• Angelo and Banta represents AutoNation in headquarters relocation

    Angelo and Banta represents AutoNation in headquarters relocation


    The law firm of Angelo & Banta, P.A. is pleased to announce it recently represented AutoNation in connection with a new lease for the relocation of its corporate headquarters from 110 SE 6th Street, Fort Lauderdale to 200 Las Olas Circle in downtown Fort Lauderdale.

    AutoNation will lease five floors at 200 Las Olas Circle containing approximately 105,000 square feet from an affiliate of Stiles Corporation. AutoNation is expected to move to its new location approximately mid-2009. This new state of the art building consists of approximately 186,516 square feet of Class “A” office space, 17,538 of ground-level retail shops near Las Olas Riverfront, as well as six levels of parking. The lease provides for an initial twelve year term with two five year options.

    AutoNation, headquartered in Ft. Lauderdale, FL, is the largest automotive retailer in the United States. Currently, AutoNation, Inc. owns 239 new vehicle franchises in 15 states. Named America’s Most Admired Automotive Retailer by Fortune Magazine, AutoNation is also ranked #122 on the 2007 Fortune 500.

  • Angelo and Banta Law Firm closes $67.5 million loan from Regions Bank to Plantation Residential LLC

    Angelo and Banta Law Firm closes $67.5 million loan from Regions Bank to Plantation Residential LLC


    FT. LAUDERDALE – The firm’s managing shareholder, Thomas P. Angelo, as well as attorneys Philip M. Hanaka and Michael S. Foelster of Angelo & Banta, P.A., recently represented Regions Bank in closing a $67.5 million acquisition and construction loan to Plantation Residential LLC, a Delaware limited liability company, to finance the development and construction of a 481-unit luxury apartment project to be known as “Alexan Plantation” in Plantation, Broward County, Florida.

    Jeffrey I. Shulman, South Florida’s senior vice president and sales manager and Marilyn Seroyer, both of Regions Bank, will lead a syndicate of banks for the construction loan.

    A subsidiary of JP Morgan provided equity funding to Plantation Residential, a subsidiary of Trammell Crow Company. The developer was represented by Jones Day of Columbus, Ohio.

  • The firm’s managing shareholder, Tom Angelo, recently settled an eminent domain action with the city of Sunny Isles Beach for developer Raanan Katz for $7,000,000 plus additional benefits

    The firm’s managing shareholder, Tom Angelo, recently settled an eminent domain action with the city of Sunny Isles Beach for developer Raanan Katz for $7,000,000 plus additional benefits


    The city’s original offer on the property was for $1,834,225

    By Andres Amerikaner of The Miami Herald

    The largest commercial landowner in Sunny Isles Beach is starting to throw his weight around. While settling an eminent domain suit with the city for $7 million earlier this month, developer Raanan Katz, an Israeli immigrant who owns four outdoor malls in Sunny Isles Beach, sent the city a list of 20 items he would like to see addressed.

    On the list: traffic problems, construction delays and complaints about the city’s look and marketing tactics.

    “He is always interested in making the city a better, more vibrant place,” said real estate and corporate attorney Tom Angelo, who has represented Katz for the past 10 years. “He definitely has a long-term view for the city.”

    Katz was one of the original investors in the area, before the city incorporated. In 1987, he sank $1.75 million into land on the less-desirable, west side of Collins Avenue.

    His company, RK Associates, has grown to own 6 million square feet of retail space in New England and South Florida.

    His already-heavy presence in Sunny Isles Beach is about to get heavier. Northeast 170th Street is being renamed Raanan Katz Boulevard at its entry to his strip mall on Collins Avenue – one condition of the settlement he signed with the city.

    Katz, an avid basketball fan who is a minority owner of the Miami Heat, also wants his name on a sports facility in the city.

    He also asked the city to drop $336,400 in code violation fines on his properties. The city accepted and made it part of the settlement.

    Other items on Katz’s wish list:

    • Quick completion of Sunny Isles Boulevard renovations.
    • Faster city licensing.
    • More crosswalks and a cosmetic upgrade of Collins Avenue.
    • Extending traffic light timing on certain intersections to allow more time for left turns into his shopping centers.
    • Forcing vacant property owners to immediately landscape and clean their properties.
    • Working with the Aventura Marketing Council to better market the city to tourists.

    In a letter written as part of the settlement, Mayor Norman Edelcup responded that he will “work in a cooperative fashion” with Katz. Many of the suggestions have already been addressed, Edelcup wrote, adding that he will support a separate request by Katz to increase the choice of permissible sign colors at shopping centers from two to four — an item that wasn’t on Katz’s list.

    Angelo said Katz is looking forward to working with the city.

    “We certainly hope that the mayor will live up to his word,” he said.

  • Angelo & Banta Law Firm closes joint venture to acquire The Strand Residential Tower

    Angelo & Banta Law Firm closes joint venture to acquire The Strand Residential Tower


    The law firm of Angelo & Banta, P.A. is pleased to announce it represented American Land Ventures of Miami in the formation of a joint venture and the related acquisition of The Strand, a 295-unit luxury high-rise residential tower on the south bank of the St. Johns River in Jacksonville, Florida.

    The firm assisted American Land Ventures in negotiating and closing a joint venture arrangement with Real Estate Capital Partners, a national real estate equity fund based in New York City. A new joint venture was formed between American Land Ventures and Real Estate Capital Partners, and the firm negotiated a contract to purchase The Strand project. The transaction closed December 28, 2007.

    Merrill Lynch Capital provided financing in the amount of $46,000,000.00.

    Additional financing was provided by IVG Institutional Funds GmbH.

    Simultaneous with closing the fee owner was merged with its parent, The Strand Investors Limited Partnership, a Delaware limited partnership.

    Managing partner Thomas Angelo and partner Gavin Banta handled the negotiations and the closing.

    The Strand offers a number of community amenities and conveniences to its residents. The Strand residents enjoy a fitness center with state-of-the-art weight and cardiovascular equipment, a wellness center and recreation deck with swimming pool. The development offers immediate proximity to an above ground monorail that provides passenger transport in and around the Downtown Jacksonville CBD. The unit mix is comprised of studios, one-, two- and three-bedroom units average approximately 1,200 square feet per unit.

    American Land Ventures is a Miami-based multi-family developer and owner, having developed more than 3,500 high-rise, mid-rise and garden apartments and condominiums in Florida, specializing in urban infill projects.

  • Law Firm of Angelo & Banta, P.A. represents buyer in the acquisition of fixed base operation at Boca Raton Airport

    Law Firm of Angelo & Banta, P.A. represents buyer in the acquisition of fixed base operation at Boca Raton Airport


    The law firm of Angelo & Banta, P.A. represented Hamid Hashemi and his company LAH Aviation Holdings, LLC in the acquisition of Premier Aviation of Boca Raton, L.L.C., which owns a 15-acre fixed base operation (“FBO”) and related development property at the Boca Raton Municipal Airport. Firm partners Thomas P. Angelo and Gavin S. Banta, along with associate Florian Ellison, worked on this transaction which was financed with a $24.6 million loan from Bank of America. Deborah Gordon, Esquire of Seyfarth Shaw, LLP in Chicago, Illinois represented the seller, Muvico Holding, L.L.C. in the transaction.

    Avitat Boca Raton’s FBO presently consists of a three-story, 17,000 square foot upscale terminal, 28,000 square feet of common hangar storage, as well as three air conditioned hangars totaling 42,000 square feet and 4,500 square feet of office space. Avitat Boca Raton is consistently among the top ranked FBO’s in the nation due to its state-of-the-art facility, superior ground support and unsurpassed amenities such as concierge services, gourmet catering, elegant private meeting facilities and teleconferencing capabilities available to pilots, crew members and passengers. Avitat Boca Raton was rated #6 of the top FBO’s in the USA and #1 in the State of Florida as recognized in the AIN FBO survey for 2007.

    Hashemi has been involved with Avitat Boca Raton since its inception and was the driving force behind its design. Hashemi is already making plans to increase the services of the FBO yet again with the addition of a full service restaurant on the property as well as a 75,000 square foot office building.

  • Angelo & Banta Law Firm acts as local counsel for $40 million sale of The Westin Cypress Hotel in Fort Lauderdale

    Angelo & Banta Law Firm acts as local counsel for $40 million sale of The Westin Cypress Hotel in Fort Lauderdale


    The law firm of Angelo & Banta, P.A. recently acted as counsel to Starwood Hotels and its affiliate, Lauderdale Hotel Realty, LLC, in the sale of the Westin Cypress Creek Hotel in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. Firm partners Tom Angelo and Gavin Banta both worked on the closing. The Westin Cypress Creek Hotel is a 15-story hotel with 293 rooms and is located at 1100 Corporate Drive, off Cypress Creek Road in Fort Lauderdale.

    The property was acquired for $40,750,000 by The Procaccianti Group based in Providence, Rhode Island. The buyer plans a $13 million renovation. Starwood Hotels will continue to manage the hotel.

  • SF Attorney spells business with a capital “R”

    SF Attorney spells business with a capital “R”


    by Jennifer LeClaire of the Florida Real Estate Journal

    In a legal landscape where behemoth law firms are gobbling up boutique practices, Fort Lauderdale’s Angelo & Banta PA is determined to do the mega deals without the mega roster.

    Led by managing shareholder Thomas Angelo, the eight-attorney firm frequently litigates real estate cases against legal industry titans like Greenberg Traurig, Akerman Senterfitt and Holland & Knight. But lawyers with mega-firm credentials don’t intimidate Angelo, a former partner at Stearns Weaver Miller in Miami. His track record since launching his own firm in 1998 speaks for itself.

    Indeed, Angelo & Banta is a small partnership that boasts big clients, including Bank of America, Wachovia and El-Ad, the Israeli developer that invested $56.3 million to buy a piece of Fort Lauderdale Beach for a condo-hotel development last year.

    Angelo and his partner, Gavin Banta, are proving that boutique firms can play with the big boys in the real estate and financial services realm by putting relationships first.

    “Our strategy is to keep the number of clients small so we can provide high-quality service and gain repeat business,” said Angelo, 44, who launched his own firm to control his own destiny.

    The duo’s slow-and-steady growth strategy is simple. The firm seeks clients who engage in frequent transactions so its attorneys can learn how to think the way the client does. Angelo likens the attorney-client relationship to a marriage where mutual trust grows over time.

    That strategy has paid off. Angelo represented RPH Hotel Associates in the $24 million sales of the Ritz Plaza Hotel in Miami Beach in June. He negotiated and closed a $45.8 million construction loan for the Strand, a 28-story luxury apartment tower in Jacksonville. He represented Bank of America in closing a $24 million loan to Wilton Manors Developers in Fort Lauderdale. And the list goes on.

    “We cultivate relationships with existing clients because that’s our best source of business. Any sales network will tell you that it’s easier to cultivate relationships you already have than to find a new client,” Angelo said. “We are always asking ourselves if we are doing the best possible job for our clients.”

    This relationship mindset permeates all aspects of Angelo’s firm. When he launched Angelo and Banta nine years ago, he had only one client: Bank of America. He credits relationship-building with the balance of his client base today.

    The firm didn’t advertise then and it doesn’t advertise now. It depends on word of mouth and rock solid performance to grow. Angelo & Banta enjoys referrals from national law firms like Kirkland & Ellis, a 1,500-lawyer mega-firm in Chicago. The firm also receives recommendations from clients like Starwood Hotels, Citibank, AmSouth, AutoNation and the Codina Group.

    “The key to successful business development is getting someone to give you an opportunity to do the first piece of work. Then you do a great job and create the platform internally to continue servicing that business with the same high quality you gave to the first file,” Angelo says.

    Angelo’s firm needs those strong relationships – and the trust that comes along with them – in the heat of the battle. It was actually during a battle over beachfront property in Fort Lauderdale last year that El-Ad got to see Angelo in action. Angelo represented Swiss Beach Holdings in the sale of two acres of Fort Lauderdale Beach to El-Ad. In connection to that sale, litigation was filed to evict Margarita Cafe, a tenant.

    Angelo successfully navigated through the challenges to settle the case and make way for El-Ad to close the land deal for a record $28 million per acre. His performance led El-Ad to hire Angelo & Banta to represent the developer in ongoing matters on Fort Lauderdale Beach, as well as other South Florida real estate transactions.

    Mammoth deals with clients like El-Ad take the sting out of the recent real estate retreat. Several large condo conversions Angelo & Banta was brokering have been shelved. The boutique firm has plenty to fall back on, though. Its practice areas include corporate law, estate planning and probate, bankruptcy, litigation and property tax appeals.

    The diverse practice has led to consistent 10% to 15% annual growth over the past five years. That’s just the way Angelo likes it. He is purposely trying to keep the firm small. His motto is “quality over quantity,” and his hourly rates afford him the opportunity to maintain the firm’s boutique status.

    “We are not the cheapest firm in South Florida, and we are selective about taking on new clients. It’s like a marriage. You want to have a good fit. We don’t want to take on work with companies that aren’t seeking long-term relationships,” Angelo said.

    Angelo & Banta’s biggest challenge is not competing for clients; it’s competing for the best and brightest attorneys, many of whom still want that mega-firm recognition. Angelo has been there and done that. He and the attorneys he employs enjoy the freedom of choosing which clients they’ll serve and then endeavoring to serve them well.

    Angelo also serves the community well as the chairman of the board of the Museum of Discovery and Science in Fort Lauderdale. “I am as passionate about my work at the museum as I am about my firm,” Angelo said.

    That passion is paying dividends for the museum, which has transitioned from a money-losing venture to a $2 million surplus under Angelo’s watch.

    Ask Angelo about the future of his firm and he reverts to the relationship-speak. His goal is to expand the relationship with his current client base and to provide growth opportunities for younger attorneys to enjoy the same level of success as he and his partner have achieved.

    The industry’s largest firms crave to acquire smaller, profitable firms with strong management teams like Angelo & Banta. Angelo would not go so far as to say he would never sell the firm, but mergers and acquisitions are not in his thought process. Relationships are.

    “You’ve got to keep your eye on the ball and stay focused. Be passionate about what you do and success will come,” Angelo asserted. “Build and maintain relationships because they are the key to success in life. There is no question about it.”

  • Angelo & Banta, P.A. represents joints venture to acquire and convert waterfront project in Jacksonville, Florida into condominiums

    Angelo & Banta, P.A. represents joints venture to acquire and convert waterfront project in Jacksonville, Florida into condominiums


    The law firm of Angelo & Banta, P.A. is pleased to announce it recently represented American Land Ventures of Miami in the formation of a joint venture and the related acquisition of The Strand, a 295-unit luxury high-rise residential tower currently under construction on the south bank of the St. Johns River in Jacksonville, Florida.

    The firm assisted American Land Ventures in negotiating and closing a joint venture arrangement with Real Estate Capital Partners, a national real estate equity fund based in New York City. A new joint venture was formed between American Land Ventures and Real Estate Capital Partners, and the firm negotiated a contract to purchase The Strand project, which is scheduled to be fully completed and converted into condominiums in early 2007.

    The firm also negotiated on behalf of the joint venture a construction loan commitment in the amount of $86 million with Corus Bank of Chicago, Illinois. The total sell-out of the project is expected to reach over $130 million.

    Firm partners Tom Angelo and Gavin Banta, together with associate Florian Ellison, handled the negotiations with respect to the real estate and financing aspects of the joint venture. Firm partner David Hanley assisted in corporate related documentation and due diligence.

  • Local Lawyers Donate Time to Help Others

    Local Lawyers Donate Time to Help Others


    By Sharon Harvey Rosenberg

    Lawyers have donated about 1.5 million hours to pro bono cases over the past year, according to data from the Florida Bar Association.

    Local Florida Bar Association members are also active as volunteers. In Fort Lauderdale, Thomas Angelo — managing shareholder of Angelo & Banta — uses his expertise and contacts in real estate law to assist the Florida Museum of Science and Discovery.

    Angelo, who serves as chairman of the museum on a pro bono basis, was recently alarmed when the museum faced a sharp increase (nearly 1,000 percent) in its windstorm insurance coverage. “We had a huge crisis,” he said.

    Using his real estate contacts, Angelo recruited a new insurance broker and was able to secure a better deal on windstorm coverage for the organization.

    Angelo has also recruited peers and friends from the legal sector to lend their financial support and expertise to the museum’s capital campaign to fund an upcoming expansion plan. “I really like getting my friends and business associates involved. Everybody wins, especially the children.” he said.

  • Firms managing partner named heavy hitter in South Florida real estate for second consecutive year by South Florida Business Journal

    Firms managing partner named heavy hitter in South Florida real estate for second consecutive year by South Florida Business Journal


    If a company is known by the clients it serves and keeps, the boutique law firm led by Thomas Angelo is famous. The three largest domestic financial institutions – Bank of America, Wachovia, and Citibank- all trust his firm with closing their financial transactions. Last year, Angelo closed a $208 million Bank of America syndicated construction loan to the Related Cos., financing a 1,000-unit high-rise Miami condominium project.

    He and his team also represent a host of real estate developers and major lenders throughout the region. They close a $116 million transaction that involved the Lehman Brothers and Corus Bank for the Peninsula, a 234-unit luxury condominium development by American Land Ventures on Jacksonville’s St. Johns River.

    It’s not all money, deals and land for Angelo. He also has his eye on the stars as third-term board chairman for the Museum of Discovery and Science.