
Starchitect Towers: Does a Big Name Architect Guarantee a Better Investment?
In South Florida, a famous architect can elevate a building into a collectible: instantly legible in a skyline, scarce by design, and emotionally resonant for global buyers. But in a market where the $2M+ segment can swing toward buyers as inventory builds and marketing times extend, “starchitect” status is best understood as a value enhancer, not a value shield. This editorial looks at what the name on the brochure can, and cannot, do for pricing power and resale liquidity. Using widely recognized case studies like One Thousand Museum and Eighty Seven Park, plus branded design pairings such as the Surf Club Four Seasons, we map the components that tend to matter most: scarcity, service, layout efficiency, and operational simplicity.

Investing for a Visa: How EB-5 and Residency-by-Investment Drive Luxury Home Sales
A discreet, buyer-oriented guide to how the EB-5 Immigrant Investor Program intersects with South Florida’s luxury real estate, from investment thresholds and TEA structure to timing, risk, and lifestyle-driven neighborhood selection.

Wind, Flood, and Fire: Navigating the Insurance Policies Needed for Florida Luxury Homes and Condos
South Florida luxury real estate decisions increasingly hinge on insurance mechanics: hurricane deductibles, flood exclusions, condo loss assessments, and code-driven rebuild costs. This editorial distills the parts of Florida coverage that tend to surprise high-net-worth buyers, with practical questions to ask before you close.

Florida Tax Residency Essentials for New Luxury Homeowners - Legal Overview
A discreet, buyer-oriented guide to establishing Florida domicile the right way, aligning homestead strategy with titling and lifestyle, and avoiding common statutory-residency traps when you still keep a home up north.

From Old to New: How Miami’s Older Luxury Condo Buildings Are Upgrading for the Modern Era
As Florida’s post-Surfside reforms reshape reserve funding and building due diligence, older South Florida condominiums are being re-priced, re-scoped, and, in many cases, re-underwritten by buyers. The new reality is not simply higher monthly costs. It is a more transparent capital plan driven by Structural Integrity Reserve Studies, stricter reserve rules, and a market that increasingly separates “renovated and managed” from “deferred and uncertain.” For luxury buyers, the opportunity is real, but it favors those who can read an association’s long-term obligations as fluently as a floor plan.

Miami vs. Singapore: Competing Tropical Hubs for Ultra-Luxury Real Estate
In 2026, ultra-luxury buyers are comparing global safe-harbor markets through a sharper lens: liquidity, taxes, inventory depth, and the friction embedded in each transaction. South Florida and Singapore sit at the center of that conversation, but they reward different strategies. Miami offers a uniquely cash-heavy closing environment and a tax structure that many high earners find efficient. Singapore offers institutional-grade governance and a tightly controlled prime landed segment, but foreign buyers face meaningful stamp-duty headwinds. For South Florida’s luxury real estate audience, the takeaway is not that one market “wins.” It is that each city has become a different kind of wealth instrument: Miami as a lifestyle-forward, inventory-rich coastal platform with powerful cash velocity; Singapore as a scarcity-driven, policy-shaped store of value where access is often the primary differentiator. Understanding how these characteristics translate into negotiation, timing, and portfolio construction is the edge in 2026.


