The Ritz-Carlton Residences, Miami Beach is the only Ritz-Carlton branded residential complex in the City of Miami Beach: 111 condominiums and 15 low-rise villas on Surprise Lake, in the Nautilus neighborhood of Mid-Beach. Piero Lissoni built it into the structure of the former Miami Heart Institute and it delivered in 2019. It is a finished asset, scarce and tightly held, with a resale market of its own.
The complex sits on nearly nine acres of waterfront, with a private 36-slip marina, a half-acre rooftop pool deck, spa, cinema, fitness center and two 24-hour attended lobbies. It is not a tower: these are low volumes —eight to ten stories— plus fifteen standalone villas, each with a two-car garage and private pool. The adaptive reuse of the former Miami Heart Institute kept the bones and reinterpreted them as luxury residences, with Boffi kitchens and Gaggenau appliances; it was Lissoni's first built work in the United States.
For today's buyer what matters is not the brand brochure but the secondary market: which units owners are reselling, at what price per square foot, which face the water, and what the complex offers for rent. Two products coexist here —condominiums and villas— with different pricing logic. This page orders that: live inventory for sale and for rent, how to read value, and the buying process, so you reach the offer with judgment.
What makes the complex different
The Ritz-Carlton Miami Beach's value is not in height but the opposite: low density, private waterfront and brand service in a residential enclave. Among what defines the experience:
- Low-rise in Mid-Beach eight to ten stories —not a tower— over a landscaped site of nearly nine acres, with a human scale rare among Miami's branded residences.
- Waterfront and private marina on Surprise Lake, connected to the bay, with 36 private boat slips: the residence is lived with the boat at the door, not facing the open ocean.
- The 15 villas standalone houses with a two-car garage and private pool, with Ritz-Carlton service: a house-with-hotel product the corridor's towers do not offer.
- By Piero Lissoni the Italian architect's first built work in the U.S., set into the structure of the former Miami Heart Institute, with Boffi kitchens and Gaggenau appliances.