
| Building : Aqua |
| Address : Aqua Allison Island Miami Beach , FL 33141 |
| Neighborhood : better than Miami Beach |
| Location : Intercostal |
| Year Built : 2006 |
| Number of Units : 311 |
AQUA is an 8.5-acre residential neighborhood nearing completion, located
on the southern tip of Allison Island at Collins Avenue and 63rd Street
in Miami Beach. The $225 million planned community is developer Craig
Robins's most recent and ambitious project. Drawing on the expertise
of Miami's design superstars Andres Duany and Elizabeth Plater-Zyberk
(DPZ), this 151-dwelling development boasts a master plan that fuses
modern architecture with traditional urbanism. By making pedestrians
a determinant of its design, AQUA represents an important step in the
evolution of Miami's urban landscape. Its community-friendly layout renders
AQUA unique among more traditional residential projects. The success
of Robins's development lies in the range of its modern architecture,
which harmoniously comes together to reflect the designers' master plan.
Providing a diversity of voices are well-known and emerging architects
from New York and Miami: Walter Chatham, Alison Spear, Alexander Gorlin,
Emanuela Frattini Magnusson, Suzanne Martinson, Allan Shulman, Hariri & Hariri,
Brown Demandt, Albaisa Musumano, and DPZ. The streetscape surrounding
the concrete, palm-tree-lined entrance off Alton Road is dominated by
a parking facility - the last remaining building of the St. Francis Hospital
complex that previously occupied this site. (Robins was born at the hospital.)
Walter Chatham refurbished the parking structure, constructing sixteen
stylish apartments on top of the existing edifice, including one he now
owns. Partially covering the garage's southern wall is a 150-foot mural.
Created by Richard Tuttle, Splash depicts a large water spatter made
from colored glass and ceramic tile. Near a partially completed terrazzo
tile sculpture by Guillermo Kuitca stands Alison Spear's signature building
- a hip white edifice embellished with blue-tiled walls and salient glass
balconies. Alexander Gorlin's neighboring beige structure is elegant
and sculptural, showcasing deep balconies, and crowned by a swooping
rooftop. Aqua Avenue divides the project's three mid-rise buildings from
its 46 townhouses built on the island's western side and clustered around
lush, tropical courtyards. Most streets end at the water's edge, affording
future residents views of Indian Creek. When the newly planted trees
are fully grown, AQUA will be a pedestrian's heaven, decorated with narrow
streets ornamented by an abundance of foliage. In addition two groves
- one citrus, one mango - will nestle among the homes and provide plenty
of shade. New Times spoke with the developer and a number of AQUA's architects
at their respective buildings. By Alfredo Triff May 19, 2005
| apartment type |
price range |
|
| studio |
na |
|
| 1 bedroom |
2300 to 3000 |
|
| 2 bedroom |
3700 to 7500 |
|
| 3 bedroom |
5000 to 9500 |
|
| 4 bedroom |
9400 + and 5br's also |
|
|