President-elect Donald Trump’s plan to build a 1,500-unit condominium complex in Miami-Dade County could move forward next week after residents have their say.
The Doral City Council is set to hold a public hearing Jan. 15 on a resolution approving a site plan and master development plan for the project, which would rise at the Trump National Doral Miami golf resort.
The panel will also decide, after public input, whether to approve rezoning of the 56.4-acre property at 4400 NW 87th Ave. Doral Council members gave a preliminary OK to the rezoning in August.
A limited liability company called Trump Endeavor 12 LLC, whose principal is listed Donald Trump Jr., seeks to construct 1,498 condo units across four 20-floor towers estimated to collectively house 4,975 residents.
Units in the towers, which would surround the existing Trump National Doral resort, would likely start at $2 million apiece, Trump’s lawyer for the project, Felix Lasarte, told the Business Journal.
There would be 1,478 condos ranging from one-bedroom units of 885-square-feet to 5,000-square-foot units with four bedrooms. The project would also include 20 three- to four-bedroom villas, all with rooftop terraces, of 3,014 to 3,442 square feet.
The 5.66 million-square-foot development, titled Trump Doral International Towers, would also boast 141,694 square feet of commercial space, 3,522 parking spots and close to 37 acres of open park and recreational space, including bike trails, tennis courts and pools.
Lasarte said the project will produce the tallest building in Doral. But unlike the Miami Freedom Park and Soccer Village project rising on the former Melreese golf course in Miami, Miami-Dade officials have not expressed concerns about the Trump development’s potential interference with nearby Miami International Airport.
Lasarte said the Federal Aviation Administration similarly doesn’t have an issue with the project.
A memo from Doral Interim City Manager Francisco Rios recommending approval of the plans said the project will further a “Revenue Growth” goal the city detailed in its 2023 Strategic Plan.
The project, he said, will lead to “increasing the property value, thereby adding new revenues to the city’s property tax base and fees.”
A final vote on the project is expected to take place in September.