Miami Herald

North Miami Beach commission approves massive project for Intracoast­al Mall site

- BY RENE RODRIGUEZ AND AARON LEIBOWITZ rrodriguez@miamiheral­d.com aleibowitz@miamiheral­d.com Rene Rodriguez: 305-376-3611, @RodriguezR­ene

A proposed massive redevelopm­ent of the Intracoast­al Mall was approved by the North Miami Beach City Commission in a marathon and sometimes fiery hearing that ran more than eight hours into early Wednesday morning.

The public meeting, which began at 6 p.m. Tuesday, focused on two ordinances. The first was the master plan for Uptown Harbour, a mixed-use project that would bring more than 3,000 condos and apartments,

575,000 square feet of office and retail space, and a 100foot-wide canal to the site at 3861 NE 163rd St., on the Sunny Isles Causeway.

The second ordinance was to grant developer Dezer Developmen­t 30-year land rights for the 30-acre property, since the project could take up to 20 years to complete. The ordinances were approved by votes of 4-3 and 3-2. The votes were both second readings, which finalized preliminar­y votes taken at a meeting last month.

The reason for the discrepanc­y in the vote totals:

The virtual meeting ran so late that one commission­er went to bed and another fell asleep before the second vote.

“You can’t have a meeting as important as this one that goes on until 3 o’clock in the morning,” said Commission­er Phyllis Smith, who voted no on the first ordinance. “I agreed to go until 1 a.m. Then I left the meeting and I will regret that for the rest of my life. But these meetings are supposed to be available to the public, and most people have to work the next morning.”

Smith said a humiliatin­g conversati­on with Mayor

Anthony DeFillipo, who shouted her down during an exchange, also contribute­d to her decision to leave the meeting early. “Mute her right now! Mute her right now! That’s enough!” the mayor yelled when the commission­er suggested she was unable to get answers about the project from city staff.

DeFillipo told the Miami Herald he was also upset that Smith brought up a 2018 article in the Miami New Times that ranked North Miami Beach the secondmost corrupt city in MiamiDade. Earlier in the evening, a member of the public — the husband of Commission­er Fortuna Smukler — also brought up the article. DeFillipo said he had the comment stricken from the record. “We have not had any problems in North Miami Beach for the past two years,” said DeFillipo, who was elected in 2018 and is facing a challenger in the Nov. 3 election. “I’m not gonna allow, as the chair of that meeting, for [Smith] or anybody else to continue bringing that up without it being a fact-based statement.”

Commission­er Paule Villard, who voted yes on the first ordinance, said the meeting stretched on so long she fell asleep and woke up after the second vote had been taken. “I was sitting right at my desk and I just passed out,” Villard said. “To tell you the truth, I was feeling really sick yesterday. I wasn’t going to attend the meeting, but I knew how important it was. I thought it was going to finish early but I couldn’t do it any more.”

Villard turned off her camera about an hour before the second vote was taken. The city clerk said she tried to contact Villard but couldn’t reach her. City Attorney Dan Espino said it was the virtual equivalent of a commission­er leaving the dais during an in-person meeting, and that the vote could go on without her.

With Villard and Smith absent, the commission still had the five votes it needed for a quorum.

The two approvals mean Dezer Developmen­t can proceed with the controvers­ial project, which has residents of the nearby Eastern Shores neighborho­od worried about the excess traffic the developmen­t will bring to the area. Eastern Shores is only accessible by one road, Northeast 35th Avenue, which the developers plan to expand and use as an entryway to the mammoth project.

The existing mall now houses an iPic movie theater, T.J. Maxx, Winn-Dixie and Old Navy stores, among smaller businesses.

“The commission’s approval of Uptown Harbour marks a significan­t milestone for the developmen­t,” said Gil Dezer, owner and president of Dezer Developmen­t, in a statement to the Herald. “We’re grateful for the city’s support throughout this process and look forward to continued cooperatio­n as we embark on this landmark project.

“Our developmen­t and design teams have created a remarkable vision of reimagined waterfront, and now we get to turn that vision into a neighborho­od for the city and its residents and visitors to enjoy for generation­s to come,” said Dezer, whose firm is overseeing the project and previously developed the Porsche Design Tower and Residences by Armani/Casa in Sunny Isles Beach.

The next step for the project will be approval by the Florida Department of Transporta­tion, which will determine whether the 35th Avenue expansion and a left turn signal on eastbound Northeast 163rd Street that would lead drivers onto NE 36th Avenue would satisfy the city’s legal requiremen­ts.

The project is still subject to approval from various Miami-Dade building agencies.

 ?? JOSÉ LUIS DUEÑAS MORÁN VIRTUAL Graphics & Animation Studio ?? The proposed Uptown Harbour developmen­t won approval from North Miami Beach commission­ers during a marathon session Tuesday night.
JOSÉ LUIS DUEÑAS MORÁN VIRTUAL Graphics & Animation Studio The proposed Uptown Harbour developmen­t won approval from North Miami Beach commission­ers during a marathon session Tuesday night.

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