Sarasota Region – Happiest City in America

Sarasota Region Named Happiest in America

WASHINGTON, D.C. — North Port-Sarasota-Bradenton, Florida, has the highest Well-Being Index score (64.1) across the 100 most populous communities in the U.S., according to the Gallup-Healthways Well-Being Index. Rounding out the top five are Urban Honolulu, Hawaii; Raleigh, North Carolina; Oxnard-Thousand Oaks-Ventura, California; and El Paso, Texas.

Lido BeachThe North Port-Sarasota-Bradenton metro area has been named the No. 1 “Happiest City in America” by the Gallup-Healthways Well-Being Index. The poll reports population growth of 6.4 percent between mid-2010 and July 2014, attributing the cause to employment opportunity and Americans seeking warmer climate.

1. North Port-Sarasota-Bradenton, FL
Poverty rate: 14.4%
2013 unemployment rate: 7.2%
Adult obesity rate: 22.5%
Violent crimes per 100,000: 422.2

Roughly 30% of the area’s population was at least 65 years old, nearly the highest share compared to other metro areas. Many members of the area’s relatively large elderly population are likely retired. Living in retirement does not guarantee happiness, but more free time and retirement living is likely a major contributor to well-being in the North Port metro area. It is also a popular destination for migrants, with the population growing 6.4% from the middle of 2010 through July of last year, one of the faster growth rates compared to other metro areas.

Warm weather is strongly associated with metro area growth, and Florida’s favorable climate is both a luxury for residents and an added incentive for Americans looking to relocate. Strong health indicators also explain the metro’s lead position on Gallup’s Index. The obesity rate of 22.5% in the North Port metro was among the lower rates nationwide.

The Gallup-Healthways Well-Being Index score for the nation and for each community comprises metrics affecting overall well-being and each of the five essential elements of well-being:

Purpose: liking what you do each day and being motivated to achieve your goals
Social: having supportive relationships and love in your life
Financial: managing your economic life to reduce stress and increase security
Community: liking where you live, feeling safe and having pride in your community
Physical: having good health and enough energy to get things done daily

CitySide – Downtown Sarasota New Developments

Construction on CitySide Apartments to begin in April

cityside_downtown_sarasotaSarasota’s Rosemary District – Urban Contemporary Architecture

Rosalyne Holdings, headed by Bruce Weiner of Longboat Key, is developing the project with Ascentia Development Group (ADG) and expects to have a building permit by March.

CitySide is a four-story complex designed with urban contemporary architecture. Phase 1 will offer 228 units on the northeast corner of Boulevard of the Arts and Cocoanut Avenue. Phase 2 will have about 250 units directly across May Lane from Phase 1.

“CitySide will address the growing demand for rentals in or near downtown Sarasota,” said Weiner.” It will also bring new vitality to the area, while maintaining the rich culture that makes the 128-year-old Rosemary District so unique.

The Rosemary District is a quiet area, awaiting development and revitalization to help reach its potential. It’s a part of Sarasota’s urban appeal, just north of Fruitville. With ample land available and the district in close proximity to core downtown amenities, industry experts say the Rosemary District area is ripe for a transformation. A surging interest to build in the Rosemary District has officials confident the density boost will help make developments there more economically viable.

The ongoing plans to revamp the Rosemary District come a midst a rising real estate market, which has pushed demand for condos and rental apartments to near decade highs.

Rents are expected to range from $1,000 to $2,000 a month and designed to meet the needs of a growing professional population seeking Sarasota’s downtown urban appeal. CitySide residences will have one and two bedroom options, along with two bedroom, plus den floor plans. Residences will range in size from 700 to 1,200 square feet.

Downtown Sarasota Developments – New Construction

Echelon on Palm – Downtown Sarasota New Construction

downtown-sarasota-by-nightDowntown Sarasota’s construction boom will continue well into 2015, the result of newly unveiled plans that include another luxury condominium tower and the first new office building in eight years.

In the larger of the two developments, the Ronto Group of Naples plans to build an 18-story condo tower between Gulf Stream and South Palm avenues, investing at least $20 million to compete in an increasingly crowded market for new residential units.

Veteran local developer Mark Kauffman, meanwhile, is preparing to construct a $4.7 million, four-story office building called Centerplex at Ringling Boulevard and Golf Street.

For Kauffman, whose properties include Courthouse Centre and the Hollywood 20/Main Plaza complex downtown, the offices become the latest in a series of new projects in or around downtown.

He already is building Payne Park Plaza, a $1.5 million office and retail development on South Washington Boulevard, near Morrill Street.

The three projects join a post-recession resurgence in downtown construction, with condos, hotels and retail space sprouting from the business district to the bayfront. Ronto Group plans 17 units on a one-third-acre site called Echelon on Palm, executive vice president and co-owner Anthony Solomon said Tuesday.

While a number of new condos are coming online downtown and on nearby barrier islands, Solomon says demand is sufficient for more. “The economy is doing a lot better,” he said. “People are looking for new design and new product, and it’s a good time to launch something.”

The company has purchased a parcel at 624 S. Palm, site of the La Palme Royale bed-and-breakfast, and in March will acquire another parcel at 621 Gulf Stream Ave.

Sixteen floors of the modern design building will contain a single unit, Solomon said, with just over 4,000 square feet of living area. One of the units will be a two-level townhouse on the first and second floors. Parking will be located on the first two floors.

Prices will range from $2.2 million to $4 million, he said, with an average of $3 million. Its penthouse will be the priciest of the units.

The company wants to pre sell at least half the residences before starting construction next summer. Build-out is scheduled to take about 16 months. A sales office will open at the site next month.

This is the first venture in Sarasota for Ronto, founded in 1967 by Jack Solomon and now co-managed with his son. The company has completed more than 10,000 high-rise units, 2,000 single-family homes, several shopping plazas and a hotel, according to its website.

“What attracted us to Sarasota is that it is very similar to Naples in demographics,” Anthony Solomon said. “The site and its views are amazing, and the location is incredible.”

But Echelon on Palm will join a growing field of new projects underway or planned around downtown. Among them: the $120 million Vue on the bayfront, with 141 condos and a 255 hotel rooms; the $31 million mixed-use One Palm Avenue, with 130 hotel rooms and 139 apartments; the $19 million Jewel on Main Street, with 18 units; and the $6 million “Q,” which contains 39 condos on Ringling Boulevard.

Kauffman has filed plans with the city for 30,000 square feet of office space at Ringling and Golf, which would become the first free-standing office project to open downtown since the Great Recession.

“They wanted new, and the locations are pretty incredible for both of them,” said Kauffman, who also developed the P.F. Chang’s China Bistro on Osprey Avenue downtown and redeveloped an office building at U.S. 41 and Siesta Drive housing Fleming’s Steakhouse.

The planned buildings come, however, as the market for new Class A office space remains soft and financing for new office projects remains elusive. During the third quarter, for example, the 2.5 million square feet of existing office space in downtown Sarasota had a 12 percent vacancy. In all of 2013, too, there was net absorption of just 17,532 square feet of office space downtown, according to figures compiled by the Economic Development Corp. of Sarasota County.

Commercial brokers say downtown landlords are now asking about $25 to $27 per square foot in gross rents. “The numbers don’t make sense yet,” said local commercial real estate broker Ian Black. “The market has to turn so that demand will exceed supply.”

Both the Echelon and the Centerplex projects are scheduled to go before Sarasota’s Development Review Committee Wednesday 12/17.

Payne Park Plaza on South Washington Boulevard would contain 8,300 square feet of office and retail space, as well, according to plans. Both commercial projects will be developed on a build-to-suit basis, with a bank occupying two floors in the Centerplex development and a financial firm committing to Payne Park Plaza.

HeraldTribune 12/16/2014

Ringling College Expansion – New Art Museum

Ringling-Expansion-SarasotaRingling College begins major construction on new art museum in Sarasota

The adage, “If you build it, they will come,” has taken multiple meanings for the Ringling College of Art and Design’s ongoing construction of the new Sarasota Museum of Art/SMOA facility. Today major renovation began in the historic Sarasota High School building. And the “they” for Ringling College are not only artists and patrons, but also an executive director.

“The Bash!” will be held on Sunday, Jan 18 on the high school grounds

The SMOA Board commenced a search in concert with the ongoing structural improvements of the space for an executive director to operate the space once the space is finished. Once announced, the new executive director will serve as the figurehead of the new institution.

Structurally, the completion and revamping of the historic Sarasota High School will not affect the architectural or structural integrity of the landmark high school building. The old high school will be transformed into a state of the art exhibition space. With approximately 60,000 square feet, 110-seat auditorium, sculpture court, cafes, classrooms and studios for Ringling College classes and various educational outlets. The Sarasota Museum of Art is projected to open in the first quarter of 2016 and aims to be an enveloping laboratory of artistic expression and learning. It will be an integral component of the Ringling College’s already extensive campus.

To showcase to the Sarasota community the renovation progress, celebrate donors and fundraisers, and to look at what lies ahead, SMOA announced today a winter celebration. “The Bash!” will be held on Sunday, Jan 18 on the high school grounds. “The Bash!” will celebrate the approximately $22.5 million raised and constant support for Sarasota’s future home for contemporary art.

YourObserver.com 11/2014

Sarasota Construction Projects – Sarasota Lifestyles

Downtown Sarasota Construction Projects – Development News

The Sarasota housing market continues toSarasota Bay View show signs of strength: In November, at least three housing projects totaling more than 400 units have emerged in neighborhoods near the heart of the Downtown Sarasota. Currently in various stages of development, the projects have the potential to leave a significant mark on the city’s landscape.

ROSEMARY DISTRICT
1401 Fruitville Road

With the Rosemary Residential Overlay District in place, a second developer is seeking to take advantage of the density bonuses created by the new regulations.

Framework Group LLC, a Tampa-based developer, is proposing a five-story, 228-unit apartment complex along Fruitville Road between Central Avenue and Lemon Avenue. With the project, called Sarasota Flats, the group said it hopes to appeal to a broadening market interested in highly amenitized luxury apartments.

The 3.05-acre site is located within the Rosemary Residential Overlay District, which allows for housing projects with a density of 75 units per acre — three times the previous cap. Philip Smith, president of Framework Group, said the incentive to develop in the area was a significant draw.

DOWNTOWN
711 S. Palm Ave.

On Wednesday, the developer behind a planned five-story development on south Palm Avenue appeared before the city’s Development Review Committee.

The condominium complex would replace a single-family residential home at 711 S. Palm Ave., subject to demolition approval.

With 15 units across four residential stories, the development was geared more toward full-time residents., with a goal to attract the end user who will spend significant time here and live here rather than just spending a couple of weeks in Sarasota.

Although the project is in its early stages, concern is already brewing among adjacent property owners about how their sightlines might be affected if the building is not set further back from the sidewalk.

Seaward Development is currently working on plans to bring forward to the city as soon as next month, with a targeted construction date as early as next spring.

DOWNTOWN
1455 Second St.

A site plan has been in place for 1455 Second St. for six years, but the fate of the project has regularly been in question.

On Monday, the City Commission may have helped keep the project afloat, allowing the developer to forgo required payments to an Affordable Housing and Transit Development Fund.

The site plan, approved under the now-expired Downtown Residential Overlay District, calls for a 10-story building with 168 residential units and 16,400 square feet of retail space on the 0.84-acre parcel. Earlier this year, property owner Jesse Biter said he was uncertain whether he could move forward with his plans without another partner coming aboard.

Since then, Carter Acquisitions LLC has agreed to partner with Biter Enterprises in developing the project. Before an agreement is finalized, however, the group sought to avoid the payments to the housing and transit funds as was stipulated following site-plan approval.

Since that approval, the plans have been modified so more than 130 of the apartments are 1,250 square feet or smaller. Bill Merrill, who represented Carter Acquisitions at Monday’s meeting, said the intent of the DROD regulations was to create smaller, more attainable housing units; the required payments to housing and transit were triggered by the number of units larger than 1,250 square feet.

Before the 3-2 vote to forgo the payment, Vice Mayor Susan Chapman questioned whether the smaller apartments qualified as attainable. Jerome Hagley, executive vice president with Carter Acquisitions, said one-bedroom units should range from $1,100 to $1,500, while two-bedroom apartments will be priced from $1,800 to $2,200.

Aria – Longboat Key Luxury

Luxury and Location – Escape to AriaAria-Longboat-Key

Located on renowned Longboat Key, the distinctive residences of Aria offer a nod to Sarasota’s renowned embrace of Art and Architecture. Five pristine acres will feature a private Gulf beach, unobstructed views in every direction, lush gardens and superior amenities. The gracious floor plans, of the 16 exclusive residences, boast private elevator entries, floor-to-ceiling windows, gulf and bay terraces, fine finishes, flowing indoor/outdoor spaces, security and private garages.

Thoughtful design of this project includes the preservation of the historic Villa am Meer Estate. The 1935 Villa am Meer Estate has been meticulously restored, retaining many of the original finishes, including beautiful handmade ceramic tile floors and intricate stained glass windows.

Features

  • Five-acre beachfront location, with 300-foot on the white sands of the Gulf of Mexico
  • Secured gated access with a high-tech monitoring system
  • Four distinctive open floor plans with private elevator access and 10′ ceilings
  • Grand gulf-front terraces with summer kitchens and bay terraces for endless sunrise and sunset views
  • Glass terrace railings and floor-to-ceiling stacking doors with corner openings create a transparent transition between indoor and outdoor living spaces
  • Historic Villa am Meer – A 1935 estate lovingly restored and recreated into a beachfront Residents’ Club with gathering room, private dining room, wine cellar, caterer’s kitchen, fully equipped guest suite, and covered terrace with fire pit
  • Elevated beachside spa and pool with sculptural overhead rain curtain
  • Poolside Cabanas – private seaside gathering rooms for entertaining or peaceful retreat
  • Private two and three car enclosed garages with owner storage
  • First living level Beach Villas with expanded terraces, direct walk-downs to a private 3-car garage, the pool and beach and fire tables – three with private infinity edge pools
  • A separate service elevator, accessed from the garage, allows for pets, and service access without direct residence access
  • The convenience and security of a resident caretaker

Nik Wallenda’s Chicago Tightrope Walk – November 2, 2014

Nik Wallenda plans to arrive in Chicago on Wednesday to prepare for his tightrope walk across the Chicago River this weekend, a variety of restrictions are being announced, ranging from bridge closures to a ban on drones.

Wallenda, 35, has spent the past three weeks practicing in his hometown of Sarasota, Fla., where he rehearsed on the same rigging that will be used during his stunt Sunday evening. He has often practiced at dusk and employed wind machines to help simulate the conditions he may find here.

A seventh-generation member of the famed Flying Wallendas, he is slated to begin his walk at 6 p.m. and finish within two hours. He repeatedly has said he will not use a harness or a net.

Organizers are expected to cancel the event if winds exceed 50 mph. Current forecasts call for a high of 49 degrees Sunday and wind speeds around 14 mph.

I have trained immensely here in Sarasota and am more than prepared physically and ready to go,” he told reporters. “But the unknowns are, of course, Mother Nature, and that’s really the one thing that we can’t control. I do my best to train in it here in ‘real world’ weather … so I’m feeling very, very confident.”

Wallenda plans to walk more than two city blocks — uphill at a 15-degree angle — between the 534-foot-tall Marina City west tower and the 635-foot-tall Leo Burnett Building. He then will ride an elevator down to the street and return to the west tower, where he plans to be blindfolded as he crosses to the east tower on a tightrope.

Marina City residents have received a set of rules in advance of the stunt, including restrictions on parking and the number of visitors allowed. Residents are also barred from using drones or laser pointers, blaring music, grilling, yelling or taking pictures with flash cameras during Wallenda’s walk.

We are all very excited to be a part of this historic event,” a letter from building managers states. “Marina City will be on the world stage and we want to make a favorable impression, ensure your safety and that of Nik Wallenda and his crew.”

The letter warns that any violations will “be dealt with severely.”

Spectators also will face restrictions, as the city plans to close bridges at State Street and Dearborn Street from 5 p.m. Sunday to midnight. Wacker Drive will be closed on the south side of the river between Clark Street and Wabash Avenue during that same time.

The river will be closed to watercraft from 6 to 8 p.m.

The city has designated two public viewing areas along the south side of the river. The spots will be on Wacker Drive from Clark Street to Dearborn Street, entering from Clark, and Wacker Drive from Wabash Street to State Street, entering from Wabash.

In preparation for the event, the city also will close Wacker Drive from Dearborn Street to State Street from 9 p.m. Thursday to 6 a.m. Friday. The Dearborn Street and State Street bridges also will shut down during that time for the setup of stage and production areas.  

http://www.skyscraperlive.com/360.html

New Life, New Design for Aqua Project Downtown Sarasota

Redesign for Aqua Downtown Sarasota

downtown sarasota condos - downtown sarasota real estateThe luxury condominium Aqua is undergoing CPR.

The project, at 280 Golden Gate Point in Sarasota, is being redesigned in a new shape that will meet setback requirements, said developer Jonathan McCague.

Aqua, with architecture by Guy Peterson OFA, appeared to be dead in June.

Unforeseen zoning challenges” was the reason given by the development team when it announced that the project, with eight high-end residences, could not proceed “as currently designed.”

We tried very hard to reconcile and move forward, and just couldn’t do it,” McCague told the Herald-Tribune in an exclusive interview. “I asked Guy, ‘What can we do? We decided, ‘Let’s start again.’ ”

The original plan is being replaced with a trapezoidal building — the front and rear facades are parallel, with the north wall perpendicular to them. The southern wall will be angled from the narrower front and the wider rear wall, which faces Sarasota Bay.

It will follow the 25-foot setback requirement that buffers it from a neighboring condominium. The new building will still have eight units. But they will be as much as 20 percent smaller, with a corresponding reduction in price, said McCague.

The original units were 3,780 to 6,620 square feet and were priced from $3.3 million to $5.7 million. “The new residences will have a broader appeal with their slightly smaller square footage, translating to a more competitive and attractive price point,” he said.

Amenities including private two-car garages, one boat slip per residence, a full-time concierge, a fitness and yoga studio and state-of-the-art security. Views are of downtown Sarasota, the Ringling Bridge and Sarasota Bay.

The first design used a city-approved 2007 site plan that permitted a second phase to the neighboring condominium. But with Aqua as a distinct project, the 25-foot setback regulation was back in force.

In order to develop the property in the way they proposed, with the setbacks and plans, that still would have to meet that agreement,” Buster Chapin, senior zoning analyst for the city, told the Herald-Tribune in June. “It’s just a technical issue that needs to be addressed.”

It was addressed by starting over.

You couldn’t slice and dice the building and still have architectural integrity,” Peterson said.

We redesigned it and we are really excited about it. The building, in my sense, becomes more dynamic now because it is thinner in the front and has a more vertical sense to it, instead of being more boxy. It has a very clean language.”

The top two floors are penthouses, with taller ceilings. The penthouse floors partially extend over the lower floors. “We are celebrating the penthouses by projecting them out,” Peterson said.

Renderings are being refined and will not be released for about two months.

McCague said he “has his ducks in a row” and that the project will be in full compliance with zoning and permit regulations.

Peterson is the design architect for the project. The working drawings will be done by the architect of record, Parker Walter Group.

The project is being marketed by Premier Sotheby’s International Realty agents Cheryl Loeffler and Joel Schemmel.

Peterson’s original plan of a square building will be shelved at his First Street office, perhaps for use at another site. “Do you have one in mind?” McCague asked.

Sarasota Herald Tribune September 23, 2014

Sophisticated Urban Loft Project Underway Downtown Sarasota

VanGuard-Lofts-downtown-sarasota-condos

Downtown Sarasota Urban Loft Project

Tetra Terra Development (TTD) will build an upscale residential project of just six units in the Rosemary District north of downtown Sarasota.

Vanguard Lofts is being designed by Halflants + Pichette Architects of Sarasota.

Veteran Realtor Frank Lambert of Premier Sotheby’s International Realty will be the exclusive listing agent, said Judy Green, president and CEO of the real estate brokerage.

Vanguard Lofts will be designed with the urban infill philosophy of walkable city environments, with live/work spaces within walking distance of shopping, dining and entertainment venues.

The project will have three loft units and three garden units. The loft are priced from $745,000 for three bedrooms and three baths broad views of downtown Sarasota and partial views of Sarasota Bay.

The loft units will have 2,325 square feet of air-conditioned space. With terraces, balconies and private two-car garages, for 3,503 total square feet.

Loft living downtown sarasotaFeatures include balconies in each bedroom, 20-foot living room ceilings with floor-to-ceiling glass, and “floating” wood stairways to lofts overlooking the living room. The contemporary kitchen and baths will have high-end fixtures.

A fitness room will be on the second floor and a conference/media room on the third floor.

Priced from $530,000, the two-bedroom, two-bath garden units will have a home office and 1,468 square feet of air-conditioned space. They will have 400-square-foot private courtyard entryways, patios, porches, and private two-car garages in 2,280 total square feet.

The garden units will have landscaped private yards, covered wood patios, and 13-foot ceilings with floor-to-ceiling glass, along with a sidewalk entry and street parking.

Buyers will get three hours with a designer to select interior fixtures and finishes, with groundbreaking is expected by year’s end. VanguardLoft.com

Sarasota Herald Tribune Sept 2014

Five of the Top Housing Markets for Executives are in Florida

Where the CEO’s Live

Five of the Top Housing Markets for Executives are in Florida

When it comes to real estate, many chief executives take a sunny outlook: Five of the top housing markets for CEOs are in Florida, including Miami, Sarasota and Vero Beach.

“These guys didn’t get to where they are by making poor financial decisions.” said Doug Grant, an agent with Coldwell Banker in Naples Florida, who says sales of $2 million-plus, single-family homes are up 83% in the first quarter, compared with last year.

Florida is also a popular destination because there is no individual state income tax – a fact that attracts buyers from New York and elsewhere, according to Elana Bluntzer with ONE Sotheby’s International Realty in Miami.

Charles DallAcqua, the 59-year-old chief executive of Leading Response, a marketing-services company, moved to Sarasota, Fla., from Annapolis, Md., in part because it was near one of his company’s call centers at the time. He and his wife, Valerie, live in a 3,600-square-foot waterfront Mediterranean-style home.

Mostly, though, CEOs are attracted to other CEOs, says Barbara Ackerman, a Sarasota, Fla.-based agent with Coldwell Banker. “Once you please one CEO, they refer you to the next,” she said.