Riverfront (Miami)

The Riverfront is an urban development in Downtown Miami, Florida, United States. The complex is located on the north bank of the Miami River in Miami's Central Business District. The complex contains three main towers, "Mint" and "The Ivy" and "Wind." The taller of the three, Mint, is currently the 6th-tallest building in Miami and Florida. It has 55 floors and rises 631 feet (192 m).

Mint Tower
Mint
General information
TypeResidential
Location350 South Miami Avenue, Miami, Florida, United States
Construction started2006
Completed2008
Height
Roof631 ft (192 m)
Technical details
Floor count55
Design and construction
ArchitectRevuelta Vega Leon
DeveloperKey International
The Ivy
The Ivy
General information
TypeResidential
Location350 South Miami Avenue, Miami, Florida, United States
Construction started2006
CompletedJuly 2008
Height
Roof512 ft (156 m)
Technical details
Floor count45
Design and construction
ArchitectRevuelta Vega Leon
DeveloperKey International

History

The Ivy opened in July, 2008. This tower is 512 feet (156 m) tall, and rises 45 floors. Ivy and Mint are developed by Key International. The third tower, Wind, was developed by Neo. "Wind," is a 45-story of 533 feet (162 m), was approved in 2006 by the city council of Miami and the Federal Aviation Administration, is the third tower in the complex. Construction began in 2007 and the tower was completed 2009.

"Cima" tower was proposed for the southeast corner of the Riverfront Complex but was never built. It was proposed to begin in 2006 and be completed by 2008. The tower was proposed to have 471 residential units with a height of 52 floors.

The final phase of the development was supposed to be Riverfront Phase IV, a 334 feet (102 m), 22-story building which would have been located to the west of the three towers. The Riverfront Retail Center was proposed to connect the buildings at the lower floors and was to be dedicated to retail. The towers were to be used for condominiums, apartments, and office space. The Miami Riverwalk and the Riverwalk Metro Station would have been incorporated into the development. The complex is bordered by Southwest 3rd Street to the north, the Miami River to the south, Southwest 1st Avenue to the east, and Southwest 4th Avenue to the west. It is served by the Riverwalk and Miami Avenue Metromover stations, which connect to the Metrorail at Government Center and Brickell stations. The architect is Revuelta Vega Leon.

gollark: Like parsing Perl. Instead of writing a parser, which is hard, you can simply prove that it cannot be done at all and get out of work.
gollark: Hyper^∞computers, inevitably.
gollark: It is very convenient though, you can just handwave away the possibility of doing various things by going "no, halting problem".
gollark: You don't have hypercomputers?
gollark: Maybe an actual stacky one.

See also

References

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