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Aventura
Thanks and Goodbye, George Berlin
Aventura pioneer dies at 85
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George Berlin |
By Randy Abraham
George Berlin, a partner in the pioneering Aventura development
firm Turnberry Associates, passed away Sunday, March 16, of a
heart ailment at the age of 85.
Services were held Tuesday at
Temple Sinai in North Miami Beach, where Berlin had served as
president.
Berlin was the right-hand man of Turnberry Associates founder
Donald Soffer since Soffer first put up $6 million for 785 acres
of mostly soggy swampland in unincorporated northeast Dade County.
Soffer’s vision of an upscale resort community and
Berlin’s engineering background and attention to details were
behind the good planning, excellent waterfront location and savvy
marketing that led to the rapid success of the developing Aventura
community. Early projects such as the Turnberry Isle Resort and
Aventura Mall set the tone and pace for his and other developers’
projects. After those successes, the
Buena Vista,
Coronado and Eldorado high-rise developments were introduced.
To promote Aventura, Turnberry targeted affluent buyers in the
northeastern
United States,
in South America and Europe; an aggressive advertising campaign
followed, ensuring that the name “Aventura” was known to brokers
and agents in specific markets around the world.
“We couldn’t sell them fast enough,”
Berlin said at the time. “To many, the developments — close enough
for commuters working in Miami or Fort Lauderdale, but secluded —
offered the best of both worlds. We’ve got the benefits of living
in the suburbs, but also the excitement, the pace and amenities of
big-city Miami. And because Aventura was conceived according to a
master plan, we have been able to develop without experiencing the
problems of a lot of growing communities. When we developed the
original projects, there was hardly a project with a single good
golf course, let alone two.”
Just as the early Turnberry condo developments upped the ante for
every other luxury condo developer in
South Florida,
the Turnberry Isle Country Club succeeded in redefining 1980s
nightlife and the South Florida social scene. At a time when
mature coastal communities such as Miami Beach, Hollywood and Fort
Lauderdale were beginning to need redevelopment, and with
once-glamorous Miami Beach becoming a staid retirement community —
before the South Beach redevelopment boom of the late 1980s —
Aventura bustled with sassy, youthful energy. And the Turnberry
Country Club, with weekly Thursday night dances and an almost
endless parade of visiting celebrities, provided local residents
entrance to social circles populated with movie stars, notable
athletes and a host of internationally recognized entertainers.
“George Berlin was a great partner,” Soffer said, “and his
integrity and creativity were outstanding and contributed to
making Aventura the great city it is today.”
Unlike many developers who lose interest in a community after
selling all of their units,
Berlin and Soffer continued their efforts and created the Joint
Council of Aventura to manage such things as street lighting,
landscaping and security.
“George Berlin was a gentleman who looked out for the community,”
said Leonard Brenner, the longtime president of the Joint Council
of Aventura. “I worked with George since 1974, and if there was
any information or assistance you needed, he would get it for you,
ungrudgingly. George never asked for anything and he always gave
willingly and with an open heart. People in the community admired
him. He was soft-spoken and he never promoted himself. He looked
over and nurtured the community.”
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