
August 13, 2010
June 14, 2010
Metro 1 Properties welcomes Marcy Kaplan and Lori Brandt!
Metro 1 welcomes Marcy Kaplan and Lori Brandt as Sales Associates at the firm. With over nine years of experience in residential real estate, the sister team specializes in single family homes and live/work warehouses as well as unique/ boutique condos in Miami Beach and the Biscayne Corridor and its neighborhood communities.
Originally from NYC, Marcy and Lori made Miami their permanent home in 1994.
They each purchased homes along the Biscayne Corridor and instantly felt very connected to the area. The two owned a successful upscale boutique that naturally led to the next successful endeavor, as customers used to come in to the store and ask about real estate opportunities.
Both sisters brought in their own unique skills and talents aligned to a deep understanding of the local market, its niches, buildings and neighborhoods to create their winning formula.
Marcy and Lori have been Top Producing real estate professionals throughout the real estate boom as well as in today’s challenging times. “Our goal is to exceed your expectations!” They have a history of unparalleled service and a proven track record of success. It is their commitment to providing you with the highest quality of service while using their expertise in pricing, marketing, and negotiating to get you the best price possible. Referrals from their many satisfied customers have been key to their success. In a city filled with Realtors®, they stand out as reliable, creative, attentive, and ethical. The sister team offers you the combined talents of two dedicated and visionary real estate professionals working full time on your behalf.
April 12, 2010
RadioShack opens for business on Historic Flagler
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
April 12, 2010
Another Deal Closed by Metro 1 Properties!
RadioShack opens for business on Historic Flagler
Miami, Fla. – Metro 1 Properties’ President Tony Cho has leased the newest downtown location to the consumer electronics retailer RadioShack. Located at the corner of Flagler Street, the main east-west road in the Central Business District, and NE 1st Avenue, RadioShack is now occupying approximately 2,400 sq. ft and has recently opened for business.
Metro 1 Properties represented the landlord Sergio Rok and Boris Kozolchyk of Grubb & Ellis and Dennis Kleier of RAM Realty Services represented the tenant in this transaction.
This deal along with other recent transactions involving high profile tenants signals a shift in the downtown retail sector with some positive up-tenanting.
“Downtown Miami is the epicenter of Miami’s bustling urban revival, and Metro 1 Properties is proud to be leading the way to make it a more attractive and inviting place to do business. With more people living in the core of Miami and a healthy workforce population we truly see the potential for our city’s urban core”, concludes Tony Cho.
The real estate brokerage firm has also recently secured a new downtown location for the Restaurant Lime Fresh Mexican Grill® and landed the exclusive assignment to represent the Historic Post Office Building, a National Landmark situated in the heart of Miami’s Central Business District.
About Metro 1 Properties
Based in Miami, Metro 1 Properties Inc. is a full service real estate brokerage firm dedicated to providing a superior level of advisory and transaction services for clients conducting business throughout the world. Metro 1 Properties offers clients the services of a vertically-integrated brokerage with a unique twist: the power of an advertising firm as well. Our services include commercial sales and leasing, landlord and tenant representation, sustainability services, M1 debt and equity finance and M1 marketing. Our focus is to build sustainable communities and effect the redevelopment of the urban core through strategic alliances with private investors, developers, landlords, retailers, tenants and governmental entities and to promote services that are sustainable, always advocating for smart growth. Metro 1 Properties is a member of the USGBC, Greater Miami Chamber of Commerce, ULI, CCIM, ICSC, CIASF, RAMB, and RCA.
For more information on Metro 1 Properties please visit www.metro1properties.com or call our office at: 305.571.9991.
April 1, 2010
A SoHo Visionary Makes an Artsy Bet in Miami
The New York Times – March 30, 2010
A SoHo Visionary Makes an Artsy Bet in Miami
By TERRY PRISTIN
MIAMI — The developer Tony Goldman is known for envisioning thriving and architecturally appealing neighborhoods where others see only desolation or neglect. He was a major force in the revival of SoHo and South Beach, and has invested his time and money transforming small stretches of Center City Philadelphia and the financial district in New York.
Now, Mr. Goldman’s effort to work the same magic in Wynwood, a former industrial neighborhood here just north of downtown and a mile and a half west of Biscayne Bay, is starting, slowly, to bear fruit. Since 2004, he has spent some $35 million to buy about two dozen buildings.
On a recent tour, Mr. Goldman pointed out galleries that have sprouted in brightly painted cinderblock buildings once used as warehouses by shoe manufacturers; a former junkyard that now houses a stainless-steel sculpture park; and a new restaurant, Joey’s, which is named for his son and draws a fashionable crowd. Mr. Goldman has always used restaurants, whether the Greene Street Cafe in SoHo or Lucky’s in South Beach, to get people to talk about a neighborhood.
To provide an incentive to restaurateurs, the Goldmans persuaded Miami officials to ease parking-space requirements. Now Joey’s is one of seven recently opened lounges and restaurants in Wynwood. “He’s the perfect neighbor for us,” said Mera Rubell, an owner of the Rubell Family Collection, which operates out of a Wynwood warehouse. “Not only did he buy properties here, but now he’s bringing life and activity to them.”
The latest buzz-generating addition to Wynwood is the eye-catching display of murals by prominent street artists that Mr. Goldman and the gallery owner Jeffrey Deitch commissioned in time for Art Basel, the annual art fair in Miami Beach that was held in December.
Mr. Goldman provided lodging for the artists, who included Kenny Scharf, Shepard Fairey and Os Gemeos, at the Park Central, one of two hotels he owns in South Beach, and provided the canvas — freshly painted warehouse walls between Northwest Second and Third Avenues — but did not pay them. “I wanted to know that they had a desire to be part of this collective project,” he said.
Mr. Goldman said he sensed Wynwood’s potential the first time he saw it. The area had a critical mass of similar-looking small-scale buildings, a street grid, sidewalks and structures built right to the property line — the essential ingredients for a signature Goldman neighborhood.
“Wynwood spoke to me right away,” said Mr. Goldman, who is based in New York but has offices in Miami, Philadelphia and Boston. “It had an urban grit that was ready to be discovered and articulated.” Another advantage was that the district could be redeveloped without displacing the surrounding Puerto Rican neighborhood, he said.
Mr. Goldman is not the first to invest recently in Wynwood, which stretches from Northwest 20th Street to Northwest 36th Street and from North Miami Avenue to Northwest Sixth Avenue. The Rubell family has displayed its extensive contemporary art collection on North 29th Street since 1993.
The Margulies Collection at the Warehouse, devoted to contemporary works owned by the real estate magnate Martin Z. Margulies, opened in 1999. David Lombardi, a local developer and broker, followed the next year and currently owns 40 properties in Wynwood.
Tony and Joey Goldman have chosen their properties based on their expectations about how the neighborhood would evolve, the elder Mr. Goldman said. “We are planting a forest where there was no visible foliage,” he said. “How a single planting pollinates to adjacent properties is part of the strategy.” He said about three-quarters of his buildings were leased, mainly to galleries.
In their next step, the Goldmans are developing a 14,000-square-foot performance studio in a warehouse on Northwest 26th Street for an arts group called the Miami Light Project; the space is to be shared by several nonprofit organizations.
Mr. Lombardi said Mr. Goldman’s experience and marketing skills had been a boon. “The best thing that ever happened to me was him coming here,” Mr. Lombardi said.
At 66, Mr. Goldman keeps a busy schedule, but his life took a new turn after he received a diagnosis of interstitial pulmonary fibrosis a few years ago and underwent a double lung transplant. Since his illness — and the slowdown in the real estate market — Mr. Goldman has spent much of his time consulting on projects like improving downtown Newark and rejuvenating Flagler Street in the heart of downtown Miami. “What cities are desperate for are ideas that are fresh and unexpected,” he said.
He is contributing his time to an effort to restore the Miami Marine Stadium, a 1964 structure that has been closed for almost two decades, as the centerpiece of a waterfront park.
In addition, Mr. Goldman is planning the next phase of a project in Center City Philadelphia that took 10 years but led to the revitalization of a seedy section between Chestnut and Walnut Streets.
Plans to create another SoHo on the Boston waterfront have stalled, however. Mr. Goldman, who generally avoids working with partners, was brought to the project by the Archon Group, an affiliate of Goldman Sachs. But Archon did not want to wait for the real estate market to recover, he said. “Their goals were shorter term than mine,” Mr. Goldman said. About half the buildings were sold.
Given Mr. Goldman’s track record — which includes the redevelopment of Stone Street in the financial district into a popular restaurant row — few people would bet against Wynwood’s long-range prospects. “He has a superrefined instinct for what creates a great neighborhood and the potential for commercial success,” said Neisen O. Kasdin, a lawyer who worked with Mr. Goldman on South Beach.
But there are challenges. Wynwood’s signature warehouses lack the architectural interest of SoHo’s cast-iron manufacturing buildings or South Beach’s Art Deco hotels. The side streets near some of Mr. Goldman’s properties are lined with shabby housing. Private guards patrol the neighborhood.
The glutted residential market means new housing is at least five years away, Mr. Goldman said. Mr. Lombardi, who sold all 36 units of his Wynwood Lofts condominium development five years ago, recently suspended plans to build a second condo building.
With SoHo and South Beach, the task was to preserve the “irreplaceable assets” that were already there, Mr. Goldman said. “Wynwood, on the other hand, is another story,” he said. “You virtually have to create a place.” Tony Cho, the president of Metro 1 Properties, a brokerage firm based in one of Wynwood’s converted warehouses, said the neighborhood was catching on with Miamians who found South Beach too touristy and expensive. “There’s definitely a demand for something that’s not South Beach,” Mr. Cho said.
Recently, a client of Mr. Cho’s, Moishe Mana, the founder of Moishe’s Moving and Storage, bought eight and a half acres of land in Wynwood for only $5 million.
“I think the Goldmans may have been a little early in buying,” Mr. Cho said. But Mr. Goldman said he always buys early and does not try to time the market. “That’s not my business,” he said.
Robert Kaplan, a principal of Olympian Capital Group, a mortgage brokerage firm in Miami, said the Goldmans had acquired better-quality properties than other Wynwood investors. “He obviously is way ahead of the curve,” Mr. Kaplan said. “He has a low enough basis to be able to hold them, make incremental improvements, and survive or do a little better than survive and be poised for the next move up.”
Mr. Goldman said he had sold only one Wynwood building so far but would probably sell a few others to reduce his debt. Still, he said he was prepared to stick it out in the neighborhood no matter how long the process took. “The work we do is not for the faint of heart,” he said.
New York Times – March 30, 2010
A SoHo Visionary Makes an Artsy Bet in Miami
By TERRY PRISTIN
MIAMI — The developer Tony Goldman is known for envisioning thriving and architecturally appealing neighborhoods where others see only desolation or neglect. He was a major force in the revival of SoHo and South Beach, and has invested his time and money transforming small stretches of Center City Philadelphia and the financial district in New York.
Now, Mr. Goldman’s effort to work the same magic in Wynwood, a former industrial neighborhood here just north of downtown and a mile and a half west of Biscayne Bay, is starting, slowly, to bear fruit. Since 2004, he has spent some $35 million to buy about two dozen buildings.
On a recent tour, Mr. Goldman pointed out galleries that have sprouted in brightly painted cinderblock buildings once used as warehouses by shoe manufacturers; a former junkyard that now houses a stainless-steel sculpture park; and a new restaurant, Joey’s, which is named for his son and draws a fashionable crowd. Mr. Goldman has always used restaurants, whether the Greene Street Cafe in SoHo or Lucky’s in South Beach, to get people to talk about a neighborhood.
To provide an incentive to restaurateurs, the Goldmans persuaded Miami officials to ease parking-space requirements. Now Joey’s is one of seven recently opened lounges and restaurants in Wynwood. “He’s the perfect neighbor for us,” said Mera Rubell, an owner of the Rubell Family Collection, which operates out of a Wynwood warehouse. “Not only did he buy properties here, but now he’s bringing life and activity to them.”
The latest buzz-generating addition to Wynwood is the eye-catching display of murals by prominent street artists that Mr. Goldman and the gallery owner Jeffrey Deitch commissioned in time for Art Basel, the annual art fair in Miami Beach that was held in December.
Mr. Goldman provided lodging for the artists, who included Kenny Scharf, Shepard Fairey and Os Gemeos, at the Park Central, one of two hotels he owns in South Beach, and provided the canvas — freshly painted warehouse walls between Northwest Second and Third Avenues — but did not pay them. “I wanted to know that they had a desire to be part of this collective project,” he said.
Mr. Goldman said he sensed Wynwood’s potential the first time he saw it. The area had a critical mass of similar-looking small-scale buildings, a street grid, sidewalks and structures built right to the property line — the essential ingredients for a signature Goldman neighborhood.
“Wynwood spoke to me right away,” said Mr. Goldman, who is based in New York but has offices in Miami, Philadelphia and Boston. “It had an urban grit that was ready to be discovered and articulated.” Another advantage was that the district could be redeveloped without displacing the surrounding Puerto Rican neighborhood, he said.
Mr. Goldman is not the first to invest recently in Wynwood, which stretches from Northwest 20th Street to Northwest 36th Street and from North Miami Avenue to Northwest Sixth Avenue. The Rubell family has displayed its extensive contemporary art collection on North 29th Street since 1993.
The Margulies Collection at the Warehouse, devoted to contemporary works owned by the real estate magnate Martin Z. Margulies, opened in 1999. David Lombardi, a local developer and broker, followed the next year and currently owns 40 properties in Wynwood.
Tony and Joey Goldman have chosen their properties based on their expectations about how the neighborhood would evolve, the elder Mr. Goldman said. “We are planting a forest where there was no visible foliage,” he said. “How a single planting pollinates to adjacent properties is part of the strategy.” He said about three-quarters of his buildings were leased, mainly to galleries.
In their next step, the Goldmans are developing a 14,000-square-foot performance studio in a warehouse on Northwest 26th Street for an arts group called the Miami Light Project; the space is to be shared by several nonprofit organizations.
Mr. Lombardi said Mr. Goldman’s experience and marketing skills had been a boon. “The best thing that ever happened to me was him coming here,” Mr. Lombardi said.
At 66, Mr. Goldman keeps a busy schedule, but his life took a new turn after he received a diagnosis of interstitial pulmonary fibrosis a few years ago and underwent a double lung transplant. Since his illness — and the slowdown in the real estate market — Mr. Goldman has spent much of his time consulting on projects like improving downtown Newark and rejuvenating Flagler Street in the heart of downtown Miami. “What cities are desperate for are ideas that are fresh and unexpected,” he said.
He is contributing his time to an effort to restore the Miami Marine Stadium, a 1964 structure that has been closed for almost two decades, as the centerpiece of a waterfront park.
In addition, Mr. Goldman is planning the next phase of a project in Center City Philadelphia that took 10 years but led to the revitalization of a seedy section between Chestnut and Walnut Streets.
Plans to create another SoHo on the Boston waterfront have stalled, however. Mr. Goldman, who generally avoids working with partners, was brought to the project by the Archon Group, an affiliate of Goldman Sachs. But Archon did not want to wait for the real estate market to recover, he said. “Their goals were shorter term than mine,” Mr. Goldman said. About half the buildings were sold.
Given Mr. Goldman’s track record — which includes the redevelopment of Stone Street in the financial district into a popular restaurant row — few people would bet against Wynwood’s long-range prospects. “He has a superrefined instinct for what creates a great neighborhood and the potential for commercial success,” said Neisen O. Kasdin, a lawyer who worked with Mr. Goldman on South Beach.
But there are challenges. Wynwood’s signature warehouses lack the architectural interest of SoHo’s cast-iron manufacturing buildings or South Beach’s Art Deco hotels. The side streets near some of Mr. Goldman’s properties are lined with shabby housing. Private guards patrol the neighborhood.
The glutted residential market means new housing is at least five years away, Mr. Goldman said. Mr. Lombardi, who sold all 36 units of his Wynwood Lofts condominium development five years ago, recently suspended plans to build a second condo building.
With SoHo and South Beach, the task was to preserve the “irreplaceable assets” that were already there, Mr. Goldman said. “Wynwood, on the other hand, is another story,” he said. “You virtually have to create a place.” Tony Cho, the president of Metro 1 Properties, a brokerage firm based in one of Wynwood’s converted warehouses, said the neighborhood was catching on with Miamians who found South Beach too touristy and expensive. “There’s definitely a demand for something that’s not South Beach,” Mr. Cho said.
Recently, a client of Mr. Cho’s, Moishe Mana, the founder of Moishe’s Moving and Storage, bought eight and a half acres of land in Wynwood for only $5 million.
“I think the Goldmans may have been a little early in buying,” Mr. Cho said. But Mr. Goldman said he always buys early and does not try to time the market. “That’s not my business,” he said.
Robert Kaplan, a principal of Olympian Capital Group, a mortgage brokerage firm in Miami, said the Goldmans had acquired better-quality properties than other Wynwood investors. “He obviously is way ahead of the curve,” Mr. Kaplan said. “He has a low enough basis to be able to hold them, make incremental improvements, and survive or do a little better than survive and be poised for the next move up.”
Mr. Goldman said he had sold only one Wynwood building so far but would probably sell a few others to reduce his debt. Still, he said he was prepared to stick it out in the neighborhood no matter how long the process took. “The work we do is not for the faint of heart,” he said.
February 26, 2010
Wynwood Community Economic Development Corp. and RIMCI, Inc. have sold the Wynwood Foreign Trade Zone at auction, bringing to a close nearly a decade of litigation and bankruptcy.
The transaction, which totals 8.5 acres and over 166,000 SF of improved property, represents the largest industrial sale in Miami-Dade County to date in 2010 and ushers in a new era for Wynwood and the City of Miami’s Urban Core.
Miami, Florida February 08, 2010 – Metro 1 Properties President Tony Cho represented the buyer Mannigan Holdings DBA/ GRM Information Management Services, Inc. and Wayne Ramoski, Executive Director of Cushman & Wakefield of Florida, Inc. represented the Sellers of the landmark site located at 2235 NW Fifth Avenue.
Wynwood Community Economic Development Corp., the federally licensed former owner of the trade zone, agreed in March 2007 with real estate company RIMCI, which owned several parcels within the site, to hire Cushman and Wakefield to market the zone as a Gateway Business Center at Wynwood, executive director William Rios said. The Zone includes three industrial and office buildings totaling 166,000 square feet.
The Wynwood Foreign Trade Zone is within 1.5 miles of the Port of Miami and is licensed for duty-free trade with limited tariffs on imports and no tariffs on exports.
The city’s zoning code rewrite, Miami 21, which passed county commission late in 2009, targets Wynwood as a Priority Development Area and would likely be flexible about potential uses despite the current industrial zoning.
The new owner, GRM, one of the largest data storage companies in the US, intends on using the property at least in the interim for their core business, but has long term plans to redevelop the site and make it a destination and central focal point of the bourgeoning and vibrant Wynwood Arts District, which already is home to more than 100 international galleries, cafes, and unique urban spaces.
“This is great news for Miami, especially for Wynwood!” exclaims Tony Cho, President of Metro 1 Properties, a sustainable real estate brokerage and investment firm based in Wynwood, which focuses on urban real estate and sustainable development. “The Wynwood Trade Zone has been a blighted site and true impediment to growth for decades amidst the wonderfully exciting urban neighborhoods of Wynwood, Midtown and the Design District.” concludes Cho.
Based in Miami, Metro 1 Properties Inc. is a boutique commercial real estate brokerage firm dedicated to providing a superior level of advisory and transaction services for clients conducting business throughout the world. Metro 1 Properties offers clients the services of a vertically-Integrated, full service brokerage with a unique twist: the power of an advertising firm as well. Our services include commercial sales and leasing, landlord and tenant representation, sustainability services, M1 debt and equity finance and M1 Marketing.
Our focus is to build sustainable communities and effect the redevelopment of the urban core through strategic alliances with private investors, developers, landlords, retailers, tenants and governmental entities and to promote services that are sustainable, always advocating for smart growth. Metro 1 Properties is a member of the USGBC, Greater Miami Chamber of Commerce, ULI, CCIM, ICSC, CIASF, RAMB and RCA.
# # #
For more information on Metro 1 Properties please visit www.metro1properties.com or call the Metro 1 Properties office at 305.571.9991
September 14, 2009
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: Metro 1 Properties launches Residential M1 Sustainable Homes ™ Division
Contact:
Susie Glass
t. 305.571.9991
sglass@metro1properties.com
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
October 1, 2009
Miami, FL – Commercial real estate firm Metro 1 Properties recently announced plans to launch a Residential Real Estate Division under the name of M1 Sustainable Homes™. The vision for M1 Homes is to provide sustainable real estate solutions for residential properties which include condos, single family homes, green developments, residential income, luxury, distressed and rental properties. M1 Homes Division will provide value-added services such as energy efficiency audits to reduce the environmental and financial impacts on homes in addition to providing equally professional services that the firm’s commercial clients receive. In addition to these services, the M1 Homes division will have a special task force focusing on bulk deals, foreclosures, REOs, short sales and distressed residential properties.
According to the firm’s president Tony Cho, “We believe that now is the time to capitalize on the historic residential opportunity that exists in this marketplace and to expand our already successful solutions and Real estate platform to a larger audience. M1 Sustainable Homes ™ will focus on creating more sustainable residential properties, developments and urban environments and providing solutions for the consumer, homeowners, investors and institutions alike, who are all looking to create a more economically viable, environmental friendly and energy efficient world. We are introducing an entirely new approach to the real estate brokerage business, focusing on properties, principles and practices which will produce high returns, quality products and benefit the environment at the same time. It is a fully integrated concept aimed at creating a more sustainable planet and we will be adding tremendous value for our customers and our community.”
The firm is in discussions with top residential real estate professionals and companies and will be launching an aggressive marketing campaign offering competitive splits and revenue-sharing incentives. The goal of the Division is to provide a superior level of transaction services with advanced, innovative marketing strategies and fluency in green building practices. The firm already houses the M1 Green Building Resource Center within its headquarters, a first of its kind in Florida, providing property owners and the community a space to learn about green building products and cost-saving techniques. In addition to marketing and green building efforts, the firm’s strong brand, reputation and image undoubtedly provides associates and customers the confidence in the firm’s new division.
Based in Miami, Metro 1 Properties Inc. is a full-service real estate brokerage firm dedicated to providing a superior level of advisory and transaction services for clients conducting business throughout the world. Metro 1 Properties offers clients the services of a vertically-integrated, full service brokerage with a unique twist: the power of an advertising firm as well. Our services include commercial and residential sales and leasing, landlord and tenant representation, sustainability services, M1 debt and equity finance and M1 marketing. Our focus is to build sustainable communities and effect the smart redevelopment of the built environment through strategic alliances with private investors, developers, landlords, retailers, tenants and governmental entities and to promote services that are sustainable, always advocating for smart growth. Metro 1 Properties is a member of the USGBC, Greater Miami Chamber of Commerce, ULI, CCIM, ICSC, CIASF, RAMB, and RCA. For more information on Metro 1 Properties please visit www.metro1properties.com or call the Metro 1 Properties office at 305.571.9991.
July 21, 2009
CRB Management Issues & Trends: “Green Practices” Still Growing
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| A Publication of the Council of Real Estate Brokerage Managers – Summer ‘09 |
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About CRB Management Issues & Trends Jim Kinney, Ginny Shipe, CAE Katie Dwyer Tel: 800.621.8738 Coles Marketing Communications , This quarterly publication is available as part of The Council of Real Estate Brokerage Managers is a
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An increasing number of property owners are seeking green building Clearly, a firm with green initiatives in place will be more One of the first steps to going green is creating an initiative to In addition, those agents who use devices such as BlackBerrys can Other paperless initiatives I incorporated into my firm are digital As we get documents sent in for pending deals, such as escrow letters When it comes to reducing operating expenses and waste, an easy And let us not forget about recycling! Implement a recycling plan One of the most important elements of branding yourself as a green Get in touch with your local Chamber of Commerce and get involved in There are many other simple green initiatives that you can easily If your firm can afford it, switch out your toilets with dual-flush Of course, some initiatives may be easier to implement than others, Susie Glass currently serves as the Vice
© Copyright 2009 Council of |
July 13, 2009
June 25, 2009
Miami Today – Retail market holding up, though full recovery remains long way off

- Retail market holding up, though full recovery remains long way off
June 4, 2009
Miami Today – New Openings lead to jump in Design District demand

- New Openings lead to jump in Design District demand


At