Miami Herald

Debt-ridden Metronomic is selling some properties in Grove and Little Havana

- BY ANDRES VIGLUCCI aviglucci@miamiheral­d.com Andres Viglucci: @AndresVigl­ucci

Developers who had announced big plans for Coconut Grove before filing for bankruptcy protection this year will sell many of their holdings in the village and in Little Havana under a settlement with a major creditor.

Under an agreement approved on Dec. 21 by U.S. bankruptcy Judge Laurel Isicoff, Metronomic Holdings will sell 17 properties in Miami and two in Illinois. Lender Fuse Group holds $17.7 million in mortgages on the properties, according to court documents.

The properties to be sold include only one of multiple lots along Grand Avenue, the heart of the historical­ly

Black West Grove. The sites were purchased by Metronomic as part of a plan for a massive mixed-use redevelopm­ent consisting of about a dozen buildings and spanning three city blocks. Metronomic planned a boutique hotel serviced by passenger drones on that one Grand lot, the site of a former gas station, included in the settlement with Fuse.

The other Grand Avenue properties are tied up in Metronomic’s Chapter 11 bankruptcy case and foreclosur­e filings by mortgage holders.

Metronomic and Chief Executive Officer Ricky Trinidad were virtually unknown in Miami when they unveiled ambitious plans for Grand Avenue in 2018. Persistent legal and financial issues over the properties have long frustrated other developers’ efforts to revitalize the street.

The rest of the Grove properties on the for-sale list include a parking lot on Commodore Plaza in the Grove’s village center. That site was also earmarked by Metronomic for a boutique hotel, town homes under constructi­on on Bird Avenue and unfinished singlefami­ly homes on Oak Avenue in the West Grove.

The other Miami properties on the list consist of vacant lots and completed or unfinished apartment buildings across Little Havana.

Under the court-approved settlement, Metronomic can sell the properties individu

ally or in packages. All sales must be concluded by March 15, 2021. No minimum purchase price was set.

In its Chapter 11 filing, Metronomic listed its 20 largest unsecured debts at $91 million, including

$488,538.46 in unpaid property taxes and $1.5 million to Miami-Dade County’s environmen­tal regulation agency, as well as the mortgage debt held by Fuse.

 ?? Metronomic ?? An architectu­ral rendering of a hotel on Grand Avenue in West Coconut Grove. That is one of the properties that Metronomic is selling under a bankruptcy-court agreement.
Metronomic An architectu­ral rendering of a hotel on Grand Avenue in West Coconut Grove. That is one of the properties that Metronomic is selling under a bankruptcy-court agreement.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States