Developer Plans 100 Residential Units At 2200 Brickell

A residential project with 100 units is being planned at 2200 Brickell Avenue, according to a new utilities agreement.

2200 Brickell Holding LLC agreed to a deal with Miami-Dade’s Water and Sewer Department to supply utilities for the new project, with the agreement completed in mid-October.

According to the agreement, 2200 Brickell will include:

  • 100 apartments
  • 2,790 square feet of gym

David Arditi signed the agreement on behalf of the LLC.

A demolition permit to clear the site was issued in August. There does not yet appear to be a construction permit pending for the new building.

 

(photo: place projects)

35 Comments
most voted
newest oldest
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
James
4 months ago

Demolition has already started.

Anonymous
4 months ago

Something classy and classical to fit with South Brickell, please. We don’t need anymore McModern car battery architecture.

Anonymous
4 months ago

Nah, all this city needs is a SIM CITY player like you to tell developers how they should build things.

Anonymous
4 months ago

The people voicing their valuable insight are the ones buying and living in these areas, not developers, so please show respect and gratitude and give people what they want. Of course developers have valuable insight too but this is an opportunity to understand what residents want to see develop and create a better product.

Anonymous
4 months ago

Ageee I’d love to see some modern Mediterranean builds, mostly modern futurism like in Central Brickell with some design nods to the classic Mediterranean style on ground level facades, roof peak shapes, and decorative materials.

Anonymous
4 months ago

Yesss. Time to clean up the west side of Brickell Ave. Lots of work to be done on that front.

Anonymous
4 months ago

Especially resurfaced roads, atmospheric lighting, landscaping, careless streets, brick sidewalks and traffic lights/stop signs. It doesn’t flood here and as much. It’s also the welcome point to Brickell, so it should be polished up to its full potential.

Anonymous
4 months ago

Add uplifting sculptures and monuments to the streets.

Anonymous
4 months ago

“careless streets, brick sidewalks and traffic lights/stop signs”

Um, if you’re going to build “carless (I believe that’s what he really meant) streets,” then why would it makes sense to put traffic lights and stop signs there?

Anonymous
4 months ago

Thanks for understanding my typo.

Well to clarify, some streets in between blocks should have car-less pedestrian ways. This could be integrated into development plans in between blocks, like in the One Southside Park plan. Or block off an underutilized street.

The main avenues need traffic lights or stop signs, right now it’s a free for all and creates gridlock and accidents. People always try to cross traffic intersections to go the opposite direction of the flow and get caught in the middle median.

Slim Shady
4 months ago

WTF?
Have you ever walked from 15th Street to 26th Street on Brickell Ave??

Anonymous
4 months ago

Yes I could be wrong. It is quiet but it’s between I-95 and US1, there’s a few businesses there, a trolley stop and walking distance to a metro. It will probably always be less dense but maybe a few ground level village-style boutiques could improve the area.

Slim Shady
4 months ago

Not true.
Both Us1 and I95 are the same thing about 3 blocks west of the subject site

Anonymous
4 months ago

With respect, what you said is not true. Check out a map. US1 merges into I95 a little further south.

There’s a little pocket here for village-style planned development.

Anonymous
4 months ago

I’d love to see the entire city integrated into canopy walkways like in the City Centre – so much nicer a walk without dealing with street traffic.

Azarius
4 months ago

The whole west side of Brickell Ave needs to be densified

Anonymous
4 months ago

It can be densified with mid-rises maximum of 10 floors, which will create a more appealing border community around the dense central area on Brickell Ave. Downtown is really going to become ultra dense so these areas need to be moderately dense low-midrise condo communities.

Anonymous
4 months ago

Moderately densified, with midrise, because it is the outer border of the City. “Make Way for Mid-Rise: How to build more homes in walkable, transit-connected neighbourhoods” https://www.jstor.org/stable/resrep00235#metadata_info_tab_contents

Anonymous
4 months ago

They should add 5 story garage-less townhomes with ground floor retail, like they have in the West Village. The West Village is one of the most coveted parts of NYC because of it’s low-rise community feel in the middle of Manhattan. Like the West Village, we do not need garages in West Brickell because it is so walkable. West Brickell can be like the West Village – bring in a village vibe to make Brickell more interesting.

Brooklyn
4 months ago

The zoning here is limited to 5 stories and zero ground floor retail.

Anonymous
4 months ago

Change the zoning, add retail so people can have convenient places to walk and more foot traffic from Brickell. It’s so underutilized now – it doesn’t have to be busy with parking lots but add some cool gyms, cafes and stores. Keep it low, 5 stories.

Slim Shady
4 months ago

Take a moment to walk on Brickell Avenue. Specifically, from 1300 Bruckell Avenue to 2200 Brickell Avenue (subject property).
What you will notice is that the retail is more and more unsustainable for the business owner as you travel.

The guy who thinks 2200 Brickell Ave is West Brickell, or anyone who thinks Townhouses with retail below is a good idea has never performed this simple walking the market excercise.

Slim Shady
4 months ago

This property is on the WEST side of BRICKELL Avenue.
Not in the West Brickell neighborhood.

mods vs. rockers
4 months ago

i love all the sim city playas here……wish away before the density ho developers come in…

Winnie
4 months ago

Miami does not have the subway system NYC has. Downtown Dadeland is as close to what you suggest as possible here and has underground garages. So close to the Bay, that is very likely out of the question. The Hilton in Coconut Grove found out how difficult it was to dig close to the water. Then you also run the risk of salt water intrusion causing spalling in the foundation. We don’t need a repeat of Surfside!

Anonymous
4 months ago

More like Maricle Mile in Coral Gables. We don’t need tons of parking and traffic, just local pedestrian commuters and few street parking.

Mad Dash
4 months ago

TOTALLY!!!!!

Anonymous
4 months ago

Don’t waste this valuable location and economic and cultural opportunity with dense basic high rises.

Anonymous
4 months ago

Revitalize it, not rapidly densify it. Give it a face lift and make better use of the land with quality developments where people can walk around – it’s already dense. Remember quality over quantity is key as Brickell and Miami grows for a sustainable brighter future.

Anonymous
4 months ago

Make it like Rosemary Square in West Palm! Love that vibe and it’s bringing in more business and high rises around it. People need a less dense pocket in the center of all these high rises to breath and grow.

Anonymous
4 months ago

It needs to be mixed use with retail on the ground floor – come one Miami Dade leadership. Last thing we need is a cluster of condos with nothing walkable nearby.

Annonymous
4 months ago

When the almost 9 acres 2451 Brickell on the Bay Sells you will see the property developed into the 🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟Star Jewel of Brickell.

Se me paró
4 months ago

1960’s architecture

Anonymous
4 months ago

Yeah, that’s the old property to be demolished.

Anonymous
4 months ago

Thank goodness, for something having Brickell in its name, this place looks like a dump