Developers are launching sales for an
eight-story condo tower in Miami’s Upper East Side, the trendy neighborhood
along Biscayne Boulevard that has barely been touched by South Florida’s luxury
condo boom.
The
105-unit project, at 5700 Biscayne Blvd., will include 45,000 square feet of
commercial and retail space on the ground floor, as well as an infinity pool,
fitness studio and tavern. Prices start at $600,000 for a 1,120-square-foot
one-bedroom apartment and go up to $2.7 million.
Boulevard
57 is launching at a difficult time for the condo market. Slowdowns in Latin
America and Europe have hurt the foreign buyers who’ve fueled the boom.
Developer Hector Torres of Unitas Group Development said Boulevard 57 will be
geared towards locals. That’s despite a 50 percent deposit structure that many
brokers say appeals more to foreign than domestic buyers. Americans tend to
prefer buying homes with financing rather than cash. Torres think that’s no
longer the case today.
$600,000Starting price for units at Boulevard 57
“A lot of
the domestic buyers are paying that today in other developments,” Torres wrote
in an email. “The demand is strong. Buyers love the walkability of the
neighborhood, the schools and the proximity to downtown Miami [and] Brickell.”
One
Sotheby’s International Realty is handling sales. Sieger Suarez Architects will
design the building.
Previous
developers have tried and failed to build on the site. A project called Kubik was
originally planned for the 2.3-acre parcel on the west side of Biscayne
Boulevard in 2008 but was held up as neighbors protested its 12-story height.
Those developers then sold out to the Green Dragon Group for $15 million in
2014 before Unitas took over the project the next year. This is the group’s
first development.
Despite a renaissance of new restaurants, hotels and bars along
Biscayne Boulevard in Miami’s MiMo District, the Upper East Side hasn’t seen
much new residential development.
One
exception is Baltus House, a Related Group project near the Design District
that opened last year. Farther north, at 7880 Biscayne Blvd., developers are
turning the old U.S. Immigration Naturalization Service building into a
mixed-use project with 324 condo units called Triton Center.
Correction: This article has been updated to
clarify a quotation from developer Hector Torres. Torres believes domestic
buyers have grown comfortable with the 50 percent deposit model.
Original content Miami Herald
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