Zom partnership plans mixed-use project on Ludlam Trail

Zom Living, Scout Capital and Mattoni plan retail and multifamily on 13-acre site

Rendering of Bird Road project

Zom Living, Scout Capital and Mattoni Group paid $36 million for a portion of the Ludlam Trail in Miami, where they plan to build a mixed-use project.

Florida East Coast Industries sold roughly 13 acres of land to the joint venture, which includes 6 miles of unused rail tracks and a 100-foot right of way where the tracks previously were, according to a release.

Zom and its partners plan to build 950 apartments and up to 35,000 square feet of retail space, with construction starting in the fourth quarter of this year. The project would be built in three phases, starting with more than 300 apartments and about one third of the retail space, Vince Signorello of Scout Capital said. Signorello left FECI, where he was CEO, about two years to start Scout Capital.

In January, the Miami-Dade County Commission approved zoning for commercial and residential developments at major intersections along the trail, the Miami Herald reported. FECI said at the time that it planned to launch a Bird Road complex first, where the county is also planning to begin building its own public park. The county had secured about 30 percent of the $100 million in funding it needs for the park, according to the Herald.

The property stretches from 48th Avenue to Bird Road (40th Street), and will connect to the public park. The joint venture will maintain the park area on its land and it will also be open to the public, Signorello said.

The Ludlam Trail runs from Miami International Airport south to Dadeland Station.

Zom, Scout Capital and Mattoni’s project will be completed within five years of groundbreaking, Signorello said. The retail “will skew towards food and beverage and those types of uses” but could also include home furnishings or design-type tenants, he said.

https://therealdeal.com/miami/2019/03/21/zom-partnership-plans-mixed-use-project-on-ludlam-trail/ail/

“There is still a lot of money around” CRE Pros on the state of the market in Miami

Following weeks of nonstop news coverage about hurricanes, real estate professionals were understandably concerned that investors might shift their sights away from Florida and its severe weather events. But the experts who spoke about capital markets and foreign investment during Bisnow’s Miami State of the Market event Tuesday agreed: the impact was almost nil.

Walker & Dunlop Managing Director Kevin O’Grady said he is in the midst of several hundred millions of dollars in deals, with foreign investors flying for tours, and “there hasn’t been a peep about the weather.” “There may be a short-term hangover, especially in the residential market,” O’Grady said, but the hurricane was otherwise mostly a temporary nuisance. “Living at the water has a price, but it’s certainly worth paying it,” Fortune International Group CEO Edgardo Defortuna said. “I’d rather have a hurricane than an earthquake.” He added that, because of building codes that came into effect after Hurricane Andrew in 1992, newer properties suffered little from Irma. As far as foreign investment, Defortuna said that “the urgency has gone out” recently, and buyers are being more selective. That is because cheap properties that had been available in the wake of the recession have all been scooped up and deals are harder to find. Also, he said, the high cost of the dollar is making some investors stick to their own countries until they see a more favorable exchange rate. In past years, foreign buyers often made deposits on projects during pre-construction phases, Defortuna said, but as exchange rates worsened over the construction period, they abandoned deals and walked away from deposits. Now, some projects are requiring 50% deposits to hedge against those scenarios, Defortuna said, and his company has stepped in to offer financing outside of typical bank loans and bridge such gaps.

But U.S. investors are also interested in Miami. “The capital has been taken over domestically,” O’Grady said, a push that is “really dominated by the debt funds … Investors want bondable returns.” As recently as the 1990s, he said, Miami was not generally perceived as a stable or attractive market for growth. Starbucks did not even put coffee shops here because it was too hot. Projects were built, but not with institutional-grade capital. That is changing, he said, as outsiders have come to understand that Miami is a gateway city for foreign capital and people want to live here full time. “Our exponential growth is just beginning,” he said. Foreign investors in politically turbulent nations will always invest in U.S. real estate for stability, the panelists agreed. Baker & McKenzie LLP partner Steve Hadjilogiou said foreign clients come to him primarily seeking advice regarding estate taxes and the tax rate on capital gains. He said he sees a lot of investment vehicles set up as corporations. After the Panama Papers saga exposed how foreign entities use shell companies to dodge tax obligations, companies are seeking advice on how to better comply with regulations. Because of the exposé, “we live in a more compliant world,” Hadjilogiou said. “There’s no time to fool around with tax savings restrictions and other things we saw a few years ago.” Overall, the panelists agreed that Miami is still young and ripe for development. “There’s still a lot of money around,” Integra Realty Resources Senior Managing Director Anthony Graziano said. He said real estate remains attractive, especially with the stock market at record highs and investors wondering when it might start to tumble.

“There doesn’t seem to be an end in sight” for real estate in Miami, O’Grady said. “We’re really at the beginning of our growth cycle,” he said. This is great for investors, but bad for affordable housing advocates, as experts pointed out on other panels during Tuesday’s event. “I don’t know if you can fix it,” Plaza Construction Southeast Region President Brad Meltzer said. “Cities that are 100 years ahead of us, you don’t see any affordable housing in the center of San Francisco or New York City. People have to move out to the suburbs and take transportation in. Property values are not going to go down. It’s just not going to happen.” Dezer Development CEO Gil Dezer said that builders are helping, not hurting, the city as they bring money into the region. “We are basically exporters — without exporting any product,” he said. People cannot take their real estate with them when they leave, he added. “Every time you see a crane go up, it’s making housing more affordable,” Key International Co-President Inigo Ardid said. Consider the current market, he said, which has some 12,000 rental units and 17,000 condos under construction. The supply would eventually make rents come down or at least slow the rate at which rents are increasing. Although, he said, “It may take some time before you feel it.”

https://www.bisnow.com/south-florida/news/capital-markets/miami-cre-market-79613?be=adriano.salucci%40bisnow.com&utm_source=Newsletter&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=wed-27-sep-2017-000000-0500_south-florida-re

Mattoni Group and The Estate Group Break Ground On Latest Venture in Blue Lagoon

Miami, Fl – September, 2017

Mattoni Group, Fortune Capital and The Estate Group have officially broken ground on Soleste Blue Lagoon, a luxury rental community in the heart of Blue Lagoon Miami minutes away from Coral Gables, Miami International Airport and downtown Miami.

The 330-unit luxury class A rental community will be comprised of an 8-story apartment building totaling approximately 222,210 square feet of rentable space. Community amenities boast easy access to public transportation, restaurants and shops, resort style swimming pool, spacious beachfront sun deck, private cabanas, resident lounge and cyber cafe.

The project will feature well-appointed studios as well as one-, two- and three-bedroom units in a variety of floor plans ranging from 394 to 1,073 sq. ft. Additionally, the gym will include a world class fitness studio with club quality equipment, WiFi throughout, 24-hour emergency maintenance, and garage parking with controlled access

Soleste Blue Lagoon is the fourth partnership between Mattoni Group and The Estate Group shifting the Blue Lagoon and West Miami area, including the recently sold Soleste Club Prado and Soleste West Gables. The project has an anticipated completion date for Q2 of 2019.

 

About Mattoni Group: (MG) is a forward-thinking, vertically integrated real estate investment and management firm headquartered in Miami with a growing portfolio of residential and commercial properties across the region and more than two decades of combined experience in the real estate industry – including property acquisition, construction, management and financial analysis. For more info please visit www.mattonigroup.com

 

About Estate Investments Group, LLC: (EIG) A full service, vertically integrated real estate investment, development and construction team leveraging 100+ years of managing client relations in the Florida market.  Please visit www.eigfl.com .