Downtown
Waldorf Astoria Residences Miami
By PMG, Greybrook Realty Partners, Mohari Hospitality & S2 Development
Under ConstructionStarting From
$3,200K
Est. Delivery
2028
Residences
387
Floors
100
About the Project
Rising 1,049 feet above the northwest corner of Biscayne Boulevard and Northeast Third Street, Waldorf Astoria Hotel and Residences Miami is Florida's first supertall skyscraper and the tallest residential tower south of Manhattan. Conceived by conceptual artist Carlos Ott and executed by Sieger Suarez Architects, the 100-story tower takes its form from nine asymmetrically stacked, offset glass cubes -- each tilted and rotated to disrupt wind loads while engineering unobstructed panoramic views from every exposure. The inspiration traces through Alberto Giacometti's fractured forms and the sculptures of Eduardo Chillida, producing a silhouette that reads differently from every angle: a crystalline column of light at night, a constantly shifting mass of glass and shadow by day. Directly across from Bayfront Park, with Biscayne Bay to the east and the Miami skyline climbing to the west, this is among the most visually commanding sites in the American South.
The 387 private residences, designed by San Francisco-based interior architecture firm BAMO, range from fully furnished junior suites at 516 square feet through one-, two-, and three-bedroom configurations to the Sky Collection four-bedroom units occupying the eighth cube -- floors 80 through 89 -- where 12-foot ceiling heights, only four residences per floor, and private elevator lobbies distinguish the tier entirely. Sky Collection four-bedroom units begin at $8.5 million and cover approximately 3,500 square feet with 253-square-foot terraces. Every residence in the tower is delivered fully finished and fully furnished to BAMO's specification, a rarity at this price point. Standard finishes across all units include Italian Italkraft custom cabinetry, a fully integrated Sub-Zero and Wolf appliance suite covering refrigerator, freezer, convection oven, wine storage, microwave, and dishwasher, Waterworks and Duravit bathroom fixtures, custom Italian vanities, in-unit washer and dryer, and Savant smart home automation managing audio, video, lighting, and climate from a single interface. Floors and custom closet packages are BAMO-curated throughout.
The Waldorf Astoria name carries a specific weight in luxury hospitality that few hotel brands can claim. Founded in New York in 1893 and synonymous with the American Gilded Age, the brand defined what hotel service looked like for a century -- inventing room service, the concept of the celebrity suite, and the standard of the 24-hour concierge. At 300 Biscayne Boulevard, Hilton operates the 205-key hotel component within the same tower under that same Waldorf Astoria brand standard. For residents, this means genuine full-service hospitality is not an amenity that approximates hotel living -- it is hotel living, delivered by one of the most practiced operators in the world. House account signing privileges at hotel restaurants, preferred access to hotel spa facilities, and access to the full Waldorf Astoria service infrastructure come standard with ownership. The concierge is not a building manager with a desk; it is a team trained to Waldorf Astoria standards.
The amenity program divides cleanly between shared hotel offerings and private residential spaces. The hotel contributes Peacock Alley -- anchored by the brand's signature Pendulum Clock, a fixture at every Waldorf Astoria property -- a ground-level signature restaurant by Major Food Group, an all-day dining brasserie, private event spaces ranging from boardrooms to ballrooms, and a resort-style pool deck with outdoor cafe and private cabanas. Residential owners access a separate, owners-only amenity deck with its own pool, whirlpools, and lounge seating, plus a private bar and wine tasting room, a billiard room, a kids club, and a dedicated hospitality suite designed for private chef's tastings and intimate gatherings. The full-service spa offers wellness lounges, saunas, steam rooms, and private treatment rooms, with personalized health, nutrition, and fitness programming available through the hotel's wellness team. A state-of-the-art fitness center with private training studios serves both residents and hotel guests.
The address places residents in the heart of Downtown Miami's Central Business District, at a moment when that district has undergone the most consequential decade of development in its history. Bayfront Park and the Bayside Marketplace are steps from the front door. The Adrienne Arsht Center for the Performing Arts, the Perez Art Museum Miami, and the Frost Museum of Science anchor the cultural district to the north. The Financial District and Brickell, Miami's highest-density luxury residential and office corridor, are a short walk to the south. Miami Worldcenter, a 27-acre mixed-use development bringing additional retail, hotel, and residential density to the immediate neighborhood, is underway two blocks away. The Brightline higher-speed rail station connecting Downtown Miami to Fort Lauderdale and Orlando is within walking distance, as are the Miami Metro and Metromover lines.
Construction broke ground in late 2022 and has proceeded at approximately one floor every ten days. As of early 2026, the tower's reinforced concrete superstructure has passed the 60th floor and is advancing into the sixth of the nine cubic volumes, with curtain wall glazing enclosing the lower cubes in sequence below. Topping out is projected for late 2026, with delivery targeted for 2028. The $668 million construction loan secured in 2024 -- the largest in Florida history at the time -- underpins the schedule and signals institutional confidence in the project's completion. Pricing for remaining residences begins at approximately $3.2 million, with Sky Collection four-bedroom units ranging from $8.5 million to $9.5 million and the ninth-cube penthouse collection offering multi-floor configurations listed up to $50 million. The residential component is reported to be over 90 percent sold, which at this stage of construction reflects both the scarcity of the product and the irreplaceable nature of the address.
Amenities
Location
300 Biscayne Blvd, Miami, FL
About Downtown
Downtown Miami has undergone a dramatic reinvention, evolving from a daytime office district into a genuine 24-hour neighborhood. Anchored by Brickell City Centre to the south and the Adrienne Arsht Center to the north, it is now home to the Miami Worldcenter megadevelopment — one of the largest urban mixed-use projects in US history — bringing a new generation of residential towers to the city's core.
- Miami Worldcenter: 27 acres of mixed-use development in the city center
- Bayside Marketplace and Museum Park on the waterfront promenade
- Home to the Pérez Art Museum Miami (PAMM) and Frost Science Museum
- Metromover, Metrorail, and Brightline high-speed rail access