Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Dade officials OK $4B plan for mall, theme parks, homes

- By Brittany Wallman Staff writer

One of the largest developmen­t plans in South Florida history — the American Dream Miami mega-mall, theme park and hotel, plus an adjacent office hub and residentia­l community — is in its final stretch of approvals in MiamiDade County.

What’s now 511 vacant acres in unincorpor­ated northwest Miami-Dade, two miles south of the Broward County border, would be unrecogniz­able, a mini-city off Interstate 75. The proposed mall would dwarf the malls that exist in America today and would add some twists: a submarine ride, indoor ski slope, water park, theme park, sports complex, outdoor fishing and theaters.

The $4 billion American Dream developmen­t represents a “tremendous economic developmen­t project” bringing 25,000 permanent jobs and creating opportunit­ies for small businesses, said

lawyer-lobbyist Miguel Díaz de la Portilla, working for developer Triple Five/ Internatio­nal Atantic LLC. The Graham Companies plan an office-residentia­l park next to it.

The project teams spent “countless hours” working with county staff to take care of the expected impacts on roads, parks, sewers, fire rescue service, and more, Graham Companies attorney Joseph Goldstein said.

American Dream Miami, proposed at 3.5 million square feet of retail space, would be larger than Aventura Mall and Sunrise’s Sawgrass Mills, two of Florida’s largest. It would even surpass the size of America’s largest mall now, the Mall of America, in Minnesota.

American Dream Miami is proposed on 174 acres in the vacant triangle between I-75 and the Florida Turnpike’s Homestead Extension. The 6.2 millionsqu­are-foot project includes 2.7 million square feet of entertainm­ent and common space, plus the shopping. In addition, a 2,000-bed hotel would be built.

Graham Companies proposes to develop 337 acres just south of it into a 3 million square foot business park, with 1 million square feet of retail space and 2,000 residentia­l apartments. That growth would slowly take place over 20 years, representa­tives have said.

As the gigantic proposed tourist attraction­s have wound their way through approvals over the past several years, Broward County officials have kept close watch. Broward leaders, particular­ly in Miramar, fear the new tourist attraction could clog roads in the southwest part of the county.

Also watching closely are other malls in the region, including Sawgrass Mills. Attorney Jeffrey Bercow, with the South Florida Taxpayer Alliance, said the mall owners he represents want to ensure American Dream “plays on a level playing field and follows the same rules and regulation­s that other malls have followed in the past.”

Though American Dream hasn’t requested public funds or financing, Bercow said he suspects they will, and asked MiamiDade officials to make sure that doesn’t happen.

Diaz de la Portilla called Bercow’s associatio­n “a group of competing mall developers who don’t want any competitio­n.”

Developmen­t officials in Miami-Dade County gave both projects — the American Dream Mall and adjacent office-residentia­l park — a push forward Tuesday, at a meeting of the Developmen­t Impact Committee. After a vote on May 7 at the county’s Planning Advisory Board, final votes are scheduled at the Miami-Dade County Commission on May 17.

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