
619 Residences by Foster + Partners + Nobu Hospitality, Armani Casa Sunny Isles Beach, and Arte Surfside: How to Choose Between Lobby Volume, Porte-Cochère Privacy, and Valet Choreography
A discreet buyer’s guide to weighing arrival sequence, privacy, and daily service rhythm across three design-led South Florida residential propositions.

Top 5 Beachfront Residences for Buyers Who Care About AI-Ready Smart-Home Infrastructure
A discreet buyer’s guide to evaluating beachfront residences through the lens of AI-ready smart-home infrastructure, privacy, resilience, and long-term adaptability.

Why Surfside Appeals to Buyers Who Need Technology That Disappears into the Architecture
Surfside speaks to a specific kind of luxury buyer: one who wants intelligent living without visible complication. In this market, the best technology is felt through silence, comfort, security and ease, while the architecture remains the main event.

Eighty Seven Park Surfside for design-minded buyers who care as much about park adjacency as ocean frontage
Eighty Seven Park Surfside reframes the oceanfront condominium conversation around Richard Meier’s minimalist architecture, a low-density residential profile, and a rare position beside both the Atlantic and Surfside’s public beachfront park.

Designing Staff Quarters and Invisible Service Corridors in Modern Private Estates
A discreet back-of-house plan has become one of the defining marks of a truly sophisticated private estate. In South Florida, the most accomplished homes separate owner life from operational movement through hidden corridors, self-contained staff suites, acoustic control, screened service entries, and code-compliant life-safety planning.

Comparing the Aesthetics of Art Deco Revival vs. Contemporary Glass: Shore Club Private Collections vs. The Perigon
In Miami Beach, aesthetics are never simply about taste. They are about posture: how a building meets the sky, how it frames the ocean, and how it signals lineage or modernity before you ever step inside. This comparison looks at two distinct design temperaments now shaping the upper tier of Miami-beach new-construction. On one side, an Art Deco revival sensibility, calibrated for Miami Beach’s historic glamour and the ritual of arrival. On the other, a contemporary glass approach that leans into weightlessness, horizon lines, and the quiet theater of transparency. Both can be impeccably luxurious. The difference is what kind of luxury you want to live in: the curated romance of a stylized past, or the disciplined clarity of a modern envelope.



