Brickell's riverfront skyline reached a new milestone this summer as Viceroy Brickell welcomed its first residents, marking the global debut of a fully residential building under the storied Viceroy hospitality brand.
The 45-story tower received a Temporary Certificate of Occupancy in May 2026, clearing the way for move-ins to begin at the 420-unit development. Positioned along the Miami River, the building represents a landmark moment not just for the neighborhood but for the Viceroy brand itself, which has until now been associated exclusively with hotels and resorts worldwide.
Designed by Arquitectonica — the Miami-based firm behind some of the city's most recognizable towers — the building features interiors crafted by Meyer Davis Studio, a New York design house known for blending residential comfort with a refined, hospitality-influenced aesthetic. The collaboration brings a distinctly curated sensibility to a project that was always conceived as a lifestyle destination as much as a place to live.
Among the building's headline features is more than 37,000 square feet of amenity space, anchored by an elevated pool deck overlooking the Miami River. That riverfront perch sets Viceroy Brickell apart in a neighborhood where rooftop pools and bay views have become standard currency — direct engagement with the river itself remains comparatively rare and is expected to be a significant draw for residents.
The delivery lands at a moment when Brickell's riverfront corridor is undergoing rapid transformation. A succession of luxury residential completions has been reshaping the area in recent years, drawing a mix of domestic relocators and international buyers to one of Miami's densest and most transit-accessible urban districts. Viceroy Brickell's arrival adds another chapter to that evolution, bringing with it the brand recognition and hospitality-caliber service standards that have become an increasingly common selling point in Miami's upper-tier residential market.
With 420 residences now coming online, the full absorption of the building's units will be a closely watched indicator of where luxury demand stands heading into the second half of 2026.
Original reporting on Viceroy Brickell's delivery was first published by CondoBlackBook.