On the edge of Miami-Dade County’s built world, where single-family home subdivisions plateau into open expanses, sits a 90-acre tract. The land in south Miami-Dade is neatly carved into distinct uses: one parcel planted with row crops such as soybeans, another devoted to a palm tree farm, a third to an avocado orchard and a fourth to a nursery for a variety of plants. Here, developers Salim and Kamil Chraibi plan roughly 500 townhomes and 76 large single-family homes lining the perimeter of the property. Every home will be capped at workforce prices and 20 percent of units will be […]
This article originally appeared on The Real Deal. Click here to read the full story.