Sweetbird North is an eight-storey mixed-use development designed by Snøhetta for Raycliff Capital. The project features a double-skin facade that combines a glass curtain wall with an outer layer of stainless steel mesh. Large dimples shape the mesh into a rippling surface that changes in appearance as lighting conditions shift throughout the day. The ground level incorporates a metal-plated base that extends into vertical mesh columns running the full height of the building.
The first and second floors are dedicated to retail space. Floors three through eight contain flexible office layouts with planted terraces integrated throughout the building. Construction is scheduled to begin in August 2026, with completion expected in 2028. The project forms part of the continuing expansion of Miami's Design District alongside new developments by David Chipperfield Architects and Kengo Kuma and Associates.
Modern Mixed Use Buildings
The Sweetbird North is an Eight-Storey Mixed-Use Development
Trend Themes
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Adaptive Facade Architecture — Dynamic building skins that shift with light and weather create new value in urban real estate through energy performance, visual identity, and premium tenant experiences.
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Terraced Office Ecosystems — Integrated planted terraces within flexible workplaces signal a growing market for biophilic commercial environments that blend wellness, sustainability, and adaptable leasing models.
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Design District Densification — High-profile mixed-use projects in creative urban neighborhoods are reshaping retail and office demand by concentrating architecture, culture, commerce, and hospitality in walkable destinations.
Industry Implications
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Commercial Real Estate — Flexible office floors paired with retail bases reflect opportunities for landlords to diversify revenue streams while responding to changing workplace and neighborhood-use patterns.
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Architecture and Design — Material experimentation with stainless steel mesh, glass curtain walls, and sculptural surfaces expands the role of facade design as both environmental infrastructure and brand expression.
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Urban Retail — Ground-level retail embedded in architecturally distinctive developments strengthens the potential for experiential shopping environments that benefit from design tourism and mixed-use foot traffic.