The owners of Goat Hospitality Group have found a buyer for their Pinecrest estate, which is listed for $18 million. The sale took place during Miami Art Week and represents the highest-priced contract among 14 signed in Miami-Dade County from December 1 to December 7. This information comes from the latest Eklund-Gomes report, which tracks homes and condos listed at $4 million or more in the Multiple Listing Service. On average, these properties were on the market for 173 days.
During that week, 61 new luxury listings were added to the market, bringing the total to 1,323. In comparison, buyers had signed contracts for 11 properties totaling $86.2 million in asking price during the previous week.
According to a report by Douglas Elliman’s team led by Fredrik Eklund and John Gomes, the combined asking price for the 11 single-family homes and three condos under contract last week reached $100.6 million. The single-family homes had an average asking price of $7.4 million and spent about 169 days on the market, with a total asking dollar volume of $81.6 million.
Eklund and Jennifer Goldstein of Elliman are handling the listing for this top contract—the pending sale of a mansion at 10061 Southwest 60th Court. Derek and Lisa Gonzalez of Goat Hospitality purchased the nearly one-acre property in 2022 for $5.7 million before building a new home featuring amenities such as a Balinese-style pool, outdoor shower, sauna, and primary suite.
The three condos that secured buyers last week averaged an asking price of $6.3 million and spent an average of 183 days on the market; together they represent an asking dollar volume of $19 million or about $2,154 per square foot.
Among these was unit 1903 at Estates at Acqualina in Sunny Isles Beach—the most expensive condo to go under contract last week—listed by Ryan Mendell of Maxwell E Realty Inc. Property records show David Schwartz from Lexington, Massachusetts bought this four-bedroom unit for $5.4 million in 2022; it measures just under 3,300 square feet.
In New York City during the same period, buyers signed contracts for 29 homes with a combined asking price of $233.5 million; these homes typically spent much longer on the market—an average of 736 days.



