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.