The retail portion of L&L Holding and Oak Row Equities’ mixed-use project in Wynwood will soon be home to an H&H Bagels and Sanguich, among other tenants.
H&H Bagels, known for its classic New York-style bagels, and Miami homegrown Cuban sandwich shop Sanguich each plan a 1,400-square-foot outpost at Wynwood Plaza, according to the developers’ news release. The development is at 55-95 Northwest 29th Street in Miami.
Megaformer Studio fitness center, now only in Miami Beach, plans a second outpost spanning 2,100 square feet at Wynwood Plaza. Pet spa S-Paw and Eternity Nail Salon each signed up for 400 square feet, marking the first outposts for both, the release says.
While H&H, Sanguich and Megaformer Studio leased under 10-year terms, S-Paw and Eternity Nail Salon signed five-year leases.
All five tenants are expected to open this year, according to the release. They bring the project’s total 26,000 square feet of retail to more than 40 percent leased.
L&L’s Bryan Lapidus, as well as Frank Begrowicz and Greg Masin of Newmark, represented Wynwood Plaza in the leases.
Karen Maerovitz of Katz & Associates represented Sanguich, while Ryan Tucker and Jeremy Modest of Ripco represented H&H Bagels. Robin Weiner of Vertical Real Estate represented Megaformer, Lucas Gomez of Compass worked with S-Paw, and Daniel Alexander Ellis of Lifestyle International Realty represented Eternity Nail Salon.
Also on tap at Wynwood Plaza is Miami chef Giorgio Rapicavoli’s Luca Steak. That lease was announced last year.
Rapicavoli established his reputation with Coral Gables restaurants Eating House and Luca Osteria. He also took over Mayfair Grill in Miami’s Coconut Grove in 2024.
Wynwood Plaza, a 1 million-square-foot development, was completed last year. It has 26,000 square feet of retail, as well as a 12-story, 509-unit apartment building and a 12-story, 266,000-square-foot office building.
San Francisco-based Shorenstein Investment Advisers and Claure Group, former Sprint and SoftBank Group International CEO Marcelo Claure’s investment firm, partnered on Wynwood Plaza.
New York-based L&L is led by David Levinson and Robert Lapidus. Oak Row, led by Erik Rutter and David Weitz, has offices in Miami and New York.
The signed office tenants are Amazon, which took 75,500 square feet, as well as Claure Group, which took 25,400 square feet for its headquarters.
Law firm Weitz & Luxenberg –– led by co-founding members Arthur Luxenberg and Perry Weitz, who is David Weitz’s father –– leased 18,000 square feet. Perry Weitz, who co-founded the law firm that previously won a hefty settlement on behalf of Brooklyn Navy Yard workers in asbestos litigation, also is involved with Oak Row.
Last month, Wynwood Plaza landed a $335 million refinancing from New York-based Blue Owl Capital, paying off its $215 million Bank OZK construction loan.
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