640 Northeast 34th Street

Two Tower Crane Permits Issued To Denver-Based Aimco For 60-Story Hamilton On The Bay Apartment Tower

The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) has issued permits for two tower cranes to build Hamilton on the Bay II, a 649-foot-tall apartment tower soon to rise at 640 Northeast 34th Street in Edgewater, Miami. Designed by Stantec with interiors by Urvanx and landscaping by MAKwork for Denver-based real estate developer Aimco, the 60-story tower will have 241 residential units, 4,696-square-feet of commercial space for a restaurant and a parking garage for 380 vehicles. The planned development will rise on nearly 1.1-acres of combined land parcels between 560 and 640 Northeast 34th Streets, across the street from the developer’s 28-story ‘The Hamilton’ recently renovated apartment tower and directly facing Biscayne Bay.

Read More

AIMCO Files Plans For 60-Story Residential Tower At 640 NE 34th Street In Edgewater

Denver-based real estate developer AIMCO has filed plans to Miami-Dade County planners requesting a shoreline review for a 60-story residential tower in Edgewater. The building would be located across the street from Hamilton on the Bay, also owned by AIMCO, occupying several parcels of land between 560 – 640 Northeast 34th Street. Plans call for the development of a 650-foot-tall structure with 241 dwelling units, 4,696 square feet of commercial space for a restaurant and a new 8-story parking garage for 380 vehicles. Stantec is both the architect and civil engineer. Kimley-Horn is the traffic engineer. Urvanx is the interior designer of record and landscaping will be handled by MAKwork.

Read More

Aimco’s Planned 60-Story Tower In Edgewater Gets New Rendering

Denver-based real estate developer Aimco has released another rendering of a 60-story tower being planned for 640 Northeast 34th Street in Edgewater, Miami. The developer released the rendering on their website in conjunction with their 2021 fourth quarter earnings announcement. In November 2021, YIMBY had reported Aimco completed the purchase of a development assemblage in Edgewater beside their Hamilton On The Bay apartment tower that would permit for up to 1.1 million square feet of new construction. The 70,000-square foot site would ultimately give rise to two towers, based on the previously released renderings, with the Biscayne Bay-facing structure depicted in the new rendering rising as high as 646-feet, or 649-feet above sea level according to an FAA filing. 

Read More

Applications Filed With The FAA For A 649-Foot-Tall Building In Edgewater, Miami

Applications have been filed with the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) for the construction of a 649-foot-tall building at 640 Northeast 34th Street in the Beverly Point sub-division of Edgewater, Miami. Located at the very end of the street, the interior lot fronts Biscayne Bay and bound by Hamilton On The Bay to the North and Bay Park Towers Condominiums to the South. The two coordinates listed in the applications correspond to a development site currently owned by Denver-based real estate developer Aimco, who also owns Hamilton On The Bay. In their Fall 2021 Investor Presentation, the developer told investors that they completed the purchase of additional properties beside their Hamilton on the Bay apartment tower, which combined will allow for 1.1 million square feet of new construction.

Read More

AIMCO Plans For Two Luxury High Rises Along Biscayne Bay In Edgewater

Denver-based real estate developer AIMCO is planning to redevelop an assemblage of properties in Edgewater near Biscayne Bay. In their recent Fall 2021 Investor Presentation, the company told investors that they completed the purchase of additional properties beside their Hamilton on the Bay apartment tower, which combined will allow for 1.1 million square feet of new construction. The assemblage is comprised of 10 plots of land approximately totaling 70,000 square feet, which may give way to two luxury residential towers well over 50 stories, and potentially addressed as 640 Northeast 34th Street.

Read More

Fetching more...