CMC Group and Fort Partners commenced vertical construction on Four Seasons Private Residences Coconut Grove this month, marking the transition from foundation work to steel and concrete on a 126-unit tower that priced its penthouse inventory north of $25M when sales launched in early 2023. The Miami property represents $400M in total development capitalization and sits on a 2.7-acre bayfront parcel where pre-sales crossed the 65% threshold in Q3 2024.
The vertical build comes eighteen months after groundbreaking and puts the project on schedule for late-2026 delivery, a timeline that places it in direct competition with three other Four Seasons-branded residential towers completing in Miami-Dade and Broward counties between Q4 2025 and Q1 2027. The Coconut Grove tower follows Fort Partners' established playbook: acquire irreplaceable waterfront land, presell to international family offices before breaking ground, then deliver at occupancy rates above 80% within six months of certificate of occupancy. The developer replicated this sequence at Four Seasons Fort Lauderdale, where penthouse resales traded 22% above original purchase prices within fourteen months of closing.
What matters for allocators: Miami's branded-residence supply curve is compressing. The Coconut Grove vertical start confirms that developers with secured construction financing are accelerating schedules to capture demand before $3.2B in competing luxury inventory floods Grove, Brickell, and Surfside submarkets simultaneously. Four Seasons operates 52 branded-residence projects globally, with 19 in active development—the highest pipeline count among luxury hotel operators. The brand's residences command price-per-square-foot premiums averaging 18-24% above non-branded comparables in the same micro-market, according to data compiled across twelve North American projects delivered since 2019.
The Coconut Grove project's material selection telegraphs positioning strategy. Fort Partners specified statement stone installations for lobby and amenity floors, sourcing book-matched marble from the same Italian quarries supplying Aman and Bulgari residential projects. This specification decision—worth roughly $4M in incremental hard costs—targets the same buyer profile acquiring whole-floor units at nearby Grove at Grand Bay, where 73% of purchasers since 2022 held passports from Argentina, Brazil, or Venezuela. Miami-Dade County approved $11.8B in residential construction permits during the twelve months ending September 2024, with branded-residence projects representing $2.1B of that total—a share that doubled from 9% in 2019 to 18% in 2024.
Operators should track three variables in the next eight months. First: whether CMC Group maintains its current vertical-construction pace through Miami's June-October weather window, when tropical systems historically delay concrete pours by 12-18 days per season. Second: pricing adjustments on the remaining 44 unsold units as three nearby projects release inventory in Q2 2025. Third: Fort Partners' refinancing of its construction facility, currently carrying a floating rate tied to SOFR plus 385 basis points—a spread that pencils differently if the Fed holds rates above 4.5% through 2025.
Four Seasons added 2,847 branded-residence keys to its global portfolio in the past thirty-six months, more than any comparable period in the company's fifty-year operating history.