MANHATTEN HEIGHTS Inteview with Hell’s Kitchen Chef Robyn Almodovar! pg 6
Interior Design tips pg 20
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CONTENTS APRIL 2018
6
features 4
Letter from the Editor
6
Interview with Chef Robyn Almodovar by Micaela Hood
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Luxury Retail’s Battle Royale by Frank Alvorado
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Properties
20
Interior Design Ideas by Sophie Warren-Smith
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LETTER FROM THE EDITOR Published October 22, 2017
N ew York’s first issue was dated April 8, 1968. While it was still on newsstands,
Martin Luther King Jr. was shot and killed. Two weeks after that, Columbia University students rioted and occupied five campus buildings. In the decades since, New York — the city and the magazine — has lived multiple lives. But here is what the magazine’s founding editor, Clay Felker, said 50 years ago in his mission statement for the launch: “We want to attack what is bad in this city and preserve and encourage what is new and good. We want to be its voice, to capture what this city is about better than anyone else has.” The issue is the first of two, bracketing our anniversary year. (The next will appear in October 2018.) It returns to Felker’s original mission, attempting to capture the city’s voice. The stories in its pages are spoken as much as written, often in dialogue. Under the broad theme “My New York,” we’ve included memories by some New Yorkers you’ll recognize and some you won’t. Larry Gagosian talks about trading a Brice Marden painting for a loft; a Satanist frets over what to say when an adherent asks how to sell his soul; a bartender tells of the patron who plotted ways of killing his dogs. We’ve eavesdropped on some scenes — a knitting circle, a sex party, a Bay Ridge beauty salon — and contrived our own, such as inviting a few prominent New Yorkers to visit their old apartments and meet the current occupants. And we’ve conducted a few experiments. Curious about what’s going through the head of the subway stranger we can’t stop staring at, we boarded an R train and talked to everybody who’d talk to us. We played Six Degrees of Kevin Bacon, but we went to 50 degrees, starting (for no good reason beyond that he’s the face of New York 1) with Pat Kiernan, and somehow got to Jeremy Lin and a girl in utero. This last editorial game gets at a secondary theme of the issue: that the connections we have with fellow New Yorkers — close or glancing or in our imaginations — create our urban experience. In the margins, you’ll see some of the odd ways the issue’s participants link to one another. “My New York” is told mostly in the first person, and occasionally in competing first-person. (Martha Stewart is not a fan of the way her former home has been renovated.) Throughout, our contributors have explored the places where disparate lives intertwine and sometimes clash, powering a city that has been, for the 50 years of this magazine’s existence, the capital of the world. At least we think so. “You want to participate in this city,” Felker wrote in his manifesto, “because it is alive.” Still true.
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L ocal
celebrity chef Robyn Almodovar has at last won a televised cooking competition. In 2012, the owner of Palate Party, a food truck based in Hollywood, was a finalist on the 10thseason of Fox’s “Hell’s Kitchen.” On July 7, she was named the Season 24 winner of the Food Network’s, “Chopped,” a hit series in which chefs compete before a panel of judges (Geoffrey Zakarian, Amanda Frietag and Marc Murphy) and turn baskets of mystery ingredients into edible threecourse meals.
On the Almodovar and (Four Seaecutive chef Oscar Toro New York and from Loulay in oddball food beef tendon micelli nooblood oranges onions. In the odovar’s bread judges.
season finale, her competitors sons Chicago exStephen Wambach, from Buddakan in Roberwt Sevcik Seattle) mixed items such as balls, fresh verdles, trash fish, and caramelized final round, Almpudding wowed the
“I think my luck started in the first round with the beef tendon balls,” she says by phone. “But I went outside the box with the bread pudding, which is hard to execute.” Almodovar won $10,000, which she says she’ll put toward her business and perhaps a trip to Italy. A private chef for celebrities such as such as Timbaland, John Corbett and Travie McCoy, Almodovar will host Supper Club Thursdays, an eighth week pop-up dinner starting July 23 at Kitchen 305 inside the Newport Beach Resort (16701 Collins Ave., Sunny Isles Beach). The menu will include slow braised meatballs (ricotta cheese, pickled shallot, ricotta ensalada); deep-fried egg salad (frisee, bacon lardon, sherry vinaigrette); duck-confit pappardelle (homemade pasta, shaved ricotta and broccolini); roasted half chicken (crispy potatoes, caramelized onions, eggplant caviar and roasted garlic au jus). “I describe it as a party in your mouth,” she says of her cooking style, using her signature catchphrase. “It’s comfort food with finesse.” The price includes access to a lounge (which will offer hors d’oeuvres and cocktails) and a meet and greet with Almodovar, who is known for her upbeat personality and for creating a homey atmosphere among her dinner guests.
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In an a male-dominated industry, Almodovar says she’s grateful for her accomplishments. “The feedback I got from people after winning ‘Chopped’ was that I am an inspiration to young people,” she says. “I’m proud to be a female chef, and I’m also proud to represent the LGBT community.”
Micaela Hood, Contact Reporter mhood@sun-sentinel.com @micaelahood
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L uxury
Retail’s Battle Royale
T
hree high-end shopping centers are in the midst of expansion, with the Design District and Aventura Mall looking to unseat Bal Harbour Shops as the number one spot for world-famous brands. By Francisco Alvarado | March 20
C
onstruction will soon begin on the Bal Harbour Shops’ expansion, including more than 340,000 square feet of new retail space. When construction begins later this year at the Bal Harbour Shops, it will mark the first time in three and a half decades that the luxury mall’s owners will expand its footprint. Whitman Family Development, which owns Bal Harbour Shops, is adding more than 340,000 square feet to the center’s existing 450,000 square feet of retail space, and the new area is going to be anchored by the first Barneys New York in Florida. For boosters of the ritzy shopping center, landing Barneys is a testament to the drawing power that Bal Harbour Shops still wields in the fickle luxury retail market. For skeptics, the long-delayed update is proof that the Whitman family needed a bold move to stave off the rising fortunes of Aventura Mall and the Design District, two tourist-driven retail destinations that have poached some of Bal Harbour Shops’ bigname luxury tenants in recent years. “Bal Harbour Shops still stands as the gold standard in luxury retail in South Florida,” said Rafael Romero, a vice president with commercial brokerage CREC. “There are more luxury retail projects, but at the end of the day, it is very challenging for these new players to trump Bal Harbour Shops.” Some hard data backs up Romero’s assertions. According to Green Street Advisors’ 2016 report on the top 10 malls in the U.S. by sales — the most recent available — Bal Harbour Shops took the number one spot. The 520,000-square-foot shopping center had $3,185 in sales per square foot. Aventura Mall, which came in fifth, made $1,595 in sales per square foot with 2.1 million square feet of retail space. However, Bal Harbour Shops’ long reign as South Florida’s crown jewel of luxury retail is in peril. Aventura Mall’s owners, Turnberry Associates, recently opened a $214 million new wing, which features 315,000 square feet of shops, restaurants and an interactive, nine-story Carsten Höller sculpture with two slides people can ride down. Before the expansion, Turnberry had also convinced Louis Vuitton, Gucci and Givenchy, among others, to
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plant flagships at Aventura Mall. Matt Levinson, a Turnberry spokesman, said the company sells tenants on Aventura Mall’s popularity by noting that it draws more than 29 million visitors each year and ranks as the sixth most visited destination in Miami-Dade by the Greater Miami Convention and Visitors Bureau. “The breadth of Aventura Mall’s offerings is unrivaled,” Levinson said. “Aventura Mall also offers wide-ranging programming and experiences that drive engagement with locals as well as international visitors.” Levinson declined to say if Turnberry offers luxury retailers lease incentives to open storefronts in Aventura Mall. Although the Design District didn’t crack Green Street’s 2016 top 10, it potentially poses the biggest threat to Bal Harbour Shops’ supremacy, thanks to commitments made five years ago by the world’s most famous high-fashion brands — including Louis Vuitton, Tom Ford and Givenchy — to anchor the once-gritty-now-glam neighborhood. “All those tenants understand why it is important to put flagships in the urban core,” said Tony Arellano, a principal with DWNTWN Realty Advisors. “Some people would argue the Design District, over time, will grow into a better location, in terms of density, than Bal Harbour Shops.” Matthew Whitman Lazenby, CEO of Whitman Family Development, acknowledged that Bal Harbour Shops needed a jolt to meet the demands of Miami’s growing luxury retail market. The expansion will go a long way to solidifying Bal Harbour Shops’ grip as the region’s top luxury retail destination, Lazenby said. “We were well overdue for an adjustment,” he said. “Not having enough space has resulted in a long list of potential tenants we can’t accommodate and others that are already here in spaces that are way too small for them.” Indeed, it was the Whitman family’s inability to give a high-profile tenant more space that led to a mass exodus of retailers to the Design District. In 2013, Bal Harbour Shops could not accommodate Louis Vuitton parent company LVMH’s demands to expand its Louis Vuitton flagship store due to lack of available space. Compounding the problem was a radius clause that stipulated that if tenants opened stores in other parts of South Florida, they would have to pay percentages of their sales from the other locations to Whitman Family Development. From that impasse, the Design District emerged as a spoiler to Bal Harbour Shops’ dominance in the South Florida market. Miami developer Craig Robins’ company, Dacra, which owns a significant number of properties in the Design District, inked a 50-50 partnership with L Real Estate, of which LVMH is a majority shareholder. The deal involved transforming the Design District into a luxury retail destination largely fueled by the relocation of Louis Vuitton and other LVMH brands from Bal Harbour Shops. Other big names such as Bulgari, Burberry, Christian Dior, Fendi, Tom Ford and Zegna followed Louis Vuitton to the Design District. The Dacra and L Real Estate partnership, which also includes investors General Growth Properties and Ashkenazy Acquisition Corp., formed Miami Design District Associates, which owns roughly 70 percent of the privately owned properties in the neighborhood. Currently, 1 million square feet of space is under development, and Miami Design District Associates has development rights to another 1.5 to 2 million square feet. In late November, the partnership completed the second phase of redevelopment with the opening of Paradise Plaza, a two-story, open-air manhattanheights.com
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retail center at 151 Northeast 41st Street. Its luxury client roster includes Cynthia Rowley, Dolce & Gabbana, Gucci and Rag & Bone. The Institute of Contemporary Art also opened its new 37,500-square-foot home about a block north, at 61 Northeast 41st Street. In turn, the Design District’s revamp has brought in other investors, in cluding Brooklyn-based Redsky Capital, London-based JZ Capital Partners, New York-based Helm Equities, the Gindi family, Thor Equities and David Edelstein’s TriStar Capital. Dacra vice president Anna Williams said that Miami Design District Associates’ first two phases are 98 percent occupied and that retail space for the third phase should be leased up within the next six months. The Design District offers potential tenants a bona fide neighborhood teeming with creativity, culture and cache, Williams said. “Brands have almost no constraints on what they can do, in terms of size,” she said. “Where else could Hermès have 10,000 square feet to make a creative statement? We also are the only destination with almost all of the important luxury brands. We believe those factors combine to create a context for true flagship stores.” About 98 percent of the space redeveloped by Miami Design District Associates has been leased, the company said. There are no deal sweeteners or incentives offered to potential tenants of the Design District, Williams said. Still, Michael Comras, founder and CEO of the Comras Company, said the Design District is experiencing growing pains, as the neighborhood has not yet hit critical mass. Comras’ firm handles leasing for Atlas Plaza, a Design District shopping center located at 130 Northeast 40th Street owned by TriStar Capital and RFR Holdings. “It is very challenging to take an urban district like this and merchandise it effectively and create an environment people want to visit,” Comras said. “When you have pre-existing buildings and different landlords, it won’t happen in one fell swoop.” New tenants leasing storefronts in Atlas Plaza over the past 12 months include designer eyewear maker Oliver Peoples, international cosmetics brand Sisley and high-end womens’ apparel store Lauren Moshi. Comras said the grand opening of Paradise Plaza has led to a rise in foot traffic since mid-December.
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The increasing draw of the Design District and the Aventura Mall are manhattanheights.com
changing the dynamics of Miami’s luxury retail market, forcing Bal Harbour Shops to shy away from radius clauses in tenant contracts. “The reality is Miami-Dade is not the Miami-Dade from 1965 when we first opened,” Lazenby said. “We still value the notion of exclusivity, but we’re not forcing tenants not to have other locations in our trade area.” In addition to expanding the mall, the Whitmans partnered with Swire Properties and Simon Property Group to program the retail at Brickell City Centre, the massive $1 billion mixed-use development in Miami’s financial district. Whitman Family Development continues to cultivate its tenant mix, said Courtney Lord, the company’s vice-president of leasing. “Rather than wait for brokers to come to us, we go into the international market and find those that we think would be a welcome addition,” Lord said. This approach has allowed Bal Harbour Shops to introduce Italian suit maker Cesare Attolini, sunglasses designer Linda Farrow and womenswear designer Marie France Van Damme to South Florida. Leather goods maker Valextra and French fashion house Balmain are on the list of tenants that will open at the shopping center soon. In addition, Valentino, Salvatore Ferragamo and Saint Laurent recently grew from one-level boutiques to two-level bazaars there. In the past two years, the shopping center fought hard to win approval from the Bal Harbour Village Council to expand the center. “There is an intimacy in our scale that we don’t ever want to lose,” Lazenby said. “But this expansion is going to provide the supply to meet our current demand for space.” By refreshing Bal Harbour Shops’ architecture and recruiting brands with zero Florida presence, the Whitman family is able to generate new excitement for the shopping center, said CREC’s Romero. “It serves as the ultimate statement that Bal Harbour Shops continues to be dominant in this market,” Romero said. “When it comes to an established name that is recognized worldwide, Bal Harbour Shops has yet to be beaten in that category.” Lazenby also holds on to the possibility that the expansion may lure a few of the top names that resettled in the Design District back to Bal Harbour Shops. “We believe now, as we did then, that we would be better off if they were still here,” Lazenby said. “We hope one day, they will return.”
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Noble Black
575 Madison Ave New York, NY 10022 212.909.8460 noble.black@elliman.com
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110 E. 76th Strewet New York, NY 10021
406 Old Montauk Highway Montauk, NY 11954
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15,000 SF 8 Beds, 10 Baths
7,500 SF 6 Beds, 8 Baths
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$51,000,000
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90 Riverside Drive
54 Warren Street New York, New York 10007
115 Eastern Parkway Prospect Heights, New York 11238
5 Beds, 3 Baths
2,147 SF 2 Beds, 2 Baths
2 Beds 2 Baths
$4,750,000
$3,500,000
$2,200,000
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OUT OF STATE PROPERTIES
18 Frick Dr Alpine, NJ 07620
1006 Laurel Way Beverly Hills, CA 90210
109 Willoughby Way Aspen, CO 81611
261,360 SF 12 Beds 15 baths
39,316 SF 6 Beds, 9.5 Baths
11,437 SF 6 Beds 6 Baths
$39,900,000
$31,950,000
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9719 Heather Road Beverly Hills Post Office, CA 90210
771 Garen LN Montecito, CA 93108
1953 Medicine Bow Rd Aspen, Colorado 81611
169,113 SF 5 Beds, 7 Baths
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GENNADY PEREPADA
Luxury Real Estate Broker & International Investment Consultant 18 East 48th Street, STE 702 New York, NY 10017 212.505.0200
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15 EAST 26TH STREET NEW YORK, NY
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1700 SQ FT 2 BED, 2 BATH
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345 EAST 46TH STREET NEW YORK, NY 10017
111 West 67th Stree, Unit 22E
400 Fifth Avenue New York, NY 10018
1147 SQ FT 1 Bed, 2 Bath
3300 Sq Ft. 3 Bed, 4 Bath
1437 Sq. Ft. 2 Bed, 3 Bath
$10,895
$10,995,000
$4,000,000
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635 W 42ND ST MANHATTAN, NY 10036
100 E 53RD ST MANHATTAN, NY 10022
56 LEONARD ST MANHATTAN, NY 10013
10,000 SF
6,760 SF
11,892 SF
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28 E 63rd St 35 E 76th St ManManhattan, NY hattan, NY 10021 10065
15 Central Park W Manhattan, NY 10023
1,000 SF
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Christie’s International Real Estate 20 Rockefeller Plaza New York, New York 10020 877.399.0177 www.christiesrealestate.com
551 West 21st Street, 15th Floor New York, New York 10011
785 FIFTH AVENUE NEW YORK, NEW YORK 10022
160 EAST 71ST STREET
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2 BEDS, 2 FULL BATHS
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$36,500,000
$9,900,000
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50 GRAMERCY PARK NORTH, 12A, NEW YORK, NEW YORK 10010
635 WEST 42ND STREET 41H, NEW YORK, NEW YORK 10036
551 WEST 21ST STREET
1,848 SQ FT 2 BED 2 FULL BATH
774 SQ FT 1 BED 1 FULL BATH
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DOUGLAS ELLIMAN REAL ESTATE 774 BROADWAY NEW YORK CITY, NY 10003 212.995.5357 www.elliman.com
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246 WEST 121ST ST HARLEM, NEW. YORK
1399 PARK AVENUE,20/21 B EAST HARLEM, NEW YORK
310 WEST 114TH ST, C HARLEM, NEW YORK
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50 WEST 127TH ST 6B HARLEM, NEW YORK
306 WEST 116TH ST 4B HARLEM, NEW YORK
2110 FREDERICK DOUGLASS BLVD 4A HARLEM, NEW YORK
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730 FT WASHINGTON AVE 6B WASHINGTON HEIGHTS, NEW YORK
2257 ADAM C POWELL BLVD 4 A HARLEM, NEW YORK
721 ST NICHOLAS AVENUE, 2 HAMILTON HEIGHTS, NEW YORK
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1,228 SQ FT 2 BED 2 BATH
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$1,200,000
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8 EAST 62ND ST UPPER EAST SIDE, NEW YORK
110 EAST 76TH ST UPPER EAST SIDE, NEW YORK
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TRANSFORM YOUR HOME WITH THESE KEY LOOKS... BY SOPHIE WARREN-SMITH JAN 26
Yes,
it’s still dark and dingy, but we have so much colour and texture to look forward to this spring and summer.
Ice-cream pastels, glittery golds, indigo blues and super zingy co lour pops, these are all trends for this year. Below, we show you our favourites and how to put them together in your home.
1. EMBELLISHMENTS
M acrame, fringing, tufting, tassels and feathers – you name it, it’s here for this seas and you’ll see it on cushions, wall hangings, throws, rugs and accessories. This trend will add a wonderful handmade quality to each room, beautiful tactile cushions on the sofa and a sumptuous throw with tassels on the bed, and a wall-hanging or two on plain walls to add interest.
2. ICE CREAM COLOURS G elato colours are going to be a huge trend in both interiors and fashion this year, but there’s no reason to wait until spring, start investing in key pieces now and get ahead of the crowd. ‘Choosing your favourite flavour of ice cream can be a bit like choosing your favourite paint colour,’ explains Kasia Wiktorowicz, marketing communications manager, Valspar. ‘So why only choose one when you can have them all, in a perfect palette of ice cream colours. You can even mix up paint colours to suit your tastes and match accessories by using our in-store colour matching technology.’ Introduce these pretty colours on a single wall or multiple if you feel brave, and accessorise with pastel hued vases, dining chairs and tableware.
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3. GEOMETRICS Although
we did see geometrics in 2017, it was mainly on cushions and rugs. This year it’s all about tiles, wallpaper and art. Seen here is a bold design being used to striking effect, no, it’s not tiles, it’s actually a specially designed decorative membrane that is so watertight it can also be used directly on the walls of a shower or as a kitchen splashback.
4. FOLIAGE AND MORE FOLIAGE With
increasing news of health benefits, the humble houseplant is fast becoming the must-have buy for our homes. And it seems the more the merrier, so pop down to your local garden centre and invest in some stunning plants. Place them in each room, use hanging plants for shelves and mantelpieces and some lovely leafy beauties for bare corners and coffee/ side tables. Team them with some lush green pieces like this charming armchair, stylish pendants, a textured rug and some stripy green cushions for added interest.
5. INDIGO BLUES As
an antidote to the pastel tones, another colour trend is inky blues. If painting a whole room in one of these shades seems overwhelming then simply accessorise instead with vases and flowers. Pick different shapes in a mixture of styles, so some coloured glass and others embossed stoneware, like these seen here. Vary the heights and widths to create an interesting display.
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EVENTS Vinny Guadagnino, left, and Paul “DJ Pauly D” DelVecchio visit “The Elvis Druan Z100 Morning Show” at Z100 Studios in Manhattan on April 5, 2018
RuPaul and Ari Gold attend the “Angels in America” Broadway opening night part 1 arrivals at the Neil Simon Theatre on March 25, 2018, in Manhattan.
Lecy Goranson, Michael Fishman, Roseanne Barr, John Goodman and Sarah Chalke attend An Evening With The Cast Of “Roseanne” at The Paley Center for Media in Manhattan on March 26, 2018
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Emily Blunt and John Krasinski attend the premier for “A Quest Place” at AMC Lincoln Square Theater in Manhattan on April 2, 2018
Jordana Brewster attends the premiere for “A Quiet Place” at AMC Lincoln Square Theater in Manhattan on April 2, 2018
Neil Patrick Harris and Allison Williams attend the Netflix preimiere of “A Series of Unfortunate Events” season 2 on March 29, 2018, in Manhattan.
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