BurgerFi, which went public last year, serves things like cajun fries, hot dogs, fried chicken sandwiches and burgers like the CEO, which is made with a double wagyu and brisket blend. Earlier this year, the company said it plans to expand its physical footprint by 30% this year.
Besides Sarasota, BurgerFi also has locations in St. Petersburg, Seminole and Tampa.
The first phase of The Green at Lakewood Ranch came online in 2017. It was initially anchored by an Earth Fare grocery store until the company went bankrupt last year, before the pandemic. Earth Fare was then replaced by a Winn-Dixie.
When it comes to big-dollar deals in Palm Beach, this season saw an abundance of riches.
Between Oct. 1 and Thursday, 38 sales closed at prices recorded at $17 million or higher. In the same period last year, just 12 deals landed in that price category 13 if you record a property that sold for $16.9 million.
This season also saw six sales record at between $30 million and $40 million, while another nine deals hit prices even higher.
Here’s a rundown of the sales including two that involved vacant lots recorded at more than $40 million this season. Unless otherwise noted, the prices are the ones documented by the Palm Beach County Clerk’s office.
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UPDATE: Landmarked seaside estate in Midtown brings $45.6M, deed shows
The meticulously restored estate at 172 S. Ocean Blvd. had not changed hands since 1989, when it was bought by private equity specialist E. Burke Ross Jr. for $2.25 million.
Palm Beach Daily News
Palm Beach saw two house sales top $45 million within one week after 172 S. Ocean Blvd. changed hands for a recorded $45.6 million.
The sale involved La Salona, a restored landmarked house that faces the ocean on the corner of Clarke Avenue, four streets north of Royal Palm Way.
The buyer was Bayhigh LLC, a Delaware limited liability company with an address in care of Palm Beach attorney Timothy Hanlon. Because of Delaware’s strict corporate privacy laws, no other information about the buyer was readily available in public records. Hanlon declined to discuss the transaction and said his client also had no comment.
DAYTONA BEACH A required beach access pedestrian walkway on the northern boundary of the controversy-plagued construction site of the $192 million Protogroup twin-tower hotel-condominium project was closed again this week, at least for a time, just as Bike Week visitors started to arrive for the annual 10-day event.
“We come down here every year and I don’t know how you get down to the ocean anymore,” said Perry Schafer, 60, a guest at the 10-room Sea Dunes hotel, located at the base of the Protogroup’s South Tower at the intersection of Oakridge Boulevard and North Atlantic Avenue.
Schafer has been making the annual trek from his home in Omaha, Nebraska, to Bike Week for six years, joining a group of friends that has been meeting at the Sea Dunes for nearly 20 years during the event, which officially opens Friday this year.