Robert Rivani, commercial real estate and hospitality visionary and Founder of RIVANI, has that the company has sold the waterfront restaurant space currently leased to acclaimed restaurant Amara at Paraiso by Michael Schwartz for $19.8 million.
“As one of my first hospitality acquisitions in South Florida, this property set the tone for what was possible,” said Rivani. “The space is one of Miami’s most beautiful waterfront assets and will always hold deep meaning for me. With this milestone, my focus is on creating the next generation of lifestyle experiences that will continue to elevate the city’s hospitality and office landscape.”
Completed in 2018, the two-story 12,316-square-foot space sits at 3101 N.E. 7th Avenue in Miami’s vibrant Edgewater district and is home to Amara at Paraiso, the celebrated Latin American restaurant from The Genuine Hospitality Group led by James Beard Award-winning chef and restaurateur Michael Schwartz. Rivani purchased the property in 2021 for $12.1 million. The indoor-outdoor waterfront venue features a main dining room and bar with seating for 150, floor-to-ceiling windows with sweeping Biscayne Bay views, and deck seating for 70 guests directly on the water. The property’s central location offers excellent connectivity to all major submarkets in eastern Miami via Biscayne Boulevard, Interstate-195, the MacArthur Causeway, Interstate-95, Interstate-295 and the Dolphin Expressway.
JLL Capital Markets Senior Managing Director Alex Sharrin, Director Jeffrey Cicurel and Analyst Noel O’Donnell represented RIVANI in the transaction.
RIVANI has amassed more than $250 million in prime South Florida assets in recent years, with a portfolio that includes acclaimed destinations including the upcoming GAIA, the fully leased Wynwood Jungle, and RIVANI, a transformative ‘Class X’ office building undergoing a $100 million redevelopment. In 2025 alone, RIVANI has made headlines with a series of record-breaking deals, including securing Playboy’s global headquarters, acquiring the historic Lincoln Theatre for $37 million, selling Catch Miami Beach for $28.2 million, and completing a $38.25 million all-cash sale of two premier restaurant spaces within SLS Lux Brickell and Dua Miami Hotel — one of the year’s most significant hospitality-driven transactions.
Images via Cristianna Duvall & Daniese Betito
