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1674-9 Tony Goldman 251 of 283, 2 Terms mh NEW YORKER GAMBLES ON REVIVING SOUTH BEACH 09/15/1986 THE MIAMI HERALD Copyright (c) 1986, The Miami Herald DATE: Monday, September 15, 1986 EDITION: FINAL SECTION: BUSINESS PAGE: 9BM LENGTH: 148 lines ILLUSTRATION: photo: Tony GOLDMAN SOURCE/CREDIT LINE: DORY OWENS Herald Business Writer 024 MEMO: IN THE SPOTLIGHT CJ� NEW YORKER GAMBLES ON REVIVING SOUTH BEACH WHEN Tony Goldman arrived in Miami 2 1/2 years ago, he strolled into Coconut Grove Realty wearing faded denim 3ea , a T-shirt and sunglasses. The New York investor had been priced out of his hometown and wanted to tour the Grove with Vincent Pastore, part owner of the realty company. He proceeded to shop for real estate the way other people shop for produce at the corner grocery. "I'll take that one, " he told Pastore. "And that one. And that one." His $2.3 million investment bought him Ted Stahl Interiors, Coconuts, the Peacock Cafe and the neighboring Masonic Lodge, all in the heart of the village. Two years later, Goldman asked Pastore to show him the Art Deco district on South Miami Beach, which he had learned about through friends. After an initial gasp of excitement as they rounded the corner of Fifth Street onto Ocean Drive, Goldman launched another buying spree. /D-/ He bought three hotels, a vacant lot and an apartment building on Ocean rive and another building on Collins Avenue at a total cost of $2.6 million. While he intends to remain only a landlord in the Grove, he claims he will be a major force in the rebirth of Ocean Drive. And there is considerable speculation that he is right. "When you sell to a real estate investor, you don't see that much change, usually just the renovation of a building, " Pastore said. "Tony is a real estate investor, but he's also an art collector, a restaurateur and has entertainment (expertise) to boot. With that you get a lot more than roof patching. " "Goldman's track record speaks for itself. The man worked magic in the SoHo district of New York, " said Woody Graber, spokesman for the Miami Beach Development Corp., a nonprofit group charged with stimulating economic growth in the area south of Dade Boulevard. "There are people with vision and there are people who follow people with vision. Tony Goldman is a person with vision, " Graber said. His comment was not made without cause. Goldman, 42, is intense, bubbling with ideas, wit and comments on life. He turned five brownstones on Manhattan's West Side into a fortune by buying low and selling high. He transformed a garbage truck garage in SoHo into a restaurant, wine bar and nightclub. He displayed the work of local artists on a graffiti wall nearby and called it public art. Goldman, adopted at birth, was reared by Charles and Tillie Goldman. He was a woman's coat manufacturer; she a person consumed by civic work and an interest in the arts. Goldman grew up in an affluent home in Manhattan's Upper East Side, playing catch with his brother amid Monet and Renoir paintings. He took piano lessons and accompanied his mother to New York Philharmonic performances. To this day he calls himself one of the luckiest people he knows. He began his work career at 15 in Camden, N.J., coat factories owned by his father, working in the cutting room, in sewing, pressing, shipping, "doing everything but signing checks, " he said. "I got a basic understanding of the working man there, " he said recently. "I learned that washing dishes is just as important as running the company if it's Saturday night and the dishwasher isn't working." Goldman says he suffered from dyslexia and had difficulty with written academics. He excelled in performing and communicative arts, however, and studied drama at Emerson College in Boston. While there he married Janet, his wife of 12 years before their divorce eight years ago. After graduating from college, he veered away from his father's business. "If you take your family's money, you'll always be a slave to it," he said. Instead he spent two years working in his uncle's real estate investment and management company in New York before striking out on his own. He got his start by borrowing money to buy the brownstone apartment buildings on the West Side and renting them. The neighborhood, depressed and undervalued at the time, became a fashionable residential area, and prices soared. "I go into an area five to seven years before it happens, " Goldman says. "I like the smell of a property, and I like to be able to afford it. Advance real estate is undervalued. Miami Beach is undervalued." Eight years ago, while scouting for property in SoHo, Goldman discovered a garbage truck garage on Greene Street. While only a stark shell of a building lay before him, he envisioned a bustling restaurant complex and leased it. "There's a fine line between vision and suicide," he said. On Dec. 6, 1979, he opened Greene Street, a 100-foot-long room and with a 30-foot ceiling unfettered by columns. He built a balcony halfway around the first floor, filled it with original art pieces and connected it to a neighboring building. Eventually he spent $550,000 to buy the building. Goldman, benefactor to numerous art organizations and a man who has given scores of struggling artists and musicians a start, books himself into the cabaret above Greene Street about three or four times a year and sings his favorite jazz classics, accompanied by a longtime friend and pianist. Two years ago, he opened the SoHo Kitchen and Bar next door to Greene Street. Between the two, he says, he earns about $300,000 a year in profits on sales of $3 million. He works on the third floor of the building in an open room, surrounded by the department heads of his business. "He can be stubborn and he changes his mind a lot because he'll think of something better, " said Jay Wolmer, general manager of both restaurants. "Whether you agree with him or not, you're going to have a new experience. It's going to make you think. That's what he wants from people. " Goldman's life is closely tied to his restaurants. He lives on the fifth floor of the building that houses Greene Street. His ex-wife, Janet Goldman, works in the building next door. The pair and their two teen-aged children dine often at the restaurant, where Goldman indulges his passion for pasta and tomato sauce. He used a huge graffiti wall on a block he owns in the area to display the works of local artists, regularly whiting out the pieces to make room for new ones. On the rest of the block, Goldman installed a sculpture garden, where the artworks are also regularly rotated. "He brings art forward, " Janet Goldman said. "He wants to educate people, to show them that life can be beautiful if you use and enhance what you've got." It is an interest he says he wants to extend to South Beach as his projects there progress. The Park Central, currently closed for renovation, is to reopen in November as a hotel. Later this year he wants to open a business called the Ocean Drive-in on a parcel he's buying at Ocean Drive and Fifth Street and a property he is in the process of buying. The drive-in would feature hamburgers, curb service, indoor seating and live music. He plans to install a free public art gallery called Ocean Space in the lobby of a building at 1200 Ocean Dr. He says the gallery will open with a Dec. 1 exhibition by Miami artists Haydee and Sahara Scull, and he hopes to display the work of New York artists locally. "I want to create a pedestal for Miami artists as well as New York artists," Goldman said. By November 1987, he plans to open a restaurant and wine bar, to be named Lucky's in the Park Central at 640 Ocean Dr. In addition, he says, he intends to convert the old 100-room Metropole Hotel, in the 600 block of Collins Avenue, into an apartment building of 30 1,000-square-foot lofts. All of Goldman's purchases in Miami Beach and the Grove were financed by sellers who agreed to take long-term installment payments. Goldman said he intends to spend some $1 million to 2 million to renovate the buildings. "It's a gamble, " he said. "There are no guarantees, but buying Madison Avenue at top prices is a gamble when the stock market goes down 80 points in one day. " Like his restaurants in SoHo, Goldman said, his businesses on Ocean Drive and Collins Avenue will help to change South Beach for the better and make his property more valuable. "My plan is to accumulate as much real estate as I can, learn and study the district, the people and their sensitivities and in another year open a restaurant and club, " he said. "When I opened Greene Street, I knew I would affect the area around me. The same thing will happen on Miami Beach. " Tony Goldman JOB: Real estate investor PERSONAL: Age 42, divorced, lives in New York LAST BOOK READ: Louis Barragon, Architect of Mexico HEROES: Gandhi, Mel Brooks PROUDEST MOMENT: Birth of his two children BIGGEST DISAPPOINTMENT: Death of his father