WA’s biggest regional city has unveiled a “bold” plan to transform its city centre and relocate a local music shell used by rough sleepers as an unofficial homeless shelter.
The plan, which the city expects to cost “hundreds of millions of dollars” would also result in the bus station being moved, the city’s heritage buildings revived and the surrounding area — known as Bicentennial Square — made into a “go-to” destination for tourists.
The proposed transformation has been met with mixed reactions.
The City of Bunbury says the plan is expected to cost hundreds of millions of dollars. (Supplied: City of Bunbury)
Andy Mcwhirter, who lives in Australind, north of Bunbury, said it was “about time” more was done to attract visitors.
“Anything that [the city] can do for tourists is good,” he said.
“When I was a kid everyone used to come to Bunbury for holiday, now they don’t. They bypass Bunbury.“
Andy Mcwhirter says anything that can be done to bring tourists to Bunbury is a good thing. (ABC South West WA: Jacqueline Lynch)
The council has described the redevelopment as a “bold” plan, which Mayor Jaysen Miguel said would shape the next generation of Bunbury’s history.
“[This is] the direct link between that waterfront and our city,” he said.
“How can we make it more accessible to bring people and potentially beautify it in some ways?”
He said the project would take some time and would need millions of dollars of government and private investment.
‘Where are they going to go?’
Rough sleepers have slept at the sound shell for years — even setting up what CBD worker Kylie Collins said was a “camp”.
Ms Collins said while the plan to revitalise parts of Bunbury sounded “great”, she worried for the homeless people sleeping at the shell.
“Where are they going to go?” she said.
“We want our town to be thriving and successful and we want shops full and businesses full, but lives need to matter more.“
Kylie Collins wants more to done to help the homeless people living at the shell. (ABC South West WA: Jacqueline Lynch)
“I have friends that are camped down there and they’re really struggling … maybe we can look at building something for them?
“I think that should really be the priority rather than nice, big, green lawns.“
April Hill, who has been sleeping in the area with up to a dozen others, said the planned changes had come as a shock.
“It actually feels home to those who actually stay here,” she said.
“A big change is going to make it all awkward, certain people are going to feel out of place, ” she said.
“[And] You’re taking away people’s old memories, you’re destroying what they had here.”
The Graham Bricknell Music Shell will be moved. (ABC South West ABC: Jacqueline Lynch)
Cr Miguel said he understood the significance of the music shell as the grandson of former deputy mayor Graham Bricknell — who the venue was named after.
Mr Miguel said he was committed to relocating it.
“It’s sort of strapped for room right now when we have big events,” he said.
“It’s obviously very much important to maintain it, absolutely, and maintain it in my grandfather’s memory, but what’s the best use out of it going forward as well?
“And how can we fully utilise that and the area?”
The bus station will be moved to another location in the city centre. (ABC South West WA: Jacqueline Lynch)
He said he would work with rough sleepers and agencies on a way forward for the people living there.
Investment into helping homeless
The state government has since promised to expand homelessness services in the regional city.
A day after the city’s plan was released, a further $3 million was promised to expand Anglicare’s Housing First Service in Bunbury, which links homeless people with health, financial, social and employment services.
WA Homeless Minister Matthew Swinbourn said the services would be crucial in helping people into homes.
“We know that these types of services transform lives and provide serious, long-term solutions for people who are experiencing homelessness,” he said.
The Bicentennial Square plan is open for public comment.
A moon shot to make Southern California an international leader in the “blue economy” is taking shape in San Pedro as a $30-million renovation of three historic waterfront warehouses nears completion.
AltaSea at the Port of Los Angeles, as the complex is known, is home to sea-centered businesses such as the headquarters of explorer Robert Ballard, who located the wrecks of the Titanic and the German battleship Bismarck. His research vessel the Nautilus docks there, as does Pacific Alliance, a vessel for farming mussels far out at sea.
On barges docked on AltaSea’s wharf, scientists from USC, UCLA and Caltech are developing methods of reducing ocean carbon dioxide and technology to scrub ships’ exhaust stacks. Other tenants in the former warehouses include startup firms that are building a new generation of remote undersea cameras and 3-D printers to build parts for offshore wind, wave and solar farms.
Jenny Cornuelle Krusoe, executive vice president and COO of AltaSea at the Port of Los Angeles.
(Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times)
An aerial view of the Captura, a barge at AltaSea where crews monitor equipment used for pulling carbon dioxide from seawater.
(Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times)
“AltaSea is education, research and business all working together,” said Jenny Krusoe, executive vice president and chief operating officer. The size and waterfront location, she added, make AltaSea “a unicorn piece of property that is basically made to be the mother ship for the blue economy.”
Mayor Karen Bass and others who played a part in AltaSea, including City Councilman Tim McOsker and Port of Los Angeles Executive Director Gene Seroka, are expected to officially open the facilities at a ceremony Wednesday.
AltaSea is bringing new purpose to a previously moribund wharf that once played a rich part in the evolution of Southern California.
In the early 20th century, Los Angeles merchants and city leaders set out to capture a share of the increased global shipping trade expected to pass through the Panama Canal, a link between the Atlantic and Pacific oceans that opened in 1914. They created a municipal wharf on the waterfront of what has become the sprawling Port of Los Angeles, with a long stretch of warehouses where ships were loaded and unloaded into trains, carts and trucks by burly longshoremen.
The growth of containerized shipping after World War II gradually rendered City Dock No. 1 obsolete for moving goods, and the wharf was little used for decades. By 2011, advocates, including port officials,saw it for what it was: a choice 35-acre site for a research center and tech companies focused on sustainable uses of the world’s oceans.
A key part of the mission of the nonprofit enterprise is to create jobs with pioneering companies. Among them is the nonprofit AltaSeads Conservancy, the largest aquaculture seed bank in the United States. Like their terrestrial counterparts, aquaculture seed banks are meant to preserve genetic diversity in plant life for the future. AltaSeads is also advancing the use of kelp as an easily grown resource.
“It’s a super versatile crop,” said scientist Emily Aguirre of AltaSeads, that can provide food for humans and livestock while removing carbon from the atmosphere. “It can be also be used to fertilize terrestrial agriculture, and it’s fantastic because if you grow it out in the ocean, you’re not taking up any land.”
Michael Marty Rivera and Emily Aguirre of AltaSeads Conservancy monitor varieties of kelp in storage tanks.
(Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times)
Kelp is also a source of algae that cuts methane emissions from cows, Aguirre said, and has many other food applications, including reducing freezer burn in ice cream.
Eco Wave Power, an Israel-based company, is set to install the first U.S. onshore wave energy pilot station in the coming months on the port’s Main Channel, next to AltaSea. The system of floaters attaches directly to preexisting structures — like breakwaters, wharfs and jetties — and produces energy from the constant motion of the waves. Another AltaSea business, CorPower Ocean, uses buoys and hydraulic pressure for energy production.
Rustom Jehangir, founder and CEO at Blue Robotics, demonstrates his BlueROV2, a high-performance remotely operated vehicle that can be used for inspections, research and adventuring.
(Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times)
The figurative whale for AltaSea so far is Ballard, who set up shop at the aged docks several years ago and has captured public interest as a deep-sea explorer and scientific researcher. It’s his headquarters and home to his research and development.
AltaSea has an array of solar panels on the roof bigger than three football fields that generates 2.2 megawatts, enough to power 700 homes annually and more energy than the entire campus will need when it reaches full capacity.
The BlueROV2 vehicle.
(Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times)
To fund the wharf’s redevelopment, AltaSea received $29 million from the state, Port of Los Angeles and private donors. The funds paid for construction, installation of the solar panels and the future creation of a park.
AltaSea is one of multiple projects that are part of a two-decade process to clean up the air and water at the port and turn unused docks, wharves and warehouses into places where more people will want to work or visit, port officials said.
“Bringing people to our waterfront has been a hallmark of the Port of Los Angeles for decades,” Seroka said in 2020, and recent investments “will really bring us to the next level.”
Before the pandemic, about 3 million people came to L.A.’s waterfront annually for recreation, a tally port leaders hope to see double in the years ahead. To smooth the path of new development catering to visitors, the Port of Los Angeles is investing about $1 billion in infrastructure improvements over 10 years, Seroka said. Private developers building AltaSea and other projects will invest an estimated $500 million.
Taylor Marchment, the manufacturing R&D lead at RCAM Technologies, shows off 3-D concrete printing for offshore renewable energy.
(Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times)
One of those projects, West Harbor, is a long-planned redevelopment of a 42-acre site that used to be home to Ports O’ Call, a kitschy imitation of a New England fishing village, built in the 1960s, that fell out of favor years ago and was razed in 2018.
Restaurants anchoring the dining, shopping and entertainment center will include Yamashiro, the second branch of a Japanese-themed Hollywood destination for locals and tourists. Another large restaurant will be Mexican-themed, with an over-water bar. There will also be a food hall and Bark Social, a membership off-leash dog park, bar and cafe. The complex is slated to open next year.
The waterfront developments represent improvements that San Pedro residents have been waiting decades to see, said Dustin Trani, whose family has been in the local restaurant business for nearly a century. Last year the chef opened Trani’s Dockside Station, a seafood restaurant situated between AltaSea and West Harbor, in part to capitalize on the expected influx of visitors.
“We’re on the cusp of a very big economic boom in this area that has not yet been seen,” Trani said.
Mainstreet Tauranga chairwoman and Miss Gee’s Bar and Eatery owner Ashleigh Gee says closing The Strand waterfront car park will have a “detrimental” impact on businesses in the CBD. Photo / Alex Cairns
Hospitality businesses in Tauranga’s CBD are “fuming” as 147 waterfront car parks are set to be turned into a green space.
A bar owner says closing the parking area just before summer will be “the worst thing” for businesses, and a real estate leader says the change will be the “death nail” for the “dying” CBD and his business might move.
Tauranga City Council says The Strand waterfront car park is closing on Monday for the area to be transformed into a green reserve and playground. It is expected to be under construction until mid-2024.
The council says redeveloping this “prime waterfront location” is important for Tauranga CBD’s revitalisation and will be a “drawcard” for locals and visitors.
It says new parks have been added nearby and the number of spots in the city centre will “will largely remain the same” once work on the Spring St parking building ends.
In under a week, however, more than 1000 people have signed an online petition expressing “concern and opposition” to the closure of “one of the city centre’s most vital car parking spaces”.
The historic Domino Sugar Refinery on the Brooklyn waterfront is officially opening Wednesday, following more than a decade of renovation to convert it to a high-end office building complete with plans for a bar, indoor pool and fitness center.
The 15-story, all-electric structure now dubbed the “Refinery at Domino” is just north of the Williamsburg Bridge. Developers Two Trees Management described it as “the crown jewel” of its larger 11-acre Domino Sugar Factory site — once home to a booming sugar refinery — that also includes the popular Domino Park.
Max Touhey
12-foot opening between all-electric Refinery building and landmark masonry facade.
The factory was once the tallest building on the waterfront, with the original structure dating to the 1880s. The famous brick facade and arched windows were retained and act as a shell for the new building within, topped by a domed glass penthouse with 360-degree views.
A 12-foot gap between the new building and the old is filled with a vertical garden of trees and plants open to the elements.
David Lombino, managing director of Two Trees, described it as a “living landmark.”
“You look around the city, I’m not sure there’s another more ambitious landmarked project than this one,” he told the Daily News during a recent tour of the site. “I think for a lot of folks who looked at this project, the landmarked status of the refinery building was a big turnoff. We looked at it as an opportunity to do something really unique, really iconic, and hopefully really successful.”
To pay homage to the building’s history, a replica of the iconic “Domino Sugar” sign has been added on the top of the building, and the original will be redone and installed in the lobby. The refinery’s ground floor will be open to the public, with retail and permanent rest rooms for Domino Park.
Todd Maisel/New York Daily News
The old Domino Sugar factory in Williamsburg Brooklyn is being partially torn down, with parts of it to make up new housing along the East River. Many of the historical features will also be preserved.October 30, 2013.
The penthouse will have amenities for workers, including a bar, and half will be used as an events space. Office workers will also have access to an indoor pool and fitness center.
Sugar production was one of Brooklyn’s most important industries in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, and the refinery didn’t cease operations until 2004; it was landmarked three years later.
When finished in 2027, the larger site will also include three residential buildings and another office tower, plus Domino Square, an extension to the park that will include amphitheater seating and ice-skating in the winter. The 1-acre plaza is expected to open next summer.
Max Touhey
The Refinery at Domino and activated Domino Park – photo by Max Touhey
Work on the building is ongoing but Lombino said it could have tenants by the end of the year. He said about 4,500 employees could be based out of the Refinery, roughly the same number that worked in the sugar factory in its heyday.
Two Trees acquired the site for $185 million in 2012 and has spent about $150 million renovating the Refinery. Early iterations of the Refinery redesign included more than 2,000 residential units, though that plan was scrapped.
Two Trees is one of the borough’s biggest developers, perhaps best known for its role in transforming DUMBO, another waterfront Brooklyn neighborhood.
Max Touhey
Refinery Penthouse
“It aligns with where we’re seeing demand in the office sector,” Lombino said of the decision to build offices despite the broader industry limbo. “People are less eager to work in central business districts in Midtown and lower Manhattan. There’s a desire to have work closer to home. Williamsburg, north Brooklyn as a whole has seen an incredible influx of talent in the past 10-plus years. The idea is folks would rather work in a highly amenitized space closer to their home, with a surrounding park and exciting neighborhood than schlep into some of the central business districts.”
But the 13-year renovation journey was not always a sweet one: There were protests from locals early on expressing fears about gentrification, and a construction worker on a residential building site part of the bigger Domino Sugar campus fell to his death in 2016.
Two Trees is putting down roots elsewhere on the Williamsburg waterfront: Its ambitious “River Ring” development nearby could bring two massive towers, a park, public beaches and breakwaters. But Lombino says the state would need to introduce a new tax abatement program “in order for the math to work” on the project, after the lucrative 421-a property tax exemption expired last year.
Julian Cook and Chris Meehan inside the new $4m showroom on Beaumont St. Photo / Dean Purcell
NZX-listed Winton Land has a $750 million scheme for Auckland CBD’s first vertical retirement village and to redevelop part of Wynyard Quarter’s waterfront edge, refurbishing and rebuilding a 1.7ha site.
Units up for grabs include 604sq m penthouses with four bedrooms and 3.5 bathrooms, on sale from $13.75m.
A 12-level 154-unit retirement village, 200-seat wedding venue, new 250-seat waterfront dining/bar building, outdoor pool in a resort-like zone for village residents, new marina piers, dredging the seabed to make it deeper, a new marina and refurbishing many other surrounding buildings are part of the plan for the site.
Winton chief executive Chris Meehan and director Julian Cook took the Herald on a tour on Thursday, opening the $4m purpose-built show suite, 136 Beaumont St.
Cape Interiors + Construction built a new standalone apartment to show buyers what’s being offered.
The retirement village site is freehold while Winton’s waterfront side of Beaumont St is leasehold in perpetuity to Viaduct Harbour Holdings, lease payments reviewed every seven years, with another four to run in its current term, Meehan said.
Marketing starts today for the retirement village to be built by Icon. The display suite is also open to the public today from 10am-4pm.
The vertical village will rise on the site of a now-ditched scheme by one of China’s wealthiest…
Ultra-high net worth real estate has long been full of hot shots, narcissists, and bravado.
In turn, unscripted reality shows like Bravo’s “Million Dollar Listing” and Netflix’s “Selling Sunset” have minted ratings and superstars out of realtors and developers, many of whom were just scrapping to get a listing or a loan a few years earlier.
Luxury real estate is also rife with hyperbole: browse through most multi-million dollar listings in Miami, Manhattan, or Los Angeles, and you’d be tempted to believe that every kitchen is fit for a Michelin-starred “chef” and that each fixture and finish belongs in the Louvre.
Acqualina Resort & Residences Master’s-quality oceanfront lawns and red umbrellas are two of its … [+] signature design elements
Courtesy of Acqualina Resort & Residences
The North and South Towers of The Estates At Acqualina and Villa Acqualina in between are the Trump … [+] Group’s latest magnum opus in Sunny Isles Beach, Florida 30 minutes north of Miami
Courtesy of The Estates At Acqualina
Against this background, it wouldn’t be unreasonable therefore to think that the tagline for the recently completed Estates At Acqualina in Sunny Isles Beach—a.k.a “The World’s Finest Residences”—might whiff of a little aggrandizement.
If you’re familiar with Florida’s “other Trumps”, however, you’d also be totally wrong since hyperbole is not their style and perfection is what they do.
Acqualina Resort & Residences 25′ arched dome lobby evokes the grandeur and opulence of the world’s … [+] finest hotels
Courtesy of Acqualina Resort & Residences
Seventeen years ago in 2006, South African-born brothers, entrepreneurs, and real estate developers Jules and Eddie Trump, along with Jules’ wife Stephanie (none of them related to the former President), opened Acqualina Resort & Residences, spanning 4.5 oceanfront acres with 98 guest rooms, 188 residences, and award-winning restaurants and amenities all wrapped up within a 51-story tower fronted by 400’ of perfectly-manicured Atlantic Ocean beach 30-minutes north of Miami.
Acqualina Resort & Residences includes more than 1200′ feet of prime South Florida beachfront with … [+] four oceanfront pools
Courtesy of Acqualina Resort & Residences/Benjamin Edelstein
Acqualina’s uber-luxe oceanfront suites have unobstructed views stretching all the way to the … [+] Bahamas
Courtesy of Acqualina Resort & Residences/Troy Campbell
In the process, the Trumps succeeded in setting a new high bar for luxury real estate and hospitality in South Florida. More substantially, Acqualina also put Sunny Isles Beach on the map as the epicenter of Florida’s new “Riviera”.
Over the next few years, Acqualina quickly became one of the most coveted hotel reservations in the world (no hyperbole here). It’s earned Forbes Travel Guide’s Five Star and AAA’s Five Diamond Awards—both luxury hospitality gold standards—fourteen years in a row, and recently was ranked the #1 Best Destination Resort in America by USA Today.
As a result, if you call up to book a room at Acqualina on any date other than a Monday in August, you’ll likely to be met with a typical, perpetual refrain: “Sorry. We don’t have anything available for those days”—which, if you’re the Trumps, is a good problem to have when your starter rooms go for an average of $1,200 a night.
“Our initial vision with Acqualina was to build a family-run hotel that had all of the elements of the finest resorts in Saint-Tropez with the elegance of a great, historic city hotel,” says Jules Trump about their original vision for Acqualina and the gap they presciently saw in the market.
“Stephanie, Eddie, and I all felt back then that what was really missing in luxury hospitality were great amenities and creature comforts, particularly while spending the day on the beach, including everything from dining and drinks to exceptional service and spas. We wanted our guests to step into the exclusive world of Acqualina and feel as though their every wish and desire had been anticipated before they even had to ask for it.”
The four pillars of Acqualina are spread out along 1,200 of pristine, uninterrupted South Florida … [+] oceanfront. From left to right: The Mansions At Acqualina, Acqualina Resort & Residences, The Estates At Acqualina South Tower, Villa Acqualina, and The Estates At Acqualina Boutique North Tower
Courtesy of The Estates At Acqualina
Using Acqualina Resort’s success as a springboard, the Trumps opened The Mansions At Acqualina next door a decade later in 2015, which consisted of 79 private residences in an iconic 47-story building designed by Cohen Freedman Encinosa & Associates that’s still the tallest in Sunny Isles Beach at 643’.
Billed as Florida’s first “mansions in the sky”, The Mansions At Acqualina delivered on almost every detail, finish, and amenity that hadn’t previously been pushed in luxury real estate before. It also set a new standard for what the synergy of world-class design, art, architecture, and lifestyle on the beach could look like—something which every other South Florida developer is still trying to catch up and outduel each other on.
Not surprisingly, especially given their perfect timing well after the Great Recession, The Mansions At Acqualina fully sold out within months of launching sales, further solidifying the Trumps’ repute as one of the leading luxury real estate developers in the world—even if their legendary lack of presence in the press and shouting their success from their penthouse rooftops belies their more innately modest and humble side.
The Estates At Acqualina’s Boutique North Tower will begin moving its first residents in in spring … [+] 2023. A select few residences are available for re-sale in both towers ranging from $39 million to $85 million
Courtesy of The Estates At Acqualina
The Estates At Acqualina like the resort and The Mansions effortlessly blend contemporary … [+] architecture and design with old world European style
Courtesy of The Estates At Acqualina
Fast forward another six years to now and the Trumps’ newest development—The Estates At Acqualina, which brings to market 245 residences in two gleaming, glass waterfront towers this time on the north end of the resort—somehow manages to raise the luxury real estate bar again.
The Estates’ budget is part of that success, which at $1.8 billion makes it one of the most expensive new residential developments in America. This perfection-at-any-cost ethos ensured that no expense would be spared to surpass buyers’ expectations at every level, from the world-class architects, interior designers, and craftsmen behind the planning and construction down to every material, finish, and fixture and the bolts, screws, and rivets that hold it all together.
With a budget of $1.8 billion The Estates At Acqualina is one of the most expensive residential … [+] developments in America and also its most luxurious
Courtesy of The Estates At Acqualina
Jules, Eddie, and Stephanie Trump’s original vision for The Estates At Acqualina was to combine … [+] unparalleled art, architecture, and lifestyle with the finest amenities in the world
Courtesy of The Estates At Acqualina
The other driver of The Estates’ success has been clarity of vision—and equally importantly, the ability to execute on it, which not coincidentally has been one of the Trumps’ real estate hallmarks for more than four decades since they first developed Miami’s Williams Island back in the 1980s.
Since its origin moment, the Trump Group’s aspiration for The Estates at Acqualina was to create a luxury lifestyle that would set it apart from anything else in the world, and to design a building from the inside out within which those details, experiences, indulgences, and amenities could be brought to life in a way that would be effortless and osmotic.
“Perfection in anything isn’t easy to achieve,” says Jules, “But The Estates at Acqualina is quite simply that. After the incredibly successful opening of Acqualina Resort & Residences fifteen years ago, followed by the creation of The Mansions at Acqualina, The Estates go even further than we ever thought we could go. No expense was spared to design and build the two towers, everything is the best in its class, and our quality is incomparable in terms of the materials we’ve used including mosaics, marbles, and metals. The Estates are also a celebration of art, architecture, and lifestyle and a pursuit of perfection that you’ll see manifested everywhere, from the grand formal entrance to the signature integration of modern and classic architecture to the exemplary services that we offer to our residents.”
Acqualina’s indoor ice skating rink within the Circus Maximus
Courtesy of Acqualina Resort & Residences
The Estates At Acqualina’s private poolside cabanas
Courtesy of Acqualina Resort & Residences
The Estates At Acqualina include almost 6 acres of outdoor amenities and greenspace
Courtesy of Acqualina Resort & Residences
Not surprisingly—and with a little boost from the pandemic which sent 40 and 50-something, deep-pocketed buyers from New York in particular fleeing to Florida for larger floor plans and an upscale work-from-home lifestyle—both The Estates’ North and South Towers pre-sold out by mid-2021 within six months of launching sales.
The Estates’ amenities and exclusivity were a big part of that, in addition to the towers’ beachfront real estate and Florida’s tax advantages, says Jules, which helped to attract buyers with younger families who naturally gravitated to six acres of Masters-quality lawns, landscaping, and pools on the ocean, a quarter-mile of postcard beachfront, five restaurants, and over 45,000 SF of indoor and outdoor amenities within the Tuscan-styled Villa Acqualina connecting The Estates’ two towers.
Private bowling lanes are one of the dozens of family-centered amenity perks at The Estates At … [+] Acqualina
Courtesy of The Estates At Acqualina
The Wall Street Traders Club at The Estates At Acqualina was designed with buyers from New York City … [+] in mind
Courtesy of The Estates At Acqualina
The Estates At Acqualina’s night club in Villa Acqualina is designed so that parents are afforded as … [+] much fun as their children
Courtesy of The Estates At Acqualina
The entrace to The Estates At Acqualina’s world-class private spa and AcquaFit wellness and fitness … [+] sancutary
Courtesy of The Estates At Acqualina
“The Estates not only provides the world’s finest residences,” Jules tells me with a rare note of self-satisfaction, “But also the world’s most luxurious amenities for our residents, redefining the standard for sophisticated living. The Acqualina brand has always prided itself on putting our residents first, and Villa Acqualina is an unprecedented offering in a residential development, including a spa, an ice skating rink, bowling lanes, a movie theater, a kids club, a teen room, an amazing health and fitness sanctuary called Acquafit with a juice bar, salt room, and boxing gym, and a Wall Street Trader’s Club where residents will have access to ticker tape, computers, and a board room.”
Karl Lagerfeld’s exclusive lobbies are The Estates At Acqualina are his only residential commission … [+] in the U.S.
Courtesy of The Estates At Acqualina
Lobbies by Karl Lagerfeld are one of The Estates At Acqulina’s signature design elements
Courtesy of The Estates At Acqualina
If The Estates At Acqualina has a penultimate pièce de resistance, however, for Jules, Eddie, and Stephanie it’s the towers’ lobbies, both of which were designed by German designer Karl Lagerfeld, who was for decades was creative director for the French fashion house Chanel. The Estates’ lobbies are Lagerfeld’s only residential commission in the U.S. (Lagerfeld died in 2019), so they hold a special place for the Trumps given their reverence for world-class design and architecture.
“The Estates architecturally are purposefully a combination of contemporary elements and design merged with European Old World style that Eddie and I, along with my wife Stephanie, personally love,” says Jules. “We’ve found that our buyers love it too. So, when we committed to creating ‘The World’s Finest Residences’ at The Estates at Acqualina, we knew that had to be apparent from the minute our residents stepped through the door. Thus, the lobby design was a very important decision. Toward that end, it was an obvious choice to have our lobbies designed by one of the world’s most important designers: Karl Lagerfeld, the very master of modern creativity. We also take great pride in the fact that Karl chose Acqualina as his first residential project in the United States to bring his eye for opulence, luxury, design, and style to.”
Avra Miami is one of the city’s hottest new dining spots
Courtesy of The Estates At Acqualina
Avra Miami includes more than 12,000 square feet of indoor and outdoor oceanfront dining space
Courtesy of The Estates At Acqualina
On the culinary front, The Estates is no less world-class in its A-list, pursuit of perfection than its lobbies, architecture, and amenities.
Avra—the first expansion of the iconic New York City Greek restaurant—recently opened in Villa Acqualina in November 2022 to great fanfare and is now one of Miami’s hottest new dining spots.
“At The Estates, Avra has quickly become one of the biggest selling points,” says Jules. “It’s more than a $10 million venture—the restaurant is 12,000 square feet, including an al fresco dining area that overlooks the ocean. The design includes an infinity pool, a collection of contemporary art and a panoramic bar. The restaurant flies in fish from the Mediterranean every day and has its own network of fishermen and produces its own olive oil. Based on my numerous times dining at Avra in New York, dining there is an experience that transcends your typical meal out and creates a one-of-a-kind experience.”
The entrance into the two-story Casa D’ Oro priced at $39 million
Courtesy of The Estates At Acqualina
Casa D’ Oro features more than 11,000 square feet of living space in two-stories with direct beach … [+] access and a private pool
Courtesy of The Estates At Acqualina
The view in the morning from Casa D’ Oro’s master bedroom quite
Courtesy of The Estates At Acqualina
If everything about all of this sounds appealing, billionaire neighbors are your thing, and you have a few million to spare, a few residences at The Estates At Acqualina can still be yours via re-sale.
The first is Casa D’ Oro, a two-story, turn-key, single-family home in the South Tower that’s just re-hit the market for $39,000,000.
Furnished by Fendi Casa, Casa D’ Oro flips the script on the typical South Florida condo model which for decades has priced properties vertically—namely that the higher up you go the more expensive (and usually larger) units sell for per square foot.
Casa D’ Oro is the anti-penthouse, located on the South Tower’s ground floor right next to the Acqualina resort with direct beach access, a private pool, outdoor summer kitchen, a private elevator, a four-car garage, 11’ ceilings, and six bedrooms and 7 ½ baths spread out across 11,605 impeccably furnished square feet.
Every residence at The Estates At Acqualina features sweeping oceanfront views all the way to the … [+] Bahamas
Courtesy of The Estates At Acqualina
The second is an unfinished 15,000-square-foot, four-story residence located in the Boutique North Tower that’s now on the market for $85 million—which if it sells for anywhere near its asking price would be the most expensive condo ever sold in South Florida, besting the current record of $60 million hedge fund billionaire Ken Griffin paid for his 12,500 square foot Faena House pad in Miami Beach in 2015.
Named Casa di Coba after its current owners Joshua and Jenni Coba—who made a fortune in haircare and are reselling the condo to take advantage of Miami’s still smoking hot real estate market—the residence has seven bedrooms, nine bathrooms, six powder rooms, a private pool and four-car garage, its own elevator, a three-story spiral staircase, a 3,100 square foot guest house, and a private oceanfront cabana furnished by Fendi.
Acqualina Resort & Residences is the most award-winning oceanfront resort in the world 14 years in a … [+] row
Courtesy of Acqualina Resort & Residences
As for the Trumps next magnum opus after The Estates, Jules, Eddie, and Stephanie remain coy. But inertia isn’t their thing.
“We’re always looking at new opportunities and places where we can raise the bar again and build something that sets a new standard for luxury and lifestyle,” Eddie tells me with a wry smile. “Where and what that is, you’ll just have to wait and see.”
Judging from what he, his brother Jules, and Stephanie have done before, however, every other developer should be holding their breath as well.