Condo owners at a luxury high-rise in
South Beach are on the hook for a $27.2 million special
assessment for repairs and renovations, two years after
passing a roughly $30 million payment, The Real Deal has
learned.
Condo associations across South Florida are grappling with
the high cost of repairing and maintaining their
communities. Some have doubled their monthly maintenance
fees or passed multimillion-dollar assessments.
The Murano at Portofino condo association voted in early
December to approve the $27.2 million in costs as part of
the second phase of their planned renovations and repairs.
Condo board president John Caprio said the assessment
received more than 60 percent of the vote from the 135 unit
owners who voted.
Murano at Portofino, a 37-story, 189-unit tower at 1000
South Pointe Drive in Miami Beach, was built in 2002 by
Thomas Kramer’s Portofino Group and the Pérez family’s
Related Group.
Phase two of the special assessments includes a $17.6
million pool deck project, $2.9 million elevator
modernization, $2.9 million renovation of the entrance and
lobby, and $1.5 million in Structural Integrity Reserve
Study funding (SIRS), according to a copy of the December
meeting agenda.
The latter, SIRS, is part of the condo safety legislation
that Gov. Ron DeSantis signed into law after the deadly
condo collapse in Surfside in 2021. The law requires that
condo and co-op associations that existed on or before July
2022 complete a SIRS study by the end of this year for any
building that’s three or more stories tall. The study can
cost anywhere from a few thousand dollars to tens of
thousands of dollars, depending on the complexity of the
property.
Any budget adopted on Jan. 1, 2025 or later must fund the
SIRS reserves.
Laws passed in the last two years also require milestone
inspections for condo and co-op buildings that are at least
25 to 30 years of age, depending on their proximity to the
coast.
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Unit owners’ cost for Murano at Portofino’s second phase
will range from about $66,000 to $322,000 for a penthouse
owner. Four units in the building are for sale, ranging from
$2.7 million to $8.9 million, the latter of which is under
contract, according to Zillow.
Construction work at Murano at Portofino has been underway
for years.
“If you look at our building it looks like every corner is
being attacked at the same time,” Caprio said.
In 2022, the association embarked on a large facade
restoration and renovation that included work to the stucco,
balconies, waterproofing and water intrusion, as well as
non-essential upgrades like renovating the beach club.
Caprio said the assessments “are on par with other luxury
projects,” in the area, including Portofino Tower and at the
Continuum South Beach.
Unit owners are typically held to a schedule of payments.
Caprio said the association collected a third of the first
assessment up front and amortized the remaining two payments
over two years. The association already has some funds to
begin the second phase; work could start in the first
quarter of next year.
Owners will have to pay a quarter of the second assessment
up front. The remainder will be owed over the following 18
months with a balloon payment at the end.
That’s on top of monthly dues. At Murano at Portofino, the
owner of a 3,365-square-foot, three-bedroom condo, on the
market for $7.5 million, is required to pay regular dues
totaling just over $3,400 a month, according to the listing.