Home Around the state Related Group gets approval from Miami Dade County Commission for $307 million redevelopment project

Related Group gets approval from Miami Dade County Commission for $307 million redevelopment project

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The current Liberty Square project -- this image is from Google Maps

Related Urban, an affiliate of Related Group, has received approval from the Miami Dade County Commission for its $307 million redevelopment of the Liberty Square housing project in Miami Liberty City.

According to the plans, the building will have 1,332 new housing units at Liberty Square and 216 units at Lincoln Gardens in nearby Brownsville. Both are low-income communities and the reflect the demand created by existing public housing stock that is decades out of date.

Mayor Carlos Gimenez said the contract ensures that the county would not contribute more than $46 million for the project and that a community prosperity fund would receive $10 million up front, plus 20 percent of the project’s revenue to spend on Liberty City’s needs, such as small business development, first-time homebuyer assistance and scholarships. Of the 6,100 construction jobs created by the project, Gimenez said the developer promised that 30 percent would go to Liberty Square or public housing residents. These residents would also be hired for 70 percent of the post-development jobs.

“The only way to get out of poverty is through a good job and we will have good jobs for those that want them,” Gimenez said.
Related Group CEO Jorge Perez, who started his company building public housing before focusing on luxury condominiums, pledged that he would be fully involved in seeing that Liberty Square is a success.

liberty square
A Google Maps image of the current Liberty Square site

“This is transformative,” Perez said. “It’s not just a neighborhood project. It’s a citywide project. It can be a national model for urban rehabilitation.”

Albert Milo, head of Related Urban, said that no residents of Liberty Square or Lincoln Gardens would be displaced during construction. That’s because people moving out of units undergoing rehabilitation could temporarily move into vacant units on the site. Most of those vacant units are currently not in habitable condition, so would be fixed first.

Liberty Square would have 640 public housing units, 120 affordable elderly apartments, 224 affordable family units, 288 workforce housing units and 60 home-ownership units that would be for either affordable housing or workforce buyers.

The project is located at the northwest corner of Northwest 62nd St. and Northwest 12th Ave.

The project still requires approval from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development and the Florida Housing Finance Corp.

The commercial and community components would include a 40,000 sq. ft. grocery store, 15,000 sq. ft. of retail for local businesses, a community center with free WiFi, an Alonzo Mourning Family Foundation youth center, a YMCA family center, a University of Miami UHealth facility, a Jessie Trice Community Health Centers clinic, a facility for the Foundation for Sickle Cell Disease Research and job training programs with Miami Dade College and Florida Memorial University.

Lincoln Gardens would have 105 public housing units and 111 affordable housing units.

Image: Rendering from Related Urban

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