Downtown St. Petersburg

Mat Foundation Pour Complete For 42-Story Art House At 235 1st Avenue South In Downtown St. Petersburg

The primary mat foundation placement has been completed for Art House, a 42-story residential building under construction at 235 1st Avenue South in downtown St. Petersburg. Designed by SB Architects with interiors by ID & Design International and developed by Delray Beach-based Kolter Group, the 450-foot-tall structure will house 244 condominium units, 6,100 square feet of ground floor retail along Central Avenue and 3rd Street South, and a 482-space parking garage. Kimley-Horn is the landscape architect, Smith & Associates Real Estate exclusively handles sales, and United Landmark Associates handles marketing.

Read More

Historic 6000-Yard Concrete Pour To Set Foundation for St. Petersburg’s Tallest Tower

Downtown St. Petersburg is bracing for a historic night as construction on The Residences at 400 Central, a 1.3-million-square-foot project developed by New York-based Red Apple Real Estate, enters a pivotal phase. Suffolk Construction, the project’s general contractor, is coordinating the largest-ever continuous pour of concrete for a non-governmental project in the city’s history, set to begin tonight around 9 PM. This monumental undertaking is crucial in realizing the vision of the project’s architect, Arquitectonica, which will ultimately rise 515 feet as the tallest residential condominium on Florida’s Gulf Coast.

Read More

Red Apple Real Estate Secures $252 Million In Financing, Vertical Construction For St. Petersburg’s Tallest Building To Commence In March 2023

Red Apple Real Estate has secured $252 million in financing for The Residences at 400 Central, a 46-story mixed-use building under construction at 400 Central Avenue in downtown St. Petersburg. Designed by Arquitectonica with WSP as the structural engineer and featuring interiors by Celano Design Studio, The Residences at 400 Central will become the tallest building in the city and on the gulf coast at approximately 515 feet, yielding 1.3 million square feet of space including 301 luxury condominiums with views of Tampa Bay and the Gulf of Mexico, retail and restaurant space, and upwards of 40,000 square feet of Class A office space. Suffolk Construction is the general contractor for the project, which is scheduled to go vertical in March 2023. 

Read More

Foundations Underway For 46-Story ‘The Residences At 400 Central’ In Downtown St. Petersburg

Foundation work has begun for The Residences at 400 Central, a 46-story mixed-use building at 400 Central Avenue in Downtown St. Petersburg. Slated to become the city’s tallest building, the 515-foot-tall structure is designed by Miami-based Arquitectonica with interiors by Celano Design Studio and is being developed by New York City-based Red Apple Real Estate, led by John Catsimatidis. The project will yield 1.3 million square feet of space including 301 residential units, 35,000 square feet of indoor and outdoor amenities, retail and restaurant space, Class A office space, and a rooftop observatory with a view from Tampa Bay to the Gulf of Mexico. This first stage of foundation construction is expected to be completed in the next few months, and vertical constriction is expected to begin in early 2023.

Read More

Suffolk Construction Selected As General Contractor For St. Petersburg’s Tallest Building

Suffolk Construction has been selected as the general contractor for The Residences at 400 Central, a world-class 46-story mixed-use tower slated to ascend over the heart of Downtown St. Petersburg at 400 Central Avenue. The 515-foot-tall structure will become the new tallest building in St. Petersburg and on Florida’s west coast, designed by Miami-based Arquitectonica and developed by New York City-based Red Apple Real Estate. The project will yield 1.3 million square feet of space including 301 condominium homes with 35,000 square feet of indoor and outdoor amenities, retail and restaurant space, Class A office space and a rooftop observatory with view from Tampa Bay to the Gulf of Mexico.

Read More

Fetching more...