Kobi Karp Sues Joseph And Jonathan Chetrit Over Payment

Kobi Karp Sues Joseph And Jonathan Chetrit Over Payment

Miami architect Kobi Karp is taking New York developers Joseph Chetrit and Jonathan Chetrit to court over an alleged $660,800 debt tied to design work for a $1 billion Miami River megaproject that Adam Neumann’s Flow took over last year.

Karp’s namesake firm sued the father-and-son duo and the entity that owns the 6.2-acre Miami River District development site near Brickell, in Miami-Dade Circuit Court. The entity, CG Miami River, allegedly failed to make the payment last month as required by a settlement agreement, the Jan. 13 complaint states. 

Karp, his lawyer Alex Barthet and the Chetrits did not respond to requests for comment. 

The Karp-designed project was recently rebranded as Flow on the Miami River after Neumann’s Miami-based real estate firm, called Flow, partnered with Canada Global and Yakir Gabay’s Yellowstone Trust to acquire a majority stake in the project in August from New York-based Chetrit Group. 

Neumann and partners provided a $525 million recapitalization. 

Meanwhile, CG Miami River modified a $310 million construction loan with Madison Realty Capital, increasing the mortgage by $9.5 million, records show. 

Karp withdrew a lien placed on the property in August so the Chetrits could close on the refinancing, under the terms of a settlement agreement to pay nearly $1 million in owed architecture fees, the lawsuit states. 

Karp’s lawsuit alleges CG Miami River paid $300,000 when the loan closed but failed to pay the balance by a Dec. 9 deadline. The Chetrits signed as guarantors, per the complaint. 

Karp’s lawsuit is the latest legal wrinkle around a Miami River site that Chetrit has been trying to redevelop for more than a decade. The 4-million-square-foot project could eventually include up to 1,900 apartments and condos, 39,000 square feet of retail, office space, a 17-slip marina and 770 parking spaces.

The first phase, a 54-story tower with 632 apartments at 275 Southwest Sixth Street, is nearly completed. The project includes at least two other residential high-rises. Flow is managing the first tower and will lead development of the rest of the project as managing member of the majority ownership. The Chetrits retained a minority interest. 

Picture of Developer for SWFL
Developer for SWFL