The Real Deal Miami

Posts Tagged ‘mehmet bayraktar’

  • Narrower Watson Island plan on track

    October 06, 2010 10:30AM

    A 4-1 vote last month by the City of Miami means the remake of the
    southern end of Watson Island by the Flagstone Island Gardens group is
    still alive. It was nine years ago that developer Mehment Bayraktar got
    approval from voters to build a village on the island. Watson Island is a
    man-made split of land that connects Miami Beach to downtown Miami, and
    has long been described as a waterfront jewel. But the southern end has
    remained empty for years. [Miami
    Herald]

    [more]

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  • The latest turn in the long-running development saga on city-owned
    Watson Island would grant aspiring Island Gardens developer Mehmet Bayraktar and his Flagstone Property Group
    another three years to start building its hotel and luxury marina
    complex in exchange for $1.5 million to secure the rights. Flagstone
    has proposed that the payment eventually get credited as construction
    rent once the project gets underway, a move that irked Miami City
    Commissioner Frank Carollo. According to Carollo, that essentially gives the
    developer a free three-year extension on a project that so far has
    failed to get off the ground. Flagstone would pay $1 million in annual
    construction rent under its proposed arrangement. [Miami Today]

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  • Flagstone Development Group’s Mehmet Bayraktar, who is clinging to the rights to develop the long-delayed, $600 million Island Gardens marina and hotel project, has finally managed to pay his $500,000 in overdue rent to the city of Miami. Miami Commissioners had been scheduled to vote earlier this month on whether to cut ties with Bayraktar altogether and find another use for the land after months of waiting for the back rent. Last week, they granted the developer five additional weeks to make the payment after a former Flagstone employee claiming to be owed $675,000 tried to garnish funds held in an escrow account. The employee has since agreed to allow the funds to be released to the city. The payment will buy Bayraktar some more time to get financing together for the project, which has thus far proved no easy task. Miami Commission chairman Marc Sarnoff and Mayor Tomas Regalado said the payment is a necessary step in getting the project to move forward. [SFBJ]

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  • Mehmet Bayraktar, the Flagstone Property Group head who owes the city of Miami $500,000 in overdue rent on the Watson Island property he has been planning to develop for the past eight years, was granted a five-week reprieve today, despite Miami commissioners’ calls last week for his immediate payments. Bayraktar had appeared before the commissioners last Thursday, where he promised to repay his debts by releasing the money held in escrow in time for a special meeting called for today. If he failed to do so, the city was to cut ties with Flagstone and find another use for the property. But when Bayraktar’s former attorney filed a motion in court to obtain those escrow funds in order to recover money she claims he owes her, the commissioners said they would allow Bayraktar until the end of January for that dispute to get resolved. Attorneys for both the city and for Flagstone said the motion was likely to be overturned quickly. If Bakraytar does succeed in coming up with the funds next month, he would still be seeking his fourth extension in eight years for beginning construction on his planned Flagstone Island Gardens complex, which is now expected to cost more than $600 million, and for which his problems with obtaining financing have been well-documented.

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  • Watson Island vote scheduled for Tuesday

    December 21, 2009 12:56PM

    Developer Mehmet Bayraktar of the Flagstone Group and a rendering of his Flagstone Island Gardens complex on Watson Island

    Support for developer Mehmet Bayraktar and his Flagstone Property Group, whose planned Flagstone Island Gardens complex on Watson Island is notoriously financially troubled, is waning amongst Miami officials as the company scrambles to pay back rent on the city-owned land. Commissioners were scheduled to vote last Thursday on whether the city would cut ties with Flagstone, but after a heated discussion, during which Miami City Commission chair Marc Sarnoff said the company had “certain credibility issues” in terms of its promises both in the past and present, the final vote has been delayed until tomorrow, as the city awaits a move from the developer to meet several conditions for its continued presence. The developer has recently been pleading for more time and has offered a $500,000 payment of back rent — unpaid since July — as well as a plan to document its expenditures of $46 million on the project in hopes of getting more time to line up financing. Miami City Commission chair Marc Sarnoff said he hopes the project can move forward and has faith in Bayraktar, but that he is more concerned that Watson Island become a source of revenue for the city. He recommended that the company be required to up its security deposit to cover possible future liens, and make a hefty $1 million rent prepayment in addition to paying the back rent immediately. TRD 1 Comment

  • Miami city commissioner Marc Sarnoff says he will not cut Flagstone Property Group a break on its already overdue August rent for the Watson Island land slated for development. The group has until Nov. 1 to pay its rent before the city can seek legal action. Flagstone’s Watson Island plans call for a luxury hotel and yacht marina, and in exchange for an extension on the deadline for securing financing for the project, CEO Mehmet Bayraktar had agreed to pay $83,000 per month to hold the property. Some city officials have been publicly doubting whether the project will ever materialize, though Bayraktar has dismissed the doubts, saying he has some leads on investors. Meanwhile, Sarnoff has said he would like the city to take legal action if the missing rent payment is not made in time. [Miami Today News]

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  • Mehmet Bayraktar, chairman and CEO of Flagstone Property Group, is still in arrears on rent in Miami for Watson Island, where he hopes to develop a luxury marina, hotel and retail complex, but said the project will move forward when financing becomes more accessible. Bayraktar said the problems rest not with his plans, but with the wider system. Flagstone lost a key development partner this year when ING Clarion Partners withdrew from the project.

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  • Watson Island developer makes payment

    August 28, 2009 02:33PM

    Flagstone Property Group has repaid $100,000 in back rent owed to the
    City of Miami, and its CEO said work continues on the proposed luxury
    marina project there. Mehmet Bayraktar didn’t comment on whether he’ll
    make the $83,000 payment for August but said construction was basically
    ready to go. He said the financing and costs needed extensive revisions
    and a different loan deal, but he vowed to continue the project. [more]

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  • Marina construction on course

    August 26, 2009 04:11PM

    Mehmet Bayraktar, the developer of the stalled Island Gardens yachting
    resort on Miami’s Watson Island, claims he will be able to start
    construction on his planned luxury marina by February. He paid off
    $100,000 in back rent for the city-owned site and said his company,
    Flagstone Development, would be able to retain the financial
    arrangements that will make the project possible. Island Gardens still
    faces claims of $2 million in unpaid legal, architectural and
    construction bills. [more]

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  • Island Gardens payments late

    July 30, 2009 03:28PM

    A resort, marina and shopping center project on Miami’s Watson Island
    is missing payments on the city-owned site. Island Gardens missed its
    June and July rent payments totaling $100,000 for the city-owned site,
    and faces a $236,000 claim for a broken lease at its former sales
    center off Miami Beach’s Lincoln Road. Turkish developer Mehmet
    Bayraktar can’t find a lender for the $640 million development. He has
    until February to start construction. [more]

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