logo
Don Soffer, who sketched an idea for Aventura on a napkin, dies at 92

Don Soffer, who sketched an idea for Aventura on a napkin, dies at 92

Miami Herald21-07-2025
Aventura began as a sketch on a napkin. Now it's home to the biggest mall in Florida, one of the five biggest in the country. Aventura is also one of Miami-Dade's poshest — and busiest — neighborhoods.
Real estate mogul Don Soffer, developer of Florida's Aventura Mall and the city's 'godfather,' died Sunday morning at 92, his son-in-law Craig Robins and The Aventura Turnberry Jewish Center said. The synagogue was founded by Soffer.
In a statement to CBS News Miami, the city of Aventura called Soffer a 'visionary developer and philanthropist whose leadership and foresight transformed South Florida swampland into the thriving, vibrant community we proudly call home.'
The condo community, once an unincorporated slice of Miami-Dade, became a city 30 years ago.
'Mr. Soffer's legacy is etched into the very foundation of Aventura,' the city said in a statement. 'His development of what would become the city's heart — from Aventura Mall to residential communities and the Turnberry golf course and brand — laid the groundwork for Aventura's incorporation in 1995. Without his vision, the city of Aventura would not exist as we know it today.'
In addition, there's a charter school, Don Soffer Aventura High School that was named after him in 2019; the Don Soffer Clinical Research Center, a part of UHealth, the University of Miami Health System on Northwest 14th Street in Miami; and a three-mile Don Soffer Exercise Trail on West Country Club Drive that rings Aventura.
In June, Aventura Mall, under the stewardship of his daughter Jackie Soffer, chairman and CEO of Turnberry Associates, the real estate development group that has principle ownership of Aventura Mall, was voted the best in the country in USA's Readers Choice Awards.
MORE: This Miami area mall was just voted best in the country. Here's why it's No. 1
Real estate developer Robins, who developed Miami's Design District and co-founded Design Miami, is married to Jackie Soffer. He called the family patriarch his 'hero' in an Instagram post on Sunday.
'He had the vision and fortitude to take swamp land and transform it into a city,' Robins wrote. 'Following such a dynamic and visionary parent can be especially hard for their successors. Jackie has managed to brilliantly take what Don did and carry it forward.'
Soffer was a 'builder of community.' He turned Aventura into 'a model city that continues to grow and flourish. Though Don Soffer never held a formal title in Aventura's government, he was, in every sense, the godfather of the city,' the City of Aventura told CBS News Miami.
Famous folks like tennis champ Jimmy Connors and his wife Patti Maguire Connors, John McEnroe and Princess Caroline once owned Aventura condos. Cirque du Soleil hosted its first big show in South Florida at Turnberry in 1989. Pop superstar Elton John, a frequent guest at Turnberry Isle in the 1980s, lit the torch for the venue's Whole Earth Run in 1986. Actors James Caan and 'Where the Boys Are' co-star George Hamilton dined with Soffer in Turnberry Isle.
The Monkey Business
Soffer's success also afforded him the opportunity to own a mega yacht. Alas, that yacht's name became infamous after the Miami Herald exposed a scandal concerning Democratic presidential candidate Gary Hart in May 1987. Hart was aboard the Monkey Business yacht he'd leased from Soffer. So was his date Donna Rice. They weren't married.
A photo of the pair — Hart clad in a white T shirt reading 'Monkey Business Crew' and Rice perched atop his lap — ran in the National Enquirer in June 1987, weeks after Hart ended his campaign. The Herald's reporting on the affair led Hart to suspend his campaign as a Democratic candidate in the 1988 presidential race.
After the Coast Guard seized half a marijuana cigarette on The Monkey Business in June 1988 — no one said to whom the roach belonged but the feds were into 'zero tolerance' at the time of television's 'Miami Vice' — Soffer had had enough.
'I'm thinking very seriously of changing the name,' Soffer told a Miami Herald columnist in 1988. 'They handcuffed the crew and confined them to the fly bridge under armed guard. Then they came up and said, 'Look what we found.' They could have brought the thing on with them. They just wanted to see where Donna Rice and Gary Hart slept. If this hadn't been the Monkey Business, it never would have happened.'
Soffer teased the new name for the Monkey Business could be 'The None of Your Business.' Instead, he sold the yacht.
Building Aventura from a napkin sketch
MORE: What did Aventura Mall look like when it opened four decades ago? See for yourself
All of this fame, success and admiration from associates, friends and family stemmed from notes scribbled on a cocktail napkin. In the 1960s, the Pittsburgh Soffers, including Don, loved visiting Miami 'to golf, boat and swim in the ocean,' his family said.
The Aventura and Turnberry neighborhood began when Soffer visited Northeast Miami-Dade with his father Harry Soffer, a Pittsburgh mall developer, in 1967. The father-son duo were scouting sites for a possible shopping mall.
'The first thought was to build a mall here,' said Soffer, then a principal of Turnberry Associates in a 1988 Miami Herald story. 'Most of the land was under water. I sketched out on a napkin what I thought would fit into this property beside the shopping center.'
Soffer kept that napkin for years. More than 20 years after scribbling on it, and about 16 before Aventura Mall opened in 1983, and seven years before the city of Aventura was officially incorporated in 1995, Soffer told the Herald reporter in 1988 that he'd found the cocktail napkin.
'It's remarkable how close it is to the actual development,' Soffer said.
Early life and education
Donald Morley Soffer was born on Sept. 20, 1932, in Duquesne, Pennsylvania. In 1954, Soffer graduated from Brandeis University in Massachusetts with a bachelor of arts in economics. He attended Brandeis on a football scholarship.
After graduation, Soffer weighed a few choices. He had an opportunity to join the San Francisco 49ers, the military or the family business. He chose the latter two options, his family said in an obituary.
Soffer served in the United States Army's 101st Airborne Division, today known as the 'Screaming Eagles.' He then returned to nearby Pittsburgh and went into construction and real estate with his father to develop suburban shopping centers.
Aventura means adventure
In 1967, Soffer and his business partners co-led a groundbreaking deal to acquire 785 acres of swampland in Miami-Dade. He founded Turnberry Associates to realize that vision, his family said.
Not everyone was on board. Environmentalists and controlled growth advocates didn't share Soffer's vision for the land. Through a friend, Soffer secured a five-minute meeting with then Florida Gov. Claude Kirk in Tallahassee.
Soffer, his family said, often shared the story that he convinced Gov. Kirk that his idea to employ 4,000 people in a $100 million construction project to create a modern city where 100,000 people would visit daily was actually Kirk's own idea.
'That way, Kirk could pitch it to his cabinet and take full credit. That salesmanship sealed the deal,' his family wrote in his obituary. In 1969, the county approved Soffer's ambitious 23,900 condominium unit master plan.
Over the 1970s and 1980s, Soffer and his business partners would go on to create what is now the City of Aventura, building everything from high-rises and golf resorts to libraries, fire stations and Aventura Mall.
According to a January 2012 Biscayne Times article, local author and historian Seth Bramson said Soffer came up with the city's name after telling his father, who died in 1972 at 63, that developing the city would be an 'adventure.' Aventura is Spanish for adventure.
Soffer expanded his footprint with other real estate projects like Turnberry Isle Resort and the purchase and restoration of Fontainebleau Miami Beach.
Turnberry is currently led by his daughter Jackie Soffer, who used to lead it with her brother Jeffrey as co-chief executives before they split ownership in 2019. Jeffrey Soffer currently leads Fontainebleau Development and owns the Miami Beach Fontainebleau hotel and the Fontainebleau Las Vegas.
Aventura Mall secured South Florida's first Macy's when it opened in 1983. The Northeast Miami-Dade mall, under his daughter's leadership, recently welcomed Florida's first Eataly Italian marketplace. Other Florida first recent arrivals include Massimo Dutti wardrobe store, the fashion boutique Cinq à Sept, Dolce Vita footwear and Kim Kardashian's Skims store.
Philanthropy and honors
Outside of construction and real estate, Soffer, who championed an outdoors lifestyle through frequent fishing, boating and camping excursions with his children, was a philanthropist. He donated $15 million to Brandeis University.
He was given an honorary doctorate at Brandeis in 2023 and inducted into the Brandeis Athletcis Hall of Fame in 2009.
Soffer also supported the University of Miami, Mount Sinai Medical Center and helped establish the Aventura Turnberry Jewish Center in honor of his parents, Ida and Harry, as well as helping to build the New Hope orphanage in Haiti, his family said.
His other contributions include City of Hope, Best Buddies, Breast Cancer Initiative and the Humane Society of Greater Miami.
He received the Simon Wiesenthal Center Humanitarian Award in 2024.
Survivors and services
Soffer's survivors include his wife, Michele King Soffer; his sister Rita; children Marsha, Jackie, Jeffrey, Brooke, Rock and Abigail; 13 grandchildren and a great-granddaughter.
His funeral service was held on Monday, July 21, in the Harry & Ida Soffer Sanctuary at the Aventura Turnberry Jewish Center.
Miami Herald news partner CBS News Miami contributed to this report.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Trump caps his Scottish visit by opening a new golf course
Trump caps his Scottish visit by opening a new golf course

Boston Globe

timean hour ago

  • Boston Globe

Trump caps his Scottish visit by opening a new golf course

Advertisement Trump used his trip to meet with Starmer and reach a trade framework for tariffs between the U.S. and the European Union's 27 member countries — though scores of key details remain to be hammered out. The overseas jaunt let Trump escape Washington's sweaty summer humidity but also the still-raging scandal over the files related to Jeffrey Epstein. But it was mostly built around golf — and walking the new course before it officially begins selling rounds to the public on Aug. 13, adding to a lengthy list of ways Trump has used the White House to promote his brand. Trump's assets are in a trust, and his sons are running the family business while he's in the White House. But any business generated at the course will ultimately enrich the president when he leaves office. Advertisement The new golf course will be the third owned by the Trump Organization in Scotland. Trump bought Turnberry in 2014 and owns another course near Aberdeen that opened in 2012. Trump golfed on Saturday as protesters took to the streets, and on Sunday. He invited Starmer, who famously doesn't golf, aboard Air Force One so the prime minister could get a private tour of his Aberdeen property before Tuesday's ceremonial opening. 'Even if you play badly, it's still good,' Trump said of golfing on his course over the weekend. 'If you had a bad day on the golf course, it's OK. It's better than other days.' Trump even found time at Turnberry to praise its renovated ballroom, which he said he'd paid lavishly to upgrade — even suggesting that he might install one like it at the White House. 'I could take this one, drop it right down there,' Trump joked. 'And it would be beautiful.'

Budget-friendly spin on classic summer treat goes viral: ‘Road trip luxury'
Budget-friendly spin on classic summer treat goes viral: ‘Road trip luxury'

New York Post

time2 hours ago

  • New York Post

Budget-friendly spin on classic summer treat goes viral: ‘Road trip luxury'

A budget-friendly recipe is going viral for channeling an Italian delicacy with just two ingredients that can be found at most roadside rest stops: coffee and an ice-cream sandwich. 'It's July and you know what that means: It's gas station affogato season,' New York-based travel expert and television host Samantha Brown recently posted on social media. Advertisement An affogato, which means 'drowned' in English, is typically served with fresh espresso poured over vanilla ice cream. But Brown, host of the PBS show 'Places to Love,' was forced to improvise while on a recent road trip stateside. 'You're seeing everyone in Italy, Positano, the Amalfi Coast, but you're at a Gulf station off the [Massachusetts Turnpike],' she said. To make the experience 'fancy,' she grabbed a cup of black coffee and an ice-cream sandwich from the gas station. With her ingredients resting on top of an air pump, Brown dunks the frozen treat into the cup and takes a big bite. Advertisement 'Delicious,' the mom of two exclaims. 'Back in the car,' she adds. 3 To make the experience 'fancy,' she grabbed a cup of black coffee and an ice-cream sandwich from the gas station. TikTok/@samanthabrowntravels The dessert 'blends a high-brow treat with the realities of an American road trip,' Brown said on Instagram and TikTok, where her videos had gotten over 3.1 million views and counting. Advertisement Many followers commented that they loved the relatable tip. 'A little road trip luxury,' one woman said on Instagram. 'Got to love that!' Advertisement 3 An affogato, which means 'drowned' in English, is typically served with fresh espresso poured over vanilla ice cream. kapongza – 'Road trip across Ohio and Pennsylvania coming up,' another woman wrote. 'I need to try that!! And dream of the Amalfi Coast.' 'As someone who's crushed I couldn't go to Italy this summer, this is priceless,' a TikToker commented. Brown said she prefers to enjoy the snack with the most basic ice-cream sandwich: the kind wrapped in paper. 3 'As someone who's crushed I couldn't go to Italy this summer, this is priceless,' a TikToker commented. TikTok/@samanthabrowntravels 'I don't use a Klondike bar or a Chipwich,' she told 'It's the quintessential ice-cream sandwich.' The idea came to Brown while on a road trip years ago with her two young children. She had a hankering for coffee-flavored ice cream, but there was none to be found. Advertisement 'So I was like, 'Wait a minute, why don't I make my own?'' she said. 'Desperate times called for desperate measures.'

Dems' failed makeover, ‘In-N-Out' of Cali and other commentary
Dems' failed makeover, ‘In-N-Out' of Cali and other commentary

New York Post

time5 hours ago

  • New York Post

Dems' failed makeover, ‘In-N-Out' of Cali and other commentary

Conservative: Dems' Failed Makeover Democratic leaders hoped to 'reverse the party's hard-left drift and reconnect with working-class voters' after the election, but Democrats instead ran 'straight back into the arms of their radical base,' marvels Mike Howell at The Blaze. They 'poured money and institutional support into the No Kings protests,' for example — and these 'weren't fringe outbursts. In fact, they revealed the party's core.' The Oversight Project compiled the Instagram activity of 'one key protest organizer, a group called 50501,' and 'tracked who its social media managers followed, and what emerged was a clear pattern of associations: communist, neo-Marxist, anti-American, and foreign-aligned groups.' 'These protests didn't bubble up from the grassroots. They were built from the same radical networks that have long tried to destabilize the country from within.' Every morning, the NY POSTcast offers a deep dive into the headlines with the Post's signature mix of politics, business, pop culture, true crime and everything in between. Subscribe here! West Coast watch: 'In-N-Out' of Cali Fast-food burger chain In-N-Out's owner, Lynsi Snyder is leaving 'deep blue California for the friendlier environs of red state Tennessee,' where her company is building a second corporate headquarters, reports USA Today's Nicole Russell. 'Snyder said she's leaving the West Coast for the Mid-South for the sake of her family and her business,' just as 'hundreds of thousands of regular people' and businesses like Tesla, Chevron and Hewlett Packard have done, seeking 'better lives and better business opportunities in other states.' California has 'pushed tax rates and the cost of living to ridiculous extremes even as residents' quality of life has declined.' 'People and companies are not just fleeing California — in many cases, they are relocating to red states with a drastically different approach to politics and policy.' It's 'another indicator of California's decline.' Tech beat: The Push for Unbiased AI President Trump's new executive order banning the federal government from buying 'woke AI' gives tech executives 'powerful incentives' to develop 'unbiased AI models,' argues Christopher Rufo at City Journal. All AI has 'ideological' formulas — some, including concepts like critical race theory, transgenderism and DEI — 'baked' into their code. 'The question is not whether an AI system will be built upon a set of values; the question is which set of values the programmers will select.' Yet Trump's EO stipulates that the government will purchase only software that is ''truth-seeking' and committed to 'ideological neutrality.'' The president and his advisers 'have shifted the direction of artificial intelligence away from woke — and toward a vibrant American future.' Keep up with today's most important news Stay up on the very latest with Evening Update. Thanks for signing up! Enter your email address Please provide a valid email address. By clicking above you agree to the Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. Never miss a story. Check out more newsletters From the right: A Kamala Run Scares the Left 'California Democrats are rubbing their temples' at the thought of Kamala Harris running for governor, quips National Review's Noah Rothman. She'd be the heavy favorite, but the ex-veep might owe that 'less to her political acumen' than to 'California voters' bovine insouciance.' She'd have to defend Joe Biden and 'her role in the failed' coverup of his decline. And 'in the absence of any measurable charisma and 'notable risks' to the party overall, many Dems are attacking her. One state-level official even says she'd ruin the party's chance to 'win the House and hold on to three seats that we just flipped in 2024.' So 'Harris could get herself elected,' notes Rothman, 'while still serving as a net negative for her party.' Legal expert: Media's Russiagate Blinders Newly declassified material from the Russian collusion investigation reveals 'how high-ranking officials in the Obama Administration seeded' the false collusion narrative 'with the help of an eager, unquestioning press corps,' thunders Jonathan Turley at Fox News. Ex-CIA director John Brennan 'was the key figure insisting on the inclusion of the Steele dossier' in the Russian interference assessment. Ex-FBI director James Comey knew 'the Steele dossier was an unreliable political hit job,' yet he 'lied to a federal court to maintain' the investigation. 'The public is now learning about the real Russian conspiracy and its key players,' but 'the same media that pushed the false claims' are 'imposing a news blackout as they did with the Hunter Biden laptop.' — Compiled by The Post Editorial Board

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store