Cultural Catalyst

Faena District promises to be a game changer for Miami Beach

By Leslie Kraft Burke

Faena District, aerialIt may sound like a lofty goal when the creators of the Faena District in Miami Beach promise to change the physical and cultural landscape of the city forever; but even a quick look at their plans makes it believable.

The project, conceived as a collaboration among artists and developers, carries the name of developer Alan Faena and stretches north from 32nd Street to 36th Street, between the Atlantic Ocean and Indian Creek. Its aim is to create a new neighborhood rooted in art and inclusive cultural experiences similar – but much larger in scope – to Faena Hotel Buenos Aires. Since opening in 2004, the urban resort has redefined the experience of travel by merging the elements of art, culture, entertainment, sustainable architecture and cutting-edge technology.

Faena says that success in Argentina consolidated his company’s expertise in urban development, setting the stage for more ventures there and beyond with businessman and philanthropist Len Blavatnik. This includes the redevelopment of the docklands of Puerto Madero in Buenos Aires.

The first piece of the Faena District to open was Faena House, a Foster + Partners-designed 18-story condominium building situated on the beach. It’s meant to be an emblematic addition to the Miami Beach skyline, featuring architectural advances such as signature aleros (architecturally designed metal structures) and expansive glass walls that open to panoramic views, allowing for a true indoor/outdoor experience.

Faena House aereal viewThe Faena Hotel Miami Beach opened last year and is a reimagined version of the historic Saxony Hotel, which was built in 1947 by George Sax and designed by Roy F. France. Once dubbed the “Queen of Collins Avenue,” the hotel reigned in the ’50s and ’60s as the lodestar of glamour, where Hollywood icons Frank Sinatra, Marilyn Monroe and Dean Martin performed.

The Faena Hotel, which has 169 hotel rooms and 13 penthouse residences, was conceptualized in part by film director/producer Baz Luhrmann and Academy Award-winning costume designer Catherine Martin. Meant to recall the Art Deco allure of the 1950s, rooms are designed with an Old World grandeur: hardwood floors, sumptuous “Faena red” velvet and cool-blue tiled bathrooms. Each floor will feature a Faena butler, offering guests one point of contact and personalized service throughout their stay.

The hotel’s beach club, Faena Playa, has a palm-lined pool area near 100,000 square feet of beach. There also is a spa and several luxury restaurant concepts on the property. Noteworthy, too, is Faena House’s 3,000-square-foot Saxony Theater, offering nightly world-class cabaret-style revues.

Two adjacent residential condominiums called Faena Versailles are also planned and are being designed by Brandon Haw and William Sofield.

Opening in 2016 is the Faena Forum, an arts and cultural hub designed by Rem Koolhaas/OMA that will house Faena Art, a nonprofit organization based in Buenos Aires that encourages cross-cultural collaborations and synergies throughout the Western Hemisphere.

Also planned for the district is Casa Claridge’s, a 50-room beachside guesthouse designed as a home on the site of the El Paraiso Apartments that were built in the Spanish architectural tradition in 1928.

The district will include Faena Bazaar as well. It’s planned as a shopping complex with a state-of-the-art parking area and marina on Indian Creek – all designed by Rem Koolhaas/OMA and enhanced by the landscaping design of Raymond Jungles. 

You May Also Like
Big Four Firm Deepens South Florida Roots

PwC Expands Footprint in Palm Beach County Amid Wealth Migration Boom

Read More
Powering the Past and the Future

Florida Power and Light Turns 100.

Read More
The Real ROI: Boynton Beach’s New Housing Project

PulteGroup Tackles the Region’s Quiet Crisis: Housing the People Who Power the Economy

Read More
Developers Bet Big on Florida’s Palm Coast

BH Group and Unicorp join forces as Northeast Florida draws new wealth

Read More
Other Posts
Brickell-Area Tower Secures Major Backing as Miami Defies National Trends

A $111 million construction loan from Goldman Sachs to build The Perrin, a sleek 26-story apartment tower rising just west of Brickell.

Read More
A Fix for the Fixer-Uppers: Florida Rewrites Its Condo Law Before the Market Cracks

Tens of thousands of condo owners have been blindsided by sudden special assessments, skyrocketing HOA fees, and panicked boards scrambling to comply.

Read More
Big Brains, Bigger Build: PBA Bets $236M on West Palm’s Future

Palm Beach Atlantic University to fund a transformative new student housing project in West Palm Beach.

Read More