What Is Planned at 1940 Park Avenue?
At 1940 Park Avenue in Collins Park, a mixed-use redevelopment is planned on 1.6 acres of city-owned land now occupied by the Barclay Plaza Apartments.
The proposal calls for a six-story, 78,700-square-foot building with 105 residential units and about 1,000 square feet of neighborhood retail. Such mixed-use planning reflects broader redevelopment initiatives that integrate housing, retail, and community functions.
Brooks + Scarpa Architects is designing the project under a long-term ground lease selected by Miami Beach commissioners in 2024.
Plans include co-working space, fitness areas, and an 8,600-square-foot outdoor amenity deck with a pool.
The housing mix is weighted toward smaller units, with 54 studios, 39 one-bedroom apartments, and 12 two-bedroom units.
The plan also includes historic preservation through retention of portions of the Barclay building, including restoration of its lobby.
Fifteen percent of the apartments would be reserved as affordable housing for households earning up to 160% of area median income.
Why Does Miami Beach Want More Density There?
Miami Beach officials are seeking more density on sites like 1940 Park Avenue because they view it as a direct tool for adding workforce housing on scarce public land. Higher allowable floor area can increase unit counts without expanding a site’s footprint.
That fits the city’s compact redevelopment strategy and existing zoning incentives.
Key Reasons
- Limited city-owned land makes land-efficiency essential.
- Density helps projects become financially workable in a high-cost market.
- Growth can be directed to infill areas with transit and neighborhood access.
- Officials can use percentage-based increases to balance capacity, coastal aesthetics, and traffic impacts.
The broader policy logic is regional as well as local. Planning documents anticipate continued population growth and call for more housing production in dense corridors.
In that context, added density is being treated as a practical zoning response to persistent supply pressure.
What Affordable Housing Does the Project Include?
The proposal reserves 12 of its 29 residences as affordable housing, creating a 40 percent set-aside under the Live Local Act. This makes the building Miami Beach’s first affordable housing project under that law.
The affordable homes are intended for households earning at or below 120 percent of area median income. Available information points to a workforce-housing model rather than deeply subsidized units. Similar housing policy changes in California, including ADU condo sales, are being watched for their potential to expand attainable homeownership options for middle-income buyers.
Affordable housing details
| Category | Details |
|---|---|
| Affordable homes | 12 of 29 units |
| Size and type | Compact units, 400 to 475 square feet |
These affordable residences are the project’s smallest homes. Public reporting does not specify whether they are studios or one-bedroom layouts.
The remaining 17 residences are larger one-bedroom homes with dens and two-bedroom penthouses. That mix creates a mixed-income building.
Why Is Miami Beach Using City-Owned Land?
Beyond the affordable set-aside, the land itself is central to why this proposal exists.
Miami Beach controls scarce parcels that might otherwise be unavailable or too expensive to secure later.
That control supports public stewardship by letting officials weigh housing against parks, services, or other civic uses.
Faster Control, Larger Sites
- City ownership avoids dependence on private sellers and uncertain market timing.
- Underused public land lowers a major cost barrier in a high-cost area.
- Land assembly can turn fragmented parcels into workable development sites.
- Existing control can speed planning compared with open-market acquisition.
The purchase of 7605 Collins Ave. reflected that strategy.
Officials described it as the missing piece in a largely city-owned block, showing how site completion can expand future options.
Public ownership also keeps major land-use choices within local government.
How Does This Project Fit Miami Beach’s Housing Goals?
City-land housing plans fit within a broader affordability push tied to Miami’s goal of increasing affordable housing from 20% to 25% of all units by 2030. That gives the city a clear benchmark for measuring progress.
The broader framework also calls for preserving or developing 32,000 units over the next decade. Using public land adds supply through another path instead of relying only on private parcels.
Workforce Delivery and Long-Term Control
Miami Beach’s proposals support those goals by targeting workforce housing for teachers, health workers, artists, and city employees. That focus helps direct new units toward residents who are essential to the local economy.
Projects at Byron Carlyle and Collins Park show how city land can support rent-controlled and mixed-income apartments in central locations. These sites illustrate how public assets can be used to expand housing access where demand is high.
Long-term ground leases further strengthen that policy fit. Proposed affordability terms ranging from 30 years to as long as 90 years help preserve below-market housing while allowing the city to retain land ownership.
Assessment
The 1940 Park Avenue proposal reflects Miami Beach’s growing reliance on public land to address an escalating housing shortage.
By pairing added density with affordable and workforce housing, the plan signals a shift toward more aggressive land-use decisions in high-cost areas.
Its progress will likely serve as a test of how far the city is willing to go to expand housing access.
It also highlights the challenge of balancing neighborhood pressure, limited land supply, and long-term development constraints.















