Waterfront mansion asking nearly M tops signed contracts 

Waterfront mansion asking nearly $18M tops signed contracts 



The pending sale of a waterfront mansion in Golden Beach asking $17.7 million topped last week’s signed contracts report in Miami-Dade County. 

The seven-bedroom, nine-bathroom house at 630 Golden Beach Drive sits on a 0.4-acre lot. The 8,541-square-foot home was built in 2020. Property records show Villa Helena Investments owns the property. It’s on the market with Alexander Goldstein of Miles Goldstein Real Estate. 

Records show the company paid $2.1 million for the land in 2013, which includes 100 feet of water frontage. 

The pending sale is one of 12 contracts marked in the Multiple Listing Service between Nov. 11 and Nov. 17, according to the Eklund-Gomes report, which tracks listings of properties asking $4 million and up in Miami-Dade. It’s authored by the Douglas Elliman mega team led by Fredrik Eklund and John Gomes. 

The asking dollar volume for the seven single-family homes and five condos totals $114 million, according to the report. 

The single-family homes that entered into contract last week had an average asking price of about $9.3 million and spent an average of 38 days on the market. They totaled $65.3 million in asking dollar volume.

The condos had a combined asking price of $49.1 million and spent an average of about 60 days on the market. They averaged more than $2,900 per square foot — the highest average since July, according to the report.  

The most expensive condo to go under contract was a lower penthouse at Oceana Key Biscayne. Records show a company led by Brazilian businessman Abram Szajman  paid $10 million for the 4,762-square-foot, four-bedroom, seven-bathroom condo in 2014 when the building was completed. It’s on the market now with Coldwell Banker agent Juliana Savoia for $15.3 million. 

The previous week, buyers signed contracts for 14 properties in Miami-Dade County, asking a combined $114 million.

Last week in New York, buyers signed contracts for 37 homes, according to the latest Olshan report. Their combined asking price was nearly $369 million, and the typical home spent 769 days on the market. Eklund-Gomes’ reports are modeled after Donna Olshan’s report that tracks new deals in Manhattan.





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