
Six Boutique Waterfront Buildings Under Fifty Units in Bay Harbor Islands
In Bay Harbor Islands, scarcity is not a marketing angle. It is the organizing principle. The village’s most coveted waterfront addresses tend to be intentionally small, with resident profiles that favor privacy, walkability, and lock-and-leave ease over spectacle. This editorial looks at six boutique waterfront condo buildings under fifty units in Bay Harbor Islands. With limited verified specifics available here, the focus is on what discerning buyers typically value in this micro-market: quiet arrival sequences, clean sightlines to the water, sensible amenity programming, and a level of neighbor selectivity that larger towers rarely replicate.

Six Luxury Developments in Fort Lauderdale Capable of Docking Hundred Foot Yachts
For yacht owners, Fort Lauderdale’s real estate conversation starts at the dock. The most compelling residences are those that treat the marina as an extension of the lobby: protected water, professional service, and a seamless run to the Intracoastal and inlet. This guide outlines what “hundred-foot capable” really means in practice, then spotlights six notable Fort Lauderdale luxury developments and waterfront districts where large-yacht lifestyles are part of the design intent.

Assessing Deep Water Marina Logistics at Pagani North Bay Village Against Continuum Club and Residences North Bay Village
For yacht-forward buyers, “marina access” is not an amenity. It is a daily operational system: approach depth, bridge constraints, wake protection, tender strategy, provisioning flow, and the time it takes to go from parking to pilothouse. In North Bay Village, two names repeatedly surface in those conversations: Pagani and Continuum Club & Residences. This MILLION Luxury editorial frames the due-diligence questions that separate lifestyle marketing from workable, repeatable marina logistics.

Evaluating Wait Times for Deeded Boat Slips: Bay Harbor Towers vs. Origin Bay Harbor Islands
Deeded slips are one of the rarest, most value-defining amenities in Bay Harbor and the broader Miami waterfront. For buyers weighing a legacy bayfront building like Bay Harbor Towers against a newer offering like Origin Bay Harbor Islands, “wait time” is less a stopwatch metric and more a function of how slips are titled, transferred, and governed. This editorial breaks down what typically drives access to a deeded slip, what questions to ask before you go hard on a contract, and how to underwrite the lifestyle realities of keeping a boat at home.

The Reality of Securing Boat Lifts for Center Consoles at Andare Residences Fort Lauderdale
A discreet, buyer-oriented look at what boat-lift access for center-console owners typically entails in Fort Lauderdale, and how to underwrite the question properly when considering Andare Residences.

Superyacht Slip Specifications and Port Access: St. Regis Residences Bahia Mar vs. Sixth & Rio Fort Lauderdale
For Fort Lauderdale buyers who treat a yacht like a second home, the real differentiator between addresses is not finish level. It is how quickly you can cast off, how predictably you can return, and how many constraints sit between your dock line and open water. This editorial frames the comparison between **St. Regis® Residences Bahia Mar Fort Lauderdale** and **Sixth & Rio Fort Lauderdale** through the lens of superyacht-oriented access: slip practicality, channel realities, bridge risk, and day-to-day operating friction. Because specific slip dimensions, depths, bridge clearances, and marina rulebooks vary by operator and are not always publicly uniform, the most useful approach is a buyer’s checklist. Think in terms of what you can verify during due diligence, what can change seasonally, and what you can contractually secure.



