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Ken Griffin, Stephen Ross back South Florida business drive for CEOs

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Ken Griffin, Stephen Ross back South Florida business drive for CEOs

Florida business leaders have launched a new national campaign aimed at attracting more CEOs, founders and investors to South Florida, pitching the region as one of the best places in the country to build and scale a company as rising costs and regulatory pressures increase in traditional business hubs.

On Tuesday, the Florida Council of 100 — with the backing of Citadel founder Ken Griffin and Related Companies founder Stephen Ross — announced the “Ambition Accelerated” initiative, which will feature advertising and branding aimed at encouraging decision-makers to build or relocate to South Florida, from West Palm Beach and Fort Lauderdale to Miami.

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“Where you choose to build a business determines how much time is spent driving growth versus navigating bureaucracy,” Griffin said in a press release. “Miami and the broader South Florida Gold Coast offer deep talent, regulatory clarity and an extraordinary quality of life. These are not secondary considerations; they are foundations for long-term success, and their impact compounds over time.”

FLORIDA CITY SEES DOUBLE HOME VALUE RETURN AS WEALTHY BUYERS CONSOLIDATE FORTUNES IN LUXURY MARKETS

Griffin and Ross contributed a combined $10 million to kick off the campaign. Both are billionaire executives who founded their respective firms in traditional blue-state cities and have openly backed Florida’s business-friendly landscape in recent years.

Stephen Ross and Ken Griffin in split image

Related Companies Chair Stephen Ross and Citadel CEO and founder Ken Griffin have teamed up to convince more business leaders to move south. (Kevin C. Cox/Chris Ratcliffe/Getty Images / Getty Images)

“In previous generations, there were a limited number of American cities where companies could access opportunity and build at scale,” Ross also said in the release. “That’s why I began my career building my businesses in those cities. But to me, it’s clear that the next generation of companies belongs along Florida’s Gold Coast from West Palm Beach to Miami.”

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“This region offers a clear competitive advantage — a strong operating environment, a flourishing innovation ecosystem and public leadership that works constructively with the private sector,” he continued. “This combination of factors helps companies based on Florida’s Gold Coast outperform competitors based elsewhere.”

The campaign aims to reach business executives through national advertising and direct-comparison messaging in hubs like New York, Chicago, California cities and the greater Northeast. According to the Florida Council, some of the ads may pose questions like, “What if you could scale in the top metro for GDP growth?” or “What if your business could cut utility costs by 30%?”

Florida is widely known for having no state income tax, but the Council also points out that the state has become the second-lowest state for business regulation per capita in the U.S. — and consistently ranks high or at the top nationally for GDP growth, new business formations, talent attraction and higher education systems.

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As the campaign gets underway, interested executives can reach out to the Florida Council of 100 for concierge conversations and relocation or expansion guidance. The Council also said it plans to conduct its own direct outreach to CEOs across America.

“Every CEO is making the same set of decisions right now — where can we hire, where can we operate efficiently, and where can we scale with confidence,” President and CEO of the Florida Council of 100 Mike Simas said. “Florida’s Gold Coast is answering those questions better than anywhere in the country, and this campaign is about putting that advantage directly in front of the leaders deciding where to build next.”

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Vacant Perth lot earmarked for office, dwellings in $10m plan

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Vacant Perth lot earmarked for office, dwellings in $10m plan

A vacant strip of land in Northbridge has been earmarked for an eight-storey office and apartment building.

Skypacts Property Resources has submitted a $10 million plan to build a mixed-use development on 441 William Street.

The 508-square metre lot, currently an unoccupied infill site, sits next to the Perth Mosque and is bound by William Street and Brisbane Place.

According to Skypacts’ application filed with the City of Vincent, the proposed development comprises offices and associated parking from the first to the fourth floor, and nine apartments across the upper levels.

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Lateral Planning, on behalf of Skypacts, said the project would be a high-quality development on an underutilised infill site.

“Overall, the proposed development will not detract from the amenity of the area rather, it will significantly enhance it,” the application said. 

“It represents a positive, forward-looking contribution to the locality, by supporting strategic planning goals, and promoting sustainable urban growth.”

RP data shows Skypacts bought the site for about $2.5 million in 2022.

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Skypacts Property Resources is owned by Kian Kiong Lee and has a registered address in Nedlands, according to an Australian Securities and Investments Commission document.

About 600 metres away, another vacant Northbridge lot was flagged for development.

A 480-square metre site at 195 Beaufort Street, next to the Ellington Jazz Club, has been vacant for about 20 years.

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In May 2024, a development assessment panel approved a $2.4 million proposal to build a four-storey apartment and retail project on the site.

However, the site, with the attached development application approval, was recently listed on the market.

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