
Corner Unit Premium: Are End Units Worth the Higher Price in a Luxury Condo Building?
Corner residences remain one of the most consistently coveted positions in a South Florida tower. They offer more glass, more angles on the view, and typically fewer shared walls, but they also bring practical trade-offs: more exterior exposure to weather, potentially higher cooling demand, and sometimes more street noise. In today’s more negotiable luxury condo environment, the smartest approach is to separate the emotional draw from the defensible value by verifying how corner units have actually priced and resold within the same building and stack.

Designing for the View: Architectural Innovations to Maximize Water Vistas in Miami Homes
From Biscayne Bay to the Intracoastal, South Florida’s most coveted addresses are defined by their horizons. Yet in a climate shaped by intense sun, salt air, and hurricane engineering, “more glass” is never the whole answer. The most successful waterfront residences treat glazing as a system: heat management, wind performance, privacy, and interior planning all coordinated so the view reads as effortless. This MILLION Luxury editorial outlines the design moves that preserve sightlines while improving comfort: low‑E glass that controls infrared heat, laminated impact glazing that holds together under debris impact, shading that mitigates water glare, and outdoor details like near-frameless railings that keep the terrace from cutting the horizon line. Just as important, we look at how plans, kitchens, furniture layouts, and smart shading routines can protect the vista from inside, not only at the glass.

View Protection: How to Ensure Your Future Condo’s View Won’t Be Obstructed by New Development
In South Florida, a “protected view” is rarely a single promise. It is the combined effect of waterfront rights, zoning and height limits on nearby parcels, recorded restrictions, and the practical discipline of monitoring what can be built next door. This guide explains what typically holds up under scrutiny, where buyers overestimate protection, and how to structure diligence so your horizon remains an asset rather than a surprise.

Choosing the Best View and Exposure: A Guide to Unit Orientation in Miami Condos
Exposure is not a footnote in South Florida condo buying. It is a daily, physical experience that shapes how a residence feels at 8 a.m., how hard the air conditioning works at 5 p.m., how usable the terrace is at golden hour, and how private the interior remains after dark. In a region where the sun rises in the southeast and sets in the southwest, the same “water view” can read entirely differently depending on compass direction, season, surrounding buildings, and the width of the water you face. This MILLION Luxury editorial is a buyer-oriented guide to selecting exposure with intention. Think of it less as a debate between sunrise and sunset, and more as a disciplined match between lifestyle, light quality, heat gain, privacy, and long-term view resilience.

Gables Estates vs Old Cutler Bay: Two Coral Gables Waterfront Addresses With Very Different Rules
A discreet, buyer-oriented comparison of Coral Gables’ most coveted waterfront enclaves, from governance and gatekeeping to boating access and pricing signals.

Brickell Views: Bayfront Adjacency vs High-Floor Panorama
In Brickell, “best view” is rarely a single direction or altitude. Bayfront towers reward closeness to the water, while core towers use height, orientation, and volume to turn the skyline into an everyday amenity.



