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Longboat Keys St. Regis Project Has Begun

Longboat Keys St. Regis Project Has Begun

10.26.21 | Kim Doleatto

After almost nine years and $100 million dollars spent, the long-awaited St. Regis Residences and Hotel broke ground yesterday.

Roughly 100 guests huddled beneath an event tent to avoid rainy weather on the 17.6 acres where the Colony Beach & Tennis Resort once stood. After eight-and-a-half years and more than $100 million in legal wrangling, the five-star St. Regis Residences and Hotel project finally broke ground yesterday. (Check out a slideshow of what’s to come here.)

Michael Saunders of Michael Saunders & Company, Ken Schneier, the mayor of Longboat Key, and Katie Klauber, the former president and general manager of the Colony, among others, spoke to the crowd. All were happy to begin a new chapter for the sandy site where the Colony was demolished in 2018.

Charles Whittall, president of Orlando-based Unicorp National Developments, stayed with the project despite numerous and costly setbacks. In fact, the groundbreaking hinged on an Oct. 20 meeting with the Town of Longboat Key Commissioners.

Whittall met with them Wednesday for what became the project’s final presentation. An over-allocation of parking for the residential portion and a deficit of 62 spaces for the hotel part of the project were addressed by adding 62 mechanical car lifts that will stack regular-sized cars above each other for a total of 298 spaces.

At a previous Longboat Key commissioners meeting on Oct. 12, commissioners voted unanimously to green light the site plan, minus the event pavilion, which was found to be too close to the erosion line, a line on the beachfront that designates private property from public land. (A 150-foot setback from the coastal erosion line is built into zoning code regulations to prevent potential damage caused by storms. Developers sought to build the pavilion roughly 79 feet from that line.)

“We’re now faced with complying with the setback code or to eliminating it altogether. We don’t know what we’ll do yet. We’ve packed in so many amenities and we don’t want to crowd that. It would have been a fixed, four-post, open air structure. But we can have a movable cabana for a single event when it’s not turtle season,” says Zack Justice, Unicorp’s Development Manager.

At the same meeting, a beachfront “Monkey Bar”—another nod to the Colony—was approved for a roughly 109-foot setback from the erosion line.

With such close proximity to the shore, Justice says the project will be include an underground vault dewatering system. “We have a retention area that will keep the water,” he says. “It’s like a huge underground box that has filters made of natural stone materials, and as water seeps through the ground, it collects it and filters it into safe drinking water that will be put into the ground.”

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