Construction Permits Filed For Two Edgewater Apartment Towers With Combined 616 Units

Chicago developer Trilogy has applied for construction permits to begin building two apartment towers in Edgewater.

The buildings are known as Residence 23 and Residence 27. Together, they will have a combined 616 apartments.

Residence 23

According to a UDRB filing, Residence 23 is planned to rise 36 stories, or 413 feet, and include:

  • 369 apartments
  • 13,475 square feet of commercial
  • 545 parking spaces

The construction permit application for Residence 23 was filed on August 15, and lists an estimated hard construction cost of $155,571,000. The full plans have yet to be filed, so review is not yet underway. No contractor is yet attached to the permit.

 

Residence 27

According to a UDRB filing, Residence 27 is proposed to rise 20 stories and include:

  • 247 residential units
  • 7,800 square feet of ground floor retail space
  • 374 parking spaces

The construction permit application for Residence 27 was filed on July 11, and lists an estimated hard construction cost of $91,873,674. The full plans were filed July 31, and review is already underway. No contractor is yet attached to the permit.

SB Architects is the architect for both buildings.

 

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Anonymous
1 month ago

Glad to see NE 2nd Ave finally getting developed, but we want condos!! No more apartment buildings.

Samy
1 month ago

And more stores with large sidewalks please. Don’t forget trees.

Anonymous
1 month ago

More condos uptown here and new metromover please

Downtowner
1 month ago

N.E. 2nd Ave. is being transformed, at last.

Melo is sigma and Chad
1 month ago

Glad 2nd Ave is getting line with highrises, for the folks playing at the field, theres a better one on 62nd st.

Anon
1 month ago

Nice. Long time coming.

Anon
1 month ago

Right by the ground tracks 🚂

Cover the Podiums
1 month ago

why does Urban 22 had to cover their garage with units but none of these towers had to? this is Melo we are talkin about

Anonymous
1 month ago

Where Melo doesn’t cover it’s parking garages look terrible, and the towers are nothing but boxes.

Cover the Podiums
1 month ago

better than an exposed parking garage…are you ok in the head?

Name*
1 month ago

Back up to a full 1.5 parking spaces per unit after a majority of recent projects having 1 or less spaces per unit. Remember even 1:1 without any large retail element is considered a reduction in this town!

ParkingHater
1 month ago

Facts

Anonimo
1 month ago

We should be incentivizing biking and public transport, if every new resident brings a car then you’ll never be able to leave your house with the amount of congestion.

Anonymous
1 month ago

Cool. Midtown gaining height where possible.

Anonymous
1 month ago

Residence 23 (the first one) is a beautiful tower and the parking podium doesn’t detract. Residence 27 is meh… should be taller and the silly “movement” and mural for the facades covering the “bald” spot parking garage are cheapening.

Mr. G
1 month ago

Read the zoning code. Residence27 is zoned T6-12 and can’t go any taller.

Anonymous
1 month ago

The “bald” spot parking garage is at the lot line. It is extremely likely that whatever goes up west of this also builds to the lot line. Why spend $ on something that will be buried by a building in a matter of years.

Anonymous
1 month ago

Great to see uptown filling up! While it’s not in the Miami proper metro area, it’s still a short Uber ride to the city!

Anon
1 month ago

Are you not familiar with the city? Miami’s urban core goes from Brickell up to the Design District

Anonymous
1 month ago

The area doesn’t seem to be in the urban core at the moment due to the lack of metro stations and convenient public transportation. Usually, having a metro indicates being in the urban core. However, I’m optimistic that this could change in the near future with projects like this. Right now, the area seems to be in development, featuring shorter buildings and older single-story houses, with more exciting high rises paving the way for core expansion.

Anonymous
1 month ago

^^keep checkin’ those Google Maps for your Miami knowledge. We that actually live/work here have no clue, so do educate us about Miami some more.

Anonymous
1 month ago

We can always tell when non-residents are posting!

Anonymous
1 month ago

La gente inventando con el “uptown.” There is no uptown, there’s an Upper East Side.

Anonymous
1 month ago

We need single family homes on this area

Linda
1 month ago

There are so many blocks of beautiful historical single family homes – I’d rather we keep the single family homes in this area above the core and expand the high rises west along the river.

Anonymous
1 month ago

Make the single-family homes between Miami Avenue and Biscayne Boulevard, south of Northeast 28th Street and north of 26th Terrace, a historic district. Allow the owners to sell their air rights, and the beautiful old pre-war homes can be restored. It would be like Astor Street in Chicago, surrounded by vertical development.

Anonimo
1 month ago

Go just a few blocks west if you want lower density. Miami desperately needs more housing units and single family homes are the least efficient and most expensive way to achieve that.