
The long-planned condo tower at 7200 Collins Avenue is finally going vertical in Miami Beach’s North Beach, with construction officially underway this week on a 12-story, 222-unit building. Developer Northlink Capital has now moved the site from demolition to visible vertical work, a fresh crane on a corridor that has been steadily filling in.
Every residence is slated to arrive fully furnished, with private terraces, integrated smart-home tech and high-end finishes. Shared amenities will spread across several floors and include a fitness center and two resort-style pools, according to Florida YIMBY. The outlet also reports that Northlink paid about $17.33 million for the 0.57-acre site in 2021 and that roughly 93 percent of the condos were pre-sold before construction even kicked off.
Design team and recent site work
Revuelta Architecture International is behind the tower’s design, with interiors by Adriana Hoyos Design Studio and Ortega Construction Co. serving as general contractor, according to a developer release covered by CityBiz. That release noted demolition wrapped in mid-2025 as crews pivoted to prepare the property for its next phase of vertical construction. OneWorld Properties is handling marketing and sales, and the project is being pitched as friendly to short-term rentals, with about 17,000 square feet of commercial space planned at street level.
Sales and timing
Sales launched in 2025, with studio prices starting near $600,000, as reported by The Real Deal. Brokers have leaned heavily on the short-term rental flexibility in their pitch to both local and out-of-town buyers.
The delivery timeline depends on which materials you read. Florida YIMBY cites a 2027 completion target, while the official sales platform currently advertises a 2028 window, per the developer's marketing site. Buyers are being offered studios plus one- and two-bedroom layouts, with flexible management options designed to appeal to investor-owners.
What it means for North Beach
7200 Collins is part of a broader building wave that has been reshaping sections of Collins Avenue with new condo and hotel projects, according to the Mann Report. Supporters argue that projects like this will bring more full-time residents and new retail to the strip, while critics warn that the added density could tighten already scarce parking and put extra pressure on public services.
For now, the action is all on site, where crews are expected to stay busy with foundation and framing work through 2026 as the building climbs toward its eventual topping out and delivery.









