Coral Gables
Ponce Park Residences
By Allen Morris Company
Under ConstructionStarting From
$2,900K
Est. Delivery
2028
Residences
58
Floors
11
About the Project
Ponce Park Residences represents the most ambitious residential undertaking in Coral Gables history — a statement that carries real weight when made by the Allen Morris Company, one of the Southeast's most storied real estate dynasties. Founded in Miami in 1951, Allen Morris has spent more than seven decades shaping South Florida's built environment, delivering landmark commercial and residential projects from Brickell to Boca Raton. With Ponce Park, the firm turns its full legacy toward a single defining act: a boutique tower at 3000 Ponce de Leon Boulevard that its developers describe, without hesitation, as the single most luxurious residential building ever constructed in Coral Gables. Backed by a 32.5 million construction loan from Bank OZK secured in early 2026, the project broke ground in December 2025 and is on track for completion in early 2028, representing a generational commitment to the city that has long defined refined Miami living.
The architecture of Ponce Park is entrusted to John Cunningham working alongside Zyscovich Architects, a pairing that speaks directly to Coral Gables' Mediterranean Revival soul. Cunningham, a neoclassicist whose portfolio includes the celebrated Alhambra Towers, brings an uncommon sensitivity to the city's founding design language — the arcaded loggias, the warm limestone facades, the human-scaled streetscape that George Merrick envisioned a century ago. At eleven stories, Ponce Park rises with restraint rather than ambition, its silhouette composed to honor its context while delivering generous floor-to-ceiling heights and deep terraces that blur the line between interior and open sky. Landscape architecture by Naturalficial weaves the building into its surroundings, while Allen Morris has partnered with the City of Coral Gables on an 1 million renovation of the adjacent Ponce Circle Park — a gesture that transforms a public green space into an extension of the residential experience and cements the project's role as a genuine civic contribution.
Interiors are the work of Meyer Davis Studio, the New York-based practice whose portfolio spans some of the world's most admired hotels and residences, and their influence is felt in every material choice and spatial proportion throughout the building's 58 bespoke homes. European oak wood floors and travertine stone create a warm, enduring palette that feels as at home in Coral Gables as it does in the grand apartments of Madrid or Milan. Kitchens are designed to perform as seriously as they impress: custom Italian wood cabinetry with full pantries, Italian stone countertops with double waterfall islands, La Cornue 60-inch gas ranges in select residences, and Sub-Zero and Wolf appliance packages that include 60-inch refrigerators and integrated wine storage. Bathrooms are finished with custom natural stone vanities, Dornbracht fixtures, soaking tubs, and private water closets with Toto installations in select homes. Ceilings soar to 11 and 12 feet, private elevators with double-door entries serve each residence, and integrated smart home systems govern lighting, climate, and security throughout. The 58 residences span two to five bedrooms plus penthouses, ranging from approximately 1,900 to more than 6,500 square feet, with pricing from .9 million.
The ground-floor open-air Paseo anchors Ponce Park's most talked-about amenity: the first U.S. outpost of Quintín Ultramarinos, the acclaimed Madrid institution from Grupo Paraguas — the hospitality group behind globally celebrated concepts including Amazónico and partners with D.ream International, the force behind COYA and Zuma. Founded in 2015 in Madrid's prestigious Barrio de Salamanca, Quintín has earned a devoted following for its masterful fusion of Spanish culinary tradition and contemporary sensibility — seasonal ingredients, refined yet approachable cooking, and an atmosphere that manages to feel both grand and deeply convivial. The Coral Gables location will bring the restaurant's celebrated all-day format to the Paseo, serving breakfast through dinner alongside a curated wine list that honors both Spanish and international producers. An artisanal café and boulangerie complete the ground-floor dining program, meaning residents can move from a morning croissant to a long weekend lunch without leaving the building's embrace. For a neighborhood that has long been defined by its dining culture, the arrival of a Michelin-recognized European institution at residents' front door represents something genuinely transformative.
The amenity program at Ponce Park is designed with the precision of a five-star resort. On the rooftop, a resort pool anchors a full water oasis that includes a zen pool, cold plunge, and hot tub — all oriented toward sweeping views over Southeast Coral Gables. A sky bar and rooftop lounge with dedicated event space provide the setting for the kind of effortless entertaining that the building's clientele expects. Below, the wellness suite is among the most complete in any South Florida residential tower: a full spa offering cryotherapy, sauna, steam rooms, and private treatment suites; a state-of-the-art fitness center; and a meditation courtyard that provides genuine quiet in the heart of the city. A private wine cellar and a screening and media lounge round out a program that anticipates every dimension of daily life. White-glove hospitality services — 24-hour valet, attended lobby, dedicated doorman, luxury concierge, laundry and dry-cleaning, pet care, and restaurant reservation assistance — ensure that the building functions less like a condominium and more like a private members club.
The location at 3000 Ponce de Leon Boulevard is, in itself, a master argument for Ponce Park's investment case. The building sits directly across from The Plaza Coral Gables, the billion mixed-use development that has redrawn the neighborhood's luxury map, and just steps from the Miracle Mile corridor — Coral Gables' storied retail and dining artery. The city's celebrated Mediterranean streetscape, mature canopy streets, and walkable village scale have long attracted a buyer who values permanence, discretion, and quality of place above spectacle. Coral Gables imposes strict architectural review, limiting supply and protecting values in ways that less regulated Miami neighborhoods cannot match. With only 58 residences available and no comparable boutique luxury product in the immediate pipeline, Ponce Park arrives at a moment of genuine scarcity — a combination of pedigree developer, world-class design talent, transformative dining, and irreplaceable location that defines what it means to own the best address in Coral Gables.
Amenities
Location
Coral Gables, FL 33134
About Coral Gables
Coral Gables is Miami's most architecturally distinguished neighborhood — a planned Mediterranean Revival city founded in the 1920s with a unified aesthetic of terracotta rooftops, coral rock facades, and bougainvillea-lined boulevards. It is home to the University of Miami, Miracle Mile, and some of the most prestigious addresses in South Florida, combining old-world elegance with a thriving modern dining and business scene.
- Mediterranean Revival architecture protected by strict city design standards
- Miracle Mile shopping and dining corridor
- Home to the University of Miami and Coral Gables Business District
- The Venetian Pool — a National Historic Landmark — and Fairchild Tropical Botanic Garden