
What Buyers Should Know About Owner-Only Amenities vs Hotel-Guest Amenities
A buyer-focused guide to reading amenity access, privacy, operating rules, and ownership implications in South Florida branded and mixed-use residences.

Miami Beach revival or downtown social membership: Delano Residences & Hotel Miami vs ORA by Casa Tua Brickell
A buyer-focused comparison of Delano Residences & Hotel Miami and ORA by Casa Tua Brickell, framed around resort heritage, downtown social membership, and how each lifestyle proposition fits South Florida’s luxury ownership map.

What to ask about HOA governance when restaurants, clubs, or hotels share the property
A buyer-focused guide to the governance questions that matter when luxury residences share real estate, services, or access with restaurants, private clubs, or hotels.

How to judge whether a waterfront tower will feel too public once hotel guests and restaurant traffic arrive
In South Florida, the distinction between a private residential tower and a public-facing mixed-use address is often decided at the points of contact: arrival, elevators, amenities, parking, and service circulation. This buyer-focused MILLION guide explains how to evaluate whether hotel guests and restaurant traffic will materially change the living experience once a waterfront building is fully operational.

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 Viceroy Brickell: quieter culinary identity or hotel-adjacent urban immediacy?
In Brickell, the sharper distinction between 619 Residences and Viceroy Brickell is not simply branding. It is the rhythm of daily life: one leans toward a calmer, design-led residential atmosphere shaped by culinary association, while the other suggests a more activated, hotel-adjacent urban cadence. For buyers weighing privacy against perpetual service energy, the decision is ultimately about how they want home to feel.



