
Colette Residences vs Cipriani Residences in Brickell: Rental rules & flexibility
In Brickell, luxury buyers increasingly underwrite lifestyle and liquidity together. This comparison looks at how publicly disclosed rental rules shape real-world flexibility, contrasting a boutique South Brickell offering with a landmark high-rise where the rental framework is explicitly defined.

Baccarat Residences vs. Cipriani Residences: Brickell’s Battle of Branded Towers
In Brickell, two branded high-rises are defining what “service” means in Miami’s next cycle: Baccarat Residences at the Miami River’s edge and Cipriani Residences Miami along South Miami Avenue. Both are designed by Arquitectonica, yet their propositions diverge in the details that matter to end users and long-term holders: waterfront access and marina positioning versus a brand-led dining culture and an upper-tier collection in the tower’s top floors. This guide compares what is publicly marketed today, with a focus on layout philosophy, amenities, construction signals, and who each tower tends to fit.

Brickell’s New Service Standard: Arrival, Storage, and Quiet Logistics in Ultra-Luxury New-Construction Living
In Miami’s most design-forward neighborhoods, luxury is increasingly measured not only in finishes, but in what runs flawlessly behind the scenes. From the choreography of a porte-cochère to the predictability of package handling and climate-smart storage, today’s buyers are underwriting operational excellence as seriously as views. This MILLION Luxury editorial looks at two distinct Brickell approaches to modern service: an 80-story Cipriani-branded tower with a hospitality-style concierge model and transportation perks, and a boutique, wellness-minded low-rise on Brickell Avenue designed for discretion and daily ease.

Brickell vs. Wynwood: Miami’s Luxury Condo Split, and What It Means for 2026 Buyers
Brickell and Wynwood are no longer competing on the same terms. Brickell is Miami’s established, brand-forward vertical neighborhood: liquid, internationally recognized, and increasingly defined by amenity-rich towers. Wynwood, by contrast, is evolving from a cultural destination into a live-work district, with office growth and design-led residential inventory that tends to enter at a lower price point than Brickell’s new-build pipeline. For buyers, the choice is less about which neighborhood is “hot” and more about aligning a purchase with how you plan to use the home: as a primary residence with daily transit convenience, as a pied-à-terre with hospitality-style service, or as a flexible asset where rental rules and future neighborhood maturation matter.



