
619 Residences by Foster + Partners + Nobu Hospitality for global owners who judge a tower by service choreography
An editorial examination of 619 Residences in Miami through the lens that matters most to globally mobile owners: not amenity volume, but the discipline of service. Foster + Partners supplies the architectural language, while Nobu Hospitality shapes an operating model built around anticipatory care, culinary access, arrival-readiness, and discreet daily management.

How to compare guest-bedroom placement when privacy matters as much as sleeping capacity
A luxury buyer’s framework for evaluating guest-bedroom placement, balancing seclusion, acoustics, circulation, and real sleeping capacity rather than relying on bedroom count alone.

How to compare a residence’s guest strategy when relatives stay for a month, not a weekend
For luxury buyers in South Florida, a serious guest strategy is less about an extra bedroom and more about whether relatives can live independently for weeks without disrupting the main household. The right comparison framework centers on privacy, bath access, food prep, laundry, workspace, parking, outdoor autonomy, and service planning.

What 888 Brickell by Dolce & Gabbana means for buyers who want a true pied-à-terre with high-touch arrival rituals
For second-home buyers who value immediacy over maintenance, 888 Brickell by Dolce & Gabbana sharpens the definition of a modern Miami pied-à-terre. Its furnished residences, condo-hotel structure, curated design language, and service-oriented positioning speak to owners who want to land in Brickell and feel fully arrived within minutes.

619 Residences by Foster + Partners + Nobu Hospitality vs Una Residences Brickell: hospitality depth or pure waterfront composure?
MILLION compares 619 Residences in Miami Beach with Una Residences Brickell through the lens that matters most to high-end buyers: whether daily life should feel like an impeccably serviced hospitality experience or a more restrained waterfront home defined by bay views, privacy, and composure.

Why branded hospitality matters more in secondary residences than primary homes for some buyers
For many affluent buyers, branded hospitality carries greater weight in a second home than in a primary residence because the purchase is often less about daily-life logistics and more about seamless arrival, consistent service, and reliable oversight in absentia. In South Florida, where wealth migration, international ownership, and seasonal use shape demand, the branded model answers a specific brief: turn the residence into an immediately usable retreat with hotel-caliber management between visits.



