
Comparing the Intimacy of Low Rise Living at Ocean House Surfside Against Fendi Chateau Residences Surfside
In Surfside, two names define a very specific kind of oceanfront luxury: the low-rise, privacy-forward residential experience. Ocean House Surfside and Fendi Château Residences Surfside both appeal to buyers who want beachfront proximity without the emotional temperature of a mega-tower. Yet their intimacy is expressed differently: one leans toward a quiet, residential cadence; the other pairs boutique scale with branded design identity. With no two households using “privacy” to mean the same thing, this comparison focuses on what you actually feel day to day: arrival, shared spaces, neighbor density, service posture, and how the building’s scale shapes the rhythm of living. The result is less about which is “better” and more about which version of intimacy matches your lifestyle, household size, and expectations of discretion.

Assessing the Footprint of Secondary Scullery Kitchens at The Surf Club Four Seasons Surfside
In Surfside, the secondary scullery kitchen has evolved from a discreet luxury to a practical piece of residential infrastructure, especially in service-driven, oceanfront living. This editorial examines what that “second kitchen” really does for day-to-day function and resale positioning at The Surf Club Four Seasons Surfside, and how to evaluate its footprint without overbuilding or underutilizing square footage.

Fendi Château vs. Eighty Seven Park vs. Surf Club Four Seasons: Beachfront Boutique Luxury Compared
Surfside and North Beach have become a quiet proving ground for ultra-luxury, brand-forward condominium living. In a market where privacy, service, and architectural authorship increasingly matter as much as square footage, three boutique oceanfront towers consistently anchor the conversation: Fendi Château Residences, Eighty Seven Park, and The Surf Club Four Seasons Residences. Each property makes a different promise. One leans into fashion-house identity and flow-through plans. Another pairs a celebrated architect with a park-forward setting and wellness adjacency. The third blends legacy, hotel-grade services, and a historic address that continues to attract trophy-level demand. For buyers considering a primary residence, a lock-and-leave second home, or a long-term hold, understanding the nuance between these buildings is the point of the exercise.

Four Seasons Surf Club Surfside vs. The Setai Miami Beach: Historic Glamour vs. Modern Zen on the Shore
Two properties have come to define the modern, ultra-discreet Miami stay: Four Seasons Hotel at The Surf Club in Surfside, and The Setai Miami Beach in South Beach. Both have earned Two MICHELIN Keys, a rare shorthand for hotels that deliver an exceptional stay, and each expresses luxury through a different lens: Surfside’s restored club-era elegance versus The Setai’s Art Deco and Asian-influenced glamour. For buyers and second-home owners, these hotels are more than places to check in. They set expectations for service, wellness, dining, and the quiet choreography of daily life near the sand. Here, MILLION Luxury ranks five iconic picks using verified, publicly disclosed distinctions and on-property hallmarks, then translates what they signal for residential decision-making across Miami Beach, Surfside, Bal-harbour, and beyond.

Surfside vs. Sunny Isles: Boutique Beach Town or High-Rise Haven on Collins Avenue
A discreet, buyer-oriented comparison of Surfside and Sunny Isles Beach for luxury condo and oceanfront living, with market cadence, zoning realities, and lifestyle trade-offs.

Surfside’s Oceanfront View Hierarchy: Flow-Through Exposure, Frontage, and the New Standard of Privacy
In Surfside, “the view” is not a single sightline. It is a composite of orientation, site width, glazing strategy, and how much space the building has to breathe. This MILLION Luxury editorial compares three of the area’s most discussed oceanfront addresses through the lens that matters most to sophisticated buyers: exposure.



