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1674-8 Gerry Sanchez A CENTURY OF DREAMS 02/19/1995 2 of 187, 2 Terms mh BEACH HOTSPOT HAS 10/16/1991 THE MIAMI HERALD Copyright (c) 1991, The Miami Herald DATE: Wednesday, October 16, 1991 EDITION: FINAL SECTION: LOCAL PAGE: 2B LENGTH: 49 lines ILLUSTRATION: photo: Tropics International Restaurant on Ocean Drive has filed for bankruptcy protection (RSTURANT-T) SOURCE/CREDIT LINE: DAVID KIDWELL Herald Staff Writer BEACH HOTSPOT HAS FINANCIAL PROBLEMS Tropics International Restaurant -- whose poolside bar, live reggae music and headline entertainers made it one of the hottest spots on Miami Beach's booming Ocean Drive -- has filed for protection from its creditors under federal bankruptcy laws. The club will remain open while more than $4.3 million in unpaid debts at Tropics and the adjoining Edison Hotel are sorted out by the courts, said Randy Fozzard, a principal owner. "It's still the hottest spot in South Beach, " Fozzard said. But some customers may have noticed a difference. Since filing for bankruptcy protection Sept. 23, Tropics has stopped offering breakfast and lunch and has curtailed its hours to between 5 p.m. and 2 a.m. on weekends. Staff was cut from 60 to 50, and one full-time manager was made part-time, Fozzard said. "The business just wasn't there, " he said. "We plan to open back up for lunch on Nov. 15 and for breakfast sometime after Thanksgiving. This reorganization is really very insignificant to our customers." It may be more significant for tax collectors. Among the operations' debts are $475,000 in payroll taxes the owners deducted from employees' checks but did not forward to the Internal Revenue Service, court records show. They also owe $125,000 in unpaid state sales taxes, $22,786.89 to the city of Miami Beach in overdue resort taxes and other fees, and $20,000 to the state Division of Alcoholic Beverages and Tobacco, records show. / Fozzard said the club operates at a profit, but he and other owners had counted on banks to refinance the enormous debt they took on when the ,/////- /// property was purchased for $3.3 million in 1988 from then-owner Gerry Sanchez. "Over the last two years I bet I 've gone to 20 banks, " Fozzard said. "And I can't even get into the application process. Nobody wants to get into Ocean Drive. " Local banks let him down, he said. "Instead of borrowing from the banks, I borrowed from the IRS," Fozzard said. "Now I'm in trouble. " Tropics International opened at 960 Ocean Dr. in May 1989 after a complete rehabilitation of the Edison Hotel. Other principals include Oliver Mayoral, a former general manager at Braman Honda and the Jeep Collection, and Thomas Salom, a Broward County real estate developer. Neither could be reached for comment Tuesday. TAG: 9103080876 3 of 187, 2 Terms the terms, because it may be confidential, " he said. The once-fashionable, 62-year-old hotel was torn down on March 15, 1987, after a frantic attempt by building preservationists and Miami Beach developer Gerry Sanchez to save it. Sanchez had sought to buy the 10-story, Mediterranean-style hotel and property from Goodman before it was demolished. Goodman then filed suit against the city in Dade Circuit Court seeking $2.5 million, the amount he said Sanchez offered before the city ordered the building razed. The city responded by asking the court to award it $375,000 to pay for the cost of demolition. The lawsuit has since been moved to federal court in Miami and is before U.S. District Judge Eugene Spellman. Both sides say they are awaiting Spellman's ruling. Neither side would rule out a settlement of the lawsuit, but City Attorney Arnold Weiner said no negotiations are taking place. Glottmann said his agreement to buy the land will not be affected by the outcome of the lawsuit because his company is insured against any judgment. "We expect to close out in July or August, " said Glottmann. Beach Planning and Zoning Director Jud Kurlancheek said Tuesday that Glottmann had indicated to the city that he would build an apartment building on the site. "There's been some work on a set of plans, but it's very sketchy at this point, " Kurlancheek said. Glottmann heads a corporation that is seeking a change in zoning on the site. The corporation, 600 West Avenue Apartments Inc. , wants to enlarge the size of the structure it is allowed to build on the 64, 000-square-foot property. Beach commissioners will consider the request for new zoning at their meeting Wednesday. The vice president of Glottmann's development company is Dick Fosmoen, who resigned a month ago as the city's assistant city manager. Fosmoen served as acting city manager of Miami in 1980-81 and was an assistant city manager for four years before that. He had worked for Miami Beach since 1984, including the period when the Biscaya Hotel was demolished and the subsequent lawsuit arose. Glottmann said Fosmoen approached him about a job after Fosmoen resigned his city post April 1. Fosmoen did not return telephone calls to his office on Tuesday. KEYWORDS: MB TAG: 8902010166 18 of 187, 2 Terms mh OCEAN DRIVE HOTEL 03/05/1989 THE MIAMI HERALD Copyright (c) 1989, The Miami Herald DATE: Sunday, March 5, 1989 EDITION: FINAL SECTION: HOME & DESIGN PAGE: 17H LENGTH: 107 lines ILLUSTRATION: photo: The BEACON HOTEL SOURCE/CREDIT LINE: CHARLES KIMBALL Herald Columnist MEMO: REAL ESTATE ENTREPRENEUR LOSES BEACH HOTEL Miami Beach entrepreneur Gerry Sanchez has lost another of his holdings. This time it was the Whitehart Hotel, 67 rooms at 315 Ocean Dr. Late last year, he lost the Cameo Hotel, 1434 Washington Ave., Miami Beach. Dade County Clerk of the Circuit Court Richard Brinker auctioned the hotel and awarded title to the high bidder. Taking the building was the Miami Savings Bank, with an offer of $700, 000. Sanchez bought the hotel in 1986 for $693, 000. He obtained financing from Miami Savings of $670, 000. mh AMSTERDAM PALACE 01/29/1989 THE MIAMI HERALD Copyright (c) 1989, The Miami Herald DATE: Sunday, January 29, 1989 EDITION: FINAL SECTION: NEIGHBORS MB PAGE: 19 LENGTH: 106 lines ILLUSTRATION: color photo: Brad Stonberg and Kimberly Fisher (AMSTERDAM PALACE) ; photo: Kneeling Aphrodite greets visitors at the entrance, Al Resnick, Dan Berler, Scott Mills, Carla Friedman, wall plaque, Kaye Stephenson (AMSTERDAM PALACE) SOURCE/CREDIT LINE: MARK ROBICHAUX Herald Staff Writer MEMO: COVER STORY AMSTERDAM PALACE Styled after the 16th Century home of Christopher Columbus' son -- even built with a brick from the place -- and haunted with tales of ghosts, it stands as a jewel in the rough among the Art Deco gems lining Ocean Drive. Despite the rush to renovate the Beach's ocean-front buildings, the Amsterdam Palace remains content to stew in its rustic charm -- paint peeling, plaster cracking and stairs growing more rickety by the day. And there's no sign things will change at 1116 Ocean Dr. , at least for a while. The 26 residents who live in the Mediterranean Revival building like things the way they are. And debt-ridden part-owner Gerry Sanchez says he couldn't renovate the place even if he wanted to. "This place speaks for itself," said resident Brad Stonberg, looking out into the open courtyard, washed in the cool light of a morning sun. "It's an oasis. You step in here and you step out of South Beach." Stonberg, like many of the residents, revel in the charm of the Amsterdam. The stories swapped among tenants and the equally bizarre history behind the place only add to the enigma of what many call their "sanctuary. " Before it became the Amsterdam, the three-story stucco building, topped with a Spanish tile roof, started out as the lavish project of California and Miami Beach resident Charles Boulton. With help from a millionaire named Alden Freeman and a host of contractors, artists and furniture makers, Boulton combined the nobility of Old Spain with all the amenities of the 1930s. Boulton billed the place Casa Casuarina (House of the Australian Pine) after a book about life in the tropics by W. Somerset Maugham titled Under the Casuarina Tree. Others say that after the Hurricane of 1926, a gnarled, twisted Casuarina tree was the only thing left standing on the lot. Hence the name. The building was modeled after the Alcazar de Colon, home of the Christopher Columbus family in Santo Domingo, in what is now the Dominican Republic. The Alcazar, said to be the oldest Spanish building in the Western Hemisphere, was built between 1506 and 1510 by Columbus' son, Diego Columbus. Alden Freeman brought a brick from the remaining portion of the original 0111116- 41111b- building and placed it in the Miami Beach likeness. Even the coat of arms carved into the front terrace of the building belongs to the discoverer of America. "It's by and far the most exciting building in the (Art Deco) district because of its unique architecture, " said Richard Hoberman, president of the Miami Design Preservation League. "It brings one back to the 16th Century of Spain." Dade County records put the price of construction in 1930 at between $105,000 and $130, 000, with figures as high as $1 million claimed for the completely furnished building. The higher figure would explain the eclectic mix of more than 100 sculptures -- free-standing and set in the walls -- that line the building. Walk up the steps of the pock-marked, coral-rock front patio, through the Gothic archway and towering black doors, and immediately the courtyard commands attention. Three tiers of balconies overlook the terrazzo floors below, which are peppered with tropical plants of every shape and size. "It's like you've escaped into a foreign, exotic land," said Dan Berler, a 29-year-old resident. "Other places have courtyards, but not as magnetic as this. " Said Carla Friedman, a 28-year-old poet who lives there: "This is my palace. It's timeless. I can imagine nuns and children shuffling around here. " Dominating the courtyard is the tri-windowed Homage Tower, a replica of a structure where Columbus was once held prisoner by order of King Ferdinand. Inside, stained glass throws eerie light against the walls. And at the courtyard's end is the observatory dome, now used for storage because it no longer revolves. It is in this observatory that ghosts were believed to roam until the 1960s. Tenants back then told stories of an old man in white pajamas who would walk down to shoo away curious visitors. Art rules in the Amsterdam. Flanking a portrait of John D. Rockefeller, for example, are portraits of Julius Caesar, Cleopatra, Mussolini and Lenin. The busts, sculptures and pedestals also span centuries of American and European art and literature. A bronze Kneeling Aphrodite stands as gatekeeper at the building's entrance, the work of a young California artist, Vuc Vuchinich. It once stood at one end of an oblong pool in the courtyard, but the pool later was filled and the statue was moved. Since Jac Amsterdam bought the place and changed the name to the Amsterdam Palace in 1935, several new owners have taken over. Resident Al Resnick has seen them come and go. Resnick, 65, an 18-year resident of the Amsterdam, remembers when tenants dressed up in suits and dresses just to go sit on the front porch. Back then, they called him "Sonny." "Now they're all very young, " he said. "And I'm the old one." Tenants are as equally eclectic as the art. Most are young adults -- artists, writers and blue-collar workers. The ambience drew them first, they say. The rent -- starting at $325 to $600 -- was a bonus. "I have a waiting list three miles long, " said building manager Scott Mills, who discounts rent for tenants who make minor renovations themselves. Gerry Sanchez, who bought the Amsterdam with partners roughly two years ago, is now in bankruptcy with other Beach properties, and too preoccupied to ponder plans of an Amsterdam renovation. "First I have to get my act together with my other properties, " Sanchez said. "Right now it's on the back burner. In the next month, I'll be making some kind of decision. " That decision may include a hip new Spanish restaurant and hotel suites, but Sanchez has yet to give real proof of his plans. Residents say they can wait. "Most of the tenants feel the same way," said manager Mills. "If you fixed it up, it wouldn't be the same. " TAG: 8901080032 21 of 187, 4 Terms mh THREE SOUTH BEACH HOTELS 07/04/1988 THE MIAMI HERALD Copyright (c) 1988, The Miami Herald DATE: Monday, July 4, 1988 EDITION: FINAL SECTION: BUSINESS PAGE: 20BM LENGTH: 41 lines ILLUSTRATION: photo: BREAKWATER HOTEL, LYNMAR HOTELS, WHITEHART HOTEL SOURCE/CREDIT LINE: CHRISTOPHER BOYD Herald Real Estate Writer THREE SOUTH BEACH HOTELS FACING FORECLOSURE LAWSUITS FORECLOSURE suits have been filed against three South Miami Beach hotels, one owned by preservationist Gerry Sanchez. The suits involve the Whitehart, Breakwater and twin Lynmar hotels. Sanchez owns the Whitehart and has a minority interest in the Breakwater. Unified Investors, a Margate-based firm, has the major interest in the Breakwater. United Real Estate Investors, Margate, owns the Lynmar North and South. In February, Sanchez announced he would sell his extensive South Beach property holdings to Unified. In April, after Unified bought the Breakwater and adjacent Edison Hotel, foreclosure proceedings were brought against the Breakwater. Later, the Breakwater suit was dropped, only to be renewed this month. Tom Salom, a partner in Unified and United, said the foreclosure cases would be resolved. "We've got over a half a million invested in the Breakwater, " said Tom Salom, a partner in Unified and United. "We won't let that go. Our plan is to pay off the entire mortgage. As far as the Lynmar goes, we were never served with foreclosure papers." The Breakwater and the Whitehart are on Ocean Drive; the Lynmar is on Collins Avenue. Sanchez said he would sell the Whitehart. After arriving in South Beach in 1986, Sanchez assembled a portfolio of hotels and apartment buildings. He announced that he would lead a movement to turn the declining neighborhood hotels. Sanchez could not be reached for comment Tuesday. On buying the Breakwater and Edison, Unified unveiled a plan to restore all of Sanchez's properties. Within 22 days of the purchase, the Breakwater was named in the first foreclosure suit. KEYWORDS: FINANCE MULTIPLE MB TAG: 8802160452 27 of 187, 2 Terms Enter document number to transfer '_731,38,45,52,54,64 0 mh HOTEL SUIT RESOLVED; RENOVATION TO START 06/05/1988 ❑ mh HOTEL SUIT RESOLVED; RENOVATION TO START 06/05/1988 THE MIAMI HERALD Copyright (c) 1988, The Miami Herald DATE: Sunday, June 5, 1988 EDITION: FINAL SECTION: NEIGHBORS MB PAGE: 7 LENGTH: 35 lines SOURCE/CREDIT LINE: LYNN HORSLEY Herald Staff Writer HOTEL SUIT RESOLVED; RENOVATION TO START The new owners of the Breakwater Hotel, 940 Ocean Dr. , have resolved a foreclosure suit and expect to begin renovation work within a few weeks. Unified Investors Inc., the Margate investment group that bought the Breakwater and Edison hotels from Gerry Sanchez, faced a foreclosure action shortly after they purchased the buildings April 4 for $5.1 million. The suit, filed in late April by Allan Myerson and Allan Zucker, alleged the group was in default on an $802,772 mortgage on the Breakwater. But Myerson's attorney, Elliott Harris, said last week that Unified had brought the payments current and the foreclosure action has been dismissed. The principals in Unified Investors are Tom Salom, chief executive officer for ABC Management, a Margate real estate holding company; Oliver Mayoral, who formed his own real estate holding company; and Samuel Lennox, a swimming pool contractor who has assembled a real estate portfolio. Les Wiesen, general contractor for Unified's projects, said the Miami Beach Building Department recently issued a permit for a restaurant on the ground floor of the Breakwater, and construction should be finished in several months. Wiesen also has requested permits, which he said should be issued within a few weeks, to restore the hotel with a new air- conditioning and sprinkler system, new room decor and a new pastel paint job. The renovation is expected to cost nearly $300,000. Salom said last week he was arranging the financing to purchase Sanchez's other properties, including the Betsy Ross and Waldorf Towers on Ocean Drive, and a full block of buildings on Espanola Way. He said he expects to close the deal within three weeks. KEYWORDS: MB TAG: 8802090865 31 of 187, 2 Terms mh SOUTH BEACH 04/07/1988 THE MIAMI HERALD Copyright (c) 1988, The Miami Herald DATE: Thursday, April 7, 1988 EDITION: FINAL SECTION: BUSINESS PAGE: 7D LENGTH: 40 lines SOURCE/CREDIT LINE: CHRISTOPHER BOYD Herald Real Estate Writer SOUTH BEACH HOTELS SOLD TO INVESTORS Preservationist Gerry Sanchez sold two of his South Miami Beach hotels to an investment group Wednesday, saying the new owners will complete the restoration work he failed to finish. The sale of the Breakwater and Edison hotels on Ocean Drive was the first in a series of transactions that will transfer Sanchez's South Beach real estate portfolio to Unified Investors Group, a Margate-based investment consortium. The new group announced it would complete restoration of the Breakwater within three months and would open a nightclub on its first floor. Sanchez restored the Edison in 1986. For Sanchez, who will retain a partial interest in the properties, the sale was a bittersweet conclusion to his plan to become the brightest star in a sparkling new Miami Beach tourist district. "I couldn't keep going by myself, " Sanchez said. "I knew after Black Monday last October that I would have to sell out." Sanchez bought the 70-room Breakwater for $1.2 million in June 1986 and sold it for $1 .8 million. He purchased the Edison for $1 .1 million and sold it for $3.3 million. The buyer, Unified Investors, was organized by ABC Management in Margate. Oliver Mayoral, a principal in ABC, said his group would invest $1 million to complete restoration of the Breakwater. Mayoral said within two weeks his group would buy Sanchez's other properties, which include the Waldorf Towers, Betsy Ross and Whitehall hotels on Ocean Drive and a group of hotels and shops on Espanola Way. When completed, the sale will total $11 million. Samuel Lennox, who will supervise construction, said Unified Investors would build a 250-space parking garage on three lots spanning Ocean Drive and Collins Avenue north of 10th Street. Sanchez will retain ownership of the Amsterdam Palace on Ocean Drive. TAG: 8801250736 38 of 187, 2 Terms mh SAVING HOTEL 03/02/1988 THE MIAMI HERALD Copyright (c) 1988, The Miami Herald DATE: Wednesday, March 2, 1988 EDITION: FINAL SECTION: LIVING TODAY PAGE: 1D LENGTH: 79 lines ILLUSTRATION: photo: Gloria Estefan (MIAMI SOUND MACHINE) , Sue COBB SOURCE/CREDIT LINE: FRED TASKER Herald Columnist SAVING HOTEL WAS LIKE PERILS OF PAULINE Sure, developer Gerry Sanchez was able to save his Art Deco Breakwater hotel because of $124,000 from three new investment partners. But he says there was more to the miracle. Sanchez thought he needed the money Wednesday afternoon to prevent the Breakwater from being sold on the County Courthouse steps. Then he learned it would be Wednesday morning. His investors wired the money from Boca Raton. But as the 11 a.m. sale neared, Sanchez couldn't get the cashier's check because the bank officer was out, then the teller went to the bathroom, then the taxi was delayed. Sanchez dashed across Flagler Street to the Federal Building and filed for reorganization under Chapter 11 of the bankruptcy law -- which would stop the sale. But just as he dashed back, the check arrived. Sanchez paid off his creditors, then walked back leisurely and withdrew the Chapter 11 filing. , 2 Terms mh ROYALE GROUP SAYS 01/10/1988 THE MIAMI HERALD Copyright (c) 1988, The Miami Herald DATE: Sunday, January 10, 1988 EDITION: FINAL The city, for its part, wants the tax money. Said Robert Nachlinger, city finance director: "I just wish they'd pay." TAG: 8801030343 52 of 187, 2 Terms mh S. BEACH BOOM BUSTS A BIT 01/08/1988 THE MIAMI HERALD Copyright (c) 1988, The Miami Herald DATE: Friday, January 8, 1988 EDITION: FINAL SECTION: LOCAL PAGE: 1D LENGTH: 74 lines SOURCE/CREDIT LINE: CHRISTOPHER BOYD Herald Real Estate Writer S. BEACH BOOM BUSTS A BIT MONEY WOES MOUNT FOR 3 DEVELOPERS Three of Miami Beach's best known redevelopers have suffered financial setbacks, raising concern for restoration efforts in the city's Art Deco district. The wave of trouble involves a Chapter 11 bankruptcy petition, a court * Hotel Metropole, 635 Collins Ave. , was sold recently in a court-ordered auction after Tony Goldman, a New York developer with extensive South Beach holdings, defaulted on a loan. * A partnership that owns buildings on Espanola Way filed for protection from creditors in U.S. Bankruptcy Court this week. Gerry Sanchez, a flamboyant preservationist, is the primary partner in the group. * A foreclosure suit has been filed against the owner of the Tides Hotel on Ocean Drive. An affiliate of the Royale Group, which operates several nearby hotels, owns the Tides. Goldman, Sanchez and Royale are the leading pioneers in the South Beach restoration effort. All three own groups of hotels on Ocean Drive, the focus of the historic district's new restaurant and entertainment business. "The city and the banks aren't doing enough for the Deco developers and this proves it," Sanchez said. He said he will sell one of his Ocean Drive hotels to raise money to pay debts on the Espanola Way properties. Sanchez owns the Edison, Breakwater, Waldorf Towers and Betsy Ross hotels on Ocean Drive. "We're all human beings, not some sort of bigger than life creatures who never have troubles, " Goldman said. Goldman is restoring the Park Central hotel and several apartment houses on Ocean Drive. Foreclosure proceedings were filed against Ocean Properties of Delaware, a company tied to the Royale Group, for failing to pay loans on the Tides Hotel, 1220 Ocean Dr. Royale owns the Carlyle and Cardozo hotels nearby. It bought the Tides for $2.3 million in December 1986 and announced plans to restore it, then manage it with other nearby hotels under the group's control. Dennis Richards, attorney for Ocean Properties, said the Tides owners never missed a loan payment. "We have a mortgage holder here who is trying to take advantage of increased property values on Ocean Drive, " Richards said. "Regardless of the other problems investors on South Beach are having, this company will survive and will win this one." Denis Russ, acting director of the Miami Beach Development Corp., said he hoped financial problems in the district wouldn't reverse efforts to restore hoped financial problems in the district wouldn't reverse efforts to restore buildings in the neighborhood. "There is certain, positive momentum here, " said Russ, whose company promotes South Beach investment. "There are individual events that run contrary to it. Frankly, we haven't solved a problem of getting banks to make loans. This problem may be a manifestation of the banking problem. " The historic district contains about 800 buildings, most in the Mediterranean and Art Deco styles. In the past two years, the three developers have spearheaded efforts to renovate crumbling buildings in South Beach. Goldman and Sanchez said they plan to continue restoration of their other properties. "I'm planning to finish restoring the Park Central Hotel in February, " Goldman said. "I've decided to focus on what I can do. I'm not ready to do a complete renovation of another building right now. It would have been too much for me." Goldman paid $650,000 for the Metropole in 1986.. It sold in auction for $325, 900. Clinton Capital Corp. , which held a $125,000 mortgage on the hotel, was the high bidder. Sanchez said he has $700,000 tied up in two hotels, 16 apartments and 20 shops on Espanola Way. He said he invested $300,000 for restorations to the Mediterranean-style buildings. Despite his Chapter 11 filing, Sanchez said he is confident he won't lose them. "We still believe in South Beach, but we have to shrink a little, " Sanchez said. "We're going to pass this crisis somehow. I won't lose Espanola Way, not over my dead body. " TAG: 8801020673 54 of 187, 2 Terms mh BEACH IS ON A ROLL 11/26/1987 THE MIAMI HERALD Copyright (c) 1987, The Miami Herald DATE: Thursday, November 26, 1987 EDITION: FINAL SECTION: NEIGHBORS MB PAGE: 11 LENGTH: 60 lines ILLUSTRATION: photo: Expansion of the MIAMI BEACH CONVENTION CENTER SOURCE/CREDIT LINE: STEPHEN SMITH Herald Staff Writer MEMO: COVER STORY BEACH IS ON A ROLL Seasons change. On Thanksgiving Day 1987, they're saying this tourist season is critical, roll the dice, make or break. But when haven't they said that in Miami Beach? What's different this season is who's saying it. The voices clamor from somewhere other than just Ocean Drive. There's new money, buckets of it, behind the serene Art Deco of 21st Street, along the concrete monoliths of Collins. And money is the language everybody speaks in the Beach. The pioneers, as they call themselves, still dwell on Ocean Drive, Gerry Sanchez and Tony Goldman and the Royale Group among them. This year, though, they've been in the headlines more for what they don't have -- money -- and haven't done -- completing projects. "It's not unusual that the original group of investors may for a while take a bath, " says Maria Suarez Pellerin, part owner and manager of Wimbish Commercial Real Estate. "It's tough breaking new ground. " Not so tough that Sanchez and Goldman have left. Sanchez keeps working on the Breakwater, trying to make a suitable companion for the Edison. And Goldman keeps making plans to open restaurants in his properties. It's not so tough that others aren't willing to take a gamble on Ocean Drive. What's news this season in South Beach isn't old hotels getting new life. It's all the businesses -- ice cream parlors and trendy furniture stores and chain pizza places -- trying to score the capitalist dream. They're there, all right, even if they haven't pealed the trumpets. "We're just not out there pounding our breasts, " says Don Meginley, who's directing marketing efforts at Royale's Cavalier, one of the newest old hotels to open on Ocean Drive. "The people who are investing now are not hand wavers as much." Maybe not on Ocean Drive, but, then again, Abe Hirschfeld isn't on Ocean Drive. He's on Collins Avenue, in the 50s, rolling in from New York. He paid cash for the old Konover, slapped a new name on it and has pumped $4 million into it so far. Hirschfeld isn't the only one on a spending frenzy in the concrete canyon. There are other new names, the Shawnee Group from Pennsylvania, and old names, Resnick and Dunaevsky, spending millions like spare change. After all, big spending could beget even bigger returns, which is the incentive for stripping apart hundreds of rooms and starting from scratched-up walls. They are different worlds, different philosophies, Ocean Drive and upper Collins Avenue. Consider these, from two of the most pungent personalities, immigrants who found fortune in New York and have brought it to Miami Beach: Hirschfeld on the Deco District and why his 20-year-old, 500-room hotel is better: "I'll explain what it is. When you have secondary merchandise, you can't make it primary. When a girl is ugly, no matter how you dress her she will never become a beauty queen." Sanchez on the virtues of Deco: "Of course we have the best product in terms of sex appeal. The rest is tacky or boring or not sexy." Ah, well, another season swings open. TAG: 8703290575 DEVELOPER RACES CLOCK TO BAR DEMOLITION 11/22/1987 THE MIAMI HERALD Copyright (c) 1987, The Miami Herald DATE: Sunday, November 22, 1987 EDITION: FINAL SECTION: NEIGHBORS MB PAGE: 3 LENGTH: 52 lines SOURCE/CREDIT LINE: DAVID HANCOCK Herald Staff Writer DEVELOPER RACES CLOCK TO BAR DEMOLITION Time is running out for developer Gerry Sanchez and the Whitehart Hotel . On Wednesday, Sanchez fought off the second demolition action in four months against the Whitehart, a boarded-up 73- unit hotel at 315 Ocean Dr. But he has until Jan. 19 to make structural repairs. The hotel, which Sanchez bought for $693,000 in January, has been under a demolition order from the Dade County Unsafe Structures Board since October 1985. In June, Sanchez persuaded the Miami Beach City Commission not to demolish the building, which he hopes to convert into 17 luxury oceanfront apartments. The commission gave Sanchez until Aug. 19 to obtain a building permit, which he has done. He was required to make structural repairs in the building by Jan. 19, 1988. City Attorney Arnold Weiner and Building Department Director Paul Gioia said Sanchez was supposed start the structural repairs by Sept. 19. He has not. "Those were drop-dead dates, " said Weiner, referring to deadlines in a June agreement Sanchez signed with the city. It spells out what Sanchez must do to stave off demolition of the Whitehart. The agreement required Sanchez to post a $34,000 letter of credit -- the estimated cost of demolishing the Whitehart -- that the city could turn to cash if Sanchez missed deadlines. Earlier this month, Weiner cashed in the $34, 000 and deposited it in a city account. Sanchez said he has started some work. He said the city slowed his efforts by not allowing a garbage container on Ocean Drive. He said he believes the city should leave him alone until Jan. 19, when he's supposed to be finished. "One part of the city is saying 'come develop. ' And the other part is waiting for you to slip up, " Sanchez said. While defending Gioia for his enforcement of the contract, city commissioners decided to give Sanchez until January to make good on the repairs. They voted to waive the default and reinstate the letter of credit. Sanchez, who last year lost a demolition battle with the city over the Biscaya Hotel, had other troubles last week. Two of his properties -- the Breakwater, 940 Ocean Drive, and the Sharon Hotel, 110 20th St., were named in foreclosure actions. Sanchez said the tumbling fortunes on Wall Street scared off investors in the hotels. "It hurt me a lot. A few investors who were supposed to invest were hurt." Sanchez said he was lining up new investors, and that the foreclosure suits soon will be settled. Weiner, who told commissioners there was no legal reason to give Sanchez more time, told Sanchez, "I'm sure I'll see you back here in January. " TAG: 8703280906 66 of 187, 2 Terms mh 2 SANCHEZ PROPERTIES 11/18/1987 THE MIAMI HERALD Copyright (c) 1987, The Miami Herald DATE: Wednesday, November 18, 1987 EDITION: FINAL SECTION: BUSINESS PAGE: 6B LENGTH: 41 lines ILLUSTRATION: photo: Gerry SANCHEZ SOURCE/CREDIT LINE: GREGG FIELDS Herald Business Writer 2 SANCHEZ PROPERTIES NAMED IN FORECLOSURES Two properties owned by Miami Beach developer Gerry Sanchez have been named in foreclosure actions. One case involves an apartment building at 1035 Collins Ave. , Miami Beach. That suit was filed by Ocean Bank and alleges that Sanchez is in default on a $140,000 loan he assumed when he purchased the property. The other involves a Miami Beach hotel, the Breakwater, at 940 Ocean Dr. , which is the focus of two foreclosure suits. The cases were filed by Burton Sherman and Carl Platt, each of whom hold mortgages on the hotel. The men have filed foreclosure actions before -- since settled out-of-court -- against Sanchez regarding the Breakwater. Richard Allbritton, a management consultant who works for Sanchez, said arrangements have been made to deal with the Breakwater foreclosure and a resolution is expected by the end of the month. Sanchez said he wants to build a parking deck on the property. He said he owes about $115,000 on the property at Collins Avenue. "Somehow my accountant was late in making the payment to the bank and the bank refused to accept a late payment, " Sanchez said. According to Allbritton, the loan was to be paid by proceeds from the sale of the Sharon hotel, another Sanchez property, which is at 110 20th St. in Miami Beach. Allbritton said the Sharon sale came undone "due to Black Monday, " referring to the Oct. 19 crash of the stock market. One of the people buying the Sharon lost money in the crash and was unable to go through with the transaction, Allbritton said. In another transaction, a second mortgage of $250, 000 was placed on Sanchez's Edison hotel, 960 Ocean Dr. in Miami Beach. The mortgage was obtained from Miami Beach Development Corp., a nonprofit agency that encourages development in the Miami Beach area. The $250,000 came from the state. TAG: 8703270590 68 of 187, 4 Terms mh SANCHEZ'S 11/05/1987 THE MIAMI HERALD Copyright (c) 1987, The Miami Herald DATE: Thursday, November 5, 1987 EDITION: FINAL SECTION: NEIGHBORS MB PAGE: 3 LENGTH: 64 lines SOURCE/CREDIT LINE: STEPHEN SMITH Herald Staff Writer SANCHEZ'S HOTELS ARE FOR SALE Inside the new offices of a South Beach real estate company hang pictures of Gerry Sanchez's signature properties -- the Breakwater and Edison hotels, the Waldorf Towers, Espanola Way. The pictures aren't on the wall because they're pretty. Wimbish Commercial Real Estate Services is trying to sell the properties for Sanchez, the self-styled savior of South Beach who swept into the city in 1985. He didn't buy a parcel at a time. He bought whole blocks. Now, he has whole blocks on the market. The list includes five Ocean Drive hotels and an apartment house. That's 385 hotel rooms and apartments -- and, potentially, millions in fresh cash. "Am I leaving town? No, I'm not, " Sanchez said Tuesday. "There is going to be Gerry and Gerry Development for quite a while." That's not just Sanchez talking. "Ultimately, I think he will keep one or two of these and look at other projects, " said Maria Suarez Pellerin, manager and part owner of Wimbish Commercial. "That's his MO, to keep going. He doesn't just want to stay with one building forever." Said Michael Cannon, president of Appraisal and Real Estate Economics Associates, "Maybe he feels he needs the money to do the things he wants to do. " That is precisely what Sanchez wants. By selling some of what he owns, he can use that money to buy new properties or complete renovation work on what he owns already. "I don't see any significance in it, " said Mel Schlesser, the lawyer-turned-developer whose most ambitious project so far is the restoration of the Alamac. "Almost from the time Gerry Sanchez came to Ocean Drive, I saw for sale signs on his buildings. I 'm not really quite sure how Gerry does business." Sanchez appeared, bubbly and wisecracking as ever, at a developers' conference last week. After asking why bankers aren't lending money for fixing up South Beach hotels, he gave his own answer: Forget the bankers. Sanchez announced he is looking for partners, people with new ideas and new money. That jibes with his desire to sell some of what he owns. The asking price for some of the buildings is more than double what Sanchez paid. But that's hardly a fair comparison -- he has spent hundreds of thousands repairing and renovating some of the hotels. Take, for instance, the Waldorf Towers. Sanchez bought it for $430,000. He's asking $1.8 million. "The Waldorf is ready so that somebody can just walk in and operate the whole thing tomorrow, " Pellerin said. "That's a room already with bookings, brochures, lots of publicity." The Betsy Ross Hotel is something else. Sanchez gave it a fresh coat of paint but not much more. He bought it for $1.25 million. He's asking $1.6 million. To prove the point: That's nearly $95 a square foot for the swank and swinging Waldorf Towers, and barely $50 a square foot for the we've-got-a-lot-to-do Betsy Ross. Pellerin figures she will have buyers for at least a couple of the properties by year's end. "What I'm really looking for is partners, " Sanchez said. "I'd rather not sell anything. But if they insist, I might sell." KEYWORDS: SANCHEZ ASSET TAG: 8703240003 71 of 187, 4 Terms mh PROPERTIES OWNED BY GERRY SANCHEZ 11/05/1987 THE MIAMI HERALD Copyright (c) 1987, The Miami Herald DATE: Thursday, November 5, 1987 EDITION: FINAL SECTION: NEIGHBORS MB PAGE: 4 LENGTH: 55 lines ILLUSTRATION: photo: WALDORF TOWERS, EDISON HOTEL SOURCE/CREDIT LINE: Herald Staff PROPERTIES OWNED BY GERRY SANCHEZ BREAKWATER AND EDISON HOTELS 940-960 Ocean Dr. Built in 1939, 1935, respectively 143 rooms combined Sanchez bought for $2.3 million combined Asking price for both properties: $6 million WALDORF TOWERS HOTEL 860 Ocean Dr. Built in 1937 45 rooms Sanchez bought for $430,000 Asking price: $1.8 million BETSY ROSS HOTEL 1440 Ocean Dr. 102 rooms Built in 1940 Sanchez bought for $1.25 million Asking price: $1.6 million 405-443 ESPANOLA WAY Built in 1925 75 hotel rooms; 16 one-bedroom, one-bathroom apartments; 13 store spaces; 2,400 square feet in office space Sanchez bought for $1 million Asking price: $1.5 million The Edison Hotel The Waldorf Towers WHITEHART HOTEL 315 Ocean Dr. Built in 1939 73 rooms Sanchez bought for $693,000 Asking price: $850,000 SHARON HOTEL 110 20th St. Built in 1939 102 rooms Sanchez bought for $750, 000 Asking price: $1.6 million AMSTERDAM PALACE 1116 Ocean Dr. 26 units Built in 1930 Sanchez bought for $1.2 million Make an offer KEYWORDS: LIST SANCHEZ ASSET TAG: 8703240000 72 of 187, 2 Terms mh HOT WATER'S BACK ON IN SANCHEZ BUILDING AFTER 4 DAYS 09/17/1987 THE MIAMI HERALD Copyright (c) 1987, The Miami Herald DATE: Thursday, September 17, 1987 EDITION: FINAL SECTION: NEIGHBORS MB PAGE: 8 LENGTH: 33 lines SOURCE/CREDIT LINE: CARLOS HARRISON Herald Staff Writer HOT WATER'S BACK ON IN SANCHEZ BUILDING AFTER 4 DAYS An Ocean Drive building owned by developer Gerry Sanchez was briefly declared unfit for human habitation Monday afternoon after tenants spent four nights without hot water. Tenants said the hot water was back late Monday. The "unfit" designation placed on the building at 1116 Ocean Dr. about noon Monday was removed Tuesday after Peoples Gas System turned on the gas needed to heat the water. "It was all a misunderstanding with the gas company, " said Sanchez's assistant, Gladys Benvenuto. Benvenuto said Sanchez was in New York and could not be reached for comment. A Peoples Gas spokesman said the company shut off the gas Thursday because of a delinquent bill. The payment, overdue at least 30 days, was received Friday, Peoples commercial manager Elias Franco said. But by the time the gas was turned back on, a Miami Beach code enforcement inspector had already put up a placard declaring the building unfit for habitation. Inspector Janice Pye said the division received an anonymous complaint last week about the lack of hot water. She immediately inspected the building and issued a 48-hour warning requiring the hot water problem be cleared up or threatening to declare the apartment building unfit. When Pye went back Monday, the gas was still off. So was the hot water. She put up the "unfit" placard, giving the building owner 30 days to fix the problem. The designation prohibits new tenants from moving in but doesn't force residents to move out until the 30 days are up. TAG: 8703110069 81 of 187, 2 Terms mh HIS DECO DARE: TURN 09/13/1987 82 of 187, 2 Terms mh TOWER PAINT JOB SPARKS HUE AND CRY 09/02/1987 SANCHEZ MAKES MONEY, BUT LOSES DREAM 08/06/1987 THE MIAMI HERALD Copyright (c) 1987, The Miami Herald DATE: Thursday, August 6, 1987 EDITION: FINAL SECTION: NEIGHBORS MB PAGE: 4 LENGTH: 71 lines ILLUSTRATION: photo: SHARON HOTEL SOURCE/CREDIT LINE: STEPHEN SMITH Herald Staff Writer SANCHEZ MAKES MONEY, BUT LOSES DREAM DEVELOPER SELLS SHELL OF A HOTEL So you're Gerry Sanchez, you buy a hotel in December, you sell it in August, you make $540, 000 on the deal. You're a happy man, right? "It is not a good profit. That hotel is worth $2 million, " Sanchez said. "It is a very cheap price. I'm extremely upset. I'm serious. " Really, he is. Here's why: The hotel, the Sharon, sits hard on the beach at 20th Street. It is a ramrod straight, sturdy, seven-story inn built in It is, in hotel terms, an Ideal Piece of Property. Capital Center Group, a Rhode Island real estate developer, is in the process of buying it for $1.29 million. Sanchez grabbed the Sharon, at 110 20th St., for $750,000 on Dec. 30. million. Sanchez grabbed the Sharon, at 110 20th St., for $750,000 on Dec. 30. His thinking then extended beyond the Sharon -- to the Sasson Hotel down the street and the Sea Gull half a block north. The idea seemed simple and lucrative: meld a partnership, make three hotels into one and create the convention center hotel that everybody talks about but nobody succeeds in creating. But this is Miami Beach and these are hotels and never the minds shall meet: "Too many partners, too many people, too many complications, " Sanchez said. Too little hope. Sanchez, who owns nine hotels in South Beach, decided to sell the Sharon, but not to the first millionaire who walked in off the street. He wanted somebody interested in Art Deco, a company that would spruce it up, not tear it down. "It's a good location. The streets will improve in a couple years, I think," said Irwin Loft, president of Capital Center Group. "It's on the beach. That's a positive thing, I think." Loft isn't the only one thinking this is a pretty good deal. His company has already talked to Days Inn about making the Sharon part of that chain, and Loft planned to speak this week with executives from Park Inns, another chain of moderately priced hotels. Days Inn executives couldn't be reached Tuesday evening, and a Park Inns manager didn't return a phone message left at the company's Dallas headquarters. "All these chains have many hotels near the Disney World complex, " Loft said. "They say a lot of their clientele gets tired of Disney World after a few days and wants to go to a beach to relax." There's plenty of towel space on the beach just footsteps from the Sharon. Wide swaths of sand lie untouched most days. The Sharon rises above the emptiness, robed in those Art Deco colors of faded white and dingy rust. Jagged pieces of glass are the only windows in some rooms. The place has been closed for two or three years, depending on who you talk to. Nobody sits on the green vinyl stools inside the La Campina coffee shop, which once boasted "Comidas Colombianas" -- Colombian food. It needs some paint, and the plumbing and, probably, the floors will have to be replaced. Otherwise, Sanchez and Loft said, the Sharon survived the years of neglect pretty well. The neighborhood has felt it more acutely. Moti Boaziz manages the Sasson, at 20th and Collins Avenue. That means he must manage the streets, too, bereft of tourists. "At this moment, the Town House, next to the Sharon, is closed, too, " Boaziz said. "And all of this causes, let's call it, bums. The best idea in this area would be to buy the Sasson and the Sea Gull and build, let's call it, a nice hotel." The two men sitting in one of the abandoned cabanas at the Sharon had another idea. They want the place left alone. "Yeah, " said the man wearing the T-shirt emblazoned with the words Virgin Islands. "I just come here to get high. On everything, man. Everything." TAG: 8702270391 [RETURN) to continue or type q to return to Menu: l mh DEVELOPER PULLS OUT; BISCAYA TO BE RAZED 02/27/1987 THE MIAMI HERALD Copyright (c) 1987, The Miami Herald DATE: Friday, February 27, 1987 EDITION: FINAL SECTION: LOCAL PAGE: 1C LENGTH: 32 lines 0 157 of 187, 4 Terms mh SANCHEZ TO GET 09/21/1986 THE MIAMI HERALD Copyright (c) 1986, The Miami Herald DATE: Sunday, September 21, 1986 EDITION: FINAL SECTION: NEIGHBORS MB PAGE: 2 LENGTH: 22 lines ILLUSTRATION: photo: Gerry SANCHEZ SOURCE/CREDIT LINE: Herald Staff SANCHEZ TO GET PEPPER AWARD Developer Gerry Sanchez, whose Art Deco renovation projects have helped spur the redevelopment of Ocean Drive, has been selected to receive the 1986 Claude Pepper Community Service Award from South Shore Hospital and Medical Center. Sanchez, 44, is president of Polonia Restoration South Co. and the owner of several properties on Ocean Drive and Espanola Way. U.S. Rep. Claude Pepper, for whom the award was named 17 years ago, will give Sanchez the honor Oct. 11 during a banquet at the Fontainebleau Hilton. Reservations for the black-tie dinner, which costs $175 a plate, can be made by calling 538-0385 or by visiting the hospital development office at 600 Alton Rd. TAG: 8603140386 163 of 187, 4 Terms mh DEVELOPER CASHING IN ON S. BEACH RESTORATIONS 07/31/1986 THE MIAMI HERALD Copyright (c) 1986, The Miami Herald DATE: Thursday, July 31, 1986 EDITION: FINAL SECTION: LOCAL PAGE: 1B LENGTH: 48 lines ILLUSTRATION: photo: Gerry SANCHEZ SOURCE/CREDIT LINE: DEBBIE SONTAG Herald Staff Writer DEVELOPER CASHING IN ON S. BEACH RESTORATIONS Developer Gerry Sanchez has sold the newly restored Waldorf Towers Hotel for $1.5 million, more than 3 1/2 times what he paid for the 45-room Ocean Drive hotel 10 months ago. With that sale, Sanchez has turned a profit of almost $1 million in South Beach in two months, proving that there's money to be made in the long-depressed area and luring other investors to follow suit. "This is the first time a fully restored Art Deco hotel has been sold, and it is the kind of transaction that people have waited decades to see happen, " said Woody Graber, spokesman for the Miami Beach Development Corp. "Now you should see this area mushroom." Sanchez bought the 50-year-old Waldorf for $430,000 in December, restored it for $600, 000 by April and handed it over to Clearwater native and professional hotelier Don Meginley this week. In so doing, he earned a quick profit of $500,000 one month after earning an even quicker profit of $450,000 on Ocean Drive's Clevelander Hotel. Sanchez sold the Clevelander for $1.65 million in late June to two young hoteliers from Chicago so eager to buy it that they didn't even wait for the restoration to be completed. has plunged head first into South Beach, investing $15 million there in less than a year. He has so far accumulated eight South Beach hotels, two parking lo Sanchez, a New York contractor who specializes in historic preservation, is and an entire block of Espanola Way. Meginley, who has managed three hotels on the West Coast of Florida, said Wednesday that he will operate the Waldorf "like a small, classy, family-run European pensione. " Meginley said he invested in Ocean Drive because he believed that Sanchez was single-handedly turning the depressed strip around, "creating a magic, like honey with monied flies dancing all around him." Hialeah-based contractors Tatum, Smith, Gomez and Vitale were similarly impressed. They joined forces with Sanchez this week, investing an initial $1 million in four of his projects. "South Beach is the last bastion of developability, " Gerry Vitale said. Says Sanchez: "Nobody believed Gerry when he said money could be made on Ocean Drive. "I spoke at a developers' conference in January and I told everyone, 'You go out and buy a hotel during the lunch break or you're going to be buying it from me. ' " KEYWORDS: MB SUCCESS SANCHEZ ASSET FINANCE TAG: 8602270892 174 of 187, 4 Terms mh INVESTOR PLAYS MONOPOLY ON BEACH 07/13/1986 THE MIAMI HERALD Copyright (c) 1986, The Miami Herald DATE: Sunday, July 13, 1986 EDITION: FINAL SECTION: LOCAL PAGE: 1B LENGTH: 125 lines ILLUSTRATION: photo: Gerry SANCHEZ* SOURCE/CREDIT LINE: DEBBIE SONTAG Herald Staff Writer ngINVESTOR PLAYS MONOPOLY ON BEACH Ten months ago, Gerry Sanchez quietly started playing Monopoly in South Miami Beach, buying up deteriorated property as if Ocean Drive were a board game and he the only player. First he bought the Waldorf Towers, then the Clevelander Hotel. And before long, Sanchez -- a New York contractor who restored the U.S. Capitol and the Brooklyn Bridge -- had sunk $15 million into an area few investors would touch. "Gerry saw a gold mine. Everybody else saw a slum," Sanchez said. So far, Sanchez has accumulated eight South Beach hotels, two parking lots and an entire block of Espanola Way. One hotel, the Waldorf, is renovated and opened as a hotel and jazz supper club. Another, the Clevelander, has already been resold at a profit of $400,000 -- to prove that money can be made in South Beach, Sanchez said. Although he has his skeptics, most in Miami Beach see Sanchez as a pioneer -- an outsider who not only saw value in dilapidated oceanfront property, but moved quickly to buy it and develop it. "He's the kind of investor we've been dreaming of, " said Stuart Rogel, the city's economic development director. "Number one, he's a developer with a background in historic preservation, making him sensitive to the potentials of the Art Deco district. Secondly, he has the financial strength to move quickly and aggressively." For three years, the city waited for the financially troubled Royale Group Ltd. -- which owns the Carlyle and four other Ocean Drive Hotels -- to show nervous investors that the Art Deco district was worth the risk. It didn't. Its properties are in receivership, with only the Carlyle and the Leslie open. Then along came Sanchez. And now, following right behind him, two other New Yorkers, Tony Goldman and Arthur Leeds, have bought five hotels among them. Said Beach Commissioner Stanley Arkin of Sanchez: "He's the snow that has started the snowball rolling." The fast-walking, fast-talking Sanchez makes no pretense of being the South Beach savior -- "I'm merely the agent provocateur." And his bottom line is the bottom line. But in Sanchez, Miami Beach has acquired a manic worker, a colorful character and a man who shoots for the sky. He's so quirky that he moved to Dade County expressly to buy Richard Nixon's winter house on Key Biscayne -- in which Nixon lived, behind bullet-proof windows, surrounded by Secret Service paraphernalia, until the Spanish singer Rafael bought it from him for $1.5 million, almost two and a half times what Sanchez paid. Now he rents Kirk Douglas' house. He's so compulsive that he calls up his partners at 3 a.m. "when he gets an idea. And he has just that kind of charisma, that he actually gets you to wake up and listen, " said Todd Tragash, an architect who works with Sanchez. He's such a dreamer that -- at the same time as he drapes banners with the name of his firm, Polonia, across hotel porches in South Beach -- Sanchez is trying to convince the government of India to let him restore the Taj Mahal. And even as Polonia workers wearing bright yellow slickers wash down the 76-room Breakwater with enormous green hoses, Sanchez has his eyes on the Vatican. "If it's not famous or historic, forget it, " Sanchez said. Sanchez's expectations have grown with his business, which now counts 500 employees in New York, New Jersey, San Francisco and Miami. He grew up in Havana, working as a bank auditor there and, after he emigrated in 1961, in New York. He studied banking at the American Institute of Banking, accounting and business administration at Pace University and law at the City University of New York. His studies took him to the University of Warsaw for a year. He loved the country, naming his company, Polonia, after it. Polonia began as a realty company in 1976, a time when the financial crisis in New York City was almost at its worst and real estate was cheap. He bought up old buildings in rundown areas of Upper Manhattan, Brooklyn and Queens and hired contractors to restore them. He didn't like their work. So he set out to learn the art of historic restoration himself. He took a 10-month course at RESTORE, a nonprofit training program in masonry preservation for people already working in the building trades. Now "he's one of the best in the field, certainly in facade work. No one even tries to compete with him in cleaning" historic buildings, said Jan Anderson, founder of RESTORE. "That's why Polonia gets some of the best contracts around." Among those contracts: the New York Public Library, Trinity Church, the New York Stock Exchange, the U.S. Embassy in Warsaw and, currently, the U.S. Naval Base in Guantanamo, Cuba. With such projects come stories. There was, for example, the time that he was restoring the facade of the New York Stock Exchange, working, as is his style, around the clock. Late one night, his workers short-circuited the Wall Street building's power. The computers stopped. "Oh, my God. We could have been sued all over the world. I was praying, " Sanchez said. "We managed to solve the problem. And the market was up the next day." Sanchez never intended to spend any time in Miami Beach. He had enough of the city one week 25 years ago, he said. He had just arrived from Cuba and took a job in the kitchen of a Beach hotel. He expected to be fed. He wasn't. "So there I am peeling eggs. Every third egg I peel, I eat. I get sick. I almost die. That was enough of Miami Beach for me . . . I still smell eggs around here." What pricked his interest in the city was a conference sponsored by the nonprofit Miami Beach Development Corp. "I couldn't believe my very eyes. All this oceanfront property. I smelled money in the breeze of the sea." He had a vision of Ocean Drive as a Bourbon Street by the Atlantic. He also knew a tax shelter -- owing to the tax credits granted preservationists -- when he saw one. He set off full speed ahead. And the fever of acquisition continues, as Sanchez negotiates with the owners of at least six more buildings -- including Beach Commissioner Abe Resnick, who owns the shuttered Bancroft Hotel. Resnick, for one, is hesitant to pat Sanchez on the back for investing in South Beach. "It's good for the community, but it's not a question of courage, " Resnick said. "He's a serious person and he knows what he's doing, but it's like playing the market for him. He knows the game." Meanwhile, Sanchez is branching out into other parts of Dade County: working as a contractor restoring the Florida National Bank in Coral Gables, bidding to buy the Opa-locka Hotel and train station, and looking for financing to buy the Freedom Tower in downtown Miami. What he most wants, however, is to see South Beach flush with money and hopping with activity. And then Sanchez wants one thing back from the city, he said. "You know Lummus Park? Well, I want at least half of it. It should be Gerry Park. With all due respect to Mr. Lummus." TAG: 8602230522 176 of 187, 4 Terms mh YOUNG HOTELIERS: INHERITING THE BEACH 04/10/1986 THE MIAMI HERALD Copyright (c) 1986, The Miami Herald SECTION: NEIGHBORS MB PAGE: 10 LENGTH: 55 lines SOURCE/CREDIT LINE: DEBBIE SONTAG Herald Staff Writer MEMO: COVER STORY YOUNG HOTELIERS: INHERITING THE BEACH A man who knows more about Miami Beach hotels than almost anyone else can tell in a flash whether a property is in young or old hands. The litmus of his A man who knows more about Miami Beach hotels than almost anyone else can tell in a flash whether a property is in young or old hands. The litmus of his test: carpets and televisions. "Examine the state of the building and you'll know who's in charge. In the majority of cases, if there are stains in the carpet, the hotel owner is older. If the carpet's fresh, if there's color TV and cable, it's young people," said Murray Gold, executive director of the Miami Beach Resort Hotel Association. The city is seeing more and more new carpets every year. A new generation of hoteliers is inheriting the Beach. They're young. Most are Beach natives. They're fixing up deteriorated hotels. And they're taking a gamble on a future they hope will bring back the bustling city of their youth. "We, too, could allow the properties to run down, " said Laine Unger, managing director of the Royal Palm Hotel. "But we're young. These places are extensions of our own ego. We want to feel proud." At hotels such as the Royal Palm, the Adams-Tyler, the Netherland and the Sagamore, children in their 30s are marching in to salvage or sustain the family business. Many were ensconced in other careers and had no intention of following in their parents' footsteps. But, "what with inheritance taxes, selling these places would mean forfeiting a lifetime of work. So you must perpetuate them, " said David Pearlson, owner of the Adams-Tyler. In other instances, young investors or contractors, such as Russell Galbut at the Shelborne and Gerry Sanchez with many Ocean Drive hotels, are taking a gamble. "It's a gold mine here. My word of advice to anyone who listens is: Buy, " Sanchez said. The philosophy of these new, young owners is not as isolationist as that of their seniors. "You can do all we want to fix up your property. But if it looks as if a neutron bomb has hit the area around you, it's not going to do you a whole lot of good, " said Michael Milberg, general manager of the Royal Palm. They know their own success depends on the redevelopment of Miami Beach. So they join allthe boards and committees they can to create new promotional campaigns and new special events in the city. "We have no choice but to hustle, really. We can't stay in business without moving ahead, " said Galbut. Eric Jacobs of the Tarleton is skeptical that all this young energy can make a difference, given the relatively few properties in young hands. Lloyd Mandell, 38, of the Marseilles says only a sweeping change, such as the legalization of gambling, will make a significant impact. Most consider themselves pioneers. "More fresh blood would be welcome, " said Milberg. "Let's get rid of the dinosaurs. " TAG: 8601270784 SANCHEZ CLOSES SALE 04/07/1988 THE MIAMI NEWS Copyright (c) 1988, The Miami News DATE: Thursday, April 7, 1988 EDITION: THREE-STAR SECTION: BUSINESS PAGE: 8A LENGTH: 19 lines SOURCE/CREDIT LINE: BRIEFLY SANCHEZ CLOSES SALE OF TWO BEACH HOTELS MIAMI BEACH HOTEL OWNER GERRY SANCHEZ ANNOUNCED THE CLOSING YESTERDAY OF THE SALE OF THE BREAKWATER AND EDISON HOTELS ON OCEAN DRIVE FOR $5.1 MILLION. THE PROPERTIES WERE SOLD TO UNIFIED INVESTORS GROUPS, WHICH IN MARCH AGREED TO BUY A PACKAGE OF SANCHEZ-OWNED PROPERTIES ALONG OCEAN DRIVE, INCLUDING THE BETSY ROSS HOTEL AND WALDORF TOWERS. UNDER THE $11 MILLION AGREEMENT, SANCHEZ WILL RETAIN AN INTEREST IN THE PROPERTIES AS A DIRECTOR OF UNIFIED INVESTORS GROUPS. THE GROUP PLANS TO INVEST MORE THAN $1 MILLION TO FINISH RENOVATING THE BREAKWATER. TAG: 8801120270 :4