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Officials seek clues in death of Walsh

Developer's body found in his Florida home

The Post and Courier
Friday, June 27, 2008


Steve Walsh

Broad Street Partners

Steve Walsh

Authorities are investigating the sudden death of developer Steve Walsh, who was found with an apparent gunshot wound Wednesday afternoon at his home in an exclusive Winter Park, Fla., neighborhood.

Winter Park police were called to the home to check on Walsh, 61, after he failed to attend a scheduled meeting earlier in the day. Officers found him dead and recovered a long gun from the scene, police said.

Winter Park Sgt. Pam Mark-ham said investigators are awaiting autopsy results and have reached no conclusions on the manner of Walsh's death.

Walsh was the managing partner of Broad Street Partners, which formed in Charleston in 1994 and has offices in the Lowcountry, Florida and North Carolina.

Walsh's family issued a statement Thursday thanking the community for its support and asking for privacy as they prepare to say goodbye. Walsh's wife, Paula, reportedly was in Charleston when he died.

"We adored Stephen Walsh, a loving husband and incredible father," the statement read. "The size of his heart and his smile will remain unmatched. We miss him terribly and take great comfort in knowing that he made such a tremendous difference in the community."

Broad Street Partners specializes in the acquisition, development and investment management of multi-family communities, commercial/mixed use projects and town center projects throughout the Southeast. Since the 1970s, its team has developed more than 20,000 condominium and rental units, currently valued at $2 billion, according to the company's Web site.

Many of the company's high-profile endeavors were in Central Florida, where Broad Street Partners had 10 multimillion-dollar projects planned or under way as of last year, according to The Orlando Sentinel. Walsh had also become a force in Florida philanthropic circles. In 2005, Walsh and his wife gave $2.5 million in support of the University of Central Florida's efforts to establish a medical school.

Most of Broad Street Partners' work in the Charleston area has been in the multi-family market. Its local investments include the purchase and renovation of Woodbridge Apartment Homes on Ashley River Road. Walsh's firm also built Ashley Knoll, a rental complex off St. Andrews Boulevard, for an Atlanta investor. That 408-unit property was later converted into condominiums.

In another deal, his company anted up $22 million in mid-2003 for the 300-unit River Oaks apartments in Mount Pleasant at Interstate 526 and the Wando River.

Todd Wigfield is a development associate for Charleston-based Greystar Development Group, which managed some of Broad Street's properties. He said the company was shocked by Walsh's death. He described Walsh as an "extremely nice and genuine" person.

Walsh also was known as a determined businessman who had weathered ups and downs, the Sentinel reported. He and his company emerged from a 1990 bankruptcy filing and went on to become a major force in development once again, though some Florida deals had faltered recently amid objections from residents and the struggling real estate market, the Sentinel stated.

Reach Glenn Smith at 937-5556 or gsmith@post andcourier.com.




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Comments

This article has  6 comment(s)

Posted by Mayor on June 27, 2008 at 5:19 a.m. (Suggest removal)

I guess the market is worse than we think.



Posted by strategicgrowth on June 27, 2008 at 8:19 a.m. (Suggest removal)

Mr. Walsh was a good man. I have worked with him in the past and he was one of the good guys. Many developers today get a bad rap about being greedy and destructive. Steve was niether. He saw value in building affordable communities and cared about the people he worked with.

Not all developers are stoopid! Mr. Walsh was a good steward of the community!



Posted by Early on June 27, 2008 at 11:25 a.m. (Suggest removal)

Sgt. Pam Mark-ham I would definitely change my name



Posted by DanniD on June 27, 2008 at 1:28 p.m. (Suggest removal)

Early, you are hillarious....the funniest thing was when you called majorjohnson, majormyjohnson the other day.

On a serious note, this a horrible thing to have happened. I hope his family is able to make it through this terrible time.



Posted by ccfromsc on June 27, 2008 at 2:35 p.m. (Suggest removal)

Maybe he knew Al Parish?



Posted by berthelot on June 27, 2008 at 2:56 p.m. (Suggest removal)

My condolences.

I may be way off base here, but "10 multimillion-dollar projects" in this economy... in Florida? Plus, the market dropped 350 points yesterday. No help from the Fed. I'm just saying, we could be seeing the beginning of a 1929 scenario. Sorry to bring it up. Just think about it.




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