
The art-collector’s condo checklist: light, wall integrity, humidity control, and private storage
For serious collectors, a condo is not just a backdrop for art but part of its preservation strategy. This MILLION checklist examines the four conditions that matter most in South Florida: controlled light, dry and stable walls, disciplined humidity management, and storage designed as protection rather than overflow.

How private aviation shapes where ultra-high-net-worth buyers actually choose to live in South Florida
For ultra-high-net-worth buyers in South Florida, private aviation is not a lifestyle accessory so much as a residential filter. Access to executive airports in Miami-Dade, Broward, and Palm Beach often influences where globally mobile households choose to live, tilting demand toward enclaves that minimize transfer friction while preserving privacy, security, and waterfront prestige.

What HNWI buyers should ask about condo reserve funding before signing in Florida
For affluent condo buyers in Florida, reserve funding is no longer a back-office detail. It is a frontline due-diligence issue that shapes future assessments, carrying costs, financing options, and eventual resale liquidity. This MILLION Luxury guide outlines the questions sophisticated buyers should ask before signing, from funded percentages and reserve-study dates to restricted accounts, capital plans, and pending assessments.

Kid-friendly condo living: What families should ask about pools, noise, and security
For families considering a South Florida condominium, the right questions go far beyond square footage and finishes. Pool safety, building acoustics, access control, emergency readiness, and rule enforcement shape whether daily life feels effortless or stressful. This MILLION Luxury guide outlines the practical due diligence families should complete before buying.

Private parking in Miami towers: Assigned spaces, lifts, and valet rules affluent buyers should understand
In Miami’s luxury tower market, parking is not a minor convenience. It is a legal right, an operational system, and often a defining part of the arrival experience. For affluent buyers evaluating residences in Brickell, Downtown, Edgewater, Miami Beach, and Sunny Isles, the essential question is not simply how many spaces come with a unit, but how those rights are documented, managed, and transferred.
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Choosing a unit for privacy: Avoiding amenity decks, service corridors, and traffic patterns
In luxury condominium buying, privacy is often decided less by finishes than by placement. This editorial explains how to evaluate amenity adjacency, service circulation, lobby positioning, traffic exposure, and visual sightlines so buyers can select a quieter, more discreet residence within the same tower.



