Miami Herald (Sunday)

But there are more to come

The Waldorf Astoria will be Miami’s first supertall tower

- BY ANDRES VIGLUCCI aviglucci@miamiheral­d.com

The Waldorf Astoria Hotel & Residences is the first supertall building to break ground in Miami. It probably won’t be the last.

Coming up on its heels are a handful of other proposed skyscapers that appear to be moving steadily if slowly ahead after years of delays, grandiose announceme­nts and some wishful thinking from developers looking to bust through the fabled 300-meter — nearly 1,000-foot — benchmark.

At least two more plans for supertalls have now received the needed government approvals and the kind of backing required to undertake the complex process of designing and building towers far taller than anything Miami has seen before. A third project also may vie for supertall status, after winning approval at a lower height.

And the firm of veteran Miami developer Tibor Hollo, who built Panorama Tower, for the moment still Miami’s tallest building, says it’s finally ready to start work on a fourth exemplar, a long-contemplat­ed supertall on Biscayne Boulevard in downtown Miami, just a few blocks south of the Waldorf.

With one exception, the projects all aim for 1,049 feet — the maximum allowed by the Federal Aviation Administra­tion and Miami-Dade County to safeguard routes to and from Miami Internatio­nal Airport.

There’s a big caveat. A recession or even just a slowing local real estate market could force developers to shelve their plans anew.

These are the projects paving the way to a spikier

At least two more plans for supertalls have received the needed government approvals and sufficient backing.

skyline:

Swire Properties, developer A of Brickell City Centre, is teaming with Related Companies of New York on One Brickell City Centre. At 1,049 feet, the planned tower would be Miami’s and Florida’s tallest — and largest — office building, with a massive 1.6 million square feet of space, the developers said. They plan to start constructi­on on the tower, designed by Miami’s Arquitecto­nica, next year.

The tower, which would face Brickell Avenue, is an expansion of Swire’s Brickell City Centre, a multiblock, multilevel developmen­t comprising shops and restaurant­s, a hotel, apartments and offices.

Swire first announced plans for a supertall back in 2013, when the developer acquired the proposed building’s site on Brickell Avenue, but the scheme was subsequent­ly put on hold. Originally envisioned as a mix of residentia­l and commercial uses, the project was resuscitat­ed and tweaked earlier this year when Swire joined forces with Related — the one run by billionair­e Miami Dolphins owner Stephen Ross, and not to be confused with the Miami-based Related Group founded by billionair­e Jorge Pérez.

In September, Miami commission­ers approved a significan­t change to the original developmen­t permit that allows for expanded floor plates. Constructi­on could begin as soon as early 2023.

The City of Miami, A Hyatt Hotels and developer Gencom will go to voters in November for a referendum on plans for a mammoth, $1.5 billion redevelopm­ent on the publicly owned site of the 40-year-old downtown Hyatt Regency and James L. Knight Center complex on the Miami River. The Miami Riverbridg­e proposal, encompassi­ng hotel rooms, apartments, meeting space and an overhauled public riverfront promenade, envisions three towers designed by Arquitecto­nica, one of them a supertall.

Brightline rail’s parent A company, Florida East Coast Industries, gave up on previously announced plans to build a supertall on vacant land next to its sprawling MiamiCentr­al train station complex but has agreed instead to sell the property to J3T Ventures of New York. FECI had secured approval to build twin 83-story towers designed by Miami’s Zyscovich earlier this year, but at 848 feet — actually short of the supertall benchmark. An insider, who requested anonymity, told the Miami Herald the new developer has asked the FAA to approve a height of more than 900 feet.

Florida East Coast Realty (not related to Florida East Coast Industries) says it’s moving forward with another long-planned supertall. This one would replace the firm’s current headquarte­rs, a 1963 office high-rise at South Biscayne Boulevard and Southeast First Street that FECR intends to demolish in the first quarter of

2023. The new, 1,049-foot One Bayfront Plaza would comprise office, commercial, hotel and residentia­l space. The new tower, above Biscayne Bay, would take on the existing building’s One Bayfront Plaza name.

“One Bayfront Plaza will be a mixed-use developmen­t of modern design, encompassi­ng more than three million square feet comprised of class-A office space and an upscale retail mall together with a luxury hotel, high-end residences and parking garage,” according to a statement from FECR, in response to a query from the Herald. “The project encompasse­s two full city blocks and will reach a height of 1,049 feet above Biscayne Bay.”

 ?? ARQUITECTO­NICA ?? This rendering shows the design for a new proposal to redevelop the Knight Center complex into a hotel and residentia­l complex with three towers, one of them a supertall exceeding 984 feet in height.
ARQUITECTO­NICA This rendering shows the design for a new proposal to redevelop the Knight Center complex into a hotel and residentia­l complex with three towers, one of them a supertall exceeding 984 feet in height.
 ?? Swire Properties and Related Companies ?? Developers Swire Properties and New York’s Related Companies plan to build an Arquitecto­nica-designed supertall tower, One Brickell City Centre, on Brickell Avenue. It would be Miami’s tallest and largest office building.
Swire Properties and Related Companies Developers Swire Properties and New York’s Related Companies plan to build an Arquitecto­nica-designed supertall tower, One Brickell City Centre, on Brickell Avenue. It would be Miami’s tallest and largest office building.
 ?? Florida East Coast Realty ?? A rendering depicts a bronze-tinted supertall tower, center, that veteran developer Tibor Hollo’s Florida East Realty says it plans to build on downtown Miami’s Biscayne Boulevard.
Florida East Coast Realty A rendering depicts a bronze-tinted supertall tower, center, that veteran developer Tibor Hollo’s Florida East Realty says it plans to build on downtown Miami’s Biscayne Boulevard.
 ?? ?? An aerial view of the residentia­l towers planned by Brightline parent Florida East Coast Industries in downtown Miami.
An aerial view of the residentia­l towers planned by Brightline parent Florida East Coast Industries in downtown Miami.

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