
AquaBlue Group, led by developer Philippe Harari, has a pending sale on two side-by-side waterfront homes on Miami Beach’s Di Lido Island at 340 and 320 West Di Lido Drive, with a combined asking price of $67 million. The twin new-construction properties together offer roughly 21,000 square feet of indoor space and about 120 feet of waterfront. Each house is listed with six bedrooms, seven full bathrooms and a half-bath, and both are slated for completion this summer. One Sotheby’s is marketing the listings.
AquaBlue pair tops weekly luxury contracts
As reported by The Real Deal, the AquaBlue pair led 26 luxury home contracts that Douglas Elliman’s Eklund-Gomes team tracked in Miami-Dade between May 18 and May 24. The weekly snapshot counts signed contracts for listings asking $4 million and up and shows those properties spent an average of 147 days on the market. The pending Di Lido deal was the highest-priced contract in that group, putting the duo firmly at the top of the week’s lineup.
What the listings include
The MLS posting, mirrored on platforms such as Redfin, lists Mirce Curkoski of One Sotheby’s International Realty as the listing broker and highlights interiors by Yodezeen, architecture by Domo Design and Italian-crafted finishes. The listing calls out smart-home systems, premium Gaggenau appliances and resort-style infinity pools, and it emphasizes downtown skyline and sunset views from the waterfront lots. The combined property sits on about a 21,000-square-foot parcel with roughly 120 feet of water frontage, the kind of spec package that tends to turn luxury browsers into serious bidders.
Market context
The Real Deal’s roundup of the Eklund-Gomes weekly report shows Miami-Dade’s under-contract asking dollar volume at roughly $333.5 million for the week, with single-family homes averaging $15.6 million and condos averaging $7.6 million. That under-contract inventory included 17 single-family homes and nine condos, and the report noted 27 new luxury listings were added for a total of 1,213 active luxury listings countywide. In that crowded and pricey field, the AquaBlue pair’s $67 million ask underscores how marquee waterfront specs continue to headline high-end activity.
Developer track record
Harari and AquaBlue have been active in Miami’s trophy-home market; his $25 million Coral Gables purchase recently chronicled his Coral Gables buy and noted prior AquaBlue projects that moved at headline prices. That local track record, focused on building turnkey waterfront houses and marketing them to deep-pocket buyers, helps explain why brokers are spotlighting a rare side-by-side Di Lido opportunity. Public records and brokerage filings will show whether the pending contract closes and who ultimately lands the keys.









