River Tower Tops Off At 54 Stories, Becoming Miami’s Westernmost 600 Footer

Chetrit Group’s first 54-story tower at The River District in Brickell has topped off, becoming the westernmost 600-foot tower in Miami.

A top off ceremony was held at the Miami River Tower Phase 1 construction site yesterday, according to engineer JALRW.

It took just 14 months from the start of vertical construction to top off. A foundation pour took place in June 2022.

Other foundation pours that took place that same month included the 53-story Miami World Tower (already topped off), Legacy Miami Worldcenter, and Caoba Miami Worlecenter phase 2.

According to an FAA approval letter issued in 2021, the tallest permanent point planned at Miami River Tower Phase 1 is 640 feet above ground, or 645 feet above sea level. Temporary construction cranes are approved at 760 feet above ground.

The newly topped off tower will have 632 apartments. The first phase under construction also includes retail space, and a riverfront promenade open to the public.

There are multiple other phases planned at the development, which is known as The River District. Eventually, Chetrit plans to build 4 million square feet of new development on the property. That includes about 1,600 residences, Class A office space, and 30,000 square feet of retail.

David Grutman of Groot Hospitality is partnering at The River District to provide restaurant and nightlife venues.

Kobi Karp is the architect.

G.T. McDonald is the contractor.

 

(image: JORG)
(images: Kobi Karp)

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Anonymously
1 month ago

There’s about 10 more sleek designed buildings, some over 600 ft, coming all around here… this area is going to be incredibly vibrant, especially being in Brickell connected to all the existing stunners!

Miami Winning!
1 month ago

You got to see this clip at ground level to really understand the enormous impact this masterplanned area will have on the Brickell in the near future. Check out all the curves and grand circle!

https://www.instagram.com/reel/CuscKsbgBw6/?igshid=MTc4MmM1YmI2Ng==

bob art guy
1 month ago

Beautiful Building. Nice clean white facade, greenish windows and ovoid shape. Way to go !!!!

Anonymous
1 month ago

So fast and incredible quality!!! Wow! This part of Brickell is booming. miami’s new real estate development frontier!

Anon
1 month ago

There is no shortage of onlyfans creators to fill them all up!

Anon2
1 month ago

More like executives and lawyers working in the new grade A office towers a few blocks away.

MM305
1 month ago

I’m not sure lawyers are in downtown and brickell anymore. I’ve heard that downtown Coral Gables is the choice location. Ackerman and some white shoes top 100 law firms have moved in, but most of the lawyers I know have moved out because you do all hearings via Zoom these days. So there is no urgency to be close to the courthouse now.

Anonymous
1 month ago

Coral Gables is a bland breeze-less beige cookie cutter enclave, where English-speakers have difficulty adjusting. The big global firms and attorneys want to be in Brickell.

Anonymous
1 month ago

According to who? Where did you get your data?

MM305
1 month ago

beige and bland, where English speakers have difficulty adjuster? WOW, NYC bubble boy. 90% of Miami is Latino, so you’re one of the few people that has trouble adjusting. I mean who says that in a Latino Majority City that you just moved to? You’re basically telling people they’re dumb for speaking a second language.

Anonymous
1 month ago

I share an appreciation for multilingualism and Latino culture. However, certain areas of Coral Gables lack English proficiency. I believe English-speaking places in Miami offer greater growth opportunities and market reach. In Brickell, there’s a diverse population—65% Hispanic, 35% white—highlighting the need to acknowledge diversity within these groups. It’s important to recognize that categorizing people as simply Hispanic or white is an oversimplification, as it doesn’t account for the existence of white and black Hispanics or white individuals from various global origins, including the Middle East. Brickell’s emphasis on English conversations promotes inclusivity and a welcoming atmosphere.

Anonymous
1 month ago

Importantly, Spanish-speaking regions in Miami possess significant growth potential and contribute greatly to the identities, histories, and futures of our cities. I admire the abundant cultural diversity in Miami, evident in its multitude of languages. By uniting continents and cultures, bridging the Americas, Miami evolves into a vibrant, multilingual city that flourishes with influences from both Spanish and English languages.

Lenny
1 month ago

Sentence #1 – Foolish and incorrect.
Sentence #2 – Right on!

50%…..you get an A for Effort!

Lenny
1 month ago

You know the different types of lawyers.

The last lease that I did for a law firm was for 50,000+ sq ft on Brickell (Four Seasons), and they will be there for another 10 years with two 10 year options to renew.

Berger Singerman and Bilzin Sumberg won’t be leaving 1450 Brickell anytime soon either.

Gunster Yoakley is entrenched at 600 Brickell. Stern Weaver isn’t leaving.

Kirkland & Ellis is a new to market Chicago firm that leased 115,000 sq ft in 830 Brickell. (they are subleasing some)

The point is that the biggest and best international law firms are located near the banks and businesses.

Yes. Coral Gables is great too, but you won’t see many law firms moving from Brickell, the CBD, Chicago, or New York and taking over 115k sq ft (or 50k+ sq ft for that matter).

MM305
1 month ago

There aren’t many 115k sqft buildings in Coral Gables (or even 40k ones), that’s the allure. And the only names you mentioned are white shoes law firms that I stated formerly. These are not the majority of lawyers in Miami Dade County, it is a mere 10% of the law community. I know you see these big names and like to think that’s the entire Law Community, and that’s what matter, but nothing could be further from the truth, they are the minority of the Law Community.

MM305
1 month ago

But I def agree it is not mostly only fans models – a lot of finance and investment firms have moved into brickell

Lenny
1 month ago

“have moved into Brickell” ???
History did not begin the day you arrived.

My first finance job was in Brickell for the 3rd biggest firm on Wall Street.
The #1 biggest firm on Wall Street was two floors above in the same building.
By the late 1990’s, Brickell Avenue had the second highest concentration of International Banks/deposits. Second only to Manhattan.

Finance/Investment firms existed on Brickell Avenue before you did…..and MosDef before OnlyFans existed.

MM305
1 month ago

Lenny, calm down, I am from Miami born and raised. Thats why my name is MM305. But you would also admit that many finance and investment firms have moved into Brickell since 2008. Maybe there were some there before hand, but there are many more there now. SO TAKE IT EASY.

Anon
1 month ago

This is the most iconic building in the skyline when you enter Miami, it’s the focal point of the skyline now, like a beacon that will draw in all kinds of new high end commercial and residential activity 🗽

Anonymous
1 month ago

Can’t wait to see the spire structure on top! Going to get even taller

Anonimato
1 month ago

What spire?!

Anonymous
1 month ago

This is the best looking building coming into Miami. Very impressive statement tower on the river!

Anon
1 month ago

So much more attractive than One Brickell City Center! May even be the best looking building going up IN THE WORLD!!!!!

Cbb
1 month ago

That’s a massive stretch. Hold your horses there buddy.

Anon
1 month ago

I’m ridiculing the moron above who thinks this stucco cylinder is more impressive than Waldorf, Aston Martin, Villa, etc

Anonymous
1 month ago

Waldorf is my least favorite design, imbalanced and blocky, but it’s not in Brickell at least.

Anonymous
1 month ago

Stucco cylinder > stacked boxes any day.

Anonymous
1 month ago

I love One Brickell City Centre but it’s not up yet. More beauties like this one coming to Brickell!

Miami Winning!
1 month ago

Check out how wide and open the riverfront is going to be!!! It’s going to look 10x better than Ft Lauderdale’s river front.

Miami Winning!
1 month ago

🎉 🥂Incredible victory, for Chetrit, JALRW, and Miami. Time to celebrate! 🎉 🍾

Azarius
1 month ago

This project will tie the whole river together, really enhancing the pedestrian experience and making Miami more beautiful

The Dude
1 month ago

the rug man, it really tied the room together

Lenny
1 month ago

Well….that’s just your opinion man.

Walter Sobchak
1 month ago

Donny, you are out of your element…

Anon
1 month ago

The WHOLE river!? Relax. It will “ tie together” one small section. It will be decades before Miami sees a completed riverwalk.

Anonymous
1 month ago

t will serve as an anchor for the entire riverfront, connecting the east and west. This upcoming expansive public entertainment area in Brickell is poised to be stunning, further enhancing the already remarkable spaces in the area.

Anon
1 month ago

You can downvote as much as you want, doesn’t change the fact that this will not in fact tie together the entirety of the Miami river. Sorry.

Lenny
1 month ago

What does “tie together the entirety of the Miami river [sic]” mean?
Exactly.

Anonymous
1 month ago

Like be a catalyst for all those abandoned warehouses to get turned around like Hudson Yards and connect the riverwalk to the Underline with amazing art, bike paths, and public space

MM305
1 month ago

The miami river commission was created basically to prevent exactly that from happening. So I don’t see your idea working down here when it comes to that kind of gentrification.

Anonymous
1 month ago

The Miami River Commission is obsolete, and their influence is nonexistent anymore; and the public interest is undeniably strong and will wipe the Miami River Commission off the map. The name of the commission is bogus, because they are basically the ANTI-MIAMI river commision and must be removed IMMEDIATELY, due to their harm on our city.

Anonymous
1 month ago

Retraction (delete) – based on unverified speculative comment about commission actions.

Lenny
1 month ago

This is spoken by someone who has never attended on single Miami River Commission Meeting.

If you are a lazy parasite, you sit on your ass and type complaints about strong men and strong woman who actually get off of their ass to make Miami a better place.

The reason why the Miami River has been developing the way it has is because very smart, charitable, and community oriented people have been working on the MRC for decades to bring you what you see today.

Newsflash: The Miami River Commission meetings are open to the public. The MRC is loaded up with VERY passionate people. Some representing developers, some rep the Marine Industry, some hug a lot of trees, and some go berzerko over storm water drainage. One thing that is certain, is that they are all very smart, passionate, and they dedicate their time to the community.

Join one of the public meetings. Unless, you are needed with your virtual “colleagues” on a Call of Duty mission.

Miami River Duties
1 month ago

I just went through the commission’s minutes, and honestly, I’m not just unimpressed, I’m downright frustrated that this whole commission even exists. First off, can you believe that only one board member bothers to show up to talk about storm drainage? Like, come on, that should be a top priority!

Then there’s this guy who’s all about getting more canopy trees in his area, which is actually a good idea. But seriously, the next person starts complaining about noise and light issues. I mean, really? If you can’t handle city life, maybe living in the city isn’t for you.

And don’t even get me started on those boat yards. They get awards, and now it seems like they just want to control the whole market and rake in the profits. It feels like a bunch of pay-to-play nonsense that’s not doing anything to actually improve the river for regular folks and those of us who actually call Miami home.

On a brighter note, I’m so darn thankful that this part of the river is finally going to thrive. It’s about time! I hope other areas catch on and realize how much better it can make our city.

Lenny
1 month ago

I congratulate you for “going through the minutes”. What an effort.

Most thinking people will read your post:
Wait; this cat is bitching about people not showing up…but where was he?? Did he show up?
Answer: NO.

Reading your post in the comments of The Next Miami about how you “read something” is disconcerting to me.

What is horrible is that you spent SO MANY KEYSTROKES bitching when you could have been there.

YOU could have been important. (or at least had a voice)

YOU could have made an impact.

YOU could put your “money where your mouth is” and made difference.

YOU failed. Again.

Will you be there at the September meeting?

It would be so refreshing to know that you are not afraid to walk into the realm of people who think.

Hold Miami River Commission Accountable
1 month ago

INCORRECT. The primary objective of the Miami River Commission is to enhance and develop vibrant, mixed-use Grade A residential and commercial areas along the river stretch from Brickell to Miami Springs. Its mission is in no way aimed at maintaining impoverishment or abandonment. Such a notion is baseless. Notably, the commission showcases the Aston Martin building on its official website. ***NOTICE*** Any actions or activities inconsistent with its fundamental mission should be reevaluated, and if necessary, the commission’s existence reconsidered.

Lenny
1 month ago

Does ANYONE believe this guy??? https://miamirivercommission.org/

Clearly, you have never walked into the room with the people here. These meetings are led by incredible people who do excellent work to balance the interests of many stakeholders.

The Mission of the MRC is as follows:

*To act as the official coordinating clearinghouse for all public policy and projects related to the Miami River

*To develop coordinated plans, priorities, programs, projects, and budgets that might substantially improve the river area

*To act as the principal advocate and watchdog to ensure that river projects are funded and implemented in a proper and timely manner

*To unite all governmental agencies, businesses, and residents in the area on river issues

For those smart enough to make positive community contributions, take a look at the minute from the last MRC meeting and decide for yourself if it works for you. https://miamirivercommission.org/Agenda07.10.2023.html

Whining like a daisy is easy. Leadership is not easy.

Name*
1 month ago

The only stakeholders should be the people of Miami. MM395 have us the insight that the commission is there to serve an industry and keep the river from flourishing for the people. That’s my main concern. You can ignore it and kiss some donors behind or do what is right for Miami and push forward with improved river zoning and plans.

Keeping Em
1 month ago

Is a “clearinghouse” a way of describing a pay-to-play agency with a hodgepodge of interests jockeying for position?

Lenny
1 month ago

Ummm…..what?

Notice to Miami River Commission
1 month ago

The Miami River Commission was founded with a clear objective: to bring lively, pedestrian-friendly areas complete with bike paths and top-tier public/private developments to the highly valuable and ecologically unique Miami River. This overarching aim seeks to transform the riverfront into a dynamic mixed-use zone, blending residential and commercial elements, akin to what’s observed in leading global cities and forward-moving urban hubs like Fort Lauderdale. If the commission falls short of honoring this mission, it demands rigorous restructuring or, if absolutely necessary, the consideration of abolishment.

MM305
1 month ago

What are you talking about? Their main aim is to keep the area a working river. Look it up. They encourage marine activity on the river, not retail and residential. If they wanted to they could have recommended that a decade ago, but they have deemed that D1,2,3 zoning on the river is for marine use ONLY – no residences. The reason the river is going to have residential is because of the “Live Local Act” from Desantis that allows developers to bypass the city and county to build based on the underlying zoning being commercial or industrial. D1,2,3 is marine commercial so it qualifies for the live local act. on 4th ave if they just change the zoning without upzoning to allow for commercial units it will have essentially the same effect. Right now most of 4th ave on the river is T4R – meaning it is not qualified for the live local act. PLEASE DO MORE RESEARCH on the Miami River Commission. You can attend a meeting and see what I’m saying.

New Miami River Alliance
1 month ago

Perhaps there’s a need for reform here. The riverfront, left abandoned and overlooked, seems to have become the opposite of a functional river space. The river walk appears to be dysfunctional, and their apparent lack of awareness about what’s working and what isn’t is frustrating. An industrialized river isn’t conducive to marine life, and their motives seem questionable. Developments like these suggest that the Miami River Commission is starting to recognize the flaws in their approach and the direction they should take to transform Miami into a world-class city. I’m committed to seeing the Miami riverfront evolve into a beautiful space for leisure, biking, work, and living, rather than being controlled by a group with dubious intentions.

Anonymous
1 month ago

Who are you to accuse the established marine industry of having “dubious intyentions”? Your own intentions seem quite dubious given your chatbot-esque prose.

Name*
1 month ago

Well this industry clearly isn’t making Miami a better place to live if it’s blocking waterfront river communities and insisting our bridges go up every 15 minutes. Seems like it’s only interested in its own profit and not adjusting its operations and policies to better and beautify our city. It would be fine if it was on the outskirts of the city but it cuts right through the center.

Anonymous
1 month ago

^^the marine industry has paid for the rights to use that land for marine industry functions. The marine industry also employs many people. You are a thinly veiled developer shill who is angling for your own cause.

Anonymous
1 month ago

I’m just a person who lives in and represents the people of Miami. From what I’ve observed 90% or the vast majority of the people rely on the Miami River becoming a more beautiful place to live, shop eat and experience, nobody is blocking marine industry but they could shift operations or explore ways to operate without blocking beautification and growth, or even investing in new public spaces on the river walk – how about that harmonious idea?

Lenny
1 month ago

How would you know?

Please scroll up. You can find The Next Miami has posted information that may totally discount your comments as ignorant and false.

You see….the renderings above are of a billion dollar plus development on the Miami River.

OPPOSITE of “abandoned and overlooked”.

Just because you are too lazy or can’t figure out the signs that a 3rd grader can figure out does not mean that the Nationally Recognized Miami River Greenway is dysfunctional. Look deep inside…sue you parents if you have to…but the Miami Rive is not dysfunctional, the development is robust, and the Miami River Commission is serving an exceptional purpose.

If you had been an adult for more than 10 years, took the time to learn history, or used Google Earth and the time travel feature, you’d notice extraordinary progress since the MRC was first chartered.

Name*
1 month ago

I argued that MM305 was wrong and this development is a city the Commission is doing good work. But improvements further in the river needs to be next!

Lenny
1 month ago

True.
Attending a meeting requires minimal effort.

Lost in Translation?
1 month ago

A working river is a “thriving” river (has nothing to do with class)

Lenny
1 month ago

You have no idea what you are talking about. (read the post above about the mission of the MRC)

You have no idea of how the world works.

It’s okay.

You have not been adulting for long: if ever.

Adults are no longer on their parents’ health insurance policies.
Adults probably liked their hippy professors but understand that “cars need to be on the road”.

Anon
1 month ago

It’s not that cars don’t have a place on the road; however, we also need well-defined and improved areas for pedestrians. There’s room for both in Miami, friends.

Lenny
1 month ago

That sounds non specific enough for a loving mother to tell you that you are smart, or a public school teacher to give you an A and tell you that you can be anything that you want to be.

Anon
1 month ago

It’s happening right now, faster than any other area in Miami. This is the new spot to invest for rapid growth potential.

MM305
1 month ago

If they include the other side of I95 on the river then yes, but as of right now its incomplete to say the least. They don’t even allow shops or offices in Jose Marti as it is. The only food and shopping in the area is going to in a 1Bn dollar development. Not sure how that’s going to enhance things for the people in East Little Havana who can’t afford that kind of retail and food services.

Anonymous
1 month ago

There is no place known as East Little Havana. The area is referred to as Riverside and is expected to receive commercial zoning. Little Havana is situated farther west, near Calle Ocho, Domino Park, and the Marlins Stadium, and already encompasses a broad region of underdeveloped land.

*NAME*
1 month ago

OK naming police…. Little Havana is a place and there’s an eastern section, which is east of the west section. All of this is zoned commercial, as Miami uses a transactional zoning code. The heart of Little Havana is south and west of Riverside.

Anonymous
1 month ago

Apparently a low-rise, but dense area without inadequate infrastructure or quality transit like a Metrorail extension or streetcards is “underdeveloped.” Arbitrarily upzoning it will mean more boxes that are two-fifths parking pedestal.

Anon
1 month ago

You can easily walk or bike to the Brickell Station and other stations on the opposite side of the river, indicating that the infrastructure is more developed compared to above downtown. Additionally, there’s a desire for a metro extension to Marlin Stadium. But that’s much further west, all around Martí park in Riverside has the infrastructure in place.

Anonymous
1 month ago

you can not easily walk or bike to the Brickell station from Jose Marti Park… you have to cross under I95, then go south and across 7th, then across 8th then east across Miami Ave. I’m not even counting the smaller streets. That’s a lot of road lanes to cross to get to the metro less than half a mile away in 90-degree heat with homeless people all over the underpass.

Anonymous
1 month ago

Martí Park stands as a prime exemplar of a 15-minute walkable zone, providing effortless access to nearby destinations while mirroring the pedestrian culture akin to Manhattan. Reinforcing this concept, a pleasant 15-minute waterfront stroll via the Underline pathway leads to Brickell Station, bolstering the vibrancy of the urban core. The limited homeless presence, likely stemming from ongoing construction, is expected to relocate due to the area’s escalating property value. In contrast, the larger Downtown Overtown Overpass park underscores bridge-area beautification potential. Regrettably, the lack of park funding in this endeavor may attract a homeless population, setting it apart from Martí Park. Leveraging its smaller size, waterfront appeal, and promising trajectory, Martí Park is poised to thrive swiftly.

Ana
1 month ago

dude, I live there, nothing you’re saying is true. Its a long walk to get to the metro from Jose Marti, and not safe walk for a woman. Simply getting to Publix takes 15 minutes and thats right under the I95 over pass. Your 15 minute NYC nonsense is grating like nails on a chalkboard.

Anon
1 month ago

Jose Martí Park is next to Publix, like 1 minute away, maybe you live much further west in little Havana.

Lenny
1 month ago

Read it again.
Then ask the moderator to delete the post.

Anon
1 month ago

It’s not an over pass it’s a BRIDGE because it goes above water. The “overpass” is that big thing being built over downtown.

Anonymous
1 month ago

He is right. I live by Martí Park too and walk to brickell station in 15 minutes. It’s a nice walk and getting a lot bette lately.

Anonymous
1 month ago

That’s because your leaders failed you and haven’t updated the streetscapes west of I95 in 100 years. We are going to help with that!

Sending Love to Ana
1 month ago

Ana I promise you will feel safe when this project is done and if we embrace more projects like this, it’s a five-star master planned area.

Solution
1 month ago

We can build a quiet sleek electric street car shuttle from Marlins Stadium to Brickell Station, like they have in other coastal cities, right over the underutilized lackluster FDOT parking lot.

Lenny
1 month ago

This is ChatGPT 1.0

No way these are thoughts from a human allowed to drool near a computer

Anonymous
1 month ago

Ok Chris Christie.

Rebuild Riverside!
1 month ago

It’s underdeveloped because of the vacant lots and boarded up buildings that look like they are going to blow over the next time a hurricane hits. Rebuild Riverside!

Anonymous
1 month ago

Well at least you’re not calling it West Brickell. “East” Little Havana/Riverside, western portions of Southside, and Conch Hill IS the original area of what first become known as Little Havana.

Anon
1 month ago

It’s simple, no need for superfluous and unimaginative directional labels that unnecessarily divide neighborhoods. Little Havana to Riverside to Brickell.

MM305
1 month ago

look, I’m just saying it cause there is no hope for the 4th Ave area of Jose Marti… you can’t build offices, food, or retail there. It needs an upzoning so badly and it is not a cohesive area at all. You have one side with billion dollar developments and the other is a poor food desert that sits at 3 feet above sea level. You might want taller buildings and more services there to prevent flooding and enhance nutrition. The people that live on 4th ave are not rich, they aren’t Brickell people. Why people are opposed?

Anonymous
1 month ago

I agree! I have a strong feeling the coding are waiting for 2nd and 3rd Avenues to take off and 4th Avenue is next. But it’s only a short matter of time, so let’s get planning and envision it all connecting with high value property and soaring tall skyscrapers, because it certainly will soon.

Anonymous
1 month ago

Edgwater is closer to sea level than here. It’s 15 feet higher above sea level than East Brickell. The low sea level is a false rumor. Look it up!

Ana
1 month ago

Its not a false rumor… I live next to Jose Marti, its way lower than the rest of Little Havana and sits next to the river. That’s not a lie. you even go down a hill from 7th street to get to Jose Marti Park… which begs the question – HAVE YOU EVER BEEN THERE?

Anonymous
1 month ago

Rivers channel water and don’t flood like the bay. I’ve been living by the river my entire life.

Anonymous
1 month ago

Maybe it needs updated drainage, like everywhere in Miami, and the improper coding has kept it from improving but that is changing

Anonymous
1 month ago

Yes I have been there – all around jose Martí park is 15 feet just like the western side of Brickell, highest elevations in the city, further west goes down to same sea level as East brickell. High rises are more suitable in areas like this, not single story homes that can’t afford the maintenance costs.

MM305
1 month ago

Well I agree its not suitable for single-family houses, but its low land and is lower than the rest of Little Havna like ANA said. Just walk there from 7th Street.

I Believe In Science
1 month ago

I conducted a study on current climate change trends and discovered that it would take about 1000 years for submersion to occur. However, we currently have the opportunity to construct a river ecology that prevents water from entering. The unique advantage of the river’s channeling capabilities, in contrast to the bay, along with its equivalent sea level to the bay’s billion-dollar projects, makes it an ideal location for intervention. Additionally, the study indicates that it would take approximately 200 years for the river’s edge to experience minor expansion. This extended timeline provides an opportunity for proactive planning and implementation of strategies to manage and mitigate the potential impacts. By taking action now, we can safeguard Riverside, raise barriers, and establish new storm surge systems. This approach wouldn’t just protect Riverside but also the entire city of Miami. It’s crucial to allocate our resources and investments here, as without fortifying this area against flooding, Miami as a whole is at risk of being submerged.

Lenny
1 month ago

Answer is no.

He’s never been there, he’s never walked the Miami River Greenway, he’s never been to the open to the public meetings that “need reform”.

Can’t believe that I keep posting with this guy and all his parallel accounts that say equally unintelligible things.

Name*
1 month ago

Parallel accounts? You’re one to talk Bruno! I can tell by your tone that you’re the one with the parallel accounts and project more than an old gramophone.

Name*
1 month ago

Yes I’ve been on the greenway is a disjointed excuse for a river walk but the beautiful River District will change that. I’m suggesting the City direct further investment to build on this momentum and revamp the greenway like the Underline and connect them.

Anonymous
1 month ago

I’m a “brickell person” and I live here. We cannot be ignored. Everyone here wants new developments and improvements.

Lenny
1 month ago

Food desert? “Prevent flooding” AND “enhance nutrition.”

The arrogance is amazing.

MM305 is never correct, yet never uncertain.

MM305
1 month ago

Just walk around 4th ave on Jose Marti, you will see it is situation much lower than the rest of Brickell or Little Havana. The average elevation on 4th ave is 3ft above sea level. You can look it up. And it is a food desert, there is no where to eat other than publix

Anonymous
1 month ago

Well we need to elevate it and add food spots! Why is the City so behind the times.

Anonymous
1 month ago

expected upzoning!?!? When is that happening, they tried that six years ago and it was thwarted by the same people on here asking for more “walkable” areas. It’s insane the kind of hypocrisy we hear from tourists trying to influence our city to be more like their failing cities that they fled from.

Anonymous
1 month ago

It’s all a plot from the uptown people, trying to funnel the core more north where there is no infrastructure. We are recognizing this and the high value Riverside holds being in the central core of Miamis urban environment.

New Riverside
1 month ago

This is the false narrative spread in Little Havana to maintain its impoverished and neglected state, while channeling wealth to the rest of Miami. It’s crucial for this perspective to change. Our goal is to introduce positive elements from renowned global cities, such as a riverfront area, connecting Brickell to the vibrant culture of Little Havana. We aim to create a new public space named Riverside, fostering community enjoyment. This plan also emphasizes maintaining a concentrated and accessible core, in contrast to a sprawling area plagued by unmanageable traffic.

Anonymous
1 month ago

“our”? “we”? How many people do you think you speak for? Do tell…

Name*
1 month ago

I speak for the goodness of all.

Anon
1 month ago

The same people from Edgewater and north of downtown calling for “walkable neighborhoods” are being hypocritical, when we have so many walkable areas in the Miami core, like this area, and all along our expansive Metro system where they can invest and move to with new RTZ zoning.

Anon
1 month ago

There’s a whole group of Brickell onlyfans creators/realtors that just spout factually incorrect nonsense – just ignore them

Lenny
1 month ago

This terribly ill-informed comment wants me to rent a boat and go to Kiki’s this weekend..or just walk to Garcias.

Lenny
1 month ago

Who is they?

EJS
1 month ago

I’m afraid they might not connect this devt’s extension of the Riverwalk to go under the bridge to the Riverwalk in front of Latitude and NeoVertika. Fingers crossed it gets connected.

Anonymous
1 month ago

It will connect! The new ICONIC dream hotel (best spot in NYC) is coming just across river from Marti Park. Going to be most vibrant part of the city next to BCC and Mary Brickell Village.

Lenny
1 month ago

Don’t be afraid.

Anonymous
1 month ago

Starting to look like the Chicago river in this part of Brickell!

Anonymous
1 month ago

Too bad we don’t have a Wrigley Building or Tribune Tower. Instead we get Related Group/Arquitectonica boxes and blobs.

Anon
1 month ago

And stucco cylinders that people gush over

Anon
1 month ago

You’re delusional

Aqui Estoy
1 month ago

This project is awesome.
Now we need more towers west of I95

Anonymous
1 month ago

We need more vacant lots filled east of I-95 with taller towers with better architecture. Show me the east-west Metrorail extension, and then we can talk about going vertical at stops.

Anonymouz
1 month ago

Would you agree about Edgewater and Wynwood? There’s no metro there. At least this area has multiple directions to funnel traffic and isn’t abutted to the bay. West of I95 is prime spot for Super talls with views of the Atlantic Ocean.

Rebuild Riverside!
1 month ago

I agree – East of I95 in Brickell still has room to grow, but we can start planning for Riverside. It will help Brickell attract more quality investors. It’s only a matter of time!

Anonymous
1 month ago

I think we need less quality investors and more mom-and-pop owners. Stop making things so institutional around here.

Anonymous
1 month ago

Even mom and pop investors need functional spaces where people want to go. There are very few mom and pops now so what has your policies told you?

Chris
1 month ago

I’m really looking forward to seeing what David Grutman from Groot does with this awesome spot. The waterfront looks amazing and it’s going to make a big difference for Brickell’s economy. It’s going to completely change this part of Miami into a fantastic place right by the water.

Anonymous
1 month ago

Please tell me how this is making a big difference for Brickell economy 😂😂

Wow
1 month ago

The Miami city core in Brickell is thriving.

Brickell Owner
1 month ago

Can’t wait to see all four towers glistening in the skyline. Going to be a major spot for Brickell and Miami 🤩

Anon
1 month ago

Nothing glistens like stucco!

Anonymous
1 month ago

It’s glass, and these stucco comments are getting to be bizarre. It’s the same construct as all the other glass buildings like Flat Iron and Reach. You’re just repeating talking points from outside competitors who envy it’s beauty, prominence, and speed.I never see this type of comment on all the other towers.

Anon
1 month ago

Because no one pretends all the stucco towers are marvelous pieces of architecture like the thirsty brickellites in this thread are

Anonymous
1 month ago

They look better than the brick or whatever grey material they use to hold glass together in New York and Chicago. Much more inviting and good for the environment!

Anonymous
1 month ago

Sure, downtown Jan. Don’t Marsha Marsha Marsha us.

Anonymous
1 month ago

Best comment!!😂

Morgan
1 month ago

Stands tall, above them all! phenomenal design and project, bravo

Anonymous
1 month ago

Saw the flag and a random palm tree up on the 54th floor yesterday 😂 the building is impressive and so is the restaurant space, can’t wait for this section of riverwalk to be available for us all!

Anon
1 month ago

Give it 20 years maybe a new section will be open

Anon
1 month ago

It’ll be open in a year – this is going to be the center of Miamis new River Front and developers will be expanding from here over the next five years – this is the vision we need in Miami!

Marco
1 month ago

I think you’re mistaking the timeline for Park West and the Downtown Overtown overpass which will be 20-30 years away. The Brickell Riverfront is about to open very soon!!!

Anon
1 month ago

It will be 10 years till Baccarat is totally done. Then you have the lots on both sides of the S Miami Ave bridge which do not even have proposals for them. Then you have Lofty, and then the River District. Not trying to be a hater but realistically you have quite some time to wait for a completed river walk in Brickell, and even longer for the riverwalk as a whole.

Anonymous
1 month ago

Baccarat may come up with a better river plan with all the amazing river front projects going up, but it won’t take ten years. 3 tops.

Anonymous
1 month ago

Baccarap is terrible to begin with. Expect nothing better.

Anon
1 month ago

Bro it’s an 800 foot tower. The riverwalk by Aston Martin is still closed. The riverwalk will be closed until construction is finished.

Lenny
1 month ago

If you were to walk along the river, you will see a consistent path with consistent wayfinding signage, consistent park benches, trash receptacles, safe lighting, and the best practices for community development. For these reasons, Kimley Horn and the Miami River Greenway have won national awards for design, and the development plan.

You would have to leave your computer and do the walking, and if you did, you would see it.

You also may have to put in a little work to understand why the Miami River Greenway has developed in the way it has. The path is a 50ft required setback from the waterfront whenever a property owner seeks a new construction permit for a major modification to the property.

As properties are developed by the private property owners, the Miami River Greenway will transition back to the waterfront in every place where it is currently redirected.

Anon
1 month ago

It’s a commendable start! However, needs a complete revamp, with grand statues, better lighting, wide sidewalks, bike trails — like the amazing Underline, and it needs to connect to the Underline. Look at Fort Lauderdale for inspiration, or Chicago or NYC.

Lenny
1 month ago

The Chicago River has 30ft setbacks.
I lived there. I studied it.

The Miami River Greenway has 50ft setbacks.

When you learn, live, and study, you will learn that when idealism meets reality, the costs gets prohibitive.

There is an incredibly thoughtful balance that one can only appreciate by studying law, history, and planning. Please invest some of your typing time in the comments section to learning about the topics you feel certain. You may find that things in reality are not as you imagine.

Anon
1 month ago

Also look at Paris. Where does the Eiffel Tower sit? On the Seine. Marti Park could be like the lawn leading up to the Eiffel Tower.

Huh
1 month ago

Where is this path you speak of? Brickell essentially has no river walk. Downtown does but it’s not nice. To say the river has an amazing walkway with beautiful lighting etc is simply not true. I think we all want that though. Maybe you’re part of the committee and proud of the work you’re doing. But it’s going to be a long time before we have a connected river walk if it ever happens.

Anonymous
1 month ago

What has the committee done except bill shit us all for so some container carriers can profit off our resources? Reform, and produce quality spaces or stop claiming to be for the people!

Anon
1 month ago

I don’t think it will take a long time with the massive public support demanding that we make the Miami River Walk the number one public/private project.

Fanonomous
1 month ago

Whenever I’m heading to or leaving Brickell, I’m always taken aback by this space that just grabs my attention. It’s easily the best new public spot in Miami since the BCC. I can already imagine how amazing it’s going to be to walk along the riverfront, looking up at the tall buildings and their reflections on the water.

Anon
1 month ago

Yes, it will be beautiful in 2040.

Lenny
1 month ago

The palm tree is not random.
Construction crews lift trees to the top of buildings for the Topping Off Ceremony IF and only IF there were no human casualties in the construction of the building.

The tree represent life and good luck. The Scandinavians would put a tree on top of buildings to appease the tree spirits that had been displaced by the construction.

Anonymous
1 month ago

Beautiful insight! Thanks Lenny – more reason to applaud this engineering masterpiece 👏 👏

Anonymous
1 month ago

That’s cool – thanks for sharing! I’ve watched this entire building go up from the foundation and it’s great to hear that nobody was hurt seeing how hard they worked every single day.

Wow
1 month ago

Rain or shine they gave their best!!! The work ethic in Miami is incredible.

Tim
1 month ago

The new yacht club and docks are going to be a beauty. Can’t wait to dine and take guests to this spot! 🌟

Impressed
1 month ago

Two words: total transformation

Anonymous
1 month ago

🙂 more like 10 years ago

Wow
1 month ago

Nope I witnessed it go vertical in a year and has the most momentum of any area I’ve seen in Miami!

ray
1 month ago

4 concrete pours in June 2022. Only legacy has not topped off. Have been watching live webcam of that building going up. Seems the podium is taller than renderings and continues to grow. Can someone explain?

Anonymous
1 month ago

Downtown is passé and going so much slower with more land to fill.

Anon
1 month ago

The most expensive penthouse in Miamis history was just sold at the Waldorf on Biscayne, but sure…”passé” LOL

Anonymous
1 month ago

Was it sold to the developer?

Yet Anothet Anonymous
1 month ago

Will that penthouse be above the tower cranes?

anon
1 month ago

Downtown has the best architecture in Miami. Beautiful, historic, stone structures that will be repurposed into stately venues. Streets with pavers, parks, and museums. Stay pressed.

Anonymous
1 month ago

This isn’t in downtown. Downtown has nothing on Brickell architecture, good try.

Anonymous
1 month ago

Stay pressed? What are we, juice?

calivalle
1 month ago

A beautiful project, great architecture here

Polykarpos
1 month ago

Looks like an interesting building

ELIZABETH
1 month ago

Congratulations!

will t
1 month ago

live next door , insane how quick it went up..

ELIZABETH
1 month ago

I am so excited!

I live in the neighborhood and can hardly wait buntil retail and the restaurants open up, as well as they will finally finish the River Walk on this side of the river!

Really looking forward to grand opening!

Adrian
1 month ago

We need to get our favorite blogger a drone so they can take exclusive videos of any project.

anon
1 month ago

Too bad this building is not all-glass like the supertall Hyatt coming to downtowns side of the river. Oh well.

Anonymous
1 month ago

Who wants all glass? That would look like an office or hotel. We like seeing some sculptural structure with the glass. This is perfect ratio.

Anonymous
1 month ago

Umm, all the buyers of multimillion dollar condos in Sunny Isles Beach that are all glass–Regalia, Porsche Design Tower, Jade Ocean, etc.

Huh
1 month ago

Those aren’t residents. They are oligarch money movers.

Anonymous
1 month ago

so what? they are BUYERS

Anonymous
1 month ago

neither are the buyers of this 1%er project, wake up

Melo is sigma and Chad
1 month ago

It stands out as well, cant wait for the other three for it can make west brickell more dense

Terrence
1 month ago

The renderings showed this tower , and the other few to be built , to be almost all glass. The building is MOSTLY concrete. Nothing like the renderings. It looks like the sister of OPERA TOWER. The city should not allow the public to be mislead by fake renderings. It looks like a very cheap building. It’s NOT the Architectural design that Miami needs. The CHETRIT GROUP of nyc , really cheapened what could have been stunning.

Kitty w
1 month ago

value engineering.

Anon
1 month ago

What happened to being nice? Only when it serves you Kitty?

Kitty w
1 month ago

Waaaa

Anonimato
1 month ago

Let’s not rush to conclusions. It’s still missing all the glass railings on each floor. Maybe it will shine more once that’s finished.

Anonymous
1 month ago

If already does shine bright, like opal, with hues of pink and blue at sunset. And the reflective glass balconies that will line the entire curved structure aren’t even in yet!

anon
1 month ago

We’re not rushing to conclusions – it’s topped out lol.

Anonymous
1 month ago

Who is we? Competing city or neighborhood PR I bet. The unbiased people love this and recognize its significance for Miami and the entire state of Florida.

Anonymous
1 month ago

75 Percent of the glass has yet to be installed, and the grand spire adding to its stature is yet to be revealed.

Anonimato
1 month ago

Wait until all the glass railings are installed …. It will look more glassy and sleak …

*NAME*
1 month ago

The city doesn’t give a s**t about the public, if it hasn’t been clear to you yet.

Lenny
1 month ago

Who is “the city”?

Name
1 month ago

Joe Carollo? Wish we had city leaders advocating harder for us in this part of Miami!

Anonymous
1 month ago

It looks NOTHING like opera. The balconies have luxury curves and jet out in glass and its monolithic size makes it one of the top buildings soaring in the sky. It reminds me more of the new round building in South of Fifth, but a nicer looking version.

Paul
1 month ago

Chetrit is one of the best developers in Miami right now and it looks stunning, biggest improvement and most significant masterplanned project Miami has seen in a decade.

Anonymous
1 month ago

We need more New York developers in Miami who actually invest in public improvements, instead of squeezing every bit of public space for boring buildings. This is the gold standard right here – more New York projects in Brickell!!!

MM305
1 month ago

why make Miami like NYC? NYC is failing as a city right now.

Anonymous
1 month ago

The balconies aren’t installed yet and neither are about half of the windows.

Anonymous
1 month ago

It makes the entire Miami skyline look more dynamic, adding volume and shape in the central core!

Anonymous
1 month ago

It will make BRICKELL more dense and exciting, and could use a refresh at this entrance area.

Quilt
1 month ago

I doubt most people commenting on the design of the building have even seen it in person. I have, I drive by it almost every day. nothing more than opera tower 2.0 on the River; renderings are really misleading

Truth
1 month ago

I see it every day, and it’s nothing like Opera Tower. Your comment seems like an attempt to smear, despite knowing its positive impact on Miami and the area. The new tower’s design includes multiple wave-like angles, tall ceilings, and public spaces with waterfront views, along with numerous multi-floor retail and restaurant options by the Miami River in Brickell.

Anonymous
1 month ago

Opera Tower is a nice building. It just had the worst of luck, but not as bad as Everglades on the Bay/Vizcayne or Ten Museum Park.

Name
1 month ago

I was stunned by Opera Tower when it first opened. It was the best of Edgewater and maybe still is.

Anonimato
1 month ago

Hasn’t it become a dorm for the university of Miami students? Can’t compare it to the paramount or area in edgewater.

Lenny
1 month ago

???
Have you ever stepped inside a Paramount Bay residence through their private elevators, wall to wall and floor to ceiling glass?

Paramount Bay was built in 2008 and has always blown Opera Tower away.
There are at least a half a dozen buildings better than Paramount Bay now….for my entertainment dollar….Elysee is the best in Edgewater.

Anon
1 month ago

The people pumping this building like it’s the burn Khalifa are absolutely delusional

Anonymous
1 month ago

Dubai is so jealous. How about you stop copying our Vegas domes and everything else we do here in the USA.

Ana
1 month ago

Maybe, just maybe they will sprinkle some of that good commercial zoning to Jose Marti Park on 4th ave – but probably not cause of corporate entities controlling the whole of Miami Development. Kinda wish it was more like it used to be, more like the wild wild west of real estate… It’s boring now.

Impressed
1 month ago

Wish Riverside got more commercial activity around the water – it really could be the boost Miami needs and get done faster than downtown, with all the heavy construction there. This could bring Brickell beautification into Riverside.

Anonymous
1 month ago

Yes we need a Whole Foods and Trader Joe’s in Riverside. Commercial it!

Ana
1 month ago

I agree, but allow for smaller footprint buildings that are a lil taller, that way mom and pop types could get a foothold. Not sure why people on this site are against Jose Marti getting some better zoning.

Anonymous
1 month ago

It should be a mix like in parts of Brickell. Super tall economic driver landmarks with smaller footprint zones expanding outward to allow for community mom and pops to thrive from the expanding pedestrian activity in the area.

Anonymous
1 month ago

brickell isnt a mix. its all towers and none are smaller thinner footprints.

Anonymous
1 month ago

Brickell is clearly a mix of small mom and pops in low rises and huge high rises. That’s how it started and remains today.

Anonymous
1 month ago

No one has ever said its mom and pop around brickell. Some one just commented how there are top law firms and finance firms moving into brickell left and right… thats not mom and pop

anonymous
1 month ago

There are small business owners thriving in our expanding retail spaces – from health and beauty services, retailers, co working spaces, tech startups, artists, small businesses and many others in addition to the global powerhouses. Brickell has it all.

Anonymous
1 month ago

Where can someone small and starting out rent out retail spaces in Brickell for less than 2-3k a month for a hole in the wall?

Anonymous
1 month ago

A successful small business. We need more commercial space west of I95 for startups in Riverside.

Edwardo
1 month ago

Domino’s

Anon
1 month ago

The stucco glistens marvelously on the skyline

Kitty w
1 month ago

*cries in white stucco*

Anonymous
1 month ago

It’s more glass than most the buildings in downtown and Brickell.

Anon
1 month ago

It actually looks to be a sub-50% glazing ratio so, no, it’s actually not.

New Mother of Pearl Building
1 month ago

Are you from here? The glass looks like mother of pearl at sunset, most stunning building in Brickell.

anon
1 month ago

BREAKING: Glass reflects sunlight. Thank you so much for that valuable contribution.

Anonymous
1 month ago

NEWS FLASH! Rounded glass creates an even more mesmerizing mirage unlike any other seen in Miami until now.

Anonimato
1 month ago

Lol