliman Florida, which has three South Beach offices. “We certainly didn’t take a vacation.”

According to Douglas Elliman’s latest Miami market report, South Beach condos sold for an average of $515 per square foot during the third quarter. But this factors in distressed properties, including units bought out of foreclosure.

At the market’s top end, the W South Beach Hotel & Residences has closed about $260 million in condos at an average of $1,700-plus per square foot, developer David Edelstein says. The W sold more than $50 million during the summer.

“One penthouse went for $7.7 million, north of $3,000 per square foot,” Edelstein says.

As with much of Miami, foreign buyers have been key at the W. (Douglas Elliman translated its market report into Spanish and Portuguese to spur international interest.) From May through September, about 65 percent of Edelstein’s purchasers were foreign, and about half of those were from Brazil.

The allure of the W has helped nearby condo buildings lure in buyers, including those from New York.

Fashion designer Irina Shabayeva, who won season six of “Project Runway,” owns a one-bedroom with a balcony at the 52-unit Boulan South Beach development just south of the W, but on the other side of Collins Avenue.

“I like the Boulan because it was so new, really fresh and modern,” says Shabayeva, who primarily lives in the East Village. “And it’s across the street from the beach and the W.”

Shabayeva says she enjoys the New Yorker-friendly amenities at the W, which include a Warren Tricomi salon and a Mr. Chow restaurant. And Edelstein says that the Dutch, an outpost of Andrew Carmellini’s SoHo restaurant, will open in the W by Thanksgiving.

Boulan, which has sold 22 condos and has one-bedrooms on the market for upward of $600 per square foot, is busy filling its own retail spaces, as well. An art gallery should open in time for December’s Art Basel festival. A Mexican/Asian fusion restaurant and a nightclub are also in the works.

Neighborhoods all over Miami are getting big residential and retail makeovers. The 56-acre Midtown Miami development’s second phase, which will start next year, will include a boutique hotel, a movie theater and 100,000 square feet of retail.

“We’ll definitely have a fashion component,” says developer Jack Cayre.

And the nearby Design District is getting a Louis Vuitton store.

“There was probably a point in time here someone said, ‘What’s Chelsea?’ or ‘What’s Meatpacking?’ — and eventually, they became a place because New York was ready to have another place,” says Greg Masin, senior director at commercial real estate firm Cushman & Wakefield. “When we look at the Design District and at Midtown, what we see is the evolution of the next place in Miami.”

Plus, the downtown Metropolitan Miami development’s third phase will include rental apartments and a Whole Foods Market. Plans for downtown’s eight-block Miami Worldcenter site include residences, restaurants and retailers. And the Genting Group, an Asian casino operator, has unveiled plans for its $3.8 billion Resorts World Miami mixed-use complex. But the scope of the latter two projects will depend on approval for casino gaming, something that’s the object of much speculation and uncertainty all over Miami.

Dezer says he has been talking to major Las Vegas casino operators about land he owns in Sunny Isles (13 1/2 acres on the beach and 6 1/2 acres “directly across the street that hits the intracoastal waterway”) that could accommodate a gaming resort with more than 2,000 rooms and 3 million square feet.

“They’re both good real estate,” Masin says of the Genting and Dezer sites. “If they both had a casino, they’d both be successful.”

Whatever happens, Dezer has options.

“We originally bought [the land] to build condos,” he says. “We could build five condo buildings.”

That idea would have seemed ridiculous in 2009, but now it’s more plausible.

Defortuna has sold out the 256-unit Jade Beach condo building in Sunny Isles Beach and has just three apartments left (for about $700 per square foot) at its 252-unit Jade Ocean sister property.

“In terms of quality inventory, oceanfront,” he says, “you can make a strong argument that you need to start building now.”

Source: http://www.nypost.com/p/news/business/realestate/residential/the_heat_is_on_0LNTpSmeeB4VzlEjOg9CJI#ixzz1c93wQtGe

Europeans enjoy the lifestyle Fisher Island offers

October 15th, 2009

Out of all of the private island residential communities and investment opportunities in the world that exist today, properties located on Florida’s exclusive Fisher Island have to represent amongst the brightest.

Fisher Island is an exclusive private gated community located just a few minutes by auto-ferry, helicopter or boat from Miami’s South Beach. There is no causeway or road connecting it with the Florida mainland. It constitutes a haven of peace, tranquility that offers a complete contrast with the hustle and bustle of downtown Miami – It is often described as a little Floridian Monaco without the high rise buildings. The people that live there enjoy peace and safety that one would associate with Switzerland. It is a place where the sun shines most of the year and everyone is smiling !

Once owned in the 1920’s by the influential Vanderbilt family as well as Miami Beach’s pioneer Carl G. Fisher, the island’s tiny surface area amounts to no more than 0.343 square miles. In the US Census of 2000, Fisher Island was recorded for having residents with the highest per capita income within the whole of the United States.

It is not surprising that the rich and famous from all over the world are drawn to this paradise isle of coconut palms and mangroves because it benefits from the presence of every conceivable luxury – The island offers country club resort living with a tennis club and 18 illuminated courts, a 250 sq. meter spa, an elementary private school with an excellent reputation and education, Fisher Island’s championship golf course is a 35 par nine-hole golf course designed by architect P.B. Dye and two deep sea water marinas accommodating yachts up to 200 ft., private beaches overlooking the Atlantic and restaurants of high standard service and cuisine.

For those inclined to travel to Fisher island by helicopter, there is even a helipad. There is also a very tastefully and recently decorated luxury hotel – The Fisher Island hotel – a member of the Small Leading Hotels of the world.

Security is paramount and crime is non-existent. This is an international community where it is said that up to approximately 43 different nationalities reside. Many people are from Central and South America, Europe, Canada and ‘snow birds” from the northeast United States call Fisher Island their primary or 2nd or 3rd home. It is an ideal place for families to live and relax and for children to play.

In fact many people never actually leave Fisher Island throughout an entire 4 week holiday. This is an immaculately manicured island with over 500 employees that service the island where there are sandy beaches overlooking the Atlantic ocean, swimming pools virtually every where one turns, few cars because people get around mainly on golf carts, that come with each apartment. The difference between this island and other exotic island refuges is that everything works like clockwork here – you are in the United States !

There are around 700 midrise apartments and approximately 12 estates on the island. They are all designed impeccably in a Spanish mediterranean style and to a uniform standard of excellent quality. Few of the island’s residents live there all of the year round although it would not be unreasonable to ask them why because it is a land for lotus eaters !

Ironically there are few British investors – perhaps because the British are unaware of its existence. This is surprising especially as an apartment (or as condominium as they are known locally) can now change hands for as little as $500,000 for a one bedroom apartment when this time two years ago the same apartment would have sold for twice that amount. At the other extreme of pendulum, there are very large 4 and 5 bedroom apartments that are now selling at around $2,500,000 – $ 3,000,000 (to £ 1,820,000) whereas a couple of years ago the same apartments would have been selling easily for upwards of $ 5,000,000 -6,000,000 (£ 3,636,000). There are even super-luxurious villas where asking prices have dropped from $9,000,000 to $5M.

The quality of life here is exceptional and any future resident would be well advised to become an Equity Fisher Island Club member. Fisher Island Club membership preserves the island’s very exclusive appeal and ensures that the infrastructure of the island is maintained to a very high standard.

The world economic crisis has even affected Fisher Island but that can be interpreted to mean that now is the time to buy if you want to buy a piece of exclusive paradise – especially if you are paying in sterling or euros as the exchange rate is still very beneficial for those in that position.

For more information, contact Karla Abaunza, resident and Fisher Island specialist. She speaks English, Spanish, French, Italian and Portuguese. Karla is the broker/owner of Luxury Living Realty, a boutique real estate firm dealing in the high end residential real estate market in South Florida. Located at 1111 Lincoln Road, Suite 400, Miami Beach, Florida 33139 (Telephone 001 305 343 5830) Karla can also be contacted by e-mail at info@luxurylivingrealty.net should you wish to take a first step in pursuing your island dream in Florida contact the expert.