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

Easing Mortgage Lending Requirement

Easing mortgage lending requirements will provide great assistance in furthering the housing rebound.

Regulators promise thaw in mortgage credit underway

Regulators who oversee Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and the Federal Housing Administration are telling mortgage lenders that they’re ready to cut them some slack, and mortgage lenders say they’re ready to run with the ball.

Speaking at the Mortgage Bankers Association’s annual convention, Mel Watt — who runs Fannie and Freddie’s regulator, the Federal Housing Finance Agency — said a pact with the mortgage giants to be unveiled in coming weeks should ease many of the fears lenders have about extending credit to riskier borrowers.

Revisions

Watt confirmed media reports that FHFA has reached an agreement with Fannie and Freddie on revising the representation and warranty requirements, and said lenders can expect to get more clarity in coming weeks. The revisions will still allow Fannie and Freddie to demand that loan originators buy back a loan at any time when there has been a “pattern of misrepresentations or data inaccuracies,” Watt said.

Fannie and Freddie will be able to bring back programs allowing them to guarantee some mortgages with down payments of as little as 3 percent. Like other loans made to borrowers making down payments of less than 20 percent, Fannie and Freddie will require them to obtain mortgage insurance at additional expense.

Positive News for Mortgage Lending

Mortgage Bankers Association President David Stevens called Watt’s speech, and similar remarks from Housing Secretary Julián Castro, “extraordinary announcements and extremely positive” for mortgage lending, the Wall Street Journal reported.

In his address, Castro noted that even former Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke has said that he had trouble refinancing his mortgage.

“If the former Fed chair is having trouble, imagine the frustration of average folks,” Castro told mortgage bankers. “The pendulum has swung too far in the other direction. There’s been a vacuum in the market and it needs to be filled.”

Inman News 10/2014

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

Downtown Sarasota Vertical Luxury Projects Expand

sansara - downtown sarasotaAnother addition to Sarasota’s vertical luxury market is announced with the 10-story “Sansara,” planned for 300 S. Pineapple Ave. in the Burns Square neighborhood. The newest multi-use development project will feature 17 luxury residential units, and first level commercial space, in a zen-inspired design.  A second floor amenities level is planned to include a pool, cabanas, fitness center, spa and yoga studio.

Residential levels will accommodate two units per floor, ranging from 2,280 to just under 2,800 square feet, while the penthouse is planned to boast over 4,500 square feet, with 14 foot ceilings. Residences will feature walls of glass that open to beautiful Sarasota bay views.

The $30 million “Sansara” project joins a series of planned downtown Sarasota luxury condo developments that include: “Aqua” tower and additional eight-unit condominium planned for Golden Gate Point; 18-story “The Jewel” on Main Street and U.S. 41; the “Que” town homes on Ringling, and an 18-story tower, accompanied by a Westin Hotel, at the corner of U.S. 41 and Gulfstream Avenue.