101 SE 6th Ave

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Site Plan

Properties for Lease

101 SE 6th Ave

Address

101 SE 6th Ave
Delray Beach, FL 33483
United States

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Property Type: Office
Base Rent: $47/psf, ModifiedGross (plus electric, phone, janitorial services)
Listing Status: Active

Contact Info

Gary Broidis
Direct: 5617039298
gary@atlanticcg.com

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Property Description

Rare opportunity to be on the ground floor in a centrally located professional office building in downtown Delray Beach with unlimited free parking. 2,500 square feet, beautifully renovated, bright, modern, neutral tones, and hurricane windows.

The office contains a reception area, conference room for eight, six offices, extra-large work area for additional offices or cubicles, kitchen and two private bathrooms. Five minutes from I-95 and three minutes from the Palm Beach Courthouse.

Office building is next to the brand-new Courtyard by Marriott which is ideal for out-of-town business guests. One block south of Atlantic Crossing.

Additional Information Site Highlights Units Available
County: Palm Beach
Building Size: 12,000
Min. Divisible Space: 2,500 SF
Max. Contiguous Space: 2,500 SF
Total SF Available: 2,500 SF
Year Built: 1979
    • First floor office suite with free parkin one block south of Atlantic Ave
    • Reception area, conference room for eight, 6 offices, extra-large work area for additional offices or cubicles, kitchen and two private bathrooms
    • Rent: $47/psf, Modified Gross (plus electric, phone, janitorial services)

 

 

 

Recent News

Aldi to open 180-plus stores in 2026, launch new e-commerce site

Discount grocer Aldi plans to open more than 180 new stores across 31 states in 2026, celebrating its 50th anniversary in the U.S. and pushing toward its goal of 3,200 stores by 2028. The expansion includes entering Maine as its 40th state with a Portland location, launching a five-year Colorado expansion plan with 50 stores in Denver and Colorado Springs, and converting close to 80 Southeastern Grocers locations to the Aldi format. Aldi will launch a redesigned website early in 2026 featuring tailored product recommendations for easy reordering, expanded nutritional information, shoppable recipes, and meal planning tools to support both curbside pickup and home delivery. The company plans to open three new distribution centers over the next three years in Baldwin, Florida; Goodyear, Arizona; and Aurora, Colorado, as part of its $9 billion investment through 2028. 

Claire's plans tech upgrades despite financial setbacks

Mall jewelry and accessories retailer Claire's is planning technology upgrades for 2026, including more seamless data and application integrations and implementation of a modern point-of-sale platform to enhance customer in-store experiences. In 2025, the company focused on transformation and modernization, achieving technology-related cost reductions including a 48% year-over-year reduction in Microsoft Azure cloud spending through automation and improved governance, while also optimizing Microsoft 365 licensing and accelerating store technology refreshes. Looking ahead to 2026, Claire's plans to upgrade legacy systems, deliver faster data integrations, and implement modern POS platforms, with technology positioned as a growth engine rather than just an enabler. The technology transformation comes as the company works to reduce costs and regain its market footing following financial challenges.

Saks Global does not rule out bankruptcy

Saks Global is not ruling out Chapter 11 bankruptcy as a last resort while exploring all potential paths to secure financial stability. The luxury retail conglomerate, which owns Saks Fifth Avenue, Saks OFF 5TH, Neiman Marcus, and Bergdorf Goodman, faces a more than $100 million debt payment due at the end of December and has been weighing emergency financing options or asset sales. The company missed an interest payment of over $100 million and is in talks with creditors to secure financing for the bankruptcy process, while it has been struggling with rising inflation and weakening consumer demand for luxury items. The financial troubles come after Saks raised billions of dollars last year to finance its acquisition of Neiman Marcus, which was intended to create a technology-powered luxury retail company backed by investors including Amazon, but the deal placed the company deeper in debt.