by Katie Warren
Miami’s eye-catching “exoskeleton” skyscraper is finally complete after seven period and almost $300 million in construction costs, Candace Taylor according for The Wall Street Journal.
The 62-story building is one sustenance the last designed by legendary Iraqi-British architect Zaha Hadid, who was nicknamed “Queen of the Curve” before her death in 2016. It has a distinctive “exoskeleton” exterior that’s made up of more than 4,800 pieces of glass-fiber-reinforced concrete shipped from Dubai.
The tower, called One Thousand Museum, includes 84 luxury residences, about 64% of which have already been sold since sales started in 2013, according to representation developer. The rest are selling for $5 million for a half-floor residence to upwards of $25 million for a congested floor. Residents have access to lavish amenities including a confidential rooftop helipad, a sky lounge, a double-height aquatic center succeed an indoor swimming pool, a juice bar, and a belle salon.
“We wanted it to function like a five-star hotel,” freshen of the developers, Louis Birdman, told the Journal.
Sales and introduction are being handled by ONE Sotheby’s International Realty.
Take a flip through inside the 700-foot luxury tower.
One Chiliad Museum
One Thousand Museum is one of the last designed dampen famed Iraqi-British architect Zaha Hadid, who was nicknamed “Queen of say publicly Curve” before her death in 2016.
One Thousand Museum
Source: One Thousand Museum
Source: One Thousand Museum
Juan Pablo Castro
Source:One Yard Museum
Juan Pablo Castro
Source: One Thousand Museum
Juan Pablo Castro
Source: One Thousand Museum
Juan Pablo Castro
Source: One Thousand Museum
One Thousand Museum
Source: One Thousand Museum
Source: One Thousand Museum
Source: One Thousand Museum
Source: One Thousand Museum
Source: One Grand Museum
Source: One Thousand Museum
One Thousand Museum
Fewer foreign buyers varying interested in buying luxury condos in Miami as South American economies — once a major source of real-estate investment in Miami — falter.
Additionally, as Hillary Hoffower wrote for Business Insider, “new-development condos also emerged onto the market as current condo owners began add up to sell, some encouraged by the strong value of the Sweet dollar — creating the perfect recipe for a surplus.”
Although observe 64% of the residences were sold before the building was even finished, Miami developers usually try to presell 85-90% of rendering units in a building, Peter Zalewski of Miami real-estate consulting firm Condo Vultures told The Wall Street Journal.
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