Frequently Asked Questions
No. The proposal goes far beyond converting apartments back into a hotel. The applicant is seeking a Land Use Amendment that would allow approximately 2.5× more total building square footage on the site than exists today. This includes new commercial buildings fronting Adalia Avenue and Baltic Circle, where no buildings have ever existed before. In other words, this is not a simple reuse of the historic structure—it is a major site expansion and redevelopment with a much higher commercial intensity than the original Mirasol hotel ever had.
The Mirasol has heard neighbors’ concerns, but it has not accommodated them. In fact, the project’s commercial intensity has increased since it was first presented to neighbors more than two years ago.
The original concept included about 80 hotel rooms in the existing building, 4 townhomes on Adalia, and 12 condos on Baltic Circle.
The current proposal now includes 118 hotel rooms, plus 12 condos, and relies on expanded commercial zoning to support that growth.
Over the past two years, there have been numerous plan revisions, including one that proposed demolishing the historic west wing of the Mirasol. Most recent reductions in scale were required by the City of Tampa, not voluntarily offered by the applicant in response to neighborhood concerns.
No. In fact, it may do the opposite.
Approving the Land Use Amendment (LUA) would permanently change the rules for the site without any historic protections in place for the building. Even if the current owner
intends to preserve the building today, future owners would not be bound by that intent once the Comprehensive Plan is changed.Once those rules are changed, the highest and best use of the property would likely shift away from preserving a 100-year-old, damaged, functionally obsolete structure towards demolition and redevelopment under the new entitlements
Key point:
The LUA does not protect the building — it increases redevelopment pressure on it.
That outcome is highly uncertain and risky.
Converting a 100-year-old, damaged, functionally obsolete building into a hotel — without adequate structured parking and with significant zoning and FEMA nonconformities — would place the building under greater operational and financial stress, not less.
Hotel use requires:
Higher life-safety and code upgrades
Extensive structural and systems retrofits
Ongoing commercial operational costs
Adequate parking, access, and service circulation
If the project underperforms as a modern day hotel — which is a real risk — the building could end up more distressed than it is today, making demolition more likely, not less.
Because there is no proven hotel market on Davis Islands.
There are no successful hotel operations on the Islands, nor has there ever been
The original hotel use of the Mirasol failed historically (see Mirasol Hotel era)
The building was successfully converted to apartments over 60 years ago — and has
functioned that way ever since
A hotel conversion of a 100-year-old building in this location is not a proven or a low-risk strategy. It is speculative.
Yes — unequivocally. The Mirasol has operated successfully as residential apartments for more than six decades.
Residential use:
Fits the neighborhood
Matches market demand
Requires less intensive parking and traffic (as compared to their proposed expansion
plan)
Is consistent with surrounding uses
Has already demonstrated long-term feasibility
Residential use is not theoretical here — it is proven.
Because once land use and intensity are increased, the land becomes more valuable without the existing Mirasol building.
A 100-year-old structure with:
Structural and water damage
FEMA flood issues
Nonconforming conditions
No historic designation or protection
…becomes an obstacle to maximizing value under the new rules.
That is exactly when demolition becomes the financially rational choice.
That is an important question, that remains unanswered. Historic designation or binding preservation protections would:
Limit demolition
Require preservation standards
Align incentives with saving the building
To date, no such protections have been secured, even as a permanent land-use change is being requested.
The City is being asked to approve entitlement. which more than doubles development rights on site. The Land Use Amendment rewrites the Comprehensive Plan. The rezoning approves a specific redevelopment concept.
Neither vote:
Guarantees preservation
Requires long-term maintenance
Prevents future demolition
Ensures project feasibility
Yes — and that is a critical point.
If the LUA passes:
The land use rules are permanently changed
The site becomes eligible for higher intensity uses
Even if the PD is denied later, the increased redevelopment pressure remains, and future proposals could be more aggressive.
That is the core question neighbors should ask.
For over 60 years:
Residential use has worked
The building has remained occupied
The neighborhood has remained stable
By contrast, the proposed hotel/commercial conversion:
Is unproven
Is capital-intensive
Faces parking, access, and operational constraints
Has a high risk of failure
Changing the building’s use introduces risk where none is necessary.
Yes. Preservation, repair, reinvestment, and even thoughtful residential modernization are all possible under existing rules.
The Land Use Amendment is not a prerequisite for preservation.
Because the City is being asked to approve two different legal actions:
Amend the Future Land Use Map to change residential
use to CMU-35, a more intensive commercial use)
Approve a specific redevelopment plan (PD)
Absolutely, in fact that is exactly what the Mirasol’s immediate neighborhood is supporting! A reasonable position is: Preserve the Mirasol—keep it residential.
