Showing posts with label Beach Area. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Beach Area. Show all posts

Feb 6, 2009

Americas On The Park #1503













Americas on the Park Condominium
Walk to Fort Lauderdale Beach Cafes & Shops
Approx 82 Units – Built 1977 –18 Floors
Security Guard at Gated Entry
Pool with Intracoastal Views
Rental Boat Slips to 45 Ft Vessel

One Car Secured Garage Slip – Guest Parking Also
Approx 2623+/- Sq Ft Living Area

Recreation Room with Kitchen
East Views – Views Intracoastal & Inlet & Ocean
Hurricane “Impact” Glass Throughout
Private Balcony with Ocean Views
Huge Living & Dining Areas with Water Views
Dining Area Views Intracoastal Waterway
Neutral Colors
Original Kitchen needs Updating

3 Bedrooms & 2 Full Baths & Powder Room


OUR WEBSITE: (paste web address in browser)
www.LasOlasLifestyles.com

777 Bayshore Dr, #1503,
Fort Lauderdale, FL 33304
Offered at $529,000
MLS ID: F984953

Contact:
SUZANNE WRIGHT: 954-328-0594
RORY VANUCCHI: 754-246-7758
JEAN WHITSON: 954-494-4636

Fax: 954-467-6714
eMail: RoryScottVan@gmail.com

INTERCOASTAL REALTY, INC.
1500 East Las Olas Boulevard
Fort Lauderdale, FL 33301

Nov 29, 2008

Alliance hopes Bahia can improve view

Some Fort Lauderdale residents would like to see a more pleasing skyline, and hope the new Bahia Mar Park, the projected $500 million redevelopment project on the Intracoastal Waterway, can be the way of the future.

"Bahia Mar is probably the most precious public land the city owns," Steve Glassman, president of the Central Beach Alliance, said during a recent meeting of the group with about 60 members in attendance. Peter Henn, LXR Luxury Resorts & Hotels vice president, said he hopes the Bahia Mar Park Project will win unanimous vote of approval from the Alliance at its meeting in January. Henn offered a presentation to Alliance members – including miniatures of the proposed project and posterboards with before-and-after illustrations. His aim: to persuade members that Bahia Mar is exactly what the city needs. Project plans include a luxury hotel, two upscale residential buildings and a parking garage.

Alliance member Joe Panico said he liked the project and agreed that the land has been wasted.

"But you need to work on the aesthetics," he said. "The buildings have no 'wow' power."

Resident Chuck Murawski said its the aesthetics that should attract people.

"Visit Dubai or Barcelona, where the buildings are spectacular, not rectangular boxes," he said.

Beach resident Shirley Smith said the project is too big.

"The architecture is all right, but I'd love something more Mediterranean. There has to be a lot more talking," she said.

In other news:

Glassman announced said that the Beach Music Festival is scheduled for May 2009.

Capt. Victor London of the Fort Lauderdale Police Department said crime statistics in the Central Beach Alliance area are good news. There were 70 crimes between September and October, compared with 79 in the same period last year. Additionally, there was 809 calls for service compared with 860 in 2007.

source: sun-sentinel.com

link to the original post:
Alliance hopes Bahia can improve view


Fort Lauderdale Blog and Real Estate News
Rory Vanucchi
RoryVanucchi@gmail.com

http://waterfrontlife.blogspot.com
www.FortLauderdaleLiving.net

Nov 15, 2008

Hollywood hosts meeting to discuss beach erosion problem

Hollywood recently hosted a meeting to update residents on its ongoing battle with beach erosion.

A $48 million sand renourishment project completed just two years ago appears to have made little headway in some areas of Hollywood beach that are still showing signs of depletion.

Mayor Peter Bober assured residents at the Hollywood Beach Culture and Community Center that the city is aware of the severity of the problem and is committed to pursuing all available options.

"This is a major safety issue," he said. "One of the things we are doing is looking at long-term solutions. We've got to be totally diversified and think outside the box."

Steve Higgins, the county's beach erosion administrator, outlined several avenues that the city is considering, including importing sand from the Bahamas, to researching the quality of sand created from grounded-up glass.

Sand bypassing, a method that shuttles sand from one area to another, was once thought too costly to consider, but now it is on the table, he said.

Higgins cautioned that it won't be a quick fix. Obtaining permits, he said, is often a lengthy process due to stringent guidelines to protect coral reefs.

"Coral reefs are highly protected and heavily scrutinized by the regulatory agencies to make sure that the permit applicant is not going to damage these resources," Higgins said. "It took us six years to implement the last project that we built down there, so it's not something that you can just do overnight."

Some residents at the meeting, however, said action is needed quickly.

"We can not wait till 2010," said Juan Cuesta. "This is a fight between bureaucrats and Mother Nature, and you know who will win."

"It's very frustrating to hear them talk about ideas and concepts that are virtually no different than they were two years ago," said Lee Gottlieb, a resident of The Renaissance.

Gottlieb, who said he was able to solve his building's erosion problem by planting sea oats, urged the city to pursue planting vegetation on the beach as a major part of its plan.

He said he has seen the benefits firsthand after Higgins referred him to Thaddeus Hamilton of the Broward County Soil and Water Conservation District in 2006.

Hamilton has been using plants to retain sand for years, a process that leads to the formation of sand dunes, which become natural barriers.

"Thaddeus Hamilton helped us to design and install the dune system," Gottlieb said. "If we had not done that, the ocean would be at our pool today."

Many at the meeting expressed interest in planting vegetation, though there are those against it because the dunes block their view of the ocean.

"We know of many locations where there is a pretty dedicated opposition against putting sea oats down and building a dune for those reasons," Higgins said. "I think its shortsighted, but they are within their rights and they can actually stop a project by objecting to a permit."

Gottlieb said it's still worth pursuing.

"We have the answer. It's not the only answer, but it's one important element," he said. "And I'm a firm believer that if you give Mother Nature a hand, she will take care of the rest."


source: sun sentinal


link to the original post:
http://www.sun-sentinel.com/community/news/hollywood/sfl-flbeach1116swnov16,0,7640499.story



Fort Lauderdale Blog and Real Estate News
Rory Vanucchi
RoryVanucchi@gmail.com

http://www.lasolaslifestyles.com/
http://www.fortlauderdaleliving.net/

Nov 4, 2008

Fort Lauderdale voting tonight on beach redevelopment project

19-story project would be built block off AIA

FORT LAUDERDALE - It's just a vacant parking lot with a tiny guard shack on it, staring at the back of a beach bar. But a developer sees the property at 2939 Banyan St. as the future home to a 19-story hotel-condo with restaurants.

City commissioners will vote tonight on the proposed ELAD project on property a block off State Road A1A, and a block north of Las Olas Boulevard, on land zoned for resorts.

EL-AD FL BEACH LLC is proposing a 256-room hotel there, with 41 residential condos on the top floors. On the ground floor would be almost 8,000 square feet of restaurant space. Beneath the ground floor would be four levels of "robotic," or mechanical, parking.

The proposed hotel is one of the relatively few major redevelopment plans submitted for property that's not facing the beach or the Intracoastal Waterway.

The back-street environs were called an "eyesore" by tourism advocate Ina Lee, publisher of TravelHost magazine, who implored the city's Planning and Zoning Board to say "yes" to ELAD. The board did so, voting 6-1 in favor on Oct. 15.

Paul Flanigan, owner of the nearby Quarterdeck restaurant and a beach redevelopment advocate, said he's waited years to see the back streets of the beach enhanced, and was starting to think he had wasted his time trying.

The central beach was declared officially blighted and in need of redevelopment years ago. In recent years, though, many luxury high-rise condo-hotels were constructed on the strip of State Road A1A facing the Atlantic Ocean. Flanigan is among those who want redevelopment to reach further into the barrier island.

He said he hadn't reviewed the ELAD plans, but if it would attract people to the inner streets of the beach community, he likes it.

"We're one of the few places where you can walk from the Intracoastal to the beach in three minutes," he said. "That whole back area , that should be redeveloped."

The ELAD property is just south of the property where another developer hoped to build the proposed Cortez Hotel. That project was rejected by the City Commission at its last meeting.

The meetings are open to the public, at 6 p.m. at City Hall, 100 N. Andrews Ave. Or watch on local cable Channel 78 or online at www.fortlauderdale.gov.



Brittany Wallman can be reached at bwallman@sunsentinel.com or 954-356-4541.

source: sun sentinal


Fort Lauderdale Real Estate Blog & Homes For Sale

RoryVanucchi
RoryVanucchi@gmail.com
www.LasOlasLifestyles.com

Oct 19, 2008

EVERGLADES HOUSE #1601






Everglades House - Fort Lauderdale

Panoramic Viwes: Inlet - Cruise Ships - Shorline - City
Sought After South Corner -
Considered to Have the Best Views in the Building
Resort Style Pool & Putting Green
Interior of Unit is Original but Well Maintained
Split Bedrooms & Lots of Closets

Square Ft: Approx 2250
1 Car Deeded Garage Slip
2007 Taxes: $12,839 with No Homestead
Maintenance Fee: $760 Monthly
Maintenance Includes: Water - Sewer - Bldg Insurance - Cable
Bicycle and/or Storage Room
Central Cooling and Heating

2 Bedrooms - 2 Full Baths – Powder Room
Public Schools: Harbordale Elem- Sunrise Middle- Ft Laud High

Year Built: 1966
18 Floors - 160+/- Units
Leasing Allowed: 1 Time Yearly - 90 Day Minimum
No Pets Allowed

FORT LAUDERDALE PROPERTIES FOR SALE:
www.LasOlasLifestyles.com



PROPERTY WEBSITE:


2000 S. Ocean Drive , Fort Lauderdale, FL, 33316
Price: $649,000 - MLS: F963414

Contact:
SUZANNE WRIGHT: 954-328-0594
RORY VANUCCHI: 754-246-7758
JEAN WHITSON: 954-494-4636

Fax: 954-467-6714
RoryScottVan@gmail.com

INTERCOASTAL REALTY, INC.
1500 East Las Olas Boulevard
Fort Lauderdale, FL 33301

Fort Lauderdale Real Estate Blog & Homes for Sale

Jul 1, 2008

1801 N Atlantic Blvd - Oceanfront Rental




how about living on the ocean for a few months?
in warm and fashionable fort lauderdale

3 bedrooms & 3 baths – two car garage

directly on N Atlantic Blvd/A1A with oceanfront panoramas

hardwood and granite floors

light wood and granite kitchen

hurricane impact windows & French doors

upstairs master suite has private oceanfront terrace

available for annual or seasonal lease

$5,500 monthly - Annual Term

Seasonal & Short Term Lease Condsidered

links to full screen images:


aerial view1

aerial view2

view evening

view daytime

exterior

dining area

living room

master bedroom

sunroom

floor plan1
floor plan2

survey

sample our portfolio: properties for purchase

condominium happenings: local condo scene

our daily updates: waterfrontlife blog page

South Florida Lifestyle Representatives:

Rory Vanucchi 754.246.7758
Jean Whitson 954.494.4636
Suzanne Wright 954.328.0594
Carole Riser 954.695.3416


Dec 12, 2007

Rental Scene - 3009 NE 19 Street










Fort Lauderdale Beach – Dolphin Isles

Located a Short Walk From the Beaches

Direct Intracoastal Views – 1 From The Point

100 Ft Waterfront – Accommodates 80 Ft Yacht

“Great Room” Offers Walls of Glass & Tiled Floors

Light Wood Kitchen Leads to Dining Room

Freeform Pool Located Waterside

Ground Level “Junior” Master Suite Views Water

Upper Level Master Suite with Large Terrace

Master Bath has Spa Tub & Bidet & Shower

Spectacular Views from Most Rooms

Pets Ok with Approval of Owner

4 bedrooms and 3 Full Baths

2 Car Garage

Fully Furnished

Available for 3-6 Month Seasonal Lease

$6500 Monthly

sample our portfolio: Properties for Purchase & Lease

South Florida Lifestyle Representatives:

Rory Vanucchi 754-246-7758
Jean Whitson 954-494-4636
Suzanne Wright 954-328-0594

Nov 30, 2007

on the market - 3059 N Atlantic Boulevard











Fort Lauderdale Beach

Located Across The Street From Beach Access

Walk to Shops & Eateries on Galt Mile

Granite & White Lacquer Kitchen

White Tile Floors

Paver Tile Driveway & Patio

Open Living Area

Formal Dining Room

Family Room Overlooks Patio

Large Laundry & Utility Room

3 bedrooms and 2 Full Baths

Fully Furnished

Available For Sale & Annual/Seasonal Lease

$3700 Monthly – Annual – Furnished

$4900 Monthly – Seasonal – Furnished

Purchase At $1,295,000 -

sample our portfolio: properties for purchase

South Florida Lifestyle Representatives:

Rory Vanucchi 754-246-7758
Jean Whitson 954-494-4636
Suzanne Wright 954-328-0594