Miami Commercial Real Estate News November 11, 2020: NMB Commission Finally Approves $1.5 Billion Development; 37-Story Tower with Zero Parking Proposed; More…

Miami-Dade’s Retail Market Posts Net Negative Absorption, Rent Declines in Third Quarter

Miami-Dade County’s retail market posted 120,934 square feet of negative net absorption in the third quarter, according to research from Colliers International. The decline is a sizable improvement from the second quarter, a period where the market gave back 230,698 square feet of retail space. Year-to-date absorption remains positive for Miami-Dade County…

IHG Breaks Ground on First Atwell Suites Hotel

IHG Hotels & Resorts has begun construction on the first property of its latest all-suites brand. The Atwell Suites hotel, which is owned by Francisco Arocha, Pedro Villar, Albert Ovadia and Sunview Cos., is located in Miami and is expected to open by the summer of 2021. The 90-key Atwell Suites hotel is aimed at the upper-midscale traveler who opts for longer stays…

Sweetwater District Industrial Building Brokered for $44 Million

Newmark has brokered the $44 million sale of a 312,000-square-foot industrial facility located within Dolphin Commerce Park in Miami. Tech Data Corp. sold the property to Badia Spices, a local manufacturer and distributor of spices and herbs that will eventually move into the building. Built in 2002, the property at 2200 NW 112th Avenue is situated…

Trump plan would let real estate firms avoid SALT deduction cap

The Treasury Department has announced a new measure that would allow many businesses to get around the cap on state and local tax deductions. Congressional Republicans and the Trump administration implemented the $10,000 cap as part of their 2017 tax overhaul. But it has been met with heavy resistance from both the real estate industry and Democrats…

Federal Realty’s Proposed Redevelopment Of The Shops at Sunset Place Falls Through

The Shops at Sunset Place in South Miami will not be redeveloped as planned, its lead developer said in Securities and Exchange Commission filings and on a conference call last week. The long-struggling mall had been slated for a partial teardown and the addition of three new 17-story towers that would house apartments and hotel rooms. “There’s nothing…”

Logistics Firm Clover Systems Completes $16.2 Million Sale-Leaseback of Warehouse in Doral

Logistics firm Clover Systems has sold a 113,891-square-foot warehouse in Doral for $16.2 million. The family-owned company signed a short-term lease to remain at 1910 NW 97th Avenue, which is situated nine miles east of Miami International Airport and 15 miles east of downtown Miami. The buyer was Los Angeles-based 1910 NW 97th Ave Owner LLC, an…

Studies suggest targeted lockdowns of restaurants, gyms, hotels to curb Covid

Going to a restaurant, gym or hotel? It may not be as safe as you’d think. A new study by researchers at Stanford University and Northwestern University tracked the movement of people and compared it to Covid outbreaks, according to Bloomberg. The study estimated that just 10 percent of locations account for 85 percent of predicted infections. In Chicago, for…

Terra proposes 1,384-unit apartment complex near Magic City Casino

David Martin, Central Shopping Plaza, and a rendering of the apartment complex Terra, one of South Florida’s most prolific developers, is looking to build a seven-building apartment complex behind the Central Shopping Plaza in Miami’s Flagami neighborhood. The proposed development would take up 2.5 million square feet and add 1,384 apartments to the 38-acre…

Third time’s the charm: North Miami Beach approves $1.5B Dezer project

For the third time, and in spite of opposition from many nearby Eastern Shores dwellers, the North Miami Beach City Commission narrowly approved a development agreement and new zoning plan that will enable Dezer Development to move forward with its $1.5 billion plan to redevelop the Intracoastal Mall. Next, the developer will need to obtain Florida…

‘Nowhere To Put ‘Em’: Boating Craze Pushes Marinas Into Hot Property Territory

Integra Investments principal Victor Ballestas accidentally stumbled into the marina industry. After having worked on numerous condominium developments, he co-developed a project in Bay Harbor Islands, near Miami, that had a marina component with 14 slips. Seeing the high demand for them, his firm went on to buy marinas in the Florida Keys and even…

Downtown Miami developer seeks 37-story tower with all off-site parking

A 37-story mixed-use residential tower is planned for the heart of downtown Miami. To be called The District, the project will include 343 residential units, 2,297 square feet of commercial-retail use, and zero parking. The developer is requesting a waiver to allow all parking off-site. The city’s Urban Development Review Board has voted unanimously to…

Ocean Drive overhaul won’t come quickly, mayor says

Updating Miami Beach’s newly-named Art Deco Cultural District has been the talk of the city commission all fall, but a major change isn’t likely overnight.  At a workshop Sept. 17, commissioners and city staff brainstormed ideas for re-imagining the Mixed-Use Entertainment District, which officials agreed hosted many good business operators but also…

Creative minds use ingenuity to map road to economic recovery

As Miami-Dade continues to battle the novel coronavirus under “new normal” conditions, its path to recovery and prosperity relies in large part on creative minds whose ingenuity will pave the way. Thanks to the inventiveness of John Stuart, director of FIU’s Miami Beach Urban Studio, home to one of the largest 3D printing labs in the state, thousands of lives…

You can’t put Humpty Dumpty together again in South Beach

Miami Beach is stumbling through a minefield that could blow up its economy. Impacts of a worsening pandemic are battering the city’s economic driver, its visitor industry, causing officials to assess diversifying away from reliance on guests.  Nobody has hit the panic button, but it is at hand. The city spent years and millions to modernize a convention…

Foreclosure filings picked up in October up despite moratoriums

Despite federal and state moratoriums, foreclosure activity in the United States ballooned last month. Nearly 12,000 properties had some kind of foreclosure filing in October 2020, up 20 percent from last month but down 79 percent from October 2019, according to a monthly report from Attom Data. That largely continued a trend of growing foreclosures that began…

Video: Related’s Stephen Ross Discusses COVID CRE Effects on CNBC Power Lunch

Stephen Ross, the chairman and majority owner of The Related Companies, a global real estate development firm he founded in 1972 that has been and continues to be very active in Miami, and owner of the Miami Dolphins, discusses reopening and the state of commercial real estate projects like Hudson Yards in New York in elsewhere. This discussion concentrates…

Investcorp sells nearly $1B in multifamily assets

The private equity firm Investcorp has sold eight multifamily properties across the U.S. for $900 million. Investcorp said it sold the properties to multiple buyers, though it did not disclose specifically who those were. The buildings are located in four states — Arizona, California, Florida and New York — and were acquired by the company in 2016 and 2017, according…

Office unease: Tenants are paying up but staying away

A pattern has emerged among office landlords reporting their third quarter results: The vast majority of tenants kept up with rent payments, but an equal number also kept their workers away. Investment firm and REIT executives reported strong rent collections across much of their office portfolios, a positive sign for their immediate bottom line. At many of…

Negotiating: Strategic Advantages of Backup Offers for Commercial Property Buyers

I regularly am in situations where a buyer is interested in some commercial property that is already under contract. It is the exception where I don’t recommend submitting a backup offer. There are two principal advantages to a buyer of submitting a backup offer in an effort to put a backup contract in place. Both are strategic advantages. “This is the bottom line; win the…”

Video: How COVID-19 is Impacting Commercial Real Estate

In this video from Yahoo Finance, Doubleline Capital Portfolio Manager Morris Chen joins Julia La Roche and Zack Guzman of Yahoo Finance to discuss in some detail the latest commercial real estate outlook amid COVID-19. They talk about the variance in pain among various commercial real estate sectors as well as the offsetting positives of an extremely low…

From inflation targeting to average inflation targeting : The Fed’s new long-run monetary framework

Since 1996, it has been understood among Fed policymakers that the (undeclared) target for inflation was around 2%. In January 2012, Chairman Ben Bernanke made this implicit inflation target explicit and official, thereby aligning the Fed’s inflation target with that of all the major central banks. In this framework, when inflation has approached or exceeded…

Bridge, PGIM Secure $67M Construction Loan For South Florida Cold Storage Project

Joint venture partners Bridge Development Partners, one of South Florida’s most active industrial real estate developers, and PGIM Real Estate, the global real estate investment and financing business of Prudential Financial, Inc., announced it has secured $67 million in financing to develop Bridge Point Cold Logistics Center, a 312,103-square-foot speculative cold storage facility in Hialeah. The loan was issued…

Sapir Corp CEO Amir Richulsky resigns

After about half a year as Sapir Corp’s CEO, Amir Richulsky is leaving for another firm. The developer announced Richulsky’s resignation in a Sunday filing on the Tel Aviv Stock Exchange, where the company’s bonds are listed. The disclosure did not specify where Richulsky is going, but notes that his tenure will officially end in December. Richulsky, previously Sapir Corp’s…

Office, apartment REITs get shot in the arm from vaccine news

New York office and apartment landlords received a rare shot of good news Monday with Pfizer’s announcement that it’s getting closer to developing an effective Covid-19 vaccine. An early analysis found that Pfizer’s vaccine was more than 90 percent effective in treating Covid-19 on clinical volunteers. The company said it could potentially manufacture enough vaccines for…

Oak Street Real Estate Capital buys Oakland Park Walgreens for $7M

Oak Street Jim Hennessey and Marc Zahr with 3100 North Andrews Avenue, Oakland Park The flurry of Walgreens trades continues with an Oakland Park store selling for $7.3 million. Walgreen Co. sold the store at 3100 North Andrews Avenue. The buyer is a company affiliated with Chicago-based private equity firm Oak Street Real Estate Capital. In June, Oak Street…

Lame-duck Congress will resume stimulus package talks

After several long days of vote counting last week, former Vice President Joe Biden emerged as the president-elect, Republicans gained more seats in the House and control of the Senate hinges on the results of two run-off elections in Georgia. Congress will now enter a lame-duck session, where little is typically accomplished even under normal circumstances…

Real estate to Trump: Produce evidence or move on

Former Vice President Joe Biden declared victory in the contentious 2020 presidential race Saturday morning after securing the clinching number of Electoral College votes from Pennsylvania. President Donald Trump, however, refused to concede Saturday, vowing that he would “not rest until the American People have the honest vote count,” likely setting the stage…

GLP pays $16 million for Doral warehouse

A family that owns an international logistics company sold a Doral warehouse for $16.2 million. The Rincón family, which owns and operates the Clover Group, sold the 100,000-plus-square-foot building at 1910 Northwest 97th Avenue, according to records. The buyer shares a Santa Monica address with GLP Capital Partners, an investment firm that…

Hard-hit retail, restaurants, construction show big jobs gains in October

A handful of industries that have sustained the most damage from the pandemic reported the biggest job gains in October, pointing to an improving economy despite Covid-19’s surging numbers nationwide. Travel and leisure companies added 271,000 jobs last month, retail added 104,000 positions and construction gained 84,000 jobs, according to data released…

Miami commercial brokerage alleges it was stiffed on medical office commission

A Miami-based commercial real estate brokerage alleges that a buyer and seller cut it out of its commission on a medical office deal. The brokerage, Real Capital Partners, sued the buyer and seller of the three-building, 10-acre medical office campus at 7400, 7500 and 7800 Southwest 87th Avenue in Miami, according to the lawsuit filed last month in Miami-Dade …

Prospect of divided government rallies real estate stocks

During a week of uncertainty for the country, the stock market had its best performance since April. Real estate stocks were among the big gainers as votes for president and Congress were cast and counted. Top performers in the industry included large service companies and asset-management firms, proptech and residential home builders. Gains were lower for…

Video: “It’s going to take longer, and it’s going to cost more”: Craig Solomon on the real estate capital stack

Craig Solomon is one of the most active lenders and investors in a market that’s rife with uncertainty. His firm, Square Mile Capital, has made some recent big bets on last-mile real estate and is quickly becoming one of the country’s largest owners of soundstage space, with acquisitions such as Silvercup Studios in New York City and CBS Television City in Los Angeles.

Black Creek buys Davie apartments for $79M

Real estate management firm Black Creek Group bought a 340-unit apartment complex in Davie for $79.1 million. Black Creek, based in Denver and led by CEO Raj Dhanda, bought the complex at 11000 Cameron Court for about $233,000 a unit, according to records. Los Angeles-based investment firm CIM Group sold the complex, which was built in 1998.

Suburban office demand spikes as working from home continues

Interest in small suburban offices is picking up as more people continue to work from home, and relocate outside of major urban centers. For IWG, the short-term office company, deals for its downtown New York offices have collapsed by 30 percent since the virus outbreak, while activity in southern Connecticut has surged more than 40 percent, according to Bloomberg.

Election puts real estate’s generous tax breaks in spotlight

For many in the real estate industry, having a developer in the Oval Office has brought an uncomfortable amount of media attention to a long-standing practice: avoiding taxes. A series of recent articles in The New York Times and other outlets have showcased the many ways developers and investors use tax breaks to lower their bills — sometimes to zero.

Mall giant Unibail-Rodamco-Westfield says its real estate is worth 11% less than year ago

Unibail-Rodamco-Westfield saw U.S. rental income tumble 39 percent year-over-year in the third quarter, the company disclosed Sunday. The retail landlord and investor reported that rental income from U.S. operations, including from 39 Westfield-branded malls, fell to $464 million. Across its overall portfolio, which includes major…

Has there been a “Trump effect” on property values?

Despite Trump’s claim that he will boost property values, it’s not clear that those have grown that fast in places where he won handily in 2016 (Getty; iStock) In July, President Trump announced that the Department of Housing and Urban Development would repeal an Obama-era rule requiring localities that receive federal funding to break down barriers to fair…

What four years of Trump has done for real estate

An assessment of how President Donald Trump affected real estate in terms of foreign investment, housing, taxes and general political sentiment. (Getty) Nearly four years ago, Donald Trump was sworn in as the nation’s first developer-in-chief, surrounded by prominent figures from New York City real estate. The sight of his industry friends on the national stage…

The post Miami Commercial Real Estate News November 11, 2020: NMB Commission Finally Approves $1.5 Billion Development; 37-Story Tower with Zero Parking Proposed; More… appeared first on Hawkins Commercial Realty.

Powered by WPeMatico

Negotiating: Strategic Advantages of Backup Offers for Commercial Property Buyers

I regularly am in situations where a buyer is interested in some commercial property that is already under contract. It is the exception where I don’t recommend submitting a backup offer. There are two principal advantages to a buyer of submitting a backup offer in an effort to put a backup contract in place. Both are strategic advantages.

“This is the bottom line; win the game.” 

~Joe Namath

First, if the current active contract buyer does not close, then a backup contract becomes the active contract, knocking out competitive buyers before they have a chance to get started. The more sought after a property is, the more significantly this benefit is, but it is always a benefit as it only takes one buyer to knock you out of the process. Oh, by the way, that could be a backup offer being submitting while you’re thinking about it. Just saying…

Second, and I think more powerfully, a backup contract in place increases the likelihood of a property again becoming available as it tends to make a seller less likely to grant consideration or additional due diligence time, if asked.

Think about it. Imagine a buyer has been under contract with plenty of time for due diligence. The buyer asks for an extension of due diligence. If the seller only has people saying they’re interested – talk is cheap – then he/she might or might not grant the extension. If a firm backup offer is in hand, that same seller is much less likely to grant the extension.

Allow me to go one better, strategically. A backup buyer that really wants a property can make a hard offer, i.e. an offer with a non-refundable deposit or at least with some portion non-refundable. Why? A seller in a due diligence period will consider that differently than an offer with a new due diligence period. If you want to play to win, this is your best shot.

The post Negotiating: Strategic Advantages of Backup Offers for Commercial Property Buyers appeared first on Hawkins Commercial Realty.

Powered by WPeMatico

Miami Commercial Real Estate News November 4, 2020: Voters Reject Miami Beach Marina Redevelopment, Approve Wolfsonian-FIU Museum Expansion, and Other Election Results; More…

Voters decide South Miami, Surfside and Bal Harbour real estate referendums

Voters weighed in on South Miami zoning rules, Surfside public property sales and Bal Harbour building heights, producing mixed results from Tuesday’s election. South Miami A referendum in the city of South Miami failed to pass on Election Day, so zoning vote requirements will remain the same. South Miami Referendum 1 proposed replacing a unanimous five…

‘The Money Never Stops Coming’: Miami’s Office Market Is Hot, Despite Pandemic

Plenty of people have been speculating about the end of the office since the coronavirus spurred a work-from-home revolution. But Brian Gale, vice chair of Cushman & Wakefield of Florida, has been seeing something different. People have always come to Florida for sunshine and a lack of state income taxes, Gale said during a Bisnow webinar Oct. 20.

Pharrell Williams Is Opening A ‘Spiritual WiFi’ Hotel In Miami

Musician Pharrell Williams is teaming up with Miami nightlife king David Grutman and Dreamscape Cos. to open The Goodtime Hotel in Miami Beach. The 266-room property at 601 Washington Avenue will take up an entire city block, and will have a pool deck, a restaurant, a recording studio and 45K SF of retail. The seven-story property’s exterior was redone by…

Voters reject Terra’s proposal to redevelop Miami Beach Marina with condo tower

By a slim margin, city voters rejected Terra’s proposal to redevelop the Miami Beach Marina, replacing a commercial building anchored by Monty’s Sunset with a 38-story luxury condo tower. According to the final vote tally, 51 percent of Miami Beach’s electorate voted no on a ballot question asking residents to sell the air rights above the retail complex to Terra, which…

Miami Beach voters reject proposal to redevelop marina

Miami Beach voters rejected a proposal to redevelop the Miami Beach Marina but approved expansion plans for the Wolfsonian-FIU museum. Two other ballot questions allowing increases in FAR (floor area ratio or density) – one to incentivize restoration of historic buildings and another to incentivize bicycle parking and help property owners meet new building…

Real estate on edge with election too close to call

From an undisclosed location in Manhattan, billionaire developer and local radio host John Catsimatidis told New Yorkers that President Donald Trump’s chances of winning the 2020 presidential race looked good. “The betting line in Las Vegas is laying 3 to 1 for Trump to win,” he said on conservative talk radio station 77 WABC late Tuesday, while “manning…”

Miami Beach voters overwhelmingly approve Wolfsonian-FIU expansion

A super majority of Miami Beach’s electorate approved the Wolfsonian-FIU’s plans to expand its footprint on Washington Avenue, one of the city’s long forgotten retail streets that is now undergoing redevelopment. On Election Day, nearly 64 percent of city voters approved a ballot question asking them to increase the museum’s Floor Area Ratio, or FAR…

Suburban office demand spikes as working from home continues

Interest in small suburban offices is picking up as more people continue to work from home, and relocate outside of major urban centers. For IWG, the short-term office company, deals for its downtown New York offices have collapsed by 30 percent since the virus outbreak, while activity in southern Connecticut has surged more than 40 percent, according to Bloomberg.

Key Biscayne voters approve $100M bond tied to climate change

Key Biscayne Key Biscayne residents voted to pass a referendum that would allow the village to issue $100 million in general obligation bonds to deal with the effects of climate change. More than 56 percent of the roughly 6,100 voters in Key Biscayne approved the referendum in Tuesday’s general election. About $40 million could go toward mitigating the effects of sea…

JV developing Hialeah spec cold storage facility lands $67M construction loan

A joint venture developing a speculative cold storage project in Hialeah scored a $67 million construction loan. The joint venture between industrial developer Bridge Development Partners and PGIM Real Estate, the real estate investment and financing business of Prudential Financial, plans to break ground on the project later this month…

Miami Beach seeks to end tourism economic dependence

Miami Beach is a world-renowned tourist destination, but commissioners are hoping to shift the city’s economy away from dependence on this singular industry. Covid, Hurricane Irma and the Zika virus are just some events within the past 15 years that have put a damper on visitation dollars, Commissioner Mark Samuelian said at a meeting Friday, and the city…

Greenberg Traurig Assists Atlantic Pacific Communities with Master Ground Lease for Quail Roost Transit Village

Miami office Real Estate Practice Shareholder Nancy B. Lash and Land Development Shareholder Ryan D. Bailine assisted longtime client Atlantic Pacific Communities in obtaining approval for a 90-year master ground lease from the Miami-Dade County Commission to accommodate the building of mixed-use, transit-oriented development Quail Roost Transit…

PortMiami huge project spending list wins county OK

PortMiami projects costing Miami-Dade more than $301.5 million won OKs just two days before commissioners OK’d waiving up to $285.5 million for cruise lines crushed by Covid-19. Commissioners signed off last month on construction deals required by prior berthing and development pacts. Each came via competitive bid, Deputy Mayor Jack Osterholt wrote. The priciest…

Tim Schmand: Spurs Lincoln Road Business improvement district change

When Tim Schmand first visited Lincoln Road in Miami Beach in the 1980s, it was a far cry from the chic, artsy and bustling thoroughfare it is today. In fact, he said, it was largely abandoned. That didn’t stop him from exploring, learning about its every nook and cranny and developing an affinity for its unique aspects, ingenious and idiosyncratic alike. “It was just a magical…”

Buildings of Tomorrow: Future Warehouses

Amid this prolonged uncertainty, everyone agrees that the pandemic’s impacts are yet to be fully seen. Nine months in, the health crisis is about to trigger a global economic crisis, and real estate sectors are reacting differently—some trends, that were already underway, are accentuated, while others are disrupted completely from their original course. One of…

Real estate industry in suspense as election hangs in balance

The presidential election remained too close to call early Wednesday morning, leaving the future uncertain for the real estate industry. Polls in the final days before the election largely predicted Joe Biden would defeat President Donald Trump in what’s been one of the most divisive presidential races in U.S. history. But hours after polls closed, crucial…

Real estate pros say Trump better for market than Biden: survey

Asked if Donald Trump or Joe Biden would be a better president for real estate, many industry professionals surveyed by The Real Deal picked the president, but more in some cities than others — and not at all in Chicago. Some 465 brokers, executives, and others who make their living in the industry answered the survey question: “Which presidential candidate…”

Adding flavor: Badia Spices pays $44M for Sweetwater warehouse

Talk about mixing sugar and spice. Badia Spices bought a warehouse in Sweetwater for $44 million. The Doral-based spices and herbs manufacturer paid about $141 a square foot for the 313,000-square-foot building at 2200 Northwest 112th Avenue in Dolphin Commerce Park, according to a press release. It is the largest warehouse sale by both…

Core real estate funds delay investors from cashing out

Pension fund investors are seeking to take cash out of real estate funds as property values fall, like at Water Tower Place in Chicago (Photo via iStock; Wikipedia Commons) Pension fund investors are seeking to take cash out of real estate funds as property values fall, putting managers of those funds in a difficult position. More than 15 of the 25 open-ended “core” funds…

Integra, partner move forward with $58 million senior housing project in Allapattah

A partnership between a private equity group and a nonprofit broke ground last week on a 271-unit affordable senior housing project in Miami’s Allapattah neighborhood. Integra Investments and Elderly Housing Development & Operations Corp., or EHDOC, plan to invest $58 million to develop the 13-story building at 1396 Northwest 36th Street, according…

Americans stand united on one thing: NIMBYism

Political polarization is at a fever pitch, but Trump and Biden supporters seem to have found common ground on one issue: NIMBYism. Nearly 75 percent of U.S. residents oppose policies to increase housing density in their own neighborhoods, though more than half think the government should provide developers with incentives to build more housing. Opposition…

Mall owners CBL Properties and PREIT file for bankruptcy

The Covid-accelerated retail apocalypse has claimed two more victims. Mall owners CBL Properties & Associates and Pennsylvania REIT (PREIT) filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy on Sunday, adding to the growing list of retail and mall owners that have faced a financial reckoning this year. Chattanooga-based CBL Properties first announced plans to file for bankruptcy in…

Covid survivor: Construction spending up from a year ago

Construction spending this year is up 4.1 percent from last year, according to new data for September. During the first nine months of the year, some $1.058 trillion has been put toward public and private construction, compared with $1.016 trillion for the same period in 2019. The housing sector powered the gain, though growth tapered off in September.

Wynwood nightclub building hits the market

A nightclub building in Wynwood is hitting the market, unpriced. Miami-based commercial brokerage Metro 1 has the listing for the property at 150 Northwest 24th Street. The sole tenant is the nightclub Rácket, according to a release. It is operated by Miami Beach-based Homecookin’ Hospitality Group, led by Angel Ferbes. The owner is HJK Holding, led by CEO…

Russell Galbut and partner launch blank check company, plan to raise $100M

Developer Russell Galbut and investor Michael S. Liebowitz formed a blank check company aimed at raising $100 million to invest in travel, hospitality, fintech, insurance tech, proptech and other industries impacted by the pandemic. The company, called New Beginnings Acquisition Corp. plans to sell 10 million shares priced at $10 each, according to a release. It joins a…

Open air windfalls: Shopping centers breeze past malls in their recovery

Since reopening in May, Miami’s Upper Buena Vista has seen its foot traffic surpass normal pre-Covid levels, according to the shopping center. And the mixed-use “pocket-village” with 21 stores, 12 of which have opened during the pandemic and five more that are slated to open soon, is now back to almost full occupancy. The increase in business for the 60,000-square…

Atlantic Pacific’s plan for mixed-use affordable housing project near Cutler Bay advances

Atlantic Pacific Communities’ plans for a mixed-use development near Cutler Bay, with at least 500 residential units including affordable housing, are moving forward. Miami-Dade County last week approved a 90-year master ground lease for a subsidiary of Miami-based Atlantic Pacific, led by CEO Howard Cohen. The development, called Quail Roost Transit Village…

Fed Releases Proposal for Community Reinvestment Act Reform, Seeks Comments

The Community Reinvestment Act (CRA) is a federal law that requires federally insured banks to meet the credit needs of people in their communities while meeting safety and soundness standards. At the time of its 1977 passage, lawmakers were concerned about unequal access to credit and policies such as redlining, especially in low-and moderate-income…

The impact of COVID-19 on U.S. states’ economic activity : State-level GDP data show the second quarter was much worse than the first

View on GeoFRED® GDP comes in various forms—for the nation as a whole and also for individual U.S. states. The map above shows the change in real GDP in each U.S. state for the first quarter of 2020. This was at the start of the pandemic, and some states were hit hard. The worst declines were in Louisiana (-11.91%), Delaware (-11.43%), Wyoming (-10.53%), Hawaii…

“We are erring on the side of having too much capacity”: Amazon reports massive Q3

How much capacity is too much? For Amazon, the limit doesn’t exist. At least not yet. The e-commerce giant — which has been adding warehouses at a dizzying clip across the nation — is on track to expand its fulfillment and transportation capacity by 50 percent, it said. The company has already spent $4.7 billion on property and equipment. The Jeff Bezos-led…

Creative Ways to Repurpose Abandoned Malls & Big-Box Stores After COVID-19

Many large retail spaces are sitting empty because of retailers going out of business, but there are novel strategies to reuse these spaces Although the struggles of shopping malls and big-box stores aren’t new, as eCommerce has been cutting into their sales for years, the COVID-19 pandemic has been the final straw for many retailers.

Denver-Based Company Pays $13.1M In Off-Market Industrial Acquisition

With a just-closed, off-market buy in Hialeah, Denver-based EverWest Real Estate Investors has expanded its strategy of investing and improving assets in prime industrial locations. Its latest purchase is located at 1101 E. 33rd St., an infill location in the heart of Miami’s Hialeah industrial submarket. EverWest purchased the 160,000-square-foot building for…

Pharrell, David Grutman partner with developer to launch South Beach hotel

Developer Eric Birnbaum brought on star power to launch his Washington Avenue hotel in Miami Beach. Singer-songwriter and producer Pharrell Williams and hospitality mogul David Grutman are partnering with Birnbaum on the Goodtime Hotel, a 266-room hotel on Washington Avenue between Sixth and Seventh streets, which is set to open early next year.

Bell Partners pays $94 million for two Boca Raton apartment complexes

An apartment investment and management company bought a pair of multifamily complexes in Boca Raton for a combined $94.25 million. An affiliate of Greensboro, North Carolina-based Bell Partners, led by CEO Jon Bell, bought the complexes at 5500 Broken Sound Boulevard and 950 Northwest Broken Sound Parkway, according to records. Built in 2018…

The post Miami Commercial Real Estate News November 4, 2020: Voters Reject Miami Beach Marina Redevelopment, Approve Wolfsonian-FIU Museum Expansion, and Other Election Results; More… appeared first on Hawkins Commercial Realty.

Powered by WPeMatico