Miami board approves 5 major mixed-use, multifamily projects

Projects would add 1,926 apartments between downtown Miami and Wynwood

From top left, clockwise: Wynwood 28, the Allapattah apartment building, Miami Riverside Center, and the Target-anchored mixed-use project in Miami’s Overtown
From top left, clockwise: Wynwood 28, the Allapattah apartment building, Miami Riverside Center, and the Target-anchored mixed-use project in Miami’s Overtown

The Miami Urban Development Review Board approved a slate of mixed-use and multifamily projects that could add nearly 2,000 new apartments and more than 700,000 square feet of office and retail space between the Miami River in downtown Miami and North Miami Avenue in Wynwood.

One development, Block 55, initially faced derailment, however, when the first board vote ended in a tie. But it was later approved. A partnership between The Swerdlow Group and Terra is proposing the mixed-use project featuring 402 market-rate apartments, 154 affordable senior housing units and roughly 350,000 square feet of Class A retail space anchored by a Target. The Swerdlow Group won a request for proposals from the city’s Southeast Overtown/Park West Community Redevelopment Agency for the property at 249 Northwest Sixth Street.

Block 55 also calls for a public promenade along Northwest Seventh Street with retail, restaurants and a city of Miami NET office which drew criticism from board chairman Willy Bermello. He proposed the developer enhance the pedestrian experience of the promenade by creating grand entrances. Board member Jesus Permuy didn’t like the massing on the upper floors of the 240-foot-tall building. When the board voted on a motion for denial, it resulted in a tie.

An assistant city attorney informed board members that a tie vote meant Block 55’s application would have to be continued to the next meeting. Jeffrey Bercow, an attorney for Block 55, said any delay in approving the project would result in killing it. Bercow and another developer representative said a non-approval meant their client could not close the deal with the CRA.

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“We have a required closing date in March,” Bercow said. “If we have to come back to the UDRB that means we don’t get final resolution until 30 days beyond our closing deadline.”

The board ended up rescinding its denial vote and approving Block 55 with conditions that incorporated Bermello’s suggestion and the developer agreed to break up the massing of the upper floors with an architectural element.

The following projects were also approved:

  • Wynwood Haus. A 224-unit multifamily building with 5,200 square feet of retail at 1765 North Miami Avenue developed by TSG Group and Lineaire Group. The development site is located in an Opportunity Zone. The developers paid $5.9 million for the property last year.
  • Miami Worldcenter block E: A 52-story apartment tower with 560 units and 3,100 square feet of commercial space developed by Lalezarian Properties. The Long Island-based firm purchased the 2.5-acre site for $43 million last year from Miami Worldcenter developers Nitin Motwani and Art Falcone. It is located at Northwest Eighth Street between North Miami and Northeast First avenues.
  • Wynwood 28. A 230,131-square-foot mixed-project developed by Block Capital Group and Kushner Companies. Located at 127 Northwest 27th Street, Wynwood 28 would feature 15,797 square feet of commercial/retail space, 44,637 square feet of office space, 40 residential units, 232 parking spaces and 19 bicycle spots.
  • Allapattah apartment building. An eight-story, 116-unit residential building proposed by Pointe Companies. The 168,000-square-foot project would also include roughly 7,700 square feet of retail space, 3,220 square feet of office space, 129 parking spaces and bicycle parking. The site is located at 2323 Northwest 36th Street in Allapattah.
  • Riverside development. A 1.3 million-square-foot project divided into a 20-story office building and a 38-story residential tower proposed by The Adler Group. The development would rise at 444 and 460 Southwest Second Avenue, the current site of the city of Miami’s administrative complex. Adler’s Lancelot Miami River LLC has an agreement to develop and manage the property on city-owned land, which includes a new administrative headquarters. The residential portion will have 430 units.