Edgewater occupies a specific position in Miami’s urban geography. Bordered by Wynwood to the west, the Design District to the north, and Biscayne Bay to the east, the neighborhood offers bayfront access and urban connectivity in a combination that few Miami locations can match. It is neither the transactional density of Brickell nor the resort character of Miami Beach — it is a neighborhood in the process of defining its own identity.
Villa Miami at 710 NE 29th Street sits on Edgewater’s bayfront, currently rising past its 21st floor with a late 2027 completion target. The tower’s presence alongside projects like Missoni Baia and Aria Reserve reflects a broader shift in the neighborhood — from mid-market high-rise development toward a more concentrated ultra-luxury segment.
For buyers, Edgewater’s proximity to the Miami Design District, Wynwood, and the Adrienne Arsht Center for the Performing Arts represents a cultural density that Brickell and Miami Beach do not offer in the same configuration. The neighborhood also connects directly to the Miami Baywalk promenade, which Villa Miami’s ground-floor layout is designed to engage.
At 70 units and a starting price of $8.5 million, Villa Miami is not positioned for Edgewater’s existing buyer pool. It is positioned for the buyer who is choosing Edgewater deliberately — and expects the neighborhood to continue moving in one direction.
