South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

Rehab or demolish? Miami Beach mulls fate of Fillmore

- By Amanda Rosa

To renovate or to demolish? That is the question City of Miami Beach commission­ers are asking themselves when it comes to The Fillmore Miami Beach at the Jackie Gleason Theater, the beloved yet deteriorat­ing performing arts venue.

In the ‘50s, when it was known as the Miami Beach Auditorium, it was home to TV’s “The Jackie Gleason Show.” After it was renovated and renamed in the mid-’70s, the venue hosted touring Broadway shows, Elvis Costello concerts, boxing matches and a Madonna residency. The Fillmore has survived demolition discussion­s in the past, and in 2022, after Miami Beach voters approved $159 million in bonds to invest in local cultural institutio­ns, $29 million was allocated to renovate it.

Now, commission­ers are weighing the pros and cons of using the $29 million to upgrade the existing building or start anew.

At a city Finance and Economic Resiliency Committee meeting on Friday, commission­ers were eager to discuss the future of The Fillmore with Live Nation, the entertainm­ent company that operates the venue. Though conversati­ons on how to revamp the aging building are in early stages, commission­ers showed interest in putting the $29 million toward demolishin­g the theater and building a new state-of-the-art facility.

Commission­er Alex Fernandez stressed that the building deals with flooding issues and lacks the technology needed to attract high-quality production­s. As an older building, The Fillmore is subject to a recertific­ation process every 10 years to address structural issues, the commission noted.

Discussion­s on The Fillmore have revived as constructi­on on the 800-room Grand Hyatt Miami Beach Convention Center Hotel are underway nearby. The venue closed for a year when constructi­on on the hotel began.

“The type of revamp that will be required, the type of investment that will be required, to make the facility competitiv­e again, it does beg the question: Is it worth investing that type of money in such an aging facility? That’s an option,” Fernandez said during the meeting. “Or is it a better longterm investment to build a new facility?”

Fernandez asked Trevor Ralph, Live Nation vice president of regional venue operations, how long investing $29 million into The Fillmore would “extend the lifespan” of the building.

“I don’t think it extends the lifespan much at all,” Ralph said. “I think it’s a Band-Aid, quite frankly.”

Later in the meeting, Commission­er David Suarez said, “I certainly don’t feel comfortabl­e spending $29 million to put a Band-Aid on a building only to not really know what’s going to happen five years from now. I think that’s just a waste of funds.”

In May 2023, Live Nation presented the committee plans to build a new theater, according to a meeting memo.

But those discussion­s didn’t move forward at the time.

Commission­ers who have been hesitant to radically change the theater in the past have since changed their minds.

Commission­er Kristen Rosen Gonzalez began her comments with a story about a recent trip she took to London where she saw a performanc­e at The Bridge Theatre, the first new commercial theater built in London in 80 years. It cost 11.6 million pounds, about $14 million, to build.

Rosen Gonzalez was so impressed by the venue and its technology, she wondered why Miami Beach can’t have a theater just as nice.

“I am a preservati­onist, I love our historic district, but we can make something so stunning […] and we have the money to do it in Miami Beach,” she said. “I overwhelmi­ngly approve, but I want this to be that type of theater. It has to be something that is so spectacula­r, with $30 million, I can’t see how we won’t be able to do it.”

Though Commission­er Tanya Bhatt has been “reluctant to part ways with the Gleason,” her opinion has changed, too.

“Even if we inject $29 million into upgrading the theater, we will not pass our 10 year recertific­ation unscathed. I’m sure it’ll do very well, but there will still be more that needs to happen,” Bhatt said. “Having lived in a money pit myself, it’s really frustratin­g when you spend an ungodly amount of money and finish the work successful­ly and it looks and feels exactly the way it did before.”

Lyle Stern, the Lincoln Road Business Improvemen­t District president, spoke during the meeting to show his support for the commission­er’s ideas as a Miami Beach resident.

“I love this conversati­on,” he said. “I think unlocking the potential of this real estate for the longterm good and value of the citizens of the city, our residents, our tourists, everything going on around it, is one of the most spectacula­r conversati­ons I’ve heard in a long time.”

 ?? MARSHA HALPER/THE MIAMI HERALD ?? The Fillmore Miami Beach at the Jackie Gleason Theater. In the 1950s, when it was known as the Miami Beach Auditorium, it was home to TV’s “The Jackie Gleason Show.”
MARSHA HALPER/THE MIAMI HERALD The Fillmore Miami Beach at the Jackie Gleason Theater. In the 1950s, when it was known as the Miami Beach Auditorium, it was home to TV’s “The Jackie Gleason Show.”

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