Orlando Sentinel

Doral may be best fit for Beckham’s stadium

- By Joey Flechas and Douglas Hanks

MIAMI — David Beckham’s soccer group and a Major League Soccer executive have met with officials from the city of Doral to discuss the possibilit­y of building an MLS stadium in the suburban Miami-Dade city.

The meeting, disclosed by Doral Mayor Juan Carlos “JC” Bermudez at a City Council meeting Wednesday evening, included members of the city’s administra­tion, MLS deputy commission­er Mark Abbott, Beckham partner Jose Mas and real estate developer David Martin, who owns the land in considerat­ion.

The meeting confirms the Beckham group’s interest in the site of a Pepsi distributi­on center at 7777 NW 41st St. The 24-acre property was purchased by companies controlled by developers Martin and Stephen Bittel for $40 million in January.

“The meeting went relatively well,” Bermudez said at Wednesday’s council meeting.

The mayor kept his comments brief, but the announceme­nt further establishe­s the potential for an MLS team to be based in a city outside of Miami’s city limits.

The Mas brothers, who run the Miami-based MasTec infrastruc­ture firm and became Beckham’s partners in the effort to bring profession­al soccer to Miami-Dade county, told the Miami Herald in March that they are looking at “five or so sites” in the county for a stadium.

A much-discussed contender among them: Melreese golf course, a publicly owned facility housed in a Miami park near Miami Internatio­nal Airport. Miami’s administra­tion is waiting for a formal proposal from the Beckham group before taking the matter to the City Commission — though some commission­ers have already chafed at the concept of leasing out space in a public park for a soccer stadium complex.

City Manager Emilio Gonzalez has said he wouldn’t consider any plan that wouldn’t benefit Miami financiall­y and provide some amount of public space on the soccer campus, which would probably be built on some portion of Melreese’s 18-hole golf course.

If a Melreese stadium plan cleared Miami’s commission, the fate of the proposal would likely rest with voters through a referendum, city leaders have said.

By contrast, Beckham would likely have a clearer path to breaking ground on a private site in Doral.

“In this transactio­n, It seems like it would be a cleaner process,” said Doral Councilwom­an Ana Maria Rodriguez, who supports a stadium in the growing suburban city. “And no public money would be expended on it.”

Proximity to MIA brings problems for Melreese as a stadium site.

A recent analysis by the county-owned airport of a potential Melreese stadium noted the golf course is close enough to an MIA runway that a height limit of 70 feet — seven stories — would apply in some areas. The Beckham stadium plan for Overtown had a height of about 100 feet, so the restrictio­ns don’t stand as a deal breaker. But the limits do cap how much extra revenue the Mas brothers could generate from the commercial real estate complex they want to add on to their for-profit stadium.

Doral, meanwhile, appears to have fewer obstacles.

Doral City Manager Edward Rojas told the Herald the conversati­on focused on what land-use approvals might be needed to make way for a “soccer village” concept that would include retail and office space in addition to a stadium. He suggested there wouldn’t need to be any extraordin­ary approvals for a stadium that would be about 130 feet tall.

Rodriguez said a soccer stadium would fit well into Doral’s developmen­t. Should Beckham’s five-year quest to field an MLS team in MiamiDade conclude in her city, she would see it as a boon to the local economy.

“I hope we get it,” she said.

 ?? ALEXIA FODERE/AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? Former soccer star David Beckham and his partners are now looking at building their MLS stadium in Doral.
ALEXIA FODERE/AFP/GETTY IMAGES Former soccer star David Beckham and his partners are now looking at building their MLS stadium in Doral.

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