How a French Developer Rebuilt Miami’s Luxury Market - One Spec Home at a Time with Pascal Nicolai
Release Date: 11/19/2025
Builder Straight Talk Podcast
How a French Developer Rebuilt Miami’s Luxury Market - One Spec Home at a Time with Pascal Nicolai Pascal shows up in Miami in 2008 with some cash from selling assets in France, right when everything's melting down. Most people would think that's terrible timing, but he saw it differently. "I said to my wife at the time, look, I think there is one opportunity to go there, it is now. I don't think we're going to see this kind of opportunity in our lives. The market was crashed, very accessible if you have some money." He didn't even know he'd end up in construction. His specialty...
info_outlineBuilder Straight Talk Podcast
CRMs aren't sexy. Understatement of the year! They're not the kind of thing you get excited to talk about at the jobsite. But here's the thing: if you're building homes and not using one, you're probably leaving serious money on the table. And we're not talking pocket change here. In this episode, Michael invited Shari Morton, founder and Chief Growth Officer of Shared Drive, to talk about something most builders would rather avoid: customer relationship management systems. We call it the "broccoli" of the building industry. Everyone knows it's good for you, but most people stay away from it...
info_outlineBuilder Straight Talk Podcast
Scott Menard has been in construction since he was 17 years old, starting as a laborer for KB Homes during summer breaks. Over nearly four decades, he's worked his way through purchasing, project management, land acquisition, and operations at some of the nation's most respected builders, including Ryland, Taylor Woodrow, and Shea Homes. Now he's the president of Homes Built for America, a company that didn't exist four years ago and is already the 14th largest builder in the San Francisco Bay Area. They're doing something many builders won't touch: focusing exclusively on first-time...
info_outlineBuilder Straight Talk Podcast
There's something rare about sitting down with two brothers who genuinely like working together. Chris and Clif Poston make running a homebuilding company that closes over 1,000 homes a year look almost easy, but their story is anything but. Clif: "Doing what we say we're going to do is really, really important. A foundation of our business. And we try to get that out to people in every aspect of the business, from our employees, to the marketing side, to the sales side, to dealing with our vendors, to dealing with the public when it comes to buying land and rezoning." The Poston brothers...
info_outlineBuilder Straight Talk Podcast
Jim Tobin never set out to spend 27 years at the National Association of Home Builders. He wanted to fly helicopters like his dad photographed at Sikorsky Aircraft. Then politics caught his attention, and he found himself on Capitol Hill in 1995, thinking he'd become a defense lobbyist selling guns and things that go boom. Instead, he landed at NAHB and discovered something better: an industry that builds shelter, creates wealth, and gives families a shot at the American dream. Now as President and CEO of NAHB, Jim spends his time doing something most association heads don't: actually visiting...
info_outlineBuilder Straight Talk Podcast
If you've ever driven past a construction site and wondered why we're still building houses the same way we did 50 years ago, this conversation is for you. Michael sits down with Ken Semler, President and CEO of Impresa Modular, who's spent the last 25 years trying to get people to understand what modular construction actually is. And no, it's not a double-wide trailer. That's the first misconception Ken tackles, and honestly, it's the one that's been holding the industry back for decades. Ken's journey into modular started almost by accident. He was flipping houses back in 2003 when his day...
info_outlineBuilder Straight Talk Podcast
Glen Harris III was living the contractor's dream in 2016. His custom home building company was doing $4 million in revenue, clients were happy, and he was making good money. There was just one problem: he WAS the business. Every estimate, every decision, every five-minute phone call ran through him. He'd hit a ceiling and couldn't see how to break through it. This episode is about what happened next and why it matters if you're stuck in the same trap. What You'll Learn Why systems beat hustle when you want to scale. Glen breaks down the moment he realized working harder wasn't going to get...
info_outlineBuilder Straight Talk Podcast
In this conversation, Lance walks through what it actually takes to build a homebuilding business that lasts. He talks about why his first hire made the first project successful (because he knew what he didn't know), how to structure your first deal so you have enough margin to survive your mistakes, and why contingency planning isn't optional when unexpected costs show up. When Lance Williams started his homebuilding company in 1996, his equity partners were his wife, mother-in-law, and sister-in-law. Talk about pressure! He'd just been laid off during a market downturn, took a short...
info_outlineBuilder Straight Talk Podcast
Most builders hit a wall. They work 80-hour weeks, carry tools, manage crews, chase payments, and somehow still struggle to make ends meet. Sound familiar? That was Duane Johns twenty years ago, grinding it out in Charlotte, North Carolina after moving from the Hamptons. Then 2008 hit. While other builders went under, Duane used the crisis as a mirror. "I think that that too, one thing that happened in that 2008 environment, especially the few years after, was everyone got reduced to a commodity, you know, I mean, the builders or modelers, they had the lower hand, no doubt." The...
info_outlineBuilder Straight Talk Podcast
Starting a construction company during the 2008 recession sounds insane, but sometimes desperation breeds the best business decisions. Matt Millsap's story starts like a lot of ours do - working weekends with dad, thinking he was going to hang out with friends but ending up tearing out bathrooms instead. What makes his story different is where it goes from there. After flunking out of college, Matt found himself cutting grass for a builder who saw something in the kid. That builder, Mark, became the mentor who taught him everything. It was old-school apprenticeship at its finest, and Matt...
info_outlineHow a French Developer Rebuilt Miami’s Luxury Market - One Spec Home at a Time with Pascal Nicolai
Pascal shows up in Miami in 2008 with some cash from selling assets in France, right when everything's melting down. Most people would think that's terrible timing, but he saw it differently.
"I said to my wife at the time, look, I think there is one opportunity to go there, it is now. I don't think we're going to see this kind of opportunity in our lives. The market was crashed, very accessible if you have some money."
He didn't even know he'd end up in construction. His specialty was buying, fixing, and renting or selling.
He starts doing what any smart real estate guy would do during a crisis: buying distressed properties at courthouse auctions, fixing them up, and flipping them. But Pascal gets curious about what happens before the auction. He starts buying non-performing notes from banks, basically becoming the one who forecloses on people. By 2012, the foreclosure business is drying up as the market recovers, and he's sitting on some properties thinking, maybe I should actually build something here.
That first house in Miami Beach goes well. Really well.
"I got decent price for the land. I got decent price for construction because at that time, nobody's building and I received a very good price. I said, oh my God, this is good business now."
Good enough that he decides this is the direction.
But here's where it gets interesting. Pascal isn't just another spec builder throwing up McMansions. He's a realtor and developer from France, and he brings a completely different perspective on how houses should actually work.
The conversation gets into the differences between European and American construction, and it's eye-opening.
"In France, the architect is the GC. The architect follows the project and is the one who takes responsibility if there is something wrong inside. In Florida, the architect finishes his job when you get a permit, then you give the plan to the owner and the owner manages with the GC. If there is something wrong, he says, guys, this is wrong, you need to correct, and then he provides change order."
Pascal saw that gap and figured out how to fix it by essentially becoming his own GC and internalizing construction. He talks about importing European designers, bringing in construction techniques that Florida hadn't seen, using materials and equipment that made local contractors come by just to watch.
"I remember one day, we imported this tile with this cutting machine, and they started cutting and all the contractors approached and came in the house to see, oh, what is it? We’ve never seen this."
The focus isn't on making everything white and shiny for snowbirds visiting three months a year. It's about creating homes people actually want to live in full-time.
"When you live in New York or in Canada and you want a second house, you want something white, shiny. But when you want to live all year long, you want something more warm, cozy. Design changes, architectural changes, everything changes."
The quality control thing becomes almost obsessive after one early client, a Belgian guy in the clothing business, walks through a house and points out imperfections.
"He started to look at things that even my eyes didn't see. There was a micro touch of painting that was not perfect. I realized that I was far away from the perfection. It made me understand that I need to work more, I need to get more competencies."
That changes everything. Now there's a quality control manager who has to sign off before any payment goes through. Subcontractors have to sign process documents. They do sample installations before getting the contract.
"We don't make a payment if the quality control doesn't validate the work. And for the finishes, I'm going there. And sometimes I'm redoing things completely. I went there and said to my team, no, this is not acceptable. And I'm changing and redoing this job with no problem because I want the perfect product."
But the really smart part is how he handles risk. Every project has 50 percent equity minimum. When a house finishes, it goes into high-end rental configuration, fully furnished down to the towels and coffee machine.
"When our house is finished, we put it in rental configuration. We rent the house with high price, we select the renter, and we give them a discount on the rent, but you have 60 days to leave when we sell. We have an income covering the carrying cost because we have low leverage."
This means he never has to sell at a discount just because he needs the cash.
"I don't want to jeopardize five years of work, hard work, and have to sell at a discount because you need to sell because you need the cash. I don't want to sell my house at a discount. It's impossible. I can't do this. I prefer to rent and wait."
Pascal’s portfolio runs from $20 million to $80-90 million homes, with six to eight projects going at different stages at any time, plus custom builds for specific clients. His competition? Mostly guys doing one house every year or two.
"Building a high-end house, very detailed and very luxury market is a very big personal investment. Most of the developers, they prefer to do big buildings or 30, 40, 80 houses. They are not in my niche market because it's too complicated, too much resources and they make less money than doing volume things."
Pascal's got a project under contract now in Palm Beach County, looking at doing boutique condominiums on the beach. Not your typical condo though. He wants to bring the same level of finish and detail from the houses into 10-12 units where everything's done when you walk in.
The whole conversation circles back to something simple: he imagines living in every house he builds.
"Each time I do a house, I imagine myself living inside. I don't just give to the architect a project and say, design me a house. No, I imagine myself living in this house."
The goal isn't impressing people or creating trophy properties.
"My definition of luxury is freedom and the vibe. The purpose of the house, at the end of the day, is to live inside. A lot of people forget it. They try to impress. I want people, when they buy the house, they feel at home."
About Pascal Nicolai
Pascal Nicolai is the French-born founder of Sabal Development and Sabal Luxury Builder, two Miami-based firms setting new benchmarks in high-end residential construction. After a career that began in finance and evolved through European real estate, Pascal moved to Miami during the 2008 downturn and built his success one luxury spec home at a time. Today, Sabal's portfolio includes more than $225 million in sold homes and another $220 million in projects underway, blending European precision, Miami modernism, and financial discipline into every build.
Known as a "spec-home specialist," Pascal's story is one of risk, vision, and relentless attention to detail.
Pascal Nicolai on LinkedIn:
https://www.linkedin.com/in/pascal-nicolai-2ba82b61
Sabal Development website:
https://www.sabaldev.com
Follow Builder Straight Talk:
* Web: https://BuilderStraightTalk.com
* LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/michaelkrisa
* Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/BuilderStraightTalk
* Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/builderstraighttalk
Chapters:
00:00 Introduction
00:41 Sound Capital
02:52 Welcome, Pascal Nicolai
04:00 Starting a New Life in the US
05:32 First Steps in Real Estate Auctions
08:34 Transition to Development and Construction
11:04 Adapting to the American Market
17:25 Innovations and Competitive Edge
32:03 Managing Risks and Investments
34:44 The Art of Not Selling at a Discount
35:08 Building Relationships with Buyers
36:16 The Importance of Quality and Service
38:15 The Challenges of High-End Real Estate
39:13 Learning from Early Experiences
39:48 Ensuring Perfection in Every Project
42:40 Hands-On Development Approach
45:26 Educating and Managing Subcontractors
47:24 The Philosophy of Luxury Living
49:13 The Story Behind Sabal
50:28 Future Projects and Aspirations
53:21 The Importance of Location and Design
56:15 Creating Unique and Desirable Homes
01:02:48 Balancing Work and Personal Life
01:04:07 Final Thoughts