Dewatering Application Filed For 38-Story Edgewater Construction Site

A dewatering application was filed yesterday for the 2900 Terrace site in Edgewater.

2900 Terrace is planned as a 38-story luxury rental building.

It will include 324 apartments that will be “oversized,” with large walk in closets and great rooms. Most residences will also have a study or den.

There will also be 8,000 square feet of full service restaurant, 8,000 square feet of retail, and over 500 parking spaces.

Multiple construction permits are now in process with Miami’s Building Department, including a site work permit, tree permit, and master construction permit.

Oak Row Equities and LNDMRK are the developers.


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Downtowner
16 days ago

Love the marketing ploy of “fading out” surrounding buildings to show more of the bay in the background. If only it were possible to actually see through those structures.

Luxury when unnecessary
16 days ago

It allows them to brand it as “luxury” so they can charge more. I get building luxury apartments on the water but Miami needs more housing that working professionals can afford. The lacking inventory for the missing middle is a real problem and western Edgewater could be a place to build it but instead developers opt to brand as luxury. At least it’s in-fill in a neighborhood that needs it

The Golden Anchor in Miami Real Estate
16 days ago

Miami’s luxury sector should follow its geography, not fight it. If you look at the map, the city naturally forms the shape of an anchor ⚓️. The left base stretches into South Miami and Coconut Grove—historic, rooted neighborhoods that provide cultural depth and residential strength. The Miami River runs like the shaft of the anchor, connecting these southern neighborhoods up through the heart of downtown—where transit, commerce, and community converge.

From there, the arms extend north into Edgewater and North Miami, where growth continues to spread. At the top, Miami International Airport and the new arena form the city’s crown. To the west, Coral Gables offers a historic and economic counterbalance to Hialeah.

This leaves plenty of pockets for affordable development, anchored by solid sustainment properties that support one another in keeping up common grounds.

Anonymous
16 days ago

It also creates an infinity ♾️ flow which is better for traffic, than this model:

↕️

Anon
16 days ago

The GPT is so annoying.

Anonymous
16 days ago

You’re not going to see missing middle housing minutes from downtown and the bay, period.

Anonymous
16 days ago

That’s the value anchor!

Anonymous
16 days ago

You’re not going to see missing middle housing minutes from downtown and the bay, period.

Anonymous
16 days ago

You’re not going to see missing middle housing minutes from downtown and the bay, period.

John Duns Scotus
15 days ago

I highly recommend following Jay Parsons.
He has studied this extensively.

All “working professionals” are not created equally. Some upscale their value, some bitch and complain in blog comment sections.

The valuable “working professionals” who live in affordable apartments, will move up when a building like this is completed in Edgewater. They will vacate their apartment in Little Havana, or Little Haiti, or other little places.

This opens up a spot for the “working professional” that just isn’t as good as the “working professional” who makes great choices and provides value.

Don’t hate the producer, hate that you fail to provide value in the game.

Eye in the Sky
14 days ago

I highly recommend following Alan Parsons

Nick
16 days ago

I feel like every other day there is a development breaking ground or being announced.

Anonymous
16 days ago

The podium needs work, Parts of the lower floor asymmetrical with the upper floor look cheap and the cladding is akin to a shipping container.