Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility

New Colony redevelopment plan labeled 'tremendous opportunity'

Lutgert Cos. is lending its stellar reputation and experience to a plan to bring the Colony Beach & Tennis Resort back to life. Will it be enough?


  • By
  • | 6:00 a.m. December 2, 2015
Manfred Welfonder, principal at MW Corp., has been hoping to redevelop the Colony Beach & Tennis Resort on Longboat Key for more than five years. His plans call for 350 new residences within the 18-acre resort, valued at roughly $200 million.
Manfred Welfonder, principal at MW Corp., has been hoping to redevelop the Colony Beach & Tennis Resort on Longboat Key for more than five years. His plans call for 350 new residences within the 18-acre resort, valued at roughly $200 million.
  • Longboat Key
  • News
  • Share

Longboat Key resident Manfred Welfonder and his MW Corp. have been pitching a redevelopment plan for the long-shuttered Colony Beach & Tennis Resort for the better part of a decade.

But thanks to a recently unveiled agreement with the Lutgert Cos., one of Naples’ premier real estate firms, MW Corp.’s proposed $200 million revamp of the 18-acre Longboat Key resort is gaining new traction and credibility.

In addition to building some of Naples best-known luxury high-rise residential towers in the 760-acre Park Shore beachfront community and elsewhere — including Enclave and Aria, two of 25 projects containing more than 2,500 upscale units — Lutgert has a long track record of commercial success. 

Earlier this year, the firm sold the Mercato retail and office complex in Naples, a joint venture with the Barron Collier Cos., to Prudential Real Estate Investors for roughly $240 million.

Lutgert is more than an experienced developer, however. It also owns the Premier Sotheby’s International Realty residential real estate brokerage and a commercial counterpart, a well-established insurance operation, construction arm and a title company.

“We have considerable expertise in luxury development, and we like to build on the waterfront,” says Howard Gutman, Lutgert’s president. “And the Colony represents a tremendous, excellent site. We realize a lot of issues would need to be cleaned up there, but we’d welcome the opportunity to be part of the development there.”

MW Corp.’s proposal calls for 350 new, four-star rental and residential units at the Colony, with a 190-seat restaurant and amenities ranging from tennis courts to swimming pools.

In three years, it hopes to re-open the famed resort, which closed in 2010 following a legal dispute between the Colony’s unit owner association and its developer and manager.

“We see the tremendous potential and opportunity there,” says Judy Green, president and CEO of Premier Sotheby’s, adding the company has been working with MW Corp. for “a few years.”

Although Lutgert and Premier have become well-known to MW Corp., the companies are less familiar to many Colony stakeholders — including the Colony Beach & Tennis Resort Association that represents the dozens of unit owners there.

“We did not know who they were until Manfred brought them to our attention,” Jay Yablon, president of the association, says of Lutgert. “But we hope to get a much better sense of who they are by the time of our annual meeting on Dec. 15.”

But even with its cache and sterling reputation, Lutgert’s involvement does not ensure that MW Corp.’s plan will clear the significant hurdles it faces.

“We see the tremendous potential and opportunity there.”

– Judy Green, president and CEO, Premier Sotheby’s

Chief among them are ongoing lawsuits over ownership and financial responsibility.

And then there’s Unicorp National Developments Inc., an Orlando-based company that has an agreement to purchase a substantial portion of the Colony property — including its now-dormant amenities. Unicorp also maintains it controls a lease that essentially gives it rights to recreational property at the Colony. However, unit owners argues the lease is null and void and continue to fight Unicorp’s claims in court.

Unicorp also has redevelopment plans for the Colony.

“The Colony can’t be redeveloped without us,” Unicorp President Chuck Whittall says. “We’re the ticket to the future there. Others are really just spinning their wheels.”

Like Yablon, Whittall says he had never heard of Lutgert before.

Gutman, too, acknowledges that his company is not positioning itself for a prolonged legal battle over the Colony.

“If Manfred can bring us a site that is lien-free and development-ready, then we’re interested and would like to go forward,” he says. “But we’re not getting involved in any of the lawsuits or anything else at the Colony. We’re developers.”

 

Latest News