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Diego Quint says not being able to
move into 401 Blu cost him a lot more than money.
Photo by George Barreiro / firedogphoto.com |
On the evening of June 28, 2005,
about 25 owners who had recently moved into the
condominium conversion called 401 Blu received letters
from its then-Project Manager Debra Mason telling them
they had 24 hours to get out.
“Unfortunately, due to circumstances beyond our control, we
can no longer have residents living in the building while
construction is under way in the common corridors,”
announced the letter. “We anticipate that work in the common
areas will be complete within two to four weeks.”
Edward
Carlson of Illinois-based Comprehensive Management Services
purchased the 207-unit building at 401 69th St., Miami Beach
in 2003. Another Carlson company, Byhall, LLC, owns 81 units
in the building and is the subject of multiple lawsuits by
other owners seeking damages. Carlson is also converting
another building, Treasure on the Bay, at 1900 S. Treasure
Drive in North Bay Village.
Back in the
first half of 2005, a title company associated with 401 Blu
allegedly pressured contracted buyers to close on their
units despite the fact that the building hadn’t received
certificates of occupancy from the Miami Beach Building
Department because it was still under construction. A July
7, 2005, SunPost article stated that one buyer had
been told he’d be fined $160 per day if he didn’t close on
his two-bedroom unit. That same article quotes then-Miami
Beach Building Official Hamid Dolikhani as saying: “It is
very questionable how they even closed [on the units]
without any certificates of occupancy from the city.”
More than
two years later, lives are still on hold, people’s financial
credit has been destroyed, the developer has yet to complete
the building, and everyone associated with him is keeping
quiet about it.
One of
Carlson’s tight-lipped representatives, Alfredo Gonzalez of
Greenberg Traurig, appeared before the Miami Beach Zoning
Board of Adjustment on Aug. 3 to give a progress
report. The board granted a variance to build two sets of
exit steps that the Fire Department required in January. The
variance was necessary because development regulations had
changed since 1970, when the complex was first built. Sonia
Machen, the Miami Beach fire marshal, told the SunPost
that the interior fire exit stairs were fine, but because an
outside ramp on the building was “too steep,” two small sets
of steps were needed.
The
variance was requested at the December 2006 Board of
Adjustment meeting and continued for 30 days until the
January 2007 board meeting, where it was approved, with the
condition a progress report be presented at the March
meeting. Owners showed up to those meetings and testified to
poor management of the building and numerous other problems.
But it seems the city can do little to help them.
“The board
doesn’t have the jurisdiction over real estate transactions,
but was concerned and wanted to monitor progress,” Planning
and Zoning Manager Richard Lorber told the SunPost.
Another
progress report was requested for May 4, and finally another
for Aug. 3. Gonzalez told the board that construction on the
steps was set to begin Aug. 10.
“I’ll be
honest with you, we are dealing with bad people here,” board
member Seth Frohlich testified about the character of the
development company.
Hugo
Alvarez, an attorney with Alvarez, Paz & Barbara, spoke on
behalf of Diego Quint, one of the original owners who was
forced to move out in 2005. He and at least 20 others are
suing for damages. Quint is seeking in excess of $50,000.
Looking for
a better life, Quint came to Miami Beach in 2001 from
Argentina as that country’s economy was collapsing. A hair
stylist by trade, he saved money and was able to buy a
condominium for him and his family. His wife, Vilma, and
their American-born twin 3-year-olds, Lucas and Thomas, were
visiting family in Argentina when Quint closed on the
$272,000 one-bedroom condo. He’d been living in the condo
for five days, and his family was scheduled to arrive from
Argentina the next day, when a vacate notice was slid under
his door at 11 p.m. At the time Quint’s English was poor, so
he had a neighbor translate for him.
“I couldn’t
believe it,” Quint told the SunPost. “I couldn’t
believe it. And basically I was crying.”
The next
morning he picked up his family at Miami International
Airport.
“When we go
back to the building, the building is under a disaster,”
Quint said. “Everybody’s down there in the office,
screaming, yelling. I said, ‘No, this cannot happen to me.’”
At first it
seemed CMS truly felt bad and wanted to help the affected
unit owners, Quint said. The developer arranged for hotel
rooms and said in writing, “For those who find alternate
lodging, a per diem allotment of $100 per day will be
provided.”
Quint moved
his family into the Golden Sands Hotel at 6901 Collins Ave.
Over a three-month period they received $5,600 from CMS. The
money stopped coming in December 2005. But he wasn’t allowed
to move into his condominium until September 2006, when the
city issued the seventh floor a certificate of completion.
During that
period Quint paid the mortgage and taxes on a condominium he
couldn’t live in, on top of rent on another apartment. Part
of his lawsuit demands reimbursement for the extra costs
incurred. Even if he wins, he says it’s too little too late;
that the financial burden already broke up his family. Last
year, saying the stress was too much for her, his wife took
their boys back to Buenos Aires. Now Quint lives with a
roommate in a rented apartment while he leases his 401 Blu
condo at a loss. His tenant’s lease doesn’t expire for
another six months.
Nearly half
of the building’s 16 floors are still uninhabitable because
they don’t have certificates of completion. The developer
hasn’t applied for permits for two of the floors. Fees of
$37,845.30 are owed on the other five.
Last week
Candace Duff, another of Carlson’s Greenberg Traurig
attorneys, was startled when she answered a phone call from
the SunPost seeking comment.
“I’m sorry.
I cannot. Thank you very much,” Duff said in a harried voice
before slamming the receiver down.
Alvarez
said there are rumors Duff is trying to take herself off the
case.
Gonzalez
didn’t return repeated calls for comment either. In fact, no
one associated with the developer would comment. Carlson
himself could not be reached for comment.
Though the
Board of Adjustment expressed sympathy for the 401 Blu
owners seeking restitution, its hands are tied.
“Our
purview is the granting of a variance to build egress
stairs,” board member Larry Herrup said. “That’s it.”
The city
board voted to bring the variance issue back for another
progress report in October. It would like Carlson himself to
appear, but by law he can send a representative.
Meanwhile,
Quint is beginning to lose hope that he will see his money.
Rumors are circulating around the building that Byhall, LLC,
is preparing to declare for bankruptcy protection.
Said Quint:
“I don’t know what will happen to us.”
Comments?
E-mail ben@miamisunpost.com.