Miami's vertical center, where the financial corridor opens onto Biscayne Bay. High-rise residences with full-floor terraces, walkable to Brickell City Centre, the Underline, and a restaurant inventory rivalling any North American downtown.
Eighty residential towers, almost all built since 2003 — Brickell is the only U.S. neighborhood that went from low-rise to supertall in a single generation. Panorama, Brickell Flatiron, and Una stand alongside the prewar bones of Mary Brickell Village; ground floors hold the lobby art and the espresso bar, the upper floors hold the families. The skyline reads as one continuous gesture from the bridge.
A twenty-four-hour core in a city better known for its drives. Residents work the financial corridor and walk to dinner along South Miami Avenue. The Miami Yacht Club keeps slips two blocks from the lobby; the Underline links nine miles south along the Metrorail; the Heat play at the north edge of the neighborhood. Inventory skews two-bed glass at twelve hundred square feet and up, with single-floor penthouses thinning the market at the top.