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The Miami Tower is a 47-story, landmark office skyscraper in Miami, Florida, United States; previously known as the Bank Of America Tower and CenTrust Tower. It is located in central Downtown . It is currently the 16th tallest building in Miami and Florida.
Miami Riverbridge Tower 1 1,049 (320) 95 2028 Downtown Proposed three tower project to replace the existing Hyatt Regency and James L. Knight Center. Will include 1,806 apartments, 615-room Hyatt Regency hotel and 190,000 square feet of Class A meeting space. [214] 316 NE 2 Street 1,049 (320) 104 Unknown Downtown 609 Brickell 1,049 (320)
Miami: Residential tower with 549 condominiums and 3,716 square meters of ground floor retail. Site is located on the corner of South Miami Avenue and Brickell Plaza. Typical of Miami residential construction, financing will use the Latin American finance method. Construction began in March 2016. [9] [10] 6 830 Brickell: 725 (221) 57 2022 Miami 7
Take a look at the plans for the Brickell site.
The building is planned to rise to the maximum allowable height in downtown Miami of 1,049 ft (320 meters) above sea level, or about 1,040 ft (317 meters) above ground, [1] [2] making it easily the tallest building in Miami and Florida, surpassing the Panorama Tower built in 2017. Construction began in late 2022 and is expected to complete in 2027.
Knight Center is a Metromover station in Downtown, Miami, Florida located in the Miami Tower.. This station is located at the intersection of Southwest Second Street and Second Avenue, connected to the namesake James L. Knight Center by a glass-enclosed walkway underneath the Downtown Distributor freeway.
701 Brickell Avenue, is an office skyscraper in the Brickell district of Miami, Florida, United States. It is located on Brickell Avenue in the northern Brickell Financial District, just three blocks from Biscayne Bay. The tower was built in 1986 and opened as the Lincoln Center, it held that title until 2004.
The hotel and convention center were planned to be part of the same 55-story building, [4] known as the Marriott Marquis Miami Worldcenter, but this tower and exhibition space was cancelled. [5] The hotel would have included 1,800 rooms over the approximately 600,000 square feet (55,742 m 2 ) convention center.