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MIAMI HERALD

Moishe Mana’s march to riches and influence really did start with a single van. His is a classic American tale. The Israeli-born law-school dropout parlayed that van into a ubiquitous New York City moving company that begat 14 or 15 other related enterprises, including a document-storage offshoot that, just by itself, generates $100 million in annual revenue.

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NBC MIAMI

A new visionary project is moving forward to transform Miami’s vibrant Wynwood neighborhood into an international commerce hub that will bring an estimated 20,000 jobs in South Florida.

Newly released captivating animated renderings paint a bustling image of what is being called the MANA Wynwood Americas-Asia Trade Center & International Financial Center.

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MIAMI HERALD

Entrepreneur Moishe Mana has unveiled new eye-popping animated renderings of his massive Wynwood redevelopment as he drums up investment and international interest in his plan for a trade center linking Latin America with China and other parts of Asia.

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BISNOW

Entrepreneur Moishe Mana has unveiled new eye-popping animated renderings of his massive Wynwood redevelopment as he drums up investment and international interest in his plan for a trade center linking Latin America with China and other parts of Asia.

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THE NEXT MIAMI

Moishe Mana is “near completion on his downtown assemblage” after purchasing another property for $4 million, according to a press release.

Mana now controls nearly 9 acres, the threshold for a SAP under Miami 21.

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MIAMI HERALD

Florida International University’s arts program will have a home in Miami’s Wynwood neighborhood starting next year, funded by a donation worth $10 million from developer Moishe Mana. The program will be known as FIU CARTA (College of Communication, Architecture + The Arts) @ Mana Wynwood.

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BLOOMBERY

Moishe Mana arrived in New York from Israel in the 1980s and turned his “man with a van” delivery gig into one of the city’s great moving and storage companies. Trucks bearing the Moishe’s Moving name rumbled everywhere on Manhattan streets.

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THE ARCHITECTS NEWSPAPER

Miami’s Urban Design Review Board (UDRB) approved a micro-living apartment tower with no parking from entrepreneur and developer Moishe Mana and Zyscovich Architects. The design was approved by the city’s Urban Design Review Board this morning along with the Miami Worldcenter plan, a 10-block, 30-acre development led by Elkus Manfredi architects. The Worldcenter’s blueprints were approved despite general concerns over landscaping and architecture.

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THE REAL DEAL

New York investors interested in Miami are making a beeline for one square mile in Downtown.

Over the past two years, New Yorkers have spent at least $586.5 million on property concentrated between the Miami River to Northeast Sixth Street and east of I-95 to Biscayne Bayin, according to research done by Mika Mattingly, a broker with Sterling Equity Commercial.

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MIAMI NEW TIMES

When the late developer Tony Goldman first set his sights on Wynwood, he imagined turning the sleepy industrial district into an arts-friendly neighborhood. Existing low-rise warehouses would be converted into everything from restaurants and art galleries to office space with colorful street art on their exteriors. Take a look around, and you’ll see that vision has been realized.

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JERSEY DIGS

Mana Contemporary opened in Jersey City at 888 Newark Avenue in 2011, but until a recent visit on a Thursday afternoon, when and how the public could gain access remained a little mysterious. Founded by moving company magnate Moishe Mana, the arts center is only open Monday through Friday for complimentary tours at 11 am and 3 pm.

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MIAMI HERALD

JERSEY CITY, N.J. Moving-company and arts mogul Moishe Mana’s grand but hazy vision for his extensive holdings in Miami’s mushrooming Wynwood district, which calls for a mini-city built around “culture,” starts to solidfy once you see his sprawling Mana Contemporary art center in this once-forsaken industrial town.

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ARTNET NEWS

“Originally, I was a mover of art,” said Moishe Mana, “but today art is moving me. I’m committed to it, and I love it.” So said the Mana Contemporary founder at an impromptu speech during a dinner celebrating the art center’s new Miami exhibitions.

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THE WALL STREET JOURNAL

Behind heavy metal doors at an old tobacco factory on Newark Avenue in Jersey City, portraits by the artist Chuck Close—of Hillary Clinton, of the composer Philip Glass—hang on pristine white walls.

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THE WALL STREET JOURNAL

In the run-up to the hotly-contested November election, billionaire art collector Moishe Mana is hosting a private auction to benefit Hillary Clinton’s presidential campaign.

Taking place on October 22 at the private residence of economist Nouriel Roubini and co-hosted by National Finance Committee member Laetitia Garriott, the auction is expected to generate a six-figure sum.