Welcome to The Dirt!
I’m real estate, weather and critter reporter Kimberly
Miller with the latest developments in the sizzling market.
It turns out the color of money, and Wall Street South,
isn't green, which you might assume, and it's also not
cotton candy or salmon or bubblegum or cherry blossom or
light, pastel or flamingo pink. Nope, the color of money in
South Florida is taupe. Maybe latte, if you're looking to be
dramatic. Or, just plain white limestone, which is a little
sad because the mascot and masthead of my first paper was a
pink Flamingo and it was in Boca, which, yes, I wrongly
pronounced Boca R-Ah-Tahn for six months.
|
An ocean-to-lake estate, outlined in blue, with an under-renovation mansion at 1140 S. Ocean Blvd. has changed hands for a recorded $55.5 million in Manalapan. The rich in South Florida want what they want, and if you've got $55.5 million to spend on a home you plan to knock down, well, who's to judge? Everyone. Secretly, everyone is judging because humans are judgy. It's just evolution. |
Not that there's anything wrong with
that. The likely outcome is a demo and rebuild, but it may
hinge on whether city officials are willing to let someone
go higher than the current 10-story building.
Palm Beach Gardens officials are ticked that the nonprofit
that wants to build an ice skating rink asked for a 90-day
extension to line up financing for the project so they voted
4-0 to make like Nancy Reagan and just say no. People in the
Gardens are already cranky about the rink because a lot of
them didn't want to lose their skateboard ramps, pickleball
courts and softball field.
And the last time an extension was granted to the Palm Beach
North Athletic Foundation for a project, the project never
got built. As George W. Bush says; "Fool me once...shame on
you?" Everyone knows what he meant. Anyway, PBNAF has until
July 3 to prove they have financing.
WeatherTech founder and CEO David F. MacNeil plopped down
$55.5 million for a waterfront home under construction in
Manalapan that he is expected to demolish because he also
owns the adjacent property and wants an extra large home on
the combined lots. The two estates, which total 3.56 acres
of sandy waterfront bliss, cost $94 million.
Live lightly.
