258 SE 6th Ave

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Properties for Lease

258 SE 6th Ave

Address

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

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Property Type: Retail
Base Rent: $25/SF
Listing Status: Leased

Contact Info

Gary Broidis
Direct: (561) 447-8610
Cell: (561) 703-9298
gary@atlanticcg.com

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Property Description

Great opportunity to lease a retail or office space directly on Federal Hwy, just two blocks south of Atlantic Avenue in Downtown Delray Beach. Suite 3 is a first-floor space with 1,600 SF.

Plenty of on-site parking and walking distance to Atlantic Avenue. This space also has a private bathroom in the suite and is available for immediate occupancy.

Location Description

This is an investment opportunity in the heart of Delray Beach’s vibrant Osceola Park neighborhood, a growing area known for its walkability and a strong mix of residential and commercial properties. The area is experiencing new development and a revitalization that continues to attract a younger demographic.

Additional Information Site Highlights
County: United States
Building Size: 10,838 SF
Operating Expenses: $19.94
Min. Divisible Space: 1,600 SF
Max. Contiguous Space: 1,600 SF
Year Built: 1946
Lot Size: .58 Acres
Number of Tenants: Multi
  • $25/SF Base Rent + $19.94 OP Exp
  • Direct Visibility on Federal Hwy (aka SE 6th Ave)
  • Monument Signage Available
  • Competitive Lease Rates
Recent News

Global brands shut Middle East stores as conflict causes chaos

Major retail brands have closed stores across Middle Eastern shopping hubs including Dubai as escalating regional conflict disrupts business operations and travel, with many locations operating with skeleton staff or shuttered entirely.  Chalhoub Group, operating 900 stores for brands including Versace, Jimmy Choo, and Sephora, closed all Bahrain locations while making staff attendance voluntary in UAE, Saudi Arabia, and Jordan markets. Luxury conglomerate Kering temporarily closed stores in UAE, Kuwait, Bahrain, and Qatar, while Amazon shuttered Abu Dhabi fulfillment operations and suspended regional deliveries. Apple's Dubai stores remained closed, H&M shut Bahrain and Israel locations, and consumer goods group Reckitt closed its Bahrain manufacturing site while instructing all Middle East employees to work from home. Luxury stocks LVMH, Hermès, and Richemont declined 4% to 6.5% as investors assessed the impact on a region that represented luxury's strongest growth market in recent years, accounting for 5% to 10% of global luxury spending. 

Senate Advances Sweeping Housing Bill, Includes Ban On Institutional Buyers Of Single-Family Homes

The Senate advanced the 21st Century ROAD to Housing Act with an 84-6 bipartisan vote, combining affordability and housing production measures with a Trump administration proposal to ban institutional investment in single-family homes. The bill defines institutional investors as companies owning 350 or more homes and includes exemptions for homes built to rent, with the White House indicating President Trump would sign it if passed as written.  Key provisions include simplifying National Environmental Protection Act review processes to reduce construction delays, increasing Federal Housing Administration multifamily loan limits, changing manufactured housing definitions to spur construction, and supporting housing development in opportunity zones and Community Development Block Grant jurisdictions. The legislation, authored by Senators Tim Scott and Elizabeth Warren, still requires a final Senate vote and must be reconciled with the House bill before reaching the president's desk. 

Supreme Court rules against Trump tariffs

The U.S. Supreme Court ruled 6-3 that President Trump's tariffs imposed under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) are unconstitutional, with Chief Justice John Roberts writing that Trump lacked peacetime authority to use IEEPA to impose tariffs. The decision strikes down tariffs that initially imposed at least 10% on goods from most countries, with rates reaching up to 145% on Chinese imports and 25-35% on Canadian and Mexican goods, and could require the government to refund over $130 billion collected through these tariffs. Before Trump, no president had ever used IEEPA to impose tariffs, and the ruling invalidates many but not all of Trump's tariff programs, as it doesn't affect tariffs imposed under other legal authorities. The administration has indicated plans to reimpose tariffs using alternative statutes including Section 122 of the Trade Act of 1974, Section 232 of the Trade Expansion Act of 1962, and Section 301 of the 1974 Trade Act, though these come with more procedural requirements and time limitations.