Skip to main content
Miami News

Closings Begin at The Standard Residences Midtown Miami

The wellness-focused Standard Residences has begun closings, delivering 228 amenity-rich units to Midtown — and adding another data point to the Edgewater–Midtown new-development corridor.

Miami Condo HQMiami Condo HQ
April 5, 20263 min read
Closings Begin at The Standard Residences Midtown Miami

Closings have begun at The Standard Residences Midtown Miami, the wellness-leaning branded project that brings 228 residences to Midtown. Closings mark the moment a tower stops being a sales gallery and starts being a building people live in — when deposits convert to deeds, owners take keys, and the units begin to circulate as resale and rental inventory. For a market that watches its development pipeline closely, a delivery of this size is a real event, and it lands in one of the most active new-construction corridors in the city.

What is delivering

The Standard Residences carries the design-forward, wellness-focused sensibility associated with the Standard brand into a residential format, with the amenity-rich program — fitness, social and lifestyle spaces — that buyers in this segment now expect as standard rather than a bonus. At 228 residences it is a substantial addition to Midtown's inventory, and because the Standard name is best known for its hospitality properties, the residences extend that lifestyle positioning to ownership. We do not maintain an independent building or neighborhood profile for The Standard Residences or for Midtown itself, so treat the project details here as the news as reported, not as figures from our own data.

Why it matters for the Edgewater corridor

Midtown sits shoulder to shoulder with Edgewater, the bayfront pocket just north of downtown that has become Miami's preconstruction laboratory — home to waterfront towers like Aria Reserve, Missoni Baia and the Paraiso district, and a quick walk to the Design District and Wynwood. The two areas function as one continuous new-development corridor, sharing the same buyers, the same amenity expectations and the same upward pressure on pricing. When a 228-unit building closes in Midtown, it adds to the supply and the momentum that the broader Edgewater corridor is known for. A buyer comparing options in this part of the city is effectively shopping a single market that runs from the bay inland.

What to watch next

The interesting signal in any new delivery is what happens in the months after closings: how quickly resale listings appear, where they price relative to the developer's last release, and how the rental units lease up. Those data points say more about real demand than launch-day pricing ever does. For where the corridor's numbers actually stand, our live market report at /market-stats is the place to look, and our Edgewater coverage tracks the bayfront towers that anchor the area. As Midtown and Edgewater keep delivering inventory side by side, the next several quarters of absorption are the thing worth following.

Tagged:newsMidtownnew development
Miami Condo HQ

Written by

Miami Condo HQ

Miami Condo Specialists

Miami Condo HQ is the complete Miami condo platform — a full profile for every condo building in Miami, for-sale and for-rent listings, in-depth building profiles and Miami market research, and honest, pressure-free guidance for buyers, sellers and investors across South Florida.

Back to all articles

Ready to act on this?

Where to look next

Keep reading

Get the next Miami market report first

One concise email when we publish — quarterly data, new developments and the buildings worth watching.

By subscribing you agree to receive Miami market emails and to have your details shared with our partner real-estate professionals. Unsubscribe anytime.