Friday, June 14, 2013

Icon South Beach penthouse sells for $15MThe Jills brokered the sale of the triplex with private nine-car garage


A penthouse at Icon South Beach in Miami Beach sold for $15 million to an overseas buyer, according to the sale’s broker, Jill Eber, one half of the Coldwell Banker power-agent pair, The Jills.
“It’s absolutely stunning and completely raw – no bathrooms, nothing,” Eber told The Real Deal. “It’s all glass with 360-degree views,” she said, along with another peculiar feature – a nine-car garage.
The triplex boasts more than 8,000 square feet, including a private pool and elevator, roof-top terraces, huge skylights and floor-to-ceiling windows on each floor, the brokers said.
Icon South Beach was among a trio of Icon towers designed by Phillipe Starck and developed by the Related Group. A 35-story tower is linked to a 40-story tower in an S shape.
Three-bedroom units at the complex list starting at $1.2 million, according to the building’s website. –Emily Schmall
Correction: This article has been revised to correct the name of the building where the penthouse was sold. It was the Icon South Beach, not the Icon Brickell, as was previously stated. The name was misprinted in publicity materials announcing the sale.

Billy Joel sells bayside manse, piano not includedJoel listed the property at 82 La Gorce Circle in May 2012 for $14.75M

From left: 82 La Gorce Circle, Billy Joel
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 Singer Billy Joel has sold his Miami Beach Mediterranean-style mansion for $13.75 million in an all-cash deal, $1 million off its listed price, according to One Sotheby’s International Realty, whose agents brokered the deal.
The property at 82 La Gorce Circle was built in 2004 and boasts 8,881 square feet of living space, including seven bedrooms and eight and a half bathrooms, a wine cellar and expansive outdoor kitchen, according to the MLS listing.
TMZ reported the buyer as Diego Della Valle, owner of Tod’s and a majority shareholder in Saks Fifth Avenue worth a reported $1.55 billion. A spokesperson for One Sotheby’s was unable to confirm.
After six years in the house, Joel put it on the market in May 2012 for $14.75 million, nearly $1 million more than what he paid for it in 2006. An infinity pool runs parallel to the property’s 165 feet of water frontage on Biscayne Bay. Inside the house, second-floor balconies open up to a natural stone and marble, tiled courtyard adorned with arches, fountains, columns and forged iron light fixtures.–Emily Schmall

Serena Williams’ off-court loss in Palm Beach, Tennis star sells five-bedroom house for $105,000 less than she paid for it in 2005

From left, Serena Williams and recently sold Palm Beach house
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Tennis champ Serena Williams sold a Palm Beach five-bedroom house for $595,000, taking a $105,000 hit, Gossip Extra reported.
Williams, 31, quietly sold the investment property in February, the Miami blog said, citing public records.
Williams bought the house at 122 Tranquilla Drive in the neighborhood of Mirasol for $700,496 in 2005. Jameka LLC., William’s company, sold the 4,000-square-foot house in February for $595,000, according to public records.
The new owner is Tracy Muser, according to property records. 

Today’s priciest listing Six-bedroom, single-family home in Miami Beach asks $14.95 million

3140-north-bay-road
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Today’s priciest listing is a six-bedroom, eight-and-a-half bathroom single-family home asking $14.95 million. The 8,355-square-foot home is located at 3140 North Bay Road in Miami Beach. It features a hardwood pool desk, gym, direct access to the bay and dock, split-plan guest quarters and space for a nursery or office. Benjamin S. Moss of Campins Company has the listing. ( Data include 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.)

Today’s priciest listing Ocean-facing Ritz-Carlton condo has a putting green and theater room

The Ritz-Carlton in Fort Lauderdale
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Today’s priciest new listing is a two-bedroom, two-bathroom condominium asking $14.5 million. The 3,833-square-foot ocean-facing apartment is located atop the Ritz-Carlton at 1 North Fort Lauderdale Beach Boulevard in Fort Lauderdale
The apartment boasts a 4,000-square-foot balcony overlooking the Atlantic Ocean, a putting green and a theater room. Dan Teixeira of Realty Marketing International has the listing.   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.)

Rosie O’Donnell says goodbye to Star Island Actress and talk show host sells mansion for $16.5 million

43 Star Island Dr.
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Rosie O’Donnell has sold her Star Island mansion for $16.5 million, $3 million below the original asking price, the New York Post reported.
“Rosie sold the Star Island home because she was hardly getting down there with her kids’ busy schedules,” an unnamed source reportedly told the Post.
O’Donnell, who has five children including a five-month-old baby, bought the property at 43 Star Island Drive in 1999 for $6.75 million from the Ethiopian Zion Coptic Church, the Post said.
She listed the 12-bedroom mansion in one of Miami Beach’s most exclusive enclaves in April, just days after “The Rosie Show” on Oprah’s TV network was canceled.
The 1923 Spanish-style hacienda boasts 11,104 square feet on more than an acre of land, two separate guesthouses, a pool and 203 feet of Biscayne Bay frontage with a large dock.

Bal Harbour Shops founder takes show to Brickell Stanley Whitman branches out to Swire Properties' CityCentre

From left, Matthew Whitman Lazenby, Stanley Whitman and Randy Whitman
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At the age of 94, Stanley Whitman could reinvent luxury retail – again.
Growing up during the Depression, Whitman, the owner and founder of Bal Harbour Shops, learned a precept he continues to live by: luxury is an inelastic good.
The shopping center north of Miami Beach, which opened in 1965, was named last year the world’s most productive shopping center, measured by sales per square foot, on the planet.
“I brought the Fifth Avenue merchandise back to Miami,” Whitman told The Real Deal. The shopping center, the site of the first Gucci and Prada retail outlets in the U.S., drew wealthy Northeasterners to South Florida. “If I’d leased the stores to type of clothing my wife dressed in, I’d be broke,” he said.
“With Miami rated as the third poorest large city in the U.S., what we have here could not exist in 1965 nor today,” he said.
For consumers of luxury from cities like Buenos Aires and Moscow, Bal Harbour Shops, which Whitman opened as a retired U.S. Navy officer in 1965, is synonymous with Miami – a mecca for high-end shopping.
Now the Whitmans are branching out in a joint venture with Hong Kong-based Swire Properties to develop the retail portion of the future Brickell CityCentre, a $1.05 billion mixed-use complex.
Stanley Whitman says wealthy out-of-towners have been Bal Harbour Shops’ lifeblood, and that a new influx of foreign tourists from Latin America, Russia, the E.U. and China is the impetus for CityCentre.
“Our interest in the Brickell CityCentre is very simple: Bal Harbour was the only location available to get this huge tourist business, but now we have tourists coming from the Mandarin Oriental and Four Seasons in Brickell. There’s no change to the concept, it’s just a bigger market, and Latin America and other parts of the world have gotten very wealthy,” Whitman said.
In transient South Florida, Whitman, 94, and his family, including executives Randy, Whitman’s son, and Matthew Whitman Lazenby, Whitman’s grandson, will receive an award from Urban Land Institute for “sustainable retail.”
“Florida is seeing so many projects start and fail. It’s all about the initial returns in the first few years and then sell it off! The Whitmans have been there for so long, it’s more than just the typical retail story,” said Julie Medley, director of ULI’s Southeast Florida and Caribbean district office.
The award is an acknowledgement of what the Whitmans have achieved with Bal Harbour, and what observers and residents hope will achieve with CityCentre – nothing less than a lasting impact.
“I saw the opportunity in the market place in Brickell as extremely compelling — the CityCentre capitalizes on the notion of urban reinvestment that’s sweeping the nation,” Matthew Whitman Lazenby, who joined the company in 2003, said.
Bal Harbour and CityCentre differ on one huge point: parking. Stanley Whitman innovated at Bal Harbour, enraging some by charging for validated parking, to discourage beachgoers from filling up the lot. By contrast, at CityCentre, the MetroMover will stop at a station inside the facility and all parking will be underground, driving construction costs through the roof to provide pedestrians with street-level storefronts.
“My grandfather told me it is the primary responsibility of the leasing or operating agent to give the market what it wants, not what it ought to want,” Whitman Lazenby added.

Chris Bosh’s wife puts kibosh on moving talkMiami Heat center-forward had earlier said he would list his North Bay Road home

Chris and Adrienne Bosh
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Miami Heat center Chris Bosh’s wife has firmly put an end to speculation that the couple would move out of their North Bay Road home, the Sun Sentinel reported. Adrienne Bosh’s remarks follow the basketball star’s announcement that he would look to put the 12,368-square-foot home on the market.

Before facing the San Antonio Spurs in game four of the NBA Finals, Bosh told the Sun Sentinel the decision was due to his wife expecting the couple’s second child, and had nothing to do with his playing career.
But hours later, Adrienne took to Twitter to say: “Our house is def not listed. We are in the middle of building a new nursery.”
Bosh, who was previously at the Toronto Raptors, is neighbors with Heat guard Dwyane Wade, and Wade often spends evenings at Bosh’s home before games, according to the Sun Sentinel.

Tuesday, June 4, 2013

Russian billionaire to level $95M Palm Beach manse

Russian tycoon Dmitry Rybolovlev plans to demolish Maison de L’Amitie at left
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Russian tycoon Dmitry Rybolovlev plans to demolish Maison de L’Amitie at left
Russian fertilizer tycoon Dmitry Rybolovlev plans to level the $95 million Palm Beach property he bought from Donald Trump in 2008 because of mold problems, Gossip Extra reported.
The sale of the 33,000-square-foot property, dubbed Maison de L’Amitie, was the highest ever for a single-family home, netting Trump a more than $50 million profit, according to the site.
Mold has become a “Wal-Mart-size problem,” Gossip Extra wrote.
“I don’t care about the house,” Trump told Gossip Extra. “I bought it for $41 million, put in $3 worth of paint and gave it a good cleaning — and I sold it for the highest price ever for a single family home. I don’t know what he wants to do with it, and I couldn’t care less,” he said.
Rybolovlev, the billionaire owner of the A.S. Monaco Football Club, could chop up the 6.26-acre property, which includes a 475-foot-long beach, into as many as a dozen beachfront lots, the site said, citing an unnamed source.

Miami Heat are big players in SoFla real estate

From left: Lebron James and his Coconut Grove home
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From left: Lebron James and his Coconut Grove home
Miami Heat players are on fire on and off the court, buying and selling some of the region’s biggest-ticket real estate, South Florida Business Journal reported.
Power forward Lebron James paid $9 million for a 12,000-square-foot property with six bedrooms and eight-and-a-half bathrooms on the bay in the verdant Miami exurb of Coconut Grove, the Journal said.
Center Chris Bosh picked up a 12,000-square-foot property of his own on North Bay Road in Miami Beach for $12.5 million.
Also on North Bay Road, Dwyane Wade, the Heat’s starting point guard, paid $10.65 million for a 13,000-square-foot waterfront property.
Shooting guard Mike Miller’s six-bedroom, 9,000-square-foot home in Pompano Beach was sold at auction for $3.36 million, a steep discount from the $5.4 million he paid for the property.
Heat President Pat Riley traded his Gables Estate mansion, which he sold for $16.75 million, for a 6,200-square-foot penthouse at the Apogee building in Miami Beach, for which he paid $11.75 million.
Former Heat center Shaquille O’Neal sold his six-bedroom, seven-bathroom, 18,400-square-foot home on Miami Beach’s Star Island for $16 million in June 2009, after it languished on the market four years.

Sunday, June 2, 2013

South Beach Setai $8.6M condo sale sets record


From left, Setai in Miami Beach and Theory founder Andrew Rosen
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From left, Setai in Miami Beach and Theory founder Andrew Rosen
The founder and co-owner of clothing brand Theory has purchased a condo at the Setai in Miami Beach, setting a new record in price paid per square foot for a non-penthouse unit, exMiami reported, citing broker Kevin Tomlinson.
Andrew Rosen purchased the three-bedroom, 2,521-square-foot unit for $8.6 million or $3,411 per square foot, Tomlinson said, adding that another record sale at the building could take place this week.
The sale represents a 74 percent premium over the median price per square foot paid for the building in the year ended April 30, according to a recent analysis by Douglas Elliman broker Arno de Vos.
The property was last sold in May 2012 for $6.75 million to New York developer The LeFrak Organization.

Terra Group’s Grove at Grand Bay breaks ground

Rendering of one of the Grove at Grand Bay towers
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Rendering of one of the Grove at Grand Bay towers
Miami-based Terra Group has broken ground on Grove at Grand Bay, a pair of steel and glass towers designed in Coconut Grove, Fla., by celebrity Danish architect Bjarke Ingels and landscaped by Raymond Jungles, the father-son developer duo of Pedro and David Martin reported.
The LEED-certified towers, to rise from the ashes of the recently demolished Grand Bay Hotel, climb 20 stories high, twist at a 38-degree angle, and boast 12 by 12 feet balconies overlooking Sailboat Bay, the marina and the Miami skyline.
“Our vision was to create an eco-conscious residential project so sculptural and visually spectacular that it would become a statement for a new Coconut Grove,” Terra Group co-founder David Martin said in a news release.
More than a quarter of a billion dollars of the pre-construction units, which start at $3 million, have been sold, according to Terra Group, “a figure that shows buyers’ eagerness to become a part of this exciting new wave of design,” Pedro Martin, the company’s chairman, chief executive and co-founder said.
Residents will enjoy the services of a multi-lingual butler, on-site chef, curated art gallery, a pet spa and four pools. –Emily Schmall

Leveraged buyout king pays $15M for SoBe condo

From left: Myles Chefetz, Ocean House penthouse and Marc Leder
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From left: Myles Chefetz, Ocean House penthouse and Marc Leder
A penthouse at Ocean House, a 28-unit condominium tower at 121 Ocean Drive in South Beach, was sold for $15 million, or $3,592 per square foot, in an all-cash deal completed late Thursday, the buyer’s broker, realtor Jonathan F. Castañeda of Fortune International Realty, told The Real Deal.
Although Castañeda would only provide the address of the sale and identify the buyer as American, Florida state records list the buyer as PH702 LLC, and the LLC’s manager as U.S. investor Marc J. Leder, the Boca Raton-based co-chief executive of leveraged buyout firm Sun Capital Partners.
Negotiations lasted nearly four months with the seller, celebrity Miami restaurateur Myles Chefetz, who reduced the price from an initial $18.5 million last November to $16.9 million in April before selling the property for $15 million, a 23 percent discount on the original listing.
“The seller wanted to break the record at $3,800 per square foot, but Ocean House just doesn’t have the name recognition,” Castañeda said, comparing the development to the Miami Beach Setai and Ian Schrager’s Residences at the Edition, where a South Florida record was set in March when “As Seen on TV” creator Ajit Khubani purchased two penthouses for a combined $34 million.
Chefetz bought the four-bedroom, five-and-a-half bathroom, 4,176-square-foot unit under contract pre-construction from the developer in 2005. The market crash delayed building, so the deal, at $7.2 million, was not completed until 2009.
Chefetz then invested about three years and $5.5 million to gut and build out the property from raw space, contracting Miami-based interior designer Alison Antrobus, who also designed Chefetz’s Prime 112, a South of Fifth steakhouse and among the top-grossing restaurants in the U.S., and Miami Heat President Pat Riley’s Miami Beach penthouse. Antrobus hired Swiss-Italian landscape architect Enzo Enea to design the rooftop pool deck. A $400,000 Crestron system controls lighting, surround sound, audiovisual, window shades and air conditioning which can be operated with waterproof remotes from the pool.
“The attention to detail on this place is crazy,” said Dora Puig of Puig Werner Real Estate Services LLC, Chefetz’s broker.
Chefetz moved into Ocean House in early 2012, putting it on the market about eight months later after deciding that he would rather live in a house, according to Castañeda.

Thursday, May 30, 2013

Young New Yorkers pick South Florida for second homes


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One Thousand Ocean in Boca Raton
Many New Yorkers have found their second homes in South Florida. And they’re younger than ever before, several brokers told Real Estate Weekly.
Replacing a buyer clientele of mostly retirees are a hipper crowd that is “looking at Miami like they are looking in the Hamptons,” said Jacky Teplitzky, a managing director at Douglas Elliman who specializes in sales in both the New York and Miami markets.
People in Manhattan, as well as New York City suburbs, such as Scarsdale, N.Y., Bronxville, N.Y. and Greenwich, Conn., are looking for Sunshine State properties, where the amenities of a second home are more extravagant, Teplitzky said.
The features of homes include two swimming pools, tennis courts, a parking space or a spa, Teplitzky told Real Estate Weekly.
Stephan Cotton, who handles sales at One Thousand Ocean in Boca Raton for LXR Realty, said that New Yorkers make up the largest percentage of his customer base. They prefer the retail services in Florida to the Caribbean, specifically the luxury shopping that has blossomed beyond the Miracle Mile of Coral Gables, the newspaper said. [REW] –Mark Maurer

Homebuyers paying top dollar for new trophies

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The duplex penthouses at Ian Schrager’s Residences at the Miami Beach Edition sold for $34 million, or $3,800 a square foot, a new Miami Beach record.
Ultra-wealthy homebuyers are snubbing resales of some of Miami’s most prized properties but setting records on extravagant new penthouses designed with them in mind, the New York Times reported.
Responding to an influx of wealthy buyers from Russia, Argentina, Brazil and elsewhere, Schrager and other South Florida developers up the ante with each new project, crowning condo towers with penthouses featuring exclusive amenities.
Nearly $500 million in units have sold pre-construction in Porsche Design’s first residential tower in Sunny Isles Beach, where a smart car elevator will deliver drivers directly into their sprawling condos.
“Everywhere there is a grand property, we have these great buyers, and there is no end to them,” Mark Zilbert, the president of the Zilbert Realty Group in Miami Beach, told the Times.
“It is sort of build it, they will come,” Zilbert said. “We didn’t have this a few years ago. But now developers are building these exceptional properties.”
Meanwhile, the former home of Italian designer Gianni Versace now owned by telecom mogul Peter Loftin, has been reduced twice from its original $125 million asking price, and is now listed for $75 million.

One Thousand Ocean penthouse condo sold for $7M

OneThousandBocaRaton
www.vipoceanrealty.comOne Thousand Ocean in Boca Raton (Credit: Niki Higgins)

A 4,628-square-foot penthouse at the oceanfront condominium building One Thousand Ocean in Boca Raton has sold to an undisclosed buyer for $7 million, the Sun-Sentinel reported.
Known as “The Sky,” the unit marks the third sale of a penthouse there since March. The last of the five penthouses remains unsold – at a $12.9 million asking price – as do two other condos in the 53-unit complex. Its developer, LXR Luxury Resorts & Hotels, said the building may sell out in the next few months.
The unit also features a three-car garage, private poolside cabana, a private elevator and two terraces that add an extra 2,343 square feet.
Stephan Cotton, who handles sales at One Thousand Ocean for LXR Realty, told Real Estate Weekly earlier this month that New Yorkers make up the largest percentage of his customer base.
Last month, a unit there sold for $5.8 million. At $1,425 per square foot, the unit netted the highest resale value at the project for a home re-sold in less than 190 days, as previously reported.

High-end home sales smash records as South Florida market catches fire


a-rod111
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From left: A-rod, 4358 North Bay Road and the Jills team at Coldwell Banker
The very high-end of the South Florida market is seeing a spurt of record-breaking sales, such as the $30 million deal for slugger Alex Rodriguez’s Miami Beach “party pad” to beer distributor Stephen Levin, the Miami Herald reported.
The home, at 4358 North Bay Road, was the most expensive sale ever in Miami Beach, the paper said. But it is representative of the white hot luxury market in South Florida in general, too.
“The market is on fire here,’’ Jill Eber of “the Jills” team at Coldwell Banker, who represented the buyer in the deal, told the Herald.
Her partner Jill Hertzberg agreed: “The luxury market used to be more seasonal. But now there’s such an influx of people from around the world, some of our biggest sales are happening in summer.”
And last Friday in Fort Lauderdale, an eight-bedroom, eight-bath house at 2400 Del Lago Drive in Harbor Beach sold for $17.5 million — a Broward County record.
“The prices have obviously come back in the luxury tier and have now exceeded their highs,’’ a president at One Sotheby’s International Realty, Beth Butler, told the Herald. “Last to drop, first to rally.’’

Friday, May 24, 2013

A-Rod sees $15M profit from Miami Beach home


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Alex Rodriguez’s Miami Beach mansion
UPDATED, 12:47 p.m., May 24: Yankees slugger Alex Rodriguez sold his contemporary Miami Beach mansion for $30 million, netting a $15 million profit and setting and sales record for a home on the city’s North Bay Road, The Real Deal confirmed.
Rodriguez bought the property at 4358 North Bay Road in May 2010 for $7.4 million and poured in an additional $7.6 million to renovate it, Miami-Dade County records show.
The two-story house has nine bedrooms, 11 full and two half bathrooms and an indoor batting cage spread across 19,861 square feet, according to One Sotheby’s International Realty, which represented Rodriguez.
The property also boasts a four-car garage, 16-camera security system and a Zen garden.
“The demand for trophy homes worldwide, especially those contemporary in design, has never been greater,” Mayi de la Vega, chief executive and founder of One Sotheby’s International Realty said in a statement.
The house, which Rodriguez listed last August for $38 million, was sold to a celebrity who lives in Palm Beach, the site said.

Christian Slater picks up $2.2M Coconut Grove villa


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From left: 3618 St. Gaudens Road, Christian Slater
Christian Slater has paid $2.2 million for the Villa Dolce Far Niente, a three-bedroom home at 3618 St. Gaudens Road in Miami’s Coconut Grove neighborhood, the Daily Business Review reported.
Built in the 1920s, the home hit the market in January, priced at $2.59 million and listed with Antonio Rios of Shelton and Stewart Realtors, according to Zillow.
The actor, best known for his role in the black comedy “Heathers,” was represented by Taylor Corey of Coldwell Banker Residential Real Estate, which first announced the deal. The sale has not yet appeared in public records in Miami-Dade County.
The villa last sold for $1.8 million in August 2011, but the most recent owner renovated the home with updated plumbing, air conditioning and a pool, the listing said. The two-story property also features a guesthouse, a misted pool and patio area, and marble floors.
“It was a genuine pleasure to work with Christian and his fiancée Brittany [Lopez] to find them their perfect home,” Corey told the Daily Business Review.

Today’s priciest listing


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Continuum on South Beach (Credit: Condo Vultures)
Today’s priciest listing is a three-bedroom, five-bathroom condominium at Continuum on South Beach asking $12.6 million.The 2,872-square-foot home is located at 50 South Pointe Drive, units 2601 and 2602, in Miami Beach. Carol Ann Rodriguez of Continuum South Beach Realty has the listing. The building has a 23,000-square-foot sporting club, two heated pools and spas and three tennis courts. ( Data include 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.)

$5.2M penthouse sale raises the bar on Brickell


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Four Seasons Residences in Miami
UPDATED, 1:46 p.m., May 8: The sale of a 70th-floor penthouse at the Four Seasons Residences for $5.2 million has shattered the record amount paid per square foot in Miami’s Brickell corridor, according to the seller’s broker.
A “highly recognized European tennis” player paid more than $1,500 per square foot for the apartment in the tallest tower south of New York, where residents live with hotel-style amenities, the broker, Nelson Gonzalez, told The Real Deal.
The penthouse became the most expensive unit in the building, selling for  as much as three times the average per square foot for housing in the fast-growing Miami enclave.
“It’s going to blow open the market on Brickell Avenue,” Gonzalez said, adding that residential real estate prices in neighboring buildings were hovering between $500 and $1,000 per square foot.
The buyer “really has faith because of what is happening in Brickell that the unit will gain a lot of value in the coming years,” Gonzalez was quoted earlier as telling Daily Business Review.
The seller, Miami spinal surgeon Ronald DeMeo, paid $4.15 million in July 2005 for the 3,452-square-foot unit, the newspaper reported, citing county records. The top-floor unit features a master suite and room-sized bath, as well as daily housekeeping and access to the hotel’s spa.

Howard Stern buys $40M Palm Beach mansion


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Howard Stern
Shock jock Howard Stern has purchased an oceanfront home appraised at $40.8 million on “Raiders Row” in Palm Beach, according to Gossip Extra.
North County Road, nicknamed for the high number of corporate tycoons living there, is home to talk-radio king Rush Limbaugh and Nelson Peltz, the billionaire founder of Trian Fund Management.
The sellers are New Hampshire textile mogul Martin Trust and his wife, Diane, the blog reported.
The Trusts purchased the house in 1986 for $4.6 million, Gossip Extra said, citing property records. Floor plans show 12.5 bathrooms, an elevator and a manicured croquet lawn.
Stern’s wife, former model Beth Ostrofsky, fell in love with the 19,800-square-foot manse when she traveled to Palm Beach to look at several properties earlier this year.
Stern confirmed on his show a previous Gossip Extra report that said he was property shopping in Florida, but denied it was to escape New York’s high income tax.

Wednesday, May 8, 2013

Today’s priciest listing..305-484-2559

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5817 Riviera Drive in Coral Gables
Today’s priciest new listing is a five-bedroom, five-bathroom single-family home asking $2.7 million. The 5,454-square-foot French colonial home is located at 5817 Riviera Drive in Coral Gables. It features marble floors, a fireplace and tall ceilings. The fifth bedroom is currently a den and library, but can be converted. (Data include 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.)

Tuesday, May 7, 2013

A buyer from Russia picked up the 4,134-square-foot Grand Millennium pad at 1965 Broadway, near 67th Street

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From left: Gary Green, interior images of his home and Ryan Serhant
The Upper West Side condominium unit belonging to the son of Stephen Green, chairman of the board at SL Green Realty, has gone into contract, The Real Deal has learned.
A buyer from Russia picked up the 4,134-square-foot Grand Millennium pad at 1965 Broadway, near 67th Street, on April 19, according to the listing agent and StreetEasy.
Green’s son, Gary Green, bought the 28th-floor unit for $3.81 million on February 5, 2001 and then an adjacent unit for $949,518 on November 22, 2004, according to StreetEasy. He is the CEO of Manhattan-based building service company Alliance Building Services.
Ryan Serhant, an executive vice president at Nest Seekers International, took over marketing for the combined unit on March 23 from Maxwell Jacobs’ Max Kozower and Stephania Brown. The duo listed the spread for $10.5 million in September 2012 before dropping the price to $9.999 million this January.
The most recent listing price was $9.895 million, but the Russian buyer paid “far over $10 million” in all cash, sight unseen, Serhant said.
The agent and his team targeted Russians who were pulling their money out of Cyprus following uncertainty over that country’s banking crisis.
Serhant, who can be seen tomorrow on the season two premiere of “Million Dollar Listing New York,” spruced up the listing with new photos, a marketing plan and a reduced price.
“Sometimes it just takes the right broker to make a sale,” Serhant quipped.
The deal is slated to close in July.
Kozower said that the seller only got serious about unloading the property until after he had the listing.
“As I’m sure you can appreciate, it’s tough to lose a listing,” Kozower said. “At the same time, I’ve also been the second broker on listings and similarly benefited. The adage ‘It’s all in the timing’ is certainly appropriate in these situations!”
Green was not immediately available for comment by press time.

Star broker’s son inherits real estate legacy


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1000 Museum and its architect, Zaha Hadid
Mayi de la Vega, the founder of One Sotheby’s, and her 30-year-old son Daniel are brokering some of South Florida’s biggest real estate transactions, according to Haute Living.
Launching the company in 2008, amid the housing crisis, One Sotheby’s now operates eight offices and employs about 300 agents, the magazine said.
Despite his youth, Daniel said he has already accumulated 12 years of real estate experience and, as a managing partner at One Sotheby’s, presently manages a $1 billion property portfolio.
Both major art enthusiasts, the mother-son duo is also in the midst of launching the de la Vega Collection, a combination of pieces from both of their private collections, with a focus on emerging, midcareer Latin American artists, according to the magazine.
Their latest project is 1000 Museum, a tower on Miami’s Biscayne Boulevard designed by the Pritzker prize-winning architect Zaha Hadid. “The building itself is a work of art,” Daniel said.

Two decades later, ‘Glass’ tower will finally rise


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Glass, 120 Ocean Drive, Miami Beach
The tower formerly known as Kallisto and later as 120 Ocean will finally rise as Glass, exMiami reported. Over two decades, the building’s blueprints have changed hands three times, from Arquitectonica to Bermello Ajamil and finally to Rene Gonzalez, according to the site.
The original 1993 Architectonica design for the 18-story, 10-unit tower on Ocean Drive in Miami Beach’s South of Fifth neighborhood included a boxy parking garage encased in a color palette that resembled an open crayon box. Gonzalez appears to have scrapped the colors in favor of more glass panels, according to a video by developer Terra Group.
“What was important to us was that the building dematerialize as it goes up, so it becomes lighter, then it starts to almost disappear into the sky,” Gonzalez said. “The building becomes almost a barometer of the environment.”
The project’s landscape architect Sebastian Junger said the design minimizes the use of “hardscape.”
Glass’s motto: “We don’t like barriers either.”

Dolphins’ stadium plans halted after bill sidelined


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Sun Life Stadium
The Miami Dolphins halted plans to renovate Sun Life Stadium after Florida lawmakers failed to take up a bill that would finance part of the renovation with public subsidies, the franchise’s chief executive Mike Dee told a Miami CBS affiliate Sunday.
Dolphins owner Stephen Ross was hoping to win legislative approval for $289 million over 30 years from an increase in mainland Miami-Dade’s hotel tax rate and $90 million over the same period in sales-tax subsidies, the Miami Herald reported.
“I don’t think Steve or any of us knew the condition of the facility was as desperate as it was when he bought the team,” Dee said in a live interview on “Facing South Florida with Jim Defede.”
After a heated debate over whether to invest public funds into a professional sports facility, Florida’s House of Representatives ended the annual lawmaking session without taking up the team-backed bill, the Herald said.
The Dolphins had argued a public-private partnership was needed to make crucial repairs to the Sun Life Stadium if the team hoped to compete in a bid to host the 2016 Super Bowl.
“I wouldn’t want to prognosticate what the future holds but it’s clearly bleak,” Dee said.

Monday, May 6, 2013

Foreclosure cases clog South Florida courts


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Foreclosure cases mount up
Clearing the dockets of foreclosures can appear a Sisyphean task for South Florida’s courts as new filings keep apace with closed cases, the Palm Beach Post reported.
From July 1 through the end of March, judges moved 168,589 cases out of the system statewide, but 143,772 cases were added during the same period, the Post said, citing a new report by the Office of the State Courts Administrator.
Broward County has the highest backlog of cases in the region with 42,992; Miami-Dade is second with 41,681 and Palm Beach County’s caseload stands at 30,272.
A bill passed the last day of Florida’s annual legislative session that needs the governor’s approval gives $16 million over the next two years to keep staff on hand to manage the foreclosure backlog. A separate bill would make it easier for lenders to foreclose on defaulted borrowers.
Forty-one percent of the cases cleared statewide were dismissed, an indication that more homeowners are working out ways to avoid foreclosure, defense attorney Greg Clark told the Post.
Last year’s $25 billion National Mortgage Settlement required banks to boost short sale approvals and loan modifications.
“In my own practice there is a new spirit of cooperation and settlement, in an even and measured pace, that we haven’t seen before,” Clark said. 

Renters getting crushed by U.S. housing costs


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Share of working households with a severe housing cost burden by state, 2011
In the grand scheme of personal finances, your take home pay is like an apple pie. Your bills are the hungry flock of kids banging their fists on the table to get their share.
For renters in America, housing is usually the hungriest of the bunch. Ideally, it would gobble up one-third of the pie –– anymore than that, and you likely wouldn’t have enough to feed the rest.
Unfortunately, one in four working renters watched housing devour more than half of their paycheck pie in 2011, according to the latest Housing Landscape Report from the Center for Housing Policy. The report analyzed the period between 2008 and 2011, when the rate of renters putting more than half their income toward housing jumped nearly 4 percent.
“The growing rate of severe housing cost burdens among renters is not a new trend, but it is clearly an unsustainable one,” said lead report author Janet Viveiros. “While rental costs have steadily risen over the last few years, wages for these working families have not fully recovered from the hit they took between 2008 and 2009. Spending most of your paycheck on rent means cutting back on other necessities, including health care and even food.”
Among working households earning less than 30 percent of their area’s median income (AMI), a whopping 80 percent spent more than half their pay on housing alone. Among the toughest states for renters are usual suspects like New York, California, Florida, Nevada, and Arizona (see map above).
Much of the strain on renters has to do with fallout from the housing crisis of 2009. Homeowners fled their underwater homes and flooded rental markets to downsize, driving up demand on a stagnant supply of properties and sending rental prices skyrocketing. At the same time, the job market floundered and people’s take home pays dwindled –– basically a perfect storm in personal finance hell.
Homeowners who stuck out the crisis haven’t fared much better, but their cost burden remained relatively stable throughout the economic recovery, according to CHP. One in five working homeowners experienced severe housing affordability challenges, versus one in four working renters. However, their income dropped 4 percent between 2008 and 2011.

Saturday, May 4, 2013

Sales to launch at 43-story Brickell condo tower

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1080 Brickell
Apartments in the 43-story 1080 Brickell tower will go on sale this week, exMiami reported.
A Spanish investment group purchased the site for the proposed 328-unit building on Miami’s Brickell Avenue about a year ago, paying $17.37 million, a $7.87 million premium over what the seller, Rilea Group, paid for the property in 2006, according to the South Florida Business Journal.
The site was rezoned last year so that an existing parking garage could be torn down and the new tower put up in its place.
MDR Toledo, managed by Madrid residents Manuel Moratiel Llarena and Maria Moratiel del Pilar Entrena, control Miami-based MDR Real Estate, which purchased Brickell Station Lofts for $17 million in January 2012.

Planned Panorama would be Miami’s tallest tower Mixed-use project by Tibor Hollo to begin marketing next year


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A rendering of Panorama, a project that should be Miami’s tallest tower
A veteran Miami developer is planning to build a tower to tower above the rest. Tibor Hollo’s Panorama, which would go up at 1101 Brickell Avenue, would be Miami’s and Florida’s tallest building, Miami Today reported. 
Panorama would rise 830 feet, with construction to be complete by 2016. The 85-story structure would have 941 rental apartments, 300,000 square feet of office space and 100,000 square feet of ground-level retail, according to Miami Today.
Construction at the site began last year and Hollo plans to start marketing in summer 2014, Miami Today said.
By a height of 41 feet, Panorama would dwarf the nearby Four Seasons Hotel & Tower at 1435 Brickell Avenue, which, at 789 feet, has been Miami’s and Florida’s tallest building for the past decade.
Hollo is also planning Miami’s first “super-tall” tower at 1,010 feet, the paper reported. One Bayfront Plaza has been in the works at 100 South Biscayne Boulevard for years, but construction has not yet begun. Hollo said he would re-focus on that project — and was confident it could go forward — after the Panorama project is complete.