The project is proposed to rise 38 stories, or 380 feet above sea level and include:
324 residential units (average unit size 1,069 square feet)
22,354 square feet of office use
13,108 square feet of commercial use
park/plaza space in excess of 10,000 square feet in order to encourage pedestrian interaction
515 parking spaces on levels 2, 3 4 and 5, with artistic garage screening component
Arquitectonica is the architect.
Permitting is progressing for 401 NE 29th St (formally known as 2900 Terrace) in Miami’s growing Edgewater neighborhood. The project filed for a site work permit on October 7th and a tree permit on October 4th. Both permits will prepare the site for vertical construction, likely to commence next year if plans progress smoothly. As per a previous UDRB filing, the tree permit will remove 15 trees of the existing 18 on site. Replacement trees include 38 palms and trees varying from large to medium sizes. Shrubs will be planted as decorative landscape, encapsulating 710 native to imported flora.
The filed site plan permit will handle excavation, foundation piles, and soil improvements. The general contractor for the project is Coastal Construction. In addition, all permits filed are in the approval process, incorporating both the tree and site plan permit and an additional construction and phased permit. Progress for the tree and site work permit last had activity around Dec 12, 2024.
Wow - this area is really blowing up. Miami is starting to get distinct 'towns'.
This is adjacent to a fast growing 'Midtown'. Downtown is becoming Downtown again (Once WorldCenter is fully built out). And Brickell is the Financial District.