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Newport Beach Builder Signs on to $20B Miami Project



COMMERCIAL

A glut of unsold condominium towers and delayed developments across Miami haven’t scared away Newport Beach’s Centurion Partners LLC from making its first foray into the South Florida market.

Centurion, a developer of high-end condos, resorts and hotels, recently signed on as an investment and development partner for Miami Worldcenter, a massive project planned in an older, rundown business district just north of downtown Miami.

The redevelopment project consists of a nine-block, 25-acre part of the city known as Park West.

The project envisions about 20 million square feet of office and hotel towers, condos, shops and entertainment, developed in phases during two decades. The city’s zoning commission signed off on initial plans in November, and Centurion joined the development team the following month.

The other developer in the project is the Miami Worldcenter Group, a partnership of Falcone Group and the Marc Roberts Cos., two South Florida developers.

Centurion became involved through its contacts with the heads of Miami Worldcenter Group, Art Falcone and Marc Roberts, said Centurion co-managing partner Scot Matteson.

Matteson likens the Miami project to Anschutz Entertainment Group Inc.’s L.A. Live development in downtown Los Angeles.

Miami Worldcenter has an expected price tag of $20 billion upon completion. Matteson said he’s confident Centurion and its partners will be able to raise the capital needed for the project.

The first phase of construction, which should total about $1 billion, includes about 2.5 million square feet of retail, restaurant and entertainment space.

The long timeline for the development will allow the company to ride out the tough economy and housing market, he said.

Pre-development work still needs to be completed; Matteson said he doesn’t expect to start moving dirt until the second half of 2010 at the earliest.


More Sperry Changes

Real estate investor and brokerage Sperry Van Ness still calls Irvine home, but don’t expect to see any brokers at its headquarters on Von Karman Avenue.

Six Sperry Van Ness commercial real estate offices, including the Irvine office, are being folded into its West Los Angeles operations, the company announced last month.

Local brokers will act as “satellite brokers” and telecommute, the company said.

Portland, Ore.-based Guard-ian Management LLC bought the six offices last year, as part of a portfolio of franchises in California and Arizona. Following the acquisition in 2008, two small offices near Los Angeles and one Scottsdale office were closed.

After the latest moves, Guardian’s Sperry Van Ness franchises will include just one office in California and one in Arizona.

Sperry counted 39 brokers in Orange County last year, according to the Business Journal’s 2008 list of commercial brokers.

Attempts to reach a representative of the Irvine office for comment were not successful.


Targus Renews

Targus Group International Inc., a maker of carrying cases for laptop computers, has renewed the lease for its Anaheim headquarters.

The company, which counts more than 200 workers and has been in business for 25 years, said it signed a long-term lease renewal with its San Diego-based landlord, Kilroy Realty Corp., for 200,646 square feet of space at 1211 N. Miller St.

Terms of the deal were not disclosed.

The company looked at other locations in the Inland Empire as well as in Central County, before choosing to remain at its current location, according to Vic Streufert, Targus’ chief financial officer.

“We were able to take advantage of current market conditions and city inducements,” Streufert said in a statement.

The Miller Street building is part of Kilroy’s Anaheim Technology Center, a five-building industrial property that totals about 600,000 square feet.

Targus relocated from Buena Park to the Anaheim location 10 years ago.

A 100,000-square-foot, 10-year lease that Wellington, Fla.-based B/E Aerospace Inc. signed two months ago at another Anaheim Technology Center property included monthly rents of about 79 cents per square foot.

Thomas Murphy and Jeffrey Ingham, from the Newport Beach office of Jones Lang LaSalle Inc., represented Targus in the lease. Rob Socci and Brian Corrigan of Voit Commercial Brokerage LP’s Orange office represented Kilroy.

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Mark Mueller
Mark Mueller
Mark is the former Editor-in-Chief and current Community Editor of the Orange County Business Journal, one of the premier regional business newspapers in the country. He’s the fifth person to hold the editor’s position in the paper’s long history. He oversees a staff of about 15 people. The OCBJ is considered a must-read for area business executives. The print edition of the paper is the primary source of local news for most of the Business Journal’s subscribers, which includes most of OC’s major corporate and community players. Mark’s been with the paper since 2005, and long served as the real estate reporter for the paper, breaking hundreds of commercial and residential real estate stories. He took on the editor’s position in 2018.

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