South Florida’s office market is having a harder time than the industry has let on. We knew investment sales were down compared to the record
Tag: Weekly Dirt
The Weekly Dirt: The lobbyists who run Miami real estate
The Real Deal identified the top lobbyists behind Miami’s biggest developers, the hired guns who know the ins and outs of local government and get
The Weekly Dirt: Florida’s proposal to develop in state parks a no-go
Gov. Ron DeSantis’ administration is pitching a last-minute plan to redevelop portions of nine state parks. In South Florida, these include Oleta River State Park
The Weekly Dirt: How NAR’s policy shifts are playing out in South Florida
New rules affecting how buyer’s agents will be compensated went into effect this weekend. South Florida agents and brokers said the biggest challenge will be
The Weekly Dirt: Is Miami’s condo-hotel boom a bust for buyers in the long run?
Developers have fully embraced short-term rental-friendly condos, thanks to strong demand from buyers. The huge pipeline of these projects, most of which are rebranded condo-hotels,
The Weekly Dirt: Tom Brady makes waves in Bay Harbor Islands
Seven-time Super Bowl champion Tom Brady will move his family office’s HQ to Bay Harbor Islands. TEB Capital Management signed an 8,400-square-foot lease at The
The Weekly Dirt: Summertime scandals expose South Florida real estate’s underbelly
Summers are usually slower than the rest of the year. Our sources go on vacation. Deal activity slows down. Properties are taken off the market.
The Weekly Dirt: A shocking end to developer Sergio Pino’s legacy
Developer Sergio Pino ended his life as the FBI was planning to arrest him for allegedly ordering the failed murder (not once, but twice) of
Weekly Filth: Issues for South Florida Multifamily Industry
Expenditures are soaring for multifamily landlords in South Florida. Some are searching to minimize their losses in advance of it will get even worse. South
Weekly Dust: Watershed ruling adjustments condo buyout landscape
Several condo terminations “just will not work” pursuing a latest appeals court ruling in Florida. The ones that we have noted on above the earlier