The Alarming Pattern of Negligence Behind Inspirata Management
If the name Inspirata Management Company hasn’t raised alarm bells in your construction circles yet, it should. What began as a supposed luxury project management firm has rapidly become a lightning rod for lawsuits, injuries, and alleged misconduct. And the latest legal drama? A shocking personal injury case that lays bare the reckless and dangerous conditions under Inspirata’s watch.
The Case: Carlos Perdomo v. Inspirata Management Company et al.
Filed in Miami-Dade County Circuit Court, this lawsuit by elevator technician Carlos Javier Viera Perdomo exposes a glaring failure in basic safety, oversight, and professional responsibility. Perdomo was invited to a home at 5465 Pine Tree Drive — a property owned by Nicholas and Susan Maounis, but actively under renovation by Inspirata Management Company d/b/a The Inspirata Group.
During his work, Perdomo alleges he was forced to wear dangerously slippery slip-on shoe coverings while navigating the property — a requirement imposed during the home’s remodeling phase. Unsurprisingly, he slipped and fell, sustaining serious injuries.
Let’s be clear: this is not a case about someone tripping on a step. This is about a company actively managing a job site and creating unsafe conditions so extreme that a worker ended up seriously hurt — all in the name of “protecting the floors” or some other vanity-driven nonsense.
Inspirata’s Alleged Role in Creating a Hazard
In Count II of the amended complaint, Inspirata is directly accused of:
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Creating and enforcing the hazardous condition (requiring the slip-on shoe covers)
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Failing to maintain a safe environment for workers and contractors
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Failing to warn anyone about the obvious risk of serious injury
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Failing to anticipate harm, even though it should’ve been obvious to anyone remotely competent in construction site safety
This isn’t just a minor oversight. This is an alleged corporate decision that prioritized aesthetics over basic worker safety — and it ended with a technician in the hospital, dealing with long-term injuries that may affect him for life.
The Real Face of “Luxury Construction”
Inspirata bills itself as a high-end construction and project management firm, often tied to celebrity clients and lavish projects. But behind the branding, lawsuits keep piling up — including:
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Russell Weiner’s $20 million fraud lawsuit, where the Rockstar Energy billionaire accuses Inspirata and its principal, Andrea D’Alessio, of misrepresentation, false invoicing, and overbilling.
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Investor litigation from DLC Capital, who claim D’Alessio and Inspirata siphoned business and revenue to launch a secret side company, Scalaa.
Now add personal injury lawsuits to the growing list of legal entanglements — because if you’re injured at a job site allegedly controlled by Inspirata, good luck getting out of it unscathed.
A Pattern of Negligence and Arrogance
What’s most disturbing about this case is how it fits into a clear pattern. The allegations point not to a one-off mistake, but to a culture of carelessness — one that treats licensing laws, investor trust, and even worker safety as inconveniences.
The same leadership accused of multimillion-dollar financial misconduct is now being sued for basic failures like requiring dangerously slippery footwear on an active construction site.
When does the façade fall?
When do people stop buying the hype and see this operation for what it really is?
If You’re Hiring Inspirata, Ask Yourself This:
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Can you trust a company that allegedly can’t even ensure safe working conditions for the tradesmen it relies on?
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Can you afford to have your name tied to a firm under multiple legal investigations?
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Are you prepared to deal with the PR — or legal — blowback when things inevitably go wrong?
Bottom Line: Don’t Let Them On Your Property
Inspirata Management Company is now facing serious allegations across civil courts — from investor fraud to unsafe job site conditions. Whether you’re a homeowner, developer, or contractor, the warning signs couldn’t be louder.
If you want your project completed with integrity, safety, and transparency, stay far away from Inspirata Management, Scalaa, and anything touched by Andrea D’Alessio.
There’s a growing line of lawsuits — and you do not want to be next.