Owners of the Beach Sound Condominium on Jupiter Island, fearful of multi-million dollar repair bills, have agreed to sell their four-story, 12-unit building to a partnership affiliated with Kolter Group, according to documents filed with Palm Beach County. But for the sale to take place, the builder wants the county to change the zoning code to allow a bigger building to be built without the developer having to seek a variance. The issue will be addressed today at a county commission meeting that begins at 9:30 a.m.
|
A Kolter Homes-affiliated partnership is looking to buy the Beach Sound condominium on Jupiter Island. It is the building just to the right of the Claridge, the last high-rise to the far left. But the sale is contingent upon the county approving a change in the zoning code that would let the partnership build a new building without having to seek a variance. |
The partnership says the rule makes it economically unfeasible to build. The Type 2 waiver would allow each application to be judged individually; the ultimate decision would rest with the county commission. The waiver process would only apply to the seven condos on Jupiter Island that fall under the jurisdiction of the county government.
Under current zoning, the setbacks, or space between condo buildings, must be reduced by one foot for every foot that a building exceeds 35 feet in height. The partnership says the rule makes it economically unfeasible to build. The Type 2 waiver would allow each application to be judged individually; the ultimate decision would rest with the county commission. The waiver process would only apply to the seven condos on Jupiter Island that fall under the jurisdiction of the county government.
|
Beach Sound condo on Jupiter Island is under contract to be sold to a developer who would tear the building down and build a bigger condo. But the developer wants the county to change the zoning so that it would not have to apply for a zoning variance. |
"I'm not sure what happens if we cannot sell out," she added. "It makes no sense to put millions of dollars into our building."
Claridge lawyer Seth Behn, though, said the change would set a dangerous precedent, destroying the property values of condo buildings like the Claridge. He noted that the existing code is designed to ensure that condos do not encroach upon one another.
"I'm not sure what happens if we cannot
sell out," she added. "It makes no sense to put millions of
dollars into our building."
Claridge lawyer Seth Behn, though, said the change would set
a dangerous precedent, destroying the property values of
condo buildings like the Claridge. He noted that the
existing code is designed to ensure that condos do not
encroach upon one another.
“The sky is the limit,” said Behn of the Type 2 waiver being
pushed by the partnership. "This is an infinite height
allowance, that will allow an applicant to propose wildly
out-of-scale development and the standards set for approving
the waiver are practically non-existent."
Claridge treasurer O’Sullivan testified at the Zoning
Commission hearing that other condos on Jupiter Island have
all invested millions of dollars to comply with the new
state law. Beach Sound, he said, is the only one that has
not.
Under the proposed change, the density of any building could
not be increased, which means a new Beach Sound could have
no more than 12 units but each of those units are expected
to be much bigger than the existing ones that average about
1,300 square feet. Area realtors say the new, larger units
at Beach Sound could fetch as much as $8 million.
County commission will set precedent about future rebuilds
Even with the zoning change, there is no guarantee that
plans for a bigger Beach Sound would follow. Approval would
merely allow a developer to then file an application for the
Type 2 waiver. Detailed plans would then need to be
submitted and reviewed by county planners.
Beach Sound is located on Beach Road just south of the
Martin County property line. The area contains, in addition
to Beach Sound, the Passages, built in 1982; the Seawatch,
built in 1984; the Landfall and Ocean Sound, both built in
1984 and the Carlyle, built in 1988.
Developer: 40-year-old condo should be torn down and
replaced
The partnership emailed the following statement to The Post:
"The existing building referenced in the code change
requires significant repairs, and in light of the recent
changes to the Florida Condo Safety Act, the developers are
assisting residents who are facing challenging
circumstances. The requested changes to the code are crucial
for designing and constructing more resilient and improved
structures."
Brian Seymour, an attorney representing the partnership,
explained at a Zoning Commission meeting on July 2nd that
his clients do not want to spend six figures putting
together detailed plans without a zoning change. He said if,
and when, the change is approved, the partnership would work
with the buildings to the north and south "to figure out
what makes sense."
O’Sullivan said his concern is that one of the options
presented to the Claridge was a massive nine-story building
that would “block us out of any sunshine” and cause a
dangerous wind tunnel to develop in case of a hurricane.
Also included is a three-story parking garage with the two
lower stories below sea level. O’Sullivan questioned how a
garage could safely be built below sea level.
In a letter to the county, Behn said the partnership is
seeking to do one thing: Eliminate height restrictions for
properties redeveloped along the beach through the removal
of side setback requirements. These side-setbackrequirements
have long served as a means of ensuring compatibility
between adjacent properties, he said.
“We told them we could live with a five-story building but
we have a problem with anything taller than that,”
O’Sullivan told The Post. “We are concerned about a massive
building on a very small lot. Part of the problem is they
offered too much money and now need to change plans to make
the project work.”