Honey, millennials shrunk the office space: panel

Crew-Miami panel discussed how the young generation is driving trends in Miami’s office and multifamily markets

By Francisco Alvarado | November 15, 2018 11:30AM

From left: Panelist Frank Guerra, Moderator Peggy Fucci, Panelists Ricardo Caporal, and Brian Koles (Credit: iStock)

In a Coral Gables office building owned by Altis Cardinal, anchor tenant American Airlines recently slashed its space by nearly half without shedding any employees, according to the real estate development firm’s founder Frank Guerra.

“American went from 27,000 square feet to 15,000 square feet with the exact same headcount,” Guerra told attendees at a Crew-Miami luncheon on Wednesday. “There’s a lot more telecommuting taking place.”

The drastic reduction was a result of creating flexible working conditions for millennial employees, Guerra explained. The office and apartment building developer joined Mattoni Group founder and President Ricardo Caporal and Property Markets Group brand and experience director Brian Koles for a panel discussion on how millennials are influencing changes in how commercial spaces are designed, residential projects are marketed and amenity packages are configured in South Florida. OneWorld Properties broker Peggy Fucci moderated the discussion.

Instead of a single cubicle for an employee that comes in five days a week, corporate tenants now want work stations that can be shared by two or more staffers who come into the office on alternating schedules, Guerra said. On the multifamily side of real estate, millennials want more business amenities than leisure ones, he added.

“We are seeing more office services on the ground floor where it may have been a racquetball court in the past,” Guerra said. “They even want conference rooms because they want to hold meetings where they live.”

Koles touted the emergence of co-living as another millennial-driven real estate trend that PMG believes will produce profitable results. Earlier this year, PMG announced it was launching X Social Communities, a division that matches roommates in fully furnished apartments in buildings owned by PMG. Over the summer, the company opened X Miami at 230 Northeast 4th Street in downtown Miami.

“Co-living with roommates is not something we invented or is a new trend,” Koles said. “I feel very comfortable telling our investors, ‘it’s a good bet.’”

Millennials also want functionality when it comes to equipping buildings with smart technology, Koles said. For instance, he said, X Miami and other PMG properties have package lockers where deliveries can be dropped off. A resident will get an alert in real time that the package has arrived, along with a code to open the locker. “We only use technology to enable convenience,” he said. “It’s not about making something flash.”

Caporal said Mattoni Group now builds more bike stations, places food warmers in communal areas for UberEats deliveries and provides pet amenities. “It needs to be convenient and practical,” Caporal said. “Five years ago, we didn’t have these things.”

Developers are also more in tune with what tenants are posting on social media websites to hold property managers accountable for problems, Guerra said. “Part of any marketing engagement we do requires monitoring social media and reporting any issues,” he said. “If someone complains, we take note and hold our people accountable.”

The goal, Guerra said, is to minimize any potential damage from online complaints. “It’s an effective way to address concerns,” he said. “One posting and the whole world knows.”

ZOM Living Celebrates Grand Opening of 366-Unit Luxury Garden Apartment Community in Tampa

TAMPA, FL – ZOM Living, in partnership with affiliates of Mattoni Group and New York-based Clarion Partners, LLC on behalf of a commingled fund managed by the firm, celebrates the grand opening of AZOLA, a 366-unit multifamily garden apartment community located on Progress Boulevard near the Interstate 75/Highway 301 interchange and South Falkenburg Road.

This expanding south Brandon/Riverview submarket is home to a growing number of corporate employers, such as Progressive Insurance, Spectrum, and USAA, which is bringing over 1200 new jobs to the area. An array of retail and entertainment venues is anchored by the nearby Westfield Brandon Mall, and has attracted new merchants such as Bass Pro Shop and Top Golf.

“We are excited to celebrate the grand opening of Azola with Clarion Partners and Mattoni Group” said Kyle Clayton, ZOM Florida’s Senior Vice President. “Azola brings a new level of quality to this growing suburban community and we are proud to be part of it.”

Mattoni Group’s President Ricardo Caporal, added, “We couldn’t be happier with the first-class project ZOM delivered. Both ZOM and Clarion partners share the same commitment to enhancing communities as Mattoni Group and we are proud of the work we’ve done in Riverview.”

Azola broke ground Q4 2016, started pre-leasing in late summer 2017, and is comprised of spacious and well-appointed one, two, and three bedroom units in a variety of floor plans ranging from 665 to 1,545 square feet, spread across 25 acres. A large community center contains a leasing office and on-site amenities include a clubroom, cyber café, and fitness center.

Construction financing was provided by Synovus Bank and Hancock Bank.

ZOM Living is one of the most highly regarded luxury multifamily developers in the United States, and has joint ventured or directly developed nearly 20,000 apartment units nationwide, with an aggregate value of over $4 Billion.

Miami investor Ricardo Caporal buys dev site near Westchester

A company controlled by Miami investor Ricardo Caporal paid $5 million for a development site near Miami’s Westchester neighborhood, property records show.

AmeriLumber Hardware & Building Material Inc. sold the 1.37-acre property on Bird Road and Southwest 70th Court to Altis Ludlam Miami LLC.

The lot is just north of a development site owned by a self-storage company and west of the proposed Ludlam Trail, a 6.2-mile trail intended for cyclists and pedestrians that has yet to be built.

Caporal, founder and president of the Mattoni Group, declined to comment about his plans for the site.

In November, Mattoni paid $10.5 million for commercial units at 1010 Brickell Avenue. The Brickell-based private equity group also invested in a handful of apartment projects in West Miami that were geared toward young professionals and working families.

https://therealdeal.com/miami/2018/05/03/miami-investor-ricardo-caporal-buys-dev-site-near-westchester/

Construction starts on new Tampa apartments with rooftop bay views

TAMPA — The Altman Companies began construction this week on Altis Grand Central, 314 studio and one, two-and three- bedroom apartments near the University of Tampa.

Amenities will include a dog park with doggie spa, “chic bowling lounge” and rooftop pool and lounge with views of Tampa Bay. The eight-story towers at 548 W. Grand Central Avenue will rise across the street from the popular Oxford Exchange, home to a restaurant, bookstore, coffeehouse and gift shop.

Boca Raton-based Altman, which has eight other apartment communities in Florida including in Lutz and Wesley Chapel, is partnering on Altis Grand Central with Mattoni Group, a Miami investment real estate firm.

http://www.tbo.com/news/business/realestate/construction-starts-on-new-tampa-apartments-with-rooftop-bay-views/2344187

Mattoni Group closes on commercial units at 1010 Brickell

The developers of 1010 Brickell just sold two commercial units to Mattoni Group for $10.5 million, property records show.

Mattoni put the units under contract about three years ago, president Ricardo Caporal said. They total 11,283 square feet with an additional 1,976 square feet of outdoor space. Mattoni secured leases with the Halal Guys of New York City, an undisclosed national tenant and an undisclosed local restaurant, Caporal said. A 3,346-square-foot space is still available for lease.

Asking rents for the four units averaged about $100 per square foot, triple net. Comras Company’s Michael Comras, Jonathan Carter and Spencer Young represented Mattoni in the leases.

“Our plan is to create a triple-net credit tenant environment and hold it for a very long time,” Caporal said. Retail and restaurant rents in the Design District and on Lincoln Road are much higher, he added.

“We still think there’s a lot of rent growth in the area,” Caporal said.

Key International and 13th Floor Investments delivered the 50-story, 389-unit condo tower in August at 99 percent sold. They also recently paid off the $75.7 million construction loan, according to a spokesperson.

http://bit.ly/2him1gh

The Halal Guys Opening 2 Miami Restaurants

The countdown to the best chicken and gyro combo platters in Miami is on! The Halal Guys will open its newest restaurants in South Miami near the University of Miami at 5966 South Dixie Highway. Soon to follow will be their second location at 1010 Brickell Avenue.

Miami-based investment real estate firm Mattoni Group is excited to welcome the famed NYC eatery as one of the first retail tenants in the building. “Since Brickell is a growing metropolitan residential community, the area has a high density of residents, making it a desirable location for retailers,” said Mattoni Group Founder and President Ricardo Caporal.

There will be more fun than falafel at the Grand Opening events, both slated for Fall 2017. The first 100 people to enter the restaurant get a special The Halal Guys tumbler, which earns them free drink refills for LIFE! Throughout the day, the crew will be serving up more than their specialty sandwiches and platters – lucky diners will have the chance to get The Halal Guys t-shirts and sunglasses, plus exclusive rewards cards that include free food prizes!

The Halal Guys legend began nearly three decades ago in New York City, when the three founding business partners learned there was a huge demand from New York cab drivers looking for American Halal food. An immediate success, The Halal Guys is well known for their famous chicken and gyro over rice platter and signature white and hot sauces. Even today, diners across the world will wait in long lines just to enjoy their unique and delicious food.

http://www.prweb.com/releases/2017/06/prweb14462937.htm#!

Publix buys West Miami store from Brandon Partners for $23M

Publix just closed on the purchase of a new West Miami location for $23.2 million, according to data from Real Capital Analytics. 

Orlando-based Brandon Partners sold the three-story building at 1500 Southwest 57th Avenue to the Lakeland-based grocer, partner Steve Brandon confirmed. The deal, which has not yet cleared public records, was first reported by the South Florida Business Journal.

The 110,905-square-foot building was completed last year and includes parking on the second and third floors and a 41,000-square-foot Publix. It sold for $210 per square foot for the entire building, and about $565 per square foot for the grocery store.

Imperial Orion LLC, an affiliate of Brandon Partners, paid $4.6 million for the 1.9-acre property in 2013. The commercial real estate firm built the store to sell it to Publix, a deal that closed on Wednesday. No brokers were involved in the deal, Brandon said.

West Miami, a 0.7-square-mile city west of Coral Gables and east of Westchester, recorded its biggest deal ever last year when a new apartment complex sold for $57.4 million. Chicago-based Waterton bought Soleste West Gables, a 206-unit complex at 2101 Ludlam Road, in September for about $279,000 from Estate Investments Group, Fortune Capital Partners and Mattoni Group. The developers have more multifamily projects in the works, and expect to more than double West Miami’s property values by 2019.

A CVS-leased building at 2393 Southwest 67th Avenue, also in West Miami, traded hands in July for $12.5 million.

Publix has been acquiring more of its stores over the last few years. Earlier this month, a joint venture between grocer and Echo Realty paid $29.6 million for Pompano Plaza, a Publix-anchored shopping center in Pompano Beach.

Neighbors want Miami commission to scuttle part of Avra Jain and Mattoni’s Bayside Motor Inn redevelopment

UPDATED May 9, 6:15 p.m.: Miami activist Elvis Cruz and the Morningside Civic Association are hoping to put the kibosh on Avra Jain and the Mattoni Group’s plans to demolish a building tied to the redevelopment of the Bayside Motor Inn site.

Cruz and the association are asking the Miami City Commission to overturn a February vote by the Miami Historic and Environmental Protection Board that authorized tearing down a 6,430-square-foot structure at 5125 Biscayne Boulevard.

The appeal was scheduled for the commission’s planning and zoning agenda on Thursday, but it has been pushed back to May 25.

The developer 5101 RE CO LLC, a partnership between Mattoni Group and Avra Jain, wants to replace the existing building with a new three-story building totaling 18,994 square feet that would have ground floor retail and offices on the top two floors. The board also approved the renovation of the three-story hotel at 5101 Biscayne Boulevard. Both parcels are located next to one another in Miami’s MiMo neighborhood.

“Avra Jain has an amazing track record at preserving and redeveloping in the MiMo Historic District,” said 5101 RE CO lawyer Iris Escarra. “Mr. Cruz’s appeal, in our opinion, is unwarranted and violates the settlement agreement entered into in 2014 when Avra agreed to build in accordance with the current regulations and give up the 8 Story vested project.”

In an email, Cruz said he was too busy to comment immediately.

At the February preservation board meeting, Jain also explained to the board members that the 5125 building had sustained significant fire, water and termite damage, necessitating the teardown. “I can tell you without a doubt that the building is not worth saving,” she said at the time.

Jain bought the properties in 2013 and sold them in June of last year for $4.05 million to Mattoni Group’s 5101 RE CO, but has remained on board as a co-developer. The Bayside Motor Inn was built in 1952 and has 40 rooms in a 13,511-square-foot building. The partnership plans to convert the ground floor into restaurants, enhance the courtyard and keep a small number of hotel rooms on the second floor.

Historic Miami redevelopments: Jain proposes changes to MiMo hotel, revamp for Design District building

Developers for two major redevelopment proposals will seek final approval for their projects before the Miami Historic and Environmental Preservation Board on Feb. 7. One partnership aims to build a hotel redevelopment in MiMo with neighborhood pioneer Avra Jain and another applicant wants convert a building near the Design District to full retail.

The MiMo (Miami Modern) neighborhood along Biscayne Boulevard north of downtown Miami has attracted new restaurants and retail as older properties, such as Jain’s Vagabond Hotel, have been revamped. Now she wants to take the Bayside Motor Inn at 5101 and 5125 Biscayne Blvd., which has been closed for several years, and reinvigorate the site with retail, restaurants and offices.

Built in 1952, the two-story hotel totals 13,511 square feet and previously had 40 rooms. A company controlled by Jain sold the 29,360-square-foot site in June 2016 for $4.05 million to 5101 RE CO LLC. The owner is a partnership between Ricardo Caporal-led Mattoni Group and Jain.

Urban Robot Associates designed the MiMo project.

Under the plans, the 6,430-square-foot building on the northern part of the site along Northeast 52nd Street would be torn down, as the city considers it a non-contributing structure to the historic building to the south. That building is in really bad shape, Jain said.

In its place, the developer would build a three-story building of 18,994 square feet. The new building would have 4,908 square feet of retail on the ground floor and 14,086 square feet of offices on the top two floors.

“They want more activity for neighborhood and office is a really nice fit,” Jain said. “People are there during the day and supporting the restaurants and local businesses.”

Jain recently converted the South Pacific hotel in MiMo to office space and her group owns the 5555 Biscayne Blvd. office building. She said office tenants like MiMo because it’s easier to access than Brickell and many restaurants that are attractive to employees.

The developer would provide 60 parking spaces, including 37 in a new underground garage. While the underground garage would be expensive, Jain said it was important to provide enough parking so the project doesn’t negatively impact the neighborhood.

“Because of the rents and demand for retail and office in the neighborhood, the market has told us it supports spending the money,” Jain said. “Given the demand for Biscayne Boulevard, a lot more things are economically feasible to do.”

As for the existing Bayside Motor Inn building, Jain said she would convert its ground floor to restaurants, enhance the courtyard, and keep two or three hotel rooms on the top floor. That building previously had 18 hotel rooms.

“You can’t really run a hotel with 18 rooms,” Jain said. “The fixed costs are too high. That is why a lot of motels lend themselves to adaptive reuse.”

Attorney Iris Escarra represents 5101 RE CO LLC.

Building near Design District could be converted to retail

A building in the Buena Vista East Historic District, on the northern end of the Design District, could be almost completely revamped for retail use.

Luxury retailers have flocked to the Design District as Craig Robins’ Dacra has redeveloped much of the neighborhood. The district has some of the highest rents and property values in Florida.

In April 2016, 4141 Design LLC, owned by Remy Jacobson, paid $10.5 million for the 15,901-square-foot office building at 4141 N. Miami Ave. The three-story building was built on the 9,700-square-foot lot in 1961. In November 2016, the developer started interior demolition of the building, according to county records.

The application seeks to lift a restriction that the building have no more than 4,000 square feet of commercial use so that it could be completely retail in use.

Under the plan crafted by Shulman + Associates, the developer would remove the building’s existing masonry and replace it with glass panels, leaving only the “turning forks” that line its walls. A rooftop terrace would be built for open-air events. The stairs at the main entrance would be removed and the doorway would be lowered to ground level. Behind the building on the east side, the developer would add two entrances, new windows and balconies and a garden patio. On the south side of the building, the developer would install a window spanning all three stories.

Essentially, the enclosed office building could become a glass-encased retail space.

Miami attorney Ryan Bailine, who represents 4141 Design LLC in the application, declined comment.

http://www.bizjournals.com/southflorida/news/2017/02/03/historic-miami-redevelopments-jain-proposes.html

Recently built apartment complex sold to investor

The recently completed Soleste West Gables mid-rise apartment complex in West Miami was sold to a Chicago-based investor for $57.4 million.

Gables Gate Tower, a partnership between Estate Investments Group, Fortune Capital Partners and Mattoni Group, sold the 206-unit building at 2101 S.W. 67th Ave. (Ludlam Road) to Chicago-based Waterton. The apartments started leasing on the 2.1-acre site in September 2015.

The price equated to $278,000 per unit.

“We saw West Miami as a natural westerly extension of Coral Gables and an untapped paradise for institutional investments,” said Robert Suris, principal of Estate Investments Group. “The area had been entirely overlooked for years and now this transaction elevates the West Miami community to the level of development happening in Doral, Dadeland, Coral Gables and South Florida’s other top markets. Our tenants are largely young professionals with high levels of disposable income and we are confident the combination of strong demand and an exquisite product will drive interest and accelerate the market’s growth even further.”

Estate Investments Group, Fortune Capital Partners and Mattoni Group are also building the 196-unit Soleste Club Prado, the 221-unit Soleste West Gables II, the 329-unit Soleste Alameda and the 290-unit Soleste Valentina View in the West Miami area.

“Soleste West Gables presented us an opportunity to acquire a Class-A new construction community at an attractive basis in a centrally located submarket poised to experience meaningful growth,” said Justin Maturo, Waterton’s assistant vice president of acquisitions. “The property’s location in West Miami offers convenient access to several of the area’s largest employment centers, shopping and entertainment districts and key transportation nodes, making it an ideal option for today’s renter.”

Wateron holds a $4 billion commercial real estate portfolio.
http://www.bizjournals.com/southflorida/blog/morning-edition/2016/08/recently-built-apartment-complex-sold-to-investor.html