Current media coverage and upcoming developments hand-picked from the industry.

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The Lincoln Eatery Welcomes Pop Up & Shop Up as its First Retail Boutique

MIAMI COMMUNITY NEWSPAPERS – OCTOBER 1, 2021 BY MIAMI BEACH CHAMBER Miami’s Best Food Hall Steps into the World of Retail with the Launch of its First Boutique, Creating a New Sense Of Community for Local Businesses in Miami Beach.

The Lincoln Eatery, Miami Beach’s first modern food hall and Best Food Hall 2021 by Miami New Times, announces the grand opening of its first retail boutique called Pop Up & Shop UpThe stall will launch onSunday, September 19, the same day as the eatery’s monthly makers market hosted by founder Stephani Lamoni.

The event will take place from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m., and will highlight a broad selection of local businesses, selling a rotating selection of locally made products. Participating brands on opening week include Scrub RunesIsland Gal Beauty BarMade in GoodsShop Rue and more. The event at the Lincoln Eatery is free to attend and RSVPs via Eventbrite are suggested.

The launch of Pop Up & Shop Up as a permanent stall within the food hall continues the Lincoln Eatery’s mission of bringing local artisans together, creating a sense of community in Miami Beach. The boutique will continue to highlight minority-owned businesses and showcase locally-made products, including makeup, skincare, haircare, artisan goods, homemade jewelry, works of art, sustainable fashion and more.

The Pop Up & Shop Up concept was created in 2019 when Lamoni sought to create a venue for local makers to sell their own homemade goods on a consistent basis. After operating at venues across South Florida, the Lincoln Eatery adopted the activation as a monthly event, well attended by South Florida locals seeking a sense of community in the middle of bustling South Beach.

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Stephen H Bittel: Acing Real Estate Industry with Balancing Leadership Mindset

MIRROR REVIEW – September 2021 Real estate has been an important economic indicator in the business industry. With introductions of the latest trends such as co-working, data centers, pop-up rentals, and many more. Real estate serves as a guarantee for financing and as an important element of economic stability. As the windsurf offers several scopes for growth, real estate leaders must be aware of how to cultivate and utilize the available opportunities and possibilities.

The leaders must be agile and enterprising while leading their companies in an industry as promising as real estate. One such prime example of ingenious leadership is Stephen H. Bittel (CEO and founder of Terranova) who has successfully tapped the potentials of the industry and has thrived in the competition. Guided by strong principles and a cohesive vision, Stephen has been propelling the company forward and contributing to its profound growth.

Commending the Entrepreneurial Journey

Stephen has always been an entrepreneur a heart. Hailing from a family with a law background, he had presumed to pursue the same profession. However, after graduation, he worked abroad for a year and returned home to enroll himself at the University of Miami School of Law. Simultaneously, he undertook a position at a commercial real estate firm to pay bills and stay engaged in business.

A year later when the company he was working for offered to restructure his compensation, Stephen realized his caliber and realized how much more he could achieve if he were to start his own company. Despite continuing with his law studies, Stephen established Terranova by the second year of law school in 1980 and managed operations at his home-based office.

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How the city of Miami Beach is attracting pop-ups

Commerce+Communities Today – AUGUST 4, 2021 BY BEN JOHNSON Miami Beach’s Lincoln Road shopping and dining district needed a jolt, and not just from the pandemic. The nearby Miami Beach Convention Center reopened in 2018 after three years of redevelopment, and local retailers were feeling the disruption. “We went to the city and urged them to have a streamlined licensing process so we could get short-term tenants open to keep those stores full,” said Stephen Bittel, founder and chairman of Terranova, which has a long history as an owner of retail properties in the Lincoln Road area.

As a result, the city launched a program in September to expedite 90-day special event permits for pop-up retailers. Now, that program is filling empty space and generating buzz. “We were working on the program pre-pandemic, and the pandemic just made everything come together in a very sudden way that made it even more opportune,” Bittel said.

Successful results

In late July, online lifestyle sneaker brand Air Kiy hosted its second pop-up in the district in the past six months, at 1655 Meridian Ave. For the first pop-up there, fans had lined up along the pedestrian promenade, and limited-release sneakers sold out within hours.

Other pop-ups in the district have become fixtures. Sol + Sorbet arrived last fall for a three-month pop-up and recently relocated to an expanded space at 821 Lincoln Road under a more traditional lease. Plant Daddy, a popular plant concept that grew a large online following, also signed a three-month pop-up last October, at 808 Lincoln Lane North. It renewed for six months and soon will expand into the space next door.

“We think these retailers are coming because they want to take advantage of this tremendous volume of pedestrian traffic, coupled with Lincoln Road as an open-air shopping destination so people in a pandemic world feel safer shopping outside,” said Bittel.

Pop-up spaces in the area range from 300 square feet to as much as 4,000 square feet. The latter was taken by Shein, an online retailer with a cult-like following. It has opened only a handful of in-store pop-ups across the country but set up a three-day location at 744 Lincoln Road during the annual Miami Swim Week fashion event. Reservations for the event sold out online in 48 hours.

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