Miami Beach Resort
Photo by J. Albert Diaz
Miami Beach Resort
The pending $117 million acquisition of the Miami Beach Resort by Chetrit Group LLC puts Joseph Chetrit's New York investment firm in a position to be the dominant hotel owner in the city's hospitality market.
Chetrit has an agreement to buy the 424-room oceanfront hotel at 4833 Collins Ave., according to Wednesday's report from Bloomberg News. It plans to renovate the hotel. Blackstone Group LP is selling the resort to help restructure debt in its LXR Luxury Resorts & Hotels division.
The 50-year-old Miami Beach Resort has had several names, most notably the Doral on the Ocean. Founded by the Kaskel family, the Doral was popular with celebrities. The Bloomberg report noted that Frank Sinatra used to perform at the hotel.
A source familiar with the transaction confirmed that the report of a pending sale and future renovations of the hotel is accurate.
Blackstone spokesman Peter Rose declined comment. Calls to Chetrit spokeswoman Kathleen Cudahy were not returned by deadline.
The sale has not been recorded by Miami-Dade County. Once it closes, Chetrit will have assembled at least 14 buildings in Miami Beach over the last two years.
Chetrit co-owns Chicago's Willis Tower (formerly the Sears Tower), 620 Avenue of the Americas in Manhattan and a large chunk of downtown Los Angeles. Earlier this month, Sony Corp. of America announced it had a contract to sell its United States headquarters at 550 Madison Ave. for $1.1 billion to a consortium led by Chetrit.
"Given Chetrit's involvement with landmark properties, his investment into yet another Miami Beach property emphasizes the continuing desirability and importance of Miami Beach hotel assets for investment portfolios," said Daniel Marinberg, a Miami-based shareholder in the real estate practice at Greenberg Traurig. Marinberg was not involved in the Miami Beach Resort transaction.
With the $117 million outlay, Chetrit is set to spend about $276,000 per unit for the Miami Beach Resort. That does not account for renovation costs.
For the city's "overheated" hospitality market, the recent acquisitions by Chetrit signal that Miami Beach still has significant upside, said hospitality consultant Guy Trusty, president of Lodging & Hospitality Realty Inc. in Coral Gables. Trusty was not involved in the Miami Beach Resort sale.














