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Tower plan set to loom

A $360-million, two-tower complex is proposed on Central Avenue near the bay.

By PAUL SWIDER
Published April 27, 2007


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photo
[Terra Architecture]
An artist's rendering of a mixed-use complex proposed for the Tropicana block at Second Street and Central Avenue.

ST. PETERSBURG - Defying a dull real estate market, developers submitted plans this week for a mammoth $360-million mixed-use complex at Second Street and Central Avenue.

The downtown project, dubbed Tropicana Center, calls for two towers that will include a hotel, shopping and 585 condominiums on an empty lot now used mostly for the Saturday Morning Market.

Behind the project: St. Petersburg developer Jimmy Aviram, who is also building the Arts high-rise downtown, and his Miami partner Tibor Hollo.

"It's a megaproject," said Hollo, principal of Florida East Coast Realty, which has developed more than 100 projects throughout the country and dozens in Miami. "We're trying to make a statement for us and for the city."

The project could fill a gap in decades-old plans for the downtown business core. The land has been vacant since it was cleared for the now-defunct Bay Plaza project.

BayWalk, the shopping and entertainment complex, grew out of that, but initial plans were much more grandiose.

"After Bay Plaza unwound in the late '80s, individual entities picked up parcels," said Kevin Dunn, the city's managing director of development coordination. "We've been fairly protective of this block to make sure a project delivers for the community."

Dunn said there have been numerous meetings over the years to evaluate proposals for the Tropicana block, so named because the only remaining building is the former Tropicana Hotel, now home to Aviram's offices. Aviram and Hollo first made a proposal for the property in 2004, but those plans were incomplete and didn't go forward.

Not until this submission were the proposals comprehensive enough to satisfy the city's aims, Dunn said.

"They've definitely invested a lot of time and energy in this submittal," Dunn said of the site plan that will go before the city's Environmental Development Commission in June.

The project's commercial mix is important to keep the city's downtown diverse and vibrant, Dunn said, adding that it was vital that it include retail space large enough to accommodate the kind of "midbox" retailers now lacking in the area.

Tropicana Center will completely fill the block with nearly 1-million square feet. It will rise five stories straight up from the sidewalk in a retail and parking platform before the towers separate and continue rising, the east tower to include 33 stories of condominiums, the west tower to be a 36-story hotel.

The project will connect with BayWalk on the south and the South Core building on the north, completing the old Bay Plaza concept.

The project could be a boon for South Core, which was built for department store use, Dunn said. South Core's 140,000 square feet are vacant as Progress Energy moves to its newly built headquarters on First Avenue N.

Though the project includes a large number of residential condominiums at a time when housing inventories are overstocked, Hollo said he's not concerned: This project is so complicated to design and build, it won't be completed until perhaps 2012. "I hope the slowdown in the market doesn't last 5 1/2 years," he said.

Unlike many condominium developments, Hollo said, this one won't rely on presales to trigger construction.

He said he typically needs to borrow a smaller proportion of the development's cost than would other developers, so banks are more willing to lend to him.

Dunn also seems confident that the project will materialize. He described Hollo as an institution in Miami development circles.

"You believe it when it's coming out of the ground," he said, "but this is as far as I've seen anything come along."

Aviram also has a significant track record, being involved with the recently completed Parkshore Plaza as well as 400 Beach Drive and Ovation, both currently under construction.

Aviram is also the lead developer of the Arts, slated to create a residential and artistic complex at Central Avenue and Eighth Street.

The Tropicana proposal comes on the heels of another hotel concept that downtown neighbors have opposed, at First Street and Fifth Avenue N.

While the Westin Hotel and Residences would be as tall, but not as dense, as the Tropicana, it is closer to a residential neighborhood.

The Tropicana site is "not across from a row of bungalows, it's between two parking garages," said Tim Baker, president of the Downtown Neighborhood Association, which plans to fight the Westin project. "If you're going to put a big, giant building anywhere, that's where you want to put it," he said.

Baker said he's pleased to see the development of Bay Plaza because the original concept was low and sprawling, not urban and efficient. "It was just dreadful," he said. "What we're getting is a much better mix."

Paul Swider can be reached at 892-2271 or pswider@sptimes.com or by participating in itsyourtimes.com.

[Last modified April 27, 2007, 00:51:57]


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Comments on this article
by ed 12/24/07 09:12 AM
get more culture into the city. plays, musicals, opera that is available to all!
by David 10/08/07 10:53 PM
Well...mixed feelings. Don't throw e-tomatoes, I like tall buildings, especially modern ones. But we need real urbanites to inhabit them not whiny suburbanites who complain about the "noise" of a vibrant urban culture.
by junior 05/04/07 11:26 AM
Yes more towers in our city Saint Petersburg we will be looking like New York city Skyline keep bringing these towers to our little city.
by John 04/28/07 10:26 AM
Bad idea. Putting condos that close to Jannus Landing will effectively kill that concert venue because of the whiny retirees that will inhabit the buidling and complain non-stop about the "noise"
by E.C. 04/28/07 07:40 AM
I picked St. Pete because I love the neighborhoods and can't stand the "plastic Tampa" condo set. If this project fizzles out it will be one good thing about the current real estate market.
by Jason 04/28/07 06:53 AM
I totally agree with you Paul
by weather man 04/28/07 12:51 AM
will there be low income housing units avaivable for the poor? also will it be safe from the wind and storm surge of a cat 5 hurricane hitting the tampa-st.pete region? please, do tell me all will be right
by James 04/27/07 10:08 PM
Good luck to the developer. If this project sells like the Arts, it will take more than 5.5 years. Could solve the homeless problem.
by The real SAL! 04/27/07 09:48 PM
I bet this project will never happen...
by Paul 04/27/07 05:05 PM
Ugghhh, more condos. Yippy, my quality of life goes up with more expensive places and rich people in St Pete. I liked it the way it was 10 years ago when all we had was regular people here who would actually say hello. Save St Pete, No More Condos!
by adam 04/27/07 03:16 PM
article on vacant land next to 100 Bay central in st pete times 4-28-07
by Kayla 04/27/07 01:56 PM
Great. Another snotty building downtown. More condos to remain vacant because the majority of people cannot afford them. Can't wait.
by John 04/27/07 01:32 PM
Just be sure this project doesn't disrupt the Saturday Market. I can see it now - condo dwellers complaining about the road closure for the market, and the city caving in to thier whining like a house of cards.
by Jane 04/27/07 08:52 AM
And no one in it is ever going to use any water, right?
by Sal 04/27/07 08:27 AM
Sounds great fopr us..just PLEASE don't name it "Tropicana Center" as that name will seem obsolete and obscure when one day Tropican Field will be gone or(renamed AGAIN.)
by Bob 04/27/07 07:17 AM
Maybe we should try to meet this guy Dunn at Aviram.
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