Miami Beach

Miami Beach issues demolition permit to take down historic Deauville Beach Resort

The historic Deauville Beach Resort in Miami Beach is set to be demolished after the city’s building official issued a final demolition permit Wednesday.

The shuttered hotel, at 6701 Collins Ave., will be brought down by implosion and conventional demolition, according to a Thursday memo from City Manager Alina Hudak to the City Commission. A date for the demolition was not provided.

The owners of the hotel, the Meruelo family, submitted an engineering report that recommended the demolition of the structure before hurricane season begins in June. The building, which famously hosted The Beatles in 1964, has been closed since sustaining damage due to an electrical fire in 2017. It has racked up $2.3 million in fines from the city for failing to maintain a historic property.

If the building is demolished, Miami Beach code authorizes the Historic Preservation Board to require the replication of the original structure and to order that the new building have the same height and density of the previous structure.

The approval of the permit came days after Judge Michael Hanzman, who is overseeing a lawsuit filed by the city against the owners of the hotel for not bringing it up to code, denied the city’s request to perform an independent inspection of the building. Building Official Ana Salgueiro ordered the demolition in January after inspecting the property with a team of experts, but preservationists and some commissioners demanded a second opinion.

After Hanzman’s ruling, the permit was approved Wednesday. The final requirement from the city was for the Deauville owners to pay the required $93,777 fee, which they did Wednesday. Hudak said the owners still have to do asbestos remediation prior to demolition, a process governed by Miami-Dade County. Property owners and residents near the Deauville must be notified 10 days prior to the demolition, a city spokeswoman said.

The Miami Design Preservation League, a Miami Beach preservation group, has challenged Salgueiro’s order to the county. If the appeal is successful, the order could be invalidated, Hudak wrote in the memo.

This story was originally published March 10, 2022 at 5:02 PM.

Martin Vassolo
Miami Herald
Martin Vassolo writes about local government and community news in Miami Beach, Surfside and beyond. He was part of the team that covered the Champlain Towers South building collapse, work that was recognized with a staff Pulitzer Prize for breaking news. He began working for the Herald in 2018 after attending the University of Florida.
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