Construction has officially begun on 14 ROC, a 31-story residential tower slated to rise at 125 NE 14th Street in Downtown Miami's Arts & Entertainment District, adding 283 units to a corridor that is rapidly reshaping itself around transit access and public space.
The project is being developed by 14th Street Miami Investments LLC, with Russell Galbut at the helm. RSP Architects designed the tower, and Seawood Builders is serving as general contractor. The groundbreaking marks a significant commitment to a neighborhood that has long been seen as an underutilized connector between Midtown and the urban core.
The site places 14 ROC in close proximity to several of the city's most consequential infrastructure investments. The tower sits just north of the new Signature Bridge, the sweeping cable-stayed span now redefining the northern gateway into Downtown Miami. It is also within walking distance of the Adrienne Arsht Center for the Performing Arts, one of the largest performing arts complexes in the country, and the planned Underdeck park — a future 33-acre green space being developed beneath the elevated I-395 expressway.
Walkability and transit connectivity are described as central to the project's design philosophy, a positioning that reflects broader trends among developers targeting younger, car-optional residents drawn to Miami's growing urban core. The A&E District has seen renewed developer interest in recent years, buoyed by its proximity to Biscayne Bay, its concentration of cultural institutions, and ongoing public investments in streetscaping and mobility infrastructure.
The 14 ROC groundbreaking comes as Miami continues to absorb significant residential construction activity across its downtown neighborhoods, with thousands of units in various stages of planning and development between Edgewater, Wynwood, and the central business district. Projects anchored around walkable amenities and transit access have become a favored pitch as developers compete for residents who relocated to Miami during and after the pandemic and have since raised the bar for urban livability.
No completion date or leasing timeline has been publicly announced for 14 ROC at this time.
The original story was reported by Citybiz.