Starting From

$800K

Est. Delivery

2029

Residences

320

Floors

12

About the Project

In a city that has long attracted the world's most celebrated architects, Miami's Upper Buena Vista neighborhood is poised to receive its most culturally significant residential commission yet. HOUSE by Shigeru Ban is a 320-residence, 12-story condominium conceived by Pritzker Architecture Prize laureate Shigeru Ban — the Japanese architect awarded the profession's highest honor in 2014 — and developed by the Miami-based firm Yakol Capital Partners. Representing Ban's first project in Florida and one of his most ambitious residential works globally, the $300 million tower at 237 NE 54th Street transplants the architect's internationally celebrated biophilic philosophy into the heart of one of Miami's most rapidly evolving urban districts, positioning the development as a landmark not only for its neighborhood but for the broader culture of South Florida architecture.

Shigeru Ban has spent four decades dismantling the assumption that structural elegance and environmental conscience are competing values. Best known for his humanitarian architecture — refugee shelters and disaster-relief structures built from paper tubes and recycled materials — Ban applies the same material ingenuity and respect for the natural world to luxury commissions with equal rigor. At HOUSE, his signature approach takes the form of a sculptural, cubic facade that incorporates living wood tree columns and cascading water walls, both woven into the building's structural and aesthetic logic rather than applied as ornament. The massing is articulated through a series of differentiated setbacks and cantilevered terraces that dissolve the boundary between interior and exterior, allowing each residence its own relationship with sky, greenery, and breeze. A generous central courtyard anchors the plan, functioning as a shared biophilic commons that draws natural light deep into the building's core and reinforces the sense that HOUSE is, above all else, a living organism rather than an inert object.

The 320 residences are organized across one-to-four-bedroom configurations, with a unit mix calibrated to serve both owner-occupants seeking a primary Miami address and discerning investors. Prices range from $800,000 for entry-level one-bedroom homes to well above $6 million for the building's penthouse-tier residences. Throughout every unit, Ban's involvement extends beyond the building envelope: each home is furnished with custom furniture and fixtures designed by the architect himself, ensuring that the interiors carry the same considered material sensibility as the architecture. Natural materials, refined joinery, and a muted, biophilic palette characterize the finish scheme, creating residences that feel more akin to crafted objects than conventionally appointed condominiums. City and garden views are framed by the building's deep terraces, which serve as private outdoor extensions of the living areas.

The amenity program at HOUSE reflects Yakol Capital's emphasis on integrating wellness, sport, and community into the residential experience. At the rooftop, a full pool deck offers panoramic views over Upper Buena Vista and the Miami skyline. The building's indoor padel courts — among the most architecturally distinctive recreational spaces in any Miami residential tower — speak to a broader shift in the city's luxury market toward active, wellness-oriented programming. A state-of-the-art fitness center, dedicated children's rooms, event spaces equipped with shared catering kitchens, and an activated ground-floor retail program round out the offering, ensuring that HOUSE functions as a complete urban ecosystem rather than simply a collection of private residences.

Yakol Capital Partners, the Miami-based development firm behind HOUSE, was founded by Colombian American managing partners William Jacome and Orlando Medellin, and takes its name from the Hebrew word meaning ability and endurance — a phrase that reflects the firm's philosophy of transforming underappreciated urban sites into enduring community assets. Operating an end-to-end development model that integrates architecture, art, sports and wellness programming, hospitality, food and beverage, and experiential design, Yakol approaches each project as a placemaking exercise as much as a real estate investment. The firm is simultaneously advancing the Babylon Racquet Club, a 23-story mixed-use tower in Brickell, and a large-scale residential and retail development in collaboration with the Dutch firm MVRDV — a portfolio that signals a consistent ambition to work with architects whose reputations transcend their typology.

Upper Buena Vista sits at a compelling inflection point in Miami's urban geography, occupying the corridor between Wynwood to the south and Edgewater and Morningside to the east, with the Design District immediately adjacent. Long characterized by low-rise multifamily housing and light industrial uses, the neighborhood has emerged in recent years as one of the city's most closely watched development frontiers: close enough to Miami's most desirable cultural and commercial districts to benefit from their gravity, but still early enough in its transformation to offer the land value and spatial freedom that those denser neighborhoods can no longer provide. The HOUSE site itself sits within a Qualified Opportunity Zone and is EB-5 compliant, offering qualified international investors a pathway to U.S. residency through an $800,000 investment — a dimension that broadens the building's buyer profile considerably. With sales expected to launch in fall 2025, construction scheduled to commence in 2026, and delivery targeted for 2029, HOUSE by Shigeru Ban arrives at precisely the right moment: when Upper Buena Vista is transitioning from a neighborhood on the rise to one that has arrived.

Amenities

Rooftop pool deck
Indoor padel courts
Fitness center
Event spaces
Shared catering kitchens
Children's rooms
Ground-floor retail
Custom furniture by Shigeru Ban

Location

237 NE 54th St, Miami, FL 33137

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