This 1,185 sf retail space is located at the intersection of West Flagler Street and Douglas Road (37th Avenue) in the City of Miami. This is currently one of the busiest intersections in the City of Miami
Space Available 1,185 SFRental Rate Yr $40.51 /SF/YrSpaces 1Gross Leasable Area 1,185 SFProperty Sub-type Neighborhood CenterStatus Active
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This 1,660 sf end cap retail space is located in The Shops at Flagler and Douglas, a Sedano's Supermarket anchored shopping center in the City of Miami. The center is located at the intersection of West Flagler Street and Douglas Road (37th Avenue), one of the busiest intersections in the City of Miami.
Space Available 1,660 SFRental Rate Yr $46.27 /SF/YrSpaces 1Gross Leasable Area 1,660 SFProperty Sub-type Neighborhood CenterStatus Active
The retail center is located on the east side of LeJeune Road (N. W. 42nd Avenue), just south of N. W. 7th Street in the City of MiamiSpace Available 1,800 SFRental Rate Yr $29.33 /SF/YrSpaces 1Gross Leasable Area 1,800 SFProperty Sub-type Neighborhood CenterStatus Active
The project is comprised of a 3,600 sf freestanding building located at 4100 N. W. 7th Street in the City of Miami. This is a high traffic, high density area and is located near a major intersection in the City of Miami. Parking is excellent, with a total of about 30 on-site spaces.
Little Haiti is now an official neighborhood.
City of Miami commissioners unanimously approved the creation of legal boundaries at a contentious and lively meeting on Thursday – a vote that has been years in the making.
The new boundaries are: roughly between 54th Street and 79th Street, and Northwest Sixth Avenue and Northeast Second Avenue.
Advocates of Lemon City, a neighborhood that predates Miami’s incorporation, said the designation could wipe out the area’s history and heritage, the Miami Herald reported. Miami’s first school and library were founded in Lemon City. Opponents of Little Haiti called the boundaries insensitive to the Bahamian founders of Lemon City, according to the newspaper.
Meanwhile, Haitian activists voiced concerns that Little Haiti would disappear due to gentrification in a neighborhood that developers, like Avra Jain, are already active in.
Last year, the first co-working space in Little Haiti opened, MADE at the Citadel. A group of developers led by Thomas Conway spent nearly $1 million redeveloping the MiMo-style 26,000-square-foot building, and invested about $5 million in land in the neighborhood. At the time, Conway called it “mindful gentrification.”
A New York City-based bakery also announced plans to open in a 4,000-square-foot space at 5550 Northeast Fourth Avenue. The owner of Sullivan Street Bakery is partnering with Steven Perricone of Perricone’s Marketplace & Cafe in Brickell, which owns the building.
Commission Chairman Keon Hardemon proposed the boundaries, and said on Thursday that “Everything that we do we say Little Haiti. But we won’t pay the homage to actually identify this community,” according to the Herald.
City of Miami commissioners approved an essential subsidy package on Monday night for the development of a downtown Miami convention center and hotel.
MDM Group is proposing a 600,000-square-foot expo center and 1,700-room hotel on the site of the old Miami Arena and within the footprint of the Miami Worldcenter development district. While the subsidies, a result of months of negotiations, are a step in the right direction for the developer, MDM is still looking to secure key milestones to move forward with construction.
For one, the developer wants to extend the life of the Southeast Overtown Park West Community Redevelopment Agency until 2042 to increase the value of the subsidies, the Miami Herald reported. It needs county approval to push the CRA’s end date from 2030, which would value MDM’s agreement at $50 million, to 2042.
MDM also wants to re-establish the “Global Agreement” from the mid-2000s that helped fund projects like the PortMiami Tunnel and Marlins Park, the Herald reported. The developer would need to collect 95 percent of its property taxes back through the agreement, Javier Fernandez, the firm’s attorney, told the newspaper.
In March, commissioners sent MDM back to the drawing board on its proposal, instructing the developer to offer stronger community benefits. Monday’s proposal includes higher wages, construction jobs earmarked for local residents and the funding of a culinary institute and other programs.
Moishe Mana hopes to lure a slew of innovative companies and trade groups to his 30-acre campus in the Wynwood neighborhood with a major rezoning proposal he filed with the city of Miami.
Only months after a new zoning code was approved for Wynwood, the New York-based developer is asking for a “special area plan” for his property that would increase its possible density further. Buildings could rise up to 24 stories along Interstate 95 and the total square footage, including parking decks, would be around 9 million square feet, said Bernard Zyscovich, whose Zyscovich Architects is the master planner for the project.
For comparison, the first phase of the Brickell City Centre project now under construction totals 5.4 million square feet, but on a much tighter site of seven acres.
Mana Wynwood runs from Northwest 22nd Street to Northwest 24th Street between Interstate 95 and Northwest 2nd Ave. This former free trade zone is in the middle of a neighborhood that’s been transformed from a manufacturing hub to a destination for art, restaurants and shopping. Mana has added entertainment to the mix by converting a warehouse into a convention center.
That’s only the beginning of his plans.
“The intent and goal of the plan is to develop a unique area on the southern end of Wynwood with cultural infrastructure with an area of trade on western edge, to facilitate increase trade between South America and Asia,” Zyscovich said. “The eastern edges would fulfill the Moishe Mana vision of the cultural component into the Wynwood area in the form of art and culture mixed with significant job creation, trade and other flexible uses.”
Mana saw that it’s difficult for Latin American people in the trade business to connect to SUPPLIERS in China because they’re so far apart, so he believes Mana Wynwood could create an environment for them to interact, Zyscovich said.
Zyscovich said Mana Wynwood would create a campus environment in a creative setting, making it one of the few places in Miami that could land a cutting edge company like Google.
Mary Brickell designed the Roads as a pedestrian-friendly neighborhood, with wide streets, median parkways and roundabouts with native Miami plants. Mary Brickell gave the streets, parkways, sidewalks, and electric lighting to the City of Miami in 1922. All the properties were sold in a single day on February 1, 1923.
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