Bulldozers on Grand Avenue Stoke West Grove Fears of Black Erasure

The two-story apartment building at 3395 Grand Avenue came down this month, and for many longtime West Grove residents, the sound of collapsing concrete felt painfully familiar. In a stretch of Coconut Grove that once held rows of modest rentals and small family-owned shops, another set of bulldozers has neighbors asking, again, who will still be here when the dust settles and the luxury build-outs arrive. Community leaders who helped file a federal housing complaint say every cleared lot on Grand Avenue makes the threat of displacement feel less abstract and more like a countdown.

According to The Miami Times, the demolition fits into a broader pattern laid out in that complaint, which alleges developers bought and then demolished or shuttered 18 multi-family buildings along six blocks of Grand Avenue between Plaza and Margaret Streets, displacing at least 162 people. The paper also reports that Grove Grand LLC now controls dozens of parcels along the corridor and that a slate of market-rate projects is moving forward.

Developers Pitch a Grand Avenue Comeback

Developers and brokers describe the wave of new construction as an overdue economic reboot for a corridor they say has been ignored for too long, promising fresh office space, retail and modern housing. Silver Bluff and its partners are moving ahead with Elemi Phase 2, a planned five-story building with roughly 27 market-rate rental units over street-level retail. Brokers are also marketing a separate Class A office project at 3443 Grand Avenue, based on developer portfolio pages and commercial listings. The glossy materials talk up high-end finishes, amenities and retail activation, but they do not promise deeply affordable units.

For Residents, Demolition Feels Personal

On the ground, people describe less of a renaissance and more of a slow erasure. One longtime resident told local reporters that “the neighborhood I grew up in is slowly disappearing,” while others said watching buildings come down and lots sit empty “kind of makes you shed a tear.” Those kinds of testimonies helped drive a formal complaint that accuses the city of using rezoning and permitting decisions in ways that encourage displacement instead of safeguarding residents who have held on through leaner years. As Coconut Grove Spotlight reported, the filing was backed by groups that include the Coconut Grove Ministerial Alliance, GRACE and the Village West homeowners and tenants association.

HUD Shuts Down Federal Complaint on a Technicality

Federal housing officials ultimately rejected the Fair Housing Act complaint in 2025, deciding that the community groups lacked legal standing. That procedural call cut off a federal investigation before it could fully explore whether city policies were having a discriminatory effect. According to WLRN, attorneys for the complainants have asked for HUD’s investigative file and say they are not walking away, instead looking to other legal strategies and public records tools.

Legal Stakes Around Zoning and Displacement

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