Beginning July 9, South Pointe Park will
be closed until at least December 2008 for a
long-awaited improvement project. During that period,
patrons of the steak house Smith & Wollensky, which is
located in the park, will be the only
non-construction-related people granted access.
Last Wednesday evening, June 13, city officials hosted a
Town Hall-style meeting in the community room of the
Miami Beach Police station to discuss construction plans
and the phases of the work. Winning contractor Magnum
Construction Management Corporation, the architecture
firm of Hargreaves Associates, and city staff were on
hand to answer residents’ questions and address
concerns.
The $22.3 million make-over of the 19-acre, waterfront
South Pointe Park, located along the southernmost shore
of Miami Beach, promises to create a source of pride for
the city of Miami Beach and the thousands of South
Floridians who use it.
“I think this is the most major park project that the
city has undertaken, and I think when it is completed it
will be the crown jewel in the city’s park system,”
Commissioner Saul Gross told the SunPost.
The upgrades will include a sand dune path, an elevated
serpentine walkway, another walkway along Government Cut
with turtle-sensitive lighting, a 7,000-square-foot
pavilion with a child play area, and lots of fountains
and other water features.
“Children will be able to play under arching water and
run through gushing water,” said Hargreaves associate
Jamie Maslyn.
In light of recent drought restrictions, which
scientists say are likely to worsen, Jonah Wolfson,
candidate for commission Seat 4, expressed concern over
the amount of water that will be needed to maintain the
park.
Maslyn explained that most of the fountains will use
underground filtration tanks to recycle water. However,
for health reasons, a constant flow of fresh water will
be used in the child-specific play areas. Irrigation
systems for the plants and trees will be monitored with
computers. The dunes are expected to need watering only
in the beginning while the plants take root, Maslyn
said.
Even dogs were thought of during the design process,
with water baths, an off-leash area and a possible dog
beach where the four-legged creatures would be able to
take a dip in Government Cut.
Roby and Lucia Greer of Responsible Dog Owners of Miami
Beach are working with the city to secure a spot for
their canine friends to play while the park is closed
for construction. One possibility is the grassy lot on
the corner of Second Street and Washington Avenue.
Ironically, the featured artwork in the subtropical park
will be an iceberg. The Drift, a white iceberg
sculpture by Iñigo Manglano-Ovalle, will be given a
position of prominence in the Alaska Parcel portion of
the park. Once owned by an Alaskan tribe, the two-acre
tract of land behind Apogee was deeded to the city by
the Related Group to expand South Pointe Park. The
half-million-dollar iceberg, a commentary on global
warming, was the butt of jokes around City Hall last
year.
Commissioner Matti Bower, a mayoral candidate,
questioned the decision to close the whole park during
the entire construction period, as opposed to in phases
as originally discussed.
Mario Gonzalez-Pola, the city’s senior capital project
coordinator, said the contractor, MCM, determined the
work could be completed more quickly with the entire
park closed. He said the city had hoped to keep one of
the walkways open, but determined the liability was too
great.
Nipping at the heels of the project is a lawsuit filed
by contractor A2 (A-Squared) Group that could possibly
cause the work to be postponed indefinitely. Appellate
judges (A2’s lawsuit was dismissed in Circuit Court)
heard final arguments last week, and as of press time
had not released a decision.
Though the meeting did not focus on the pending appeal,
activist Frank Del Vecchio asked for a status report.
Hours earlier, Deputy City Attorney Jean Olin was in
court giving final arguments against A2’s appeal.
Gonzalez-Pola said MCM had signed a letter satisfying
Beach officials that the city’s interests are protected
upon entering into the contract.
That indemnification agreement, dated May 3, “holds the
CMB [city] harmless for any and all damages that could
result in the event that a final non-appealable order in
the above-styled lawsuit, or any other judicial
determination, is issued requiring CMB to terminate the
contract with MCM.”
The appeal follows a long bidding war between A2 Group
and MCM.
In October of 2006, the city sent out invitations to bid
for the South Pointe Park project. City staff ranked A2
first, and MCM second. Later it was determined that
neither company met requirements. So on Jan. 17 of this
year the commission decided to reject all of the bids
and start over. MCM sued and the case was thrown out of
court.
The city then held a second bid with slightly different
criteria. MCM challenged it, asking the city to weigh a
bidder’s financial size when ranking candidates. The
city said no, it would not include financial size in the
criteria.
Once again city staff recommended A2 number one, and MCM
number two. Betty Ribas, wife of A2 Group President Al
Ribas, told the SunPost they went into the March
14 City Commission meeting fully expecting to get the
contract. She and her husband were stunned when they
lost the bid 5-2. Commissioners Michael Gongora, Simon
Cruz, Bower, Richard Steinberg and Jerry Libbin voted
for MCM. Mayor David Dermer and Commissioner Saul Gross
cast the no votes. Immediately following his loss, Al
Ribas told the press he didn’t plan to sue despite his
opinion that the vote was “bizarre.”
Ribas changed his mind and took the city to Circuit
Court. Jack Shawde and Gabriel Nieto, of the law firm
Berger Singerman, argued that the commission’s choice of
MCM was “arbitrary and capricious, contrary to the
requirements of law and the City Code denied A2 due
process of law, was pretextual and based upon rationale
that was illogical and contravened both the express
terms of the City’s [invitation to bid] and the
fundamental purpose of competitive bidding — to ensure
that city contracts are let pursuant to transparent and
defined criteria.” A2 wanted an injunction to stop the
city from entering into a contract with MCM.
Meanwhile Bower made a motion at the April 11 City
Commission meeting to reconsider the March 14 vote in
favor of MCM. Gross seconded the motion for discussion.
The item lost 3-4, with Gongora, Cruz, Libbin and
Steinberg opposed. Bower then requested that her March
14 vote be changed to a no vote against MCM. There being
no opposition, the tally was officially changed from 5-2
to 4-3.
Last week Bower told the SunPost that MCM made a
compelling argument at the March 14 commission meeting,
but she felt bad about voting against the staff
recommendation of A2. That, she said, is why she wanted
to reconsider the vote, and ultimately changed hers.
“The truth is, I should have voted for A2 from the
beginning,” Bower said.
But A2 was not able to convince the court, and after an
April 23 hearing it ruled in favor of the city and MCM.
A2 was still not ready to throw in the towel. It
appealed to the Third District Court of Appeal, which
brings the battle to the present.
Nieto and Shawde’s argument briefing on the appeal
states that Miami Beach’s “arbitrary and capricious
award of the contract to MCM does not prevent this court
[Third District Court of Appeal] or the lower court from
directing the city to follow its own ITB and award the
contract to A2, the highest ranked, best-value bidder.”
Shawde told appellate Judges David M. Gersten, John G.
Fletcher and Richard J. Suarez that the commission chose
MCM based on the criteria that MCM tried unsuccessfully
to convince the city to include in the ITB in January.
Those criteria were financial size of the company, and
limited past experience only to that in which the
company was considered the contractor, Shawde said.
Shawde argued that since the city had denied MCM’s
request, and the commission ended up using that rejected
criteria in its decision, the vote should be overturned.
Olin countered that those criteria are in the city code,
and thus the commission did no wrong.
At the community meeting last week, Libbin told the
SunPost that unfortunately litigation is the name of
the game with city contracts. He defended his decision
to go with MCM as a simple matter of dollars and cents.
The sticker price for MCM’s bid was $765,000 less than
A2’s.
“We were elected to do what we think is best,” Libbin
said. “I saw no reason to spend hundreds of thousands of
extra dollars.”
For a detailed look
at how planners arrived at the current design for South
Pointe Park, visit:
www.miamibeachfl.gov/newcity/cip/BODR_18July05_Final.pdf.
Comments? E-mail
ben@miamisunpost.com.