MEET THE 2024 POWER LEADERS 250 – REAL ESTATE

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Daniella Aragon-Andre
Levy Public Relations

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Welcome to Part IV of our Power Leaders 250 online package.

Today, we share executives that excel in the Real Estate field.

Selected by our editorial team, our Power Leaders 250 spotlights winning executives across the tri-county region’s major sectors. Its our way of celebrating the many business leaders that help grow our diverse business market and advance our local economy.

Blanca founded her firm in 2009 and today leads a team of 45 professionals. Together, they have leased more than 15.5 million square feet, including full lease-up at The Main Las Olas in Fort Lauderdale and The Plaza Coral Gables.

Birthplace: Havana, Cuba

Education: B.B.A., MBA, University of Miami

What I enjoy most about my industry: The long-term relationships and friendships, winning on behalf of our clients, and the dynamic nature of commercial real estate.

How AI will change my industry: It will impact the leasing and sales process, streamlining and expediting the transaction cycle, facilitating and enhancing the quality of data and analytics, and driving efficiencies across all building operations.

I positively impact my community by: Playing an active leadership role in industry, civic and philanthropic organizations and by encouraging our team to also participate.

tere.blanca@blancacre.com, 305-577-8851

TERRA BREAKS GROUND ON BAY HARBOR ISLAND MIXED-USE PROEJECT

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Terra broke ground on a mixed-use project in Bay Harbor Islands that will feature condos, an office and a restaurant.

Located on the 1.83-acre site at 1100 Kane Concourse, the eight-story Well Bay Harbor Islands will have 54 luxury condos, 94,000 square feet of offices, a fitness center operated by the Well, and a 4,000-square-foot restaurant.

Condo prices range from $1.2 million to $5 million and the developer said they are 50% pre-sold. They will range from 924 to 3,291 square feet. Units will include aromatherapy diffusers in the bedrooms, a therapeutic soaking tub and a red light therapy panel in the primary closet.

“The Well Bay Harbor Islands will meet growing demand for luxury living and boutique commercial space as more residents and companies gravitate to South Florida, while reviving Bay Harbor Islands’ popular Kane Concourse main thoroughfare,” stated David Martin, CEO of Miami-based Terra.

It will include more than 22,000 square feet of amenities, including a major fitness center with a halotherapy steam room, an infrared and sound dome, an energy cold dip and rooms for massages and facials. It will also feature a rooftop pool deck, lounge, private boardroom, summer kitchen and reading room.

The office tenants would also have access to the fitness and wellness amenities. There would be an outdoor fitness space for the office building.

“With the attention to our health being greater than ever, we wanted to create a one-stop shop for wellness where people can fully immerse themselves in wellness,” said Rebecca Parekh, co-founder and CEO of the Well.

Terra anticipates completing the project in the second quarter of 2025. Miami-based Arquitectonica designed it. Douglas Elliman is the lead brokerage for the condo, while Blanca Commercial Real Estate is leasing the offices.

Miami-based Rinaldi Enterprises of Florida is the general contractor.

The developer acquired the property for $31.5 million in 2021 and made major modifications to a project planned by the prior owner.

There’s been a surge in development in Bay Harbor Islands in recent years as more wealthy people move to coastal Miami-Dade County and seek to live in a secure community near the beaches and the popular Bal Harbor Shops.

CORAL GABLES OFFICE BUILDING NEARLY 90% LEASED

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The offices of a major mixed-use development in Coral Gables is nearly full after six companies secures spaces within the seven-acre complex.

Plaza Coral Gables North Tower is now 83% occupied after two financial services firms, a major law firm, a producer of aviation maintenance cloud products, a global liquor company, and a multinational hotel company signed leases within the 291,267-square-foot Class A office building.

Five of the six tenants will relocate from office locations within South Florida into the North Tower. They are:

• EisnerAmper: 7,737 square feet. The tenth largest accounting firm in South Florida, according to the Business Journal’s CPA list, EisnerAmper will move from its present office at 1001 Brickell Bay Drive. It was represented by Clay Sidner of Newmark in the lease negotiations.

• Trax USA Corp: 16,159 square feet. A producer of mobile and cloud products for aviation maintenance companies, Trax USA will relocate from an office at 2401 S. Douglas Road. Mitchell Millowitz of Newmark oversaw its lease negotiations.

• Hinshaw & Culbertson LLP: 21,376 square feet. The nationwide law firm will move from its office at 2525 Ponce De Leon Boulevard. Shay Pope, formerly of CBRE and now with Stream Realty, handled the lease negotiations.

• Diageo North America Inc.: 8,620 square feet. A London-based alcoholic beverage company with more than 200 brands, Diageo will relocate from an office at 396 Alhambra Circle in Coral Gables. Adam Bernstein of JL oversaw lease negotiations.

• W.E. Family Offices: 9,034 square feet. A fiduciary firm that serves more than 80 wealthy families in the U.S., Latin America, and Europe. It will relocate from its 701 Brickell Ave. office.

Additionally, multinational hotel company Marriott International (Nasdaq: MAR) will open a brand new 2,106-square-foot satellite office in North Tower. Jason Mayo of CBRE represented Marriott. Tere Blanca, Danet Linares, and Andres del Corral of Blanca Commercial Real Estate, represented the landlord and developer Agave Holdings in the lease negotiations.

Plaza Coral Gables includes 455,008 square feet of office, 165,000 square feet of restaurant and entertainment space, a 242-room hotel, and 170 apartments. The South Tower wing consists of 163,741 square feet of office space. Its notable tenants include Bacardi USA, which will occupy about 100,000 square feet of office once it relocates its regional corporate offices.

The occupancy rate for both towers, following the six North Tower lease deals, is nearly 90%, according to Blanca Commercial Real Estate.

South Florida’s office market has generally prospered since the pandemic as both local and out-of-state companies sought quality office space that will attract clients and employees.

As of the third quarter of 2023, Class A office project asking rents per square foot averaged $58.52 in Miami-Dade County, $45.85 in Broward County, and $45.85 in Palm Beach County, according to preliminary figures from Colliers.

That compared to Class A office space in Coral Gables of $52.06 per square foot in Q3, Colliers stated.

OFFICE TENANTS SEARCH FOR VALUE WHILE SHRINKING FOOTPRINTS

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January 16, 2024

Total availability at the end of the year was 20.5%, down 170 basis points from last year and 130 basis points below 2019 levels, before the pandemic spurred a wave of activity in Miami, according to CBRE. Rent growth was flat in the fourth quarter, but the $52.37 per SF asking rate was still up 6.4% year-over-year.

The figures indicate a shift in the market away from large new leases by new-to-market tenants and toward expansions by established tenants and recent arrivals to the city.

“Companies that have moved here post-Covid are continuing to double down and reaffirm their commitment to Miami, they continue to bring executives and employees here and recruit more employees,” said Tere Blanca, the founder and CEO of Blanca Commercial Real Estate. “What we don’t have currently are very large, significant relocations.”

The shift in tenant dynamics is reflected in average lease size, with deals below 20K SF accounting for 81% of activity in 2023, 11 percentage points higher than the previous year, according to Avison Young. Deals below 10K SF accounted for 55% of activity, while only 3% of transactions exceeded 50K SF.

Tenants looking for space are widening their search beyond Miami’s traditional business hubs of downtown and the financial district of Brickell, where the $83.90 per SF average asking rate eclipses most other parts of the city, Blanca said.

While top-flight spaces continue to attract interest from companies seeking to upgrade space, Brickell saw 56K SF of negative absorption in Q4 and nearly 100K SF in net move-outs for the year, according to CBRE, as tenants took advantage of opportunities in other neighborhoods.

That’s contrasted by Downtown Miami, where rents are around $30 cheaper per SF and which saw 72K SF of positive absorption in Q4 and 129K SF for the year, according to CBRE. Doral and the area surrounding Miami International Airport, where average asking rents are among the lowest in Miami, followed close behind with a combined 125K SF of net move-ins for the year.

“The negative absorption in Brickell is driven by some move-outs, a little bit of downsizing and then also from tenants that are seeking lower occupancy costs,” Blanca said. “Not every tenant wants to have a total occupancy cost that starts with a rate of $120 or $110.”

A 56K SF lease from Simply Healthcare at Dolphin Corporate Park was Miami’s largest new lease in the fourth quarter.

Suburban office parks captured the three largest new leases in Q4, according to Avison Young.

Doral saw the two largest new deals: a 56K SF lease from Simply Healthcare at 11410 NW 20th St. in Doral’s Dolphin Corporate Park and a 36K SF lease from AerSale, a Nasdaq-traded aircraft parts supplier that will move into 9850 NW 41st St. Vida Integrated Health signed on for 30K SF at 14901 NW 79th Court in Miami Lakes in the quarter’s third-largest new lease.

Smaller footprints dominate the pipeline of tenants in the market being tracked by Blanca. Her firm counts more than 300 tenants actively looking for space in Miami, she said, with around 230 of them looking for less than 10K SF and more than half eyeing space below 5K SF. Just over 50 tenants are looking for 20K SF or more.

While 20% of firms being tracked by Blanca are new to market, most are looking to establish smaller offices as opposed to the wave of large leases from national tenants that helped bring the under-construction 830 Brickell to nearly full occupancy during the pandemic when it acted as a magnet for corporate deals.

Even as tenants explore space in markets outside of Miami’s core business districts, top-quality space in Brickell continues to drive rent growth. Class-A rents in the neighborhood were up 12.7% year-over-year to $96.25 per SF compared to 7.1% over the year for Class-A rents citywide, according to CBRE. 830 Brickell is garnering rents approaching $200 per SF.

“Tenants are certainly exploring opportunities across the market, they’re not limiting themselves to one set market,” Blanca said. “But if you’re a financial services firm, a hedge fund or a private equity firm, it’s typically east of I-95 where you’re finding activity,” she said, in reference to the city’s urban core.

Asking rates in Downtown Miami are up 7% year-over-year.

Outside of Brickell, rent growth was strongest in Wynwood, where asking rates grew by 9% year-over-year, and in Downtown Miami, where they rose 7%, according to Blanca. Projects under construction in those neighborhoods and other highly sought-after markets like Miami Beach are expected to continue to boost rents, but increases across much of the existing inventory are expected to taper off.

“I think that the overall market will continue to hold rent,” Blanca said. “I don’t know that we’ll have another 7% or 10% rent growth, but I don’t see us retreating.”

Rent growth and leasing activity are also pulling back from pandemic highs in Broward and Palm Beach Counties.

Leasing activity in Broward slipped for each of the last three quarters, totaling 491K SF in Q4 with 76% of all leases falling below 10K SF, according to Avison Young. Rent growth has also tempered, rising 1.9% through 2023 to $38.34 per SF, after a significant run-up that saw five-year rent growth at 18%. Rents at top assets fueled that growth, spiking 25% over the same five-year period to $66.96 per SF.

GQG Partners, a boutique investment firm, signed Broward’s largest new deal of the quarter with a 23K SF lease at downtown’s 350 E. Las Olas Blvd. The second-largest was a 16K SF deal from healthcare firm Sentry Data Systems at 800 Fairway Drive in Deerfield Beach.

In Palm Beach County, vacancy ticked up 1.6 percentage points through 2023 to 12.5% despite 2.5M SF in annual leasing activity, according to Avison Young. Still, the market saw strong activity from the banking, finance, insurance and real estate sectors, which together leased more than half a million SF, up 11.5% from the prior year.

The largest new deals of the quarter in Boca Raton were both expansions. ADT signed a 68K SF expansion lease at 1501 Yamato Road, the largest nonrenewal lease to be signed in South Florida in Q4. MPLT Healthcare signed the second-largest deal in Palm Beach County, a 30K SF expansion at 3701 FAU Blvd.

Even as footprints shrink, Blanca said the strong stable of tenants looking to lease space in South Florida was a sign that the region will continue to see similar levels of activity through 2024.

“Some of the deals that will get announced this first quarter I think will make headlines,” she said. “It’ll be a very solid year for Miami real estate as well as the entire region.”

WYNWOOD DRUMS UP MORE BUSINESS, WITH SONY MUSIC COMING TO THE NEIGHBORHOOD

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October 18, 2023

Wynwood hit the right note for Sony Music. The entertainment company has signed the largest office

lease in the trendy Miami neighborhood so far this year, proving creatives want to partake in the

renaissance there. Sony will join creative companies in Wynwood, including TikTok, Spotify and Live

Nation. Sony Music, known formally as Sony Music Entertainment, is going to take 45,000 square feet

over two floors in the 10-story office building 545 Wyn at 545 NW 26 St., according to multiple sources

familiar with the deal. The company is expected to move in by summer 2024. Sony intends to

consolidate a few offices around South Florida into that one building in Wynwood. It is among the

largest new office leases in Miami-Dade County so far this year, according to the Colliers’ third quarter

office real estate report for the county. Greenberg Traurig law firm signed the biggest office lease

renewal, with its 128,450 square feet at the Wells Fargo Center in downtown Miami.

The Japanese corporation Sony has several offices across the United States, including its American

headquarters in New York. Sony Music is considered to be one of the Big Three record companies, after

Universal Music Group and ahead of Warner Music Group. “Wynwood is centrally located,” said Stephen

Rutchik, executive managing director for office services at Colliers. “It allows for the accessibility and

walkability. It also provides companies with an identity that is different from downtown and Coral

Gables. Wynwood has a cool factor. It has an appeal to a workforce.” Corporate expansions in and

relocations to South Florida slowed this year after the pandemic frenzy, but firms already in the market

or from out of state continue to ink large office leases, real estate sources said. “Overall in South Florida

we are continuing to find a migration of new-to-market tenants continuing, although at a more

measured pace than in 2021 and 2022,” Rutchik said. “The tenants that are coming are Fortune 100

companies. They are taking substantial space compared to our traditional tenants.”

Blanca Commercial Real Estate handles commercial leasing activity at the 545 Wyn office building, and

Newmark executive managing directors Lance Benson and Maury Gentile represented Sony Music in its

lease deal. Both teams declined to comment about Sony’s lease agreement. Typically, companies pay a

premium for office space in Miami’s hot areas. Wynwood and the adjacent Design District area have an

average direct asking lease rate of $79.69 per square foot, roughly 35% higher than the average of

$52.06 per square foot for Miami-Dade, according to the latest Colliers office market report. Those two

areas have 2.1 million square feet of office space and another 640,330 square feet with projects like the

Wynwood Plaza in the pipeline. The county has 5.4 million square feet of total office lease inventory.

WHY A QUIET SUBURB IS DRAWING OFFICE TENANTS, RETAILERS AWAY FROM MIAMI’S HOT SPOTS

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November 8, 2023

When FIFA, soccer’s international governing body, was searching for office space in Miami, it didn’t search in the city’s downtown, the financial hub of Brickell or the creative hot spot of Wynwood.

FIFA instead aimed squarely for Coral Gables, the suburban city southwest of Downtown Miami where it opened a 60K SF office that will be home to more than 100 employees relocating from the soccer organization’s Switzerland headquarters.

Coral Gables is at the confluence of real estate trends in Miami. High office rents in Brickell and Wynwood have caused companies to explore lower-cost buildings, while an influx of wealthy residents has boosted demand for the city’s luxury homes and provided fuel to a burgeoning restaurant scene.

“You’re going to see a lot more really significant companies coming into the market in the next couple of years,” said Danet Linares, executive vice chairman at Blanca Commercial Real Estate. “Between price, quality of buildings and amenities, Coral Gables offers that good middle ground.”

Average office rent in Coral Gables was $50.90 per SF at the end of the third quarter, according to Cushman & Wakefield, more than $20 per SF below rents in Brickell and Miami Beach and less expensive than other office hubs like Downtown Miami, Biscayne and Coconut Grove.

The neighborhood has found success peeling away tenants from other areas as well as attracting new entrants to the market, who have been drawn to its walkability, tree-lined streets and Miracle Mile retail district.

Coral Gables saw 299K SF of office leasing activity this year through the third quarter, ahead of every other Miami submarket except Downtown and the business district adjacent to Miami International Airport.

The 455K SF Plaza Coral Gables office building is nearly 90% leased less than two years after it delivered. Six tenants totaling 65K SF signed on in October alone, including two who are planning to relocate from Brickell.

“The economic backdrop has really caused things to slow down a bit. Companies aren’t making the same kind of quick moves as they did before, but they’re still looking for value,” said Donna Abood, a principal at Avison Young and managing director of the firm’s Miami office. “That still allows the Gables to meet that value at a healthy rate because those rates [tenants] are leaving are so high.”

The neighborhood’s growth has also spurred office investment, with buyers looking to acquire properties underwritten at today’s rents with the expectation that the area has a long runway for rent growth.

Three office buildings in the neighborhood have sold since August for more than $149M combined, rare activity amid sales volume across the city dipping 54% below the previous year at the end of the third quarter.

Princeton International Properties Corp. purchased a 223K SF office building at 355 Alhambra Circle from PGIM Real Estate for $90M in September. Princeton President David Twafik described the neighborhood at the time as “one of the most coveted submarkets in Miami.”

A month earlier, Torose Equities, Lndmrk Development and Terranova Corp. paid more than $50M to buy the 220K SF office building at 255 Alhambra Circle from a Deutsche Bank fund. Alex Karakhanian, founder and principal of Lndmrk Development, was more direct in his assessment of the neighborhood, saying in a statement that it had a “great deal of untapped potential” and presented a “tremendous opportunity for the partnership.”

The most recent sale came last month when Miami-based investment firm Cam Group paid $19M for an office building that it plans to demolish and replace with 89K SF of medical offices and 17K SF of commercial space.

While office space in Coral Gables is still relatively easy to come by — the vacancy rate was 15.7% at the end of the third quarter, slightly above Miami’s overall rate of 15.6%, according to Cushman & Wakefield — the city’s retail space is essentially full.

The neighborhood has seen a wave of new restaurant and store openings, pushing vacancy down to 0.5% in the third quarter, the lowest of any of Miami’s submarkets, according to Colliers.

The neighborhood’s growing population of daytime office workers, its high net worth resident population and its location near other wealthy enclaves has made it especially attractive for restaurant owners, said Michael Sullivan, a principal at the retail brokerage Vertical Real Estate.

“You’ve got Brickell, you’ve got Wynwood, you’ve got the Design District, so there was a period where the Gables wasn’t in the spotlight,” Sullivan said. “What we’ve seen over the last few years, and definitely in the post-Covid world, is people really paying attention again to Coral Gables.”

Among the recent high-profile dining entries to the Coral Gables market is a restaurant from acclaimed French Laundry chef Thomas Keller, who opened the French bistro Bouchon in September, his second Miami restaurant. Shingo, a 14-seat omakase restaurant from Shingo Akkiuni, opened at the La Palma building in May, around the same time that the popular Israeli eatery Motek Cafe opened its doors in 7,600 SF on Coral Gables’ Miracle Mile.

Michelin-starred chef Michael White is also planning a restaurant in the neighborhood, Sullivan said. He will join Zit Sum, an Asian fusion restaurant that opened in 2021 and received a Michelin Guide Bib Gourmand award in 2022.

Restaurant owners in Coral Gables, like office tenants, also find significantly less expensive rents compared to Miami’s other food destinations. Asking retail rents there were at $36.08 per SF at the end of the third quarter, less than half of what landlords in Wynwood, the Design District and Miami Beach are seeking, according to Colliers.

“In the past two years, we felt like Coral Gables was mispriced. It was just undervalued,” Sullivan said. “We actually thought it was your best bang for your buck to step into the Gables today.”

The burgeoning restaurant scene in Coral Gables is happening as the neighborhood continues to pull in a wave of wealthy residents.

The average condo sale price in the area was $675K in the third quarter in a market with 3.1 months of supply, according to Douglas Elliman. Across the Miami Mainland, the average sale price was $604K with

5.4 months of supply. The gulf is even wider when it comes to single-family homes, which cost an average of $2.3M in Coral Gables compared to $998K on the Miami Mainland.

Local residents make up around 70% of buyers at projects being built in Coral Gables by MG Developer, one of the most active homebuilders in the neighborhood, said Catie Naranjo, the firm’s chief development officer.

Buyers in the area are attracted to its cohesion compared to other parts of Miami and the local government’s focus on a “thoughtful evolution of a community that protects its vision for its future,” she said.

The layout and zoning rules of Coral Gables, famous for its Spanish architecture, necessitate designing new developments on a neighborhood scale that prioritize fewer units and low-rise construction, Naranjo added.

MG Developer’s most recent Coral Gables project is The Village at Coral Gables, a collection of 48 townhomes, lofts, villas and flats that is slated for delivery in 2025. The developer secured a $67.5M construction loan in July from New York-based Churchill Real Estate for the project, which it describes as “paying homage to the aesthetic beauty and lifestyle of Seville, Spain.”

The emphasis on smaller communities is attracting buyers and helping to push up prices as much of the development in Miami leans toward high-rise towers with hundreds of units, Naranjo said.

“The prices that we’re getting from a per-SF basis on this new product is at a higher price per SF than what we sold for in our last project that sold out during the peak of the housing market during Covid,” she said.

MIAX INKS 38,000-SQUARE-FOOT OFFICE LEASE IN MIAMI’S WYNWOOD DISTRICT

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Miami International Securities Exchange (MIAX) will be moving into a 38,409-square-foot office at 545wyn in Miami’s Wynwood Arts District. The lease — which will cover a full floor in the newly built, 10-story building — was confirmed by Juan Ruiz, vice chairman of Blanca Commercial Real Estate, who negotiated the deal on behalf of landlord and developer, Sterling Bay. The 270,000 square feet of office space at 545wyn is now 82% leased.

The 499,370-square-foot property was completed in 2021 and currently holds the title of the largest office building in Wynwood. Chicago-based Sterling Bay secured $135 million in refinancing from Blackstone after completing the building’s development.

Located at 545 NW 26th St., the property faces I-95 and features 13,000 square feet of open-air balconies; indoor and outdoor lounge areas; a fitness center; an 8,000-square-foot park; and on-site parking.

Other tenants at 545wyn include Gensler, Slalom Consulting, Actuate Law, medical equipment manufacturer Neocis and Love Life Café on the ground floor. The roster will expand further still with the addition of Sony — which signed a lease for 44,742 square feet of Miami office space — as well as global financial service provider PwC, which is set to occupy 38,409 square feet of hybrid working space for the company’s 1,000 south Florida employees.

MIAX has more than a decade of experience in the global exchange for equities, equity options and commodities market. As such, it had already occupied a company office on the 11th floor of the 1450 Brickell Ave. office tower in Miami prior to the completion of the lease deal for 545wyn.

Miami International Holdings has also announced plans to launch a new exchange platform called MIAX Sapphire, which will be based in Miami. It’s expected to launch in the second quarter of 2024.