Large-scale development on Miami Beach rarely happens without years of planning, land assemblage, and capital willing to take a long view. Ocean Terrace Residences, now rising along a full oceanfront block in North Beach, reflects that reality. The five-acre project by Witkoff, in partnership with Ocean Terrace Holdings, is designed not simply as another luxury condominium, but as a mixed-use destination intended to reshape an entire stretch of coastline.
The property spans roughly 350 feet of direct ocean frontage and includes two residential towers, a boutique hotel, private club, curated retail, and a new public park designed by landscape architect Raymond Jungles. Instead of maximizing density, the development is deliberately limited to 52 condominium residences and 24 resort residences, a scale that positions the project at the ultra-luxury end of the market while supporting long-term pricing power.
For Witkoff, the strategy follows a familiar pattern. The firm, founded by Steven Witkoff, has built its reputation on high-profile residential and hospitality projects that function as destinations as much as addresses. At Ocean Terrace, that approach is reflected in a design team that includes Robert A.M. Stern Architects for interiors and layouts, Revuelta Architecture International for the exterior architecture, and Enzo Enea for the landscaped amenity decks and gardens.
The project also aligns with Miami Beach’s broader push to reinvest in North Beach as a long-term growth corridor. By incorporating public park space, street-level retail, and a hotel component, the development fits the city’s preference for projects that contribute infrastructure while still attracting high-net-worth buyers.
From a business standpoint, the mixed-use structure creates multiple revenue streams beyond condominium sales. In addition to the residences, the plan includes a 42-key hotel, private members’ club, and approximately 15,000 square feet of retail, extending the life cycle of the investment and reinforcing the property’s positioning as a full-service residential resort.
Ocean Terrace reflects a broader shift in South Florida development, where fewer buildable sites and higher costs are pushing developers toward lower-density, design-driven projects built to hold value over time rather than move quickly through the sales cycle.













