Land swap proposed for Surfside condominium collapse property
Image via AP.

Surfside
A proposal to purchase the existing Champlain site for about $120 million is still being negotiated.

A proposed land swap to allow for an on-site memorial to the victims of the deadly Florida beachfront condominium collapse will be examined for financial viability, a judge ordered Wednesday.

Many survivors and victim family members of the Champlain Towers South collapse oppose a memorial at a nearby Miami Beach park. And many are uneasy with replacement of that doomed building with a luxury structure on what they regard as sacred ground.

“We think it’s kind of a burial site,” said Carlos Wainberg, who lost several family members in the June 24 disaster in Surfside and favors the land swap idea.

Investigators are trying to determine what caused the 12-story building to collapse, killing 98 people.

Miami-Dade Circuit Judge Michael Hanzman, who is overseeing lawsuits filed in the collapse aftermath, told a court-appointed receiver to investigate the proposed swap.

“It is something that is going to be looked at,” Judge Hanzman said at a status hearing. “There will never be enough to fully compensate everyone.”

The proposal would work this way: a new Surfside community center containing a Champlain memorial would be built on the collapse site. In exchange, land on which the 10-year-old community center now sits would be sold to provide compensation to survivors and victim family members.

A proposal to purchase the existing Champlain site for about $120 million is still being negotiated, with other bids expected. A complicating factor is the potential that the town of Surfside will enact a zoning change that could reduce the property’s value.

“The right thing is to add as much value to the property as possible,” said Oren Cytrynbaum, a former Champlain resident and attorney who informally represents many victims. “Lives have been lost. Lives have been displaced or ruined.”

Surfside officials said a Sept. 9 workshop is scheduled on the zoning issue but no vote by the town council has been set. The zoning question has to do with how much density — in other words, potential condo units — would be permitted in a new building.

Hanzman has expressed dismay previously that Surfside would continue to pursue a zoning change affecting the Champlain site’s value.

“There’s no deal until and unless it is approved by this court,” the judge said.

Another hearing is set for next Wednesday.

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Republished with permission from The Associated Press.

Associated Press


2 comments

  • Alex

    September 1, 2021 at 3:07 pm

    Most people knew the building inspector you got in Miami/Dade in those days could very well be corrupt, and the building dept knew damn well it was happening.

    Leaving $2-5k in cash in the bathroom (which was gone after they left) while the inspector was there was not an uncommon experience.

    I wish those people could be punished.

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