The mixed-use
development, Marina Lofts, in downtown Fort Lauderdale
seeks to infuse a currently run-down stretch along the New
River with a thriving pedestrian friendly public space thereby
attracting new residents into its development.
Totaling 1,000
rental apartments, 10,000 sq ft of restaurants and 25,000 sq ft of retail, the
mixed-use development is broken into three phases. The Florida-based developer,
Asi Cymbal, expects the project to have a positive long-term economic benefit
to the city and local community of Fort
Lauderdale.
“Our intent here
is to create a world class project that will serve as a model for architecture,
creativity, and energy along the most prime stretch of waterfront in Downtown
Fort Lauderdale,” says Asi Cymbal, owner of Cymbal Development. Situated in an
industrial gap in Fort Lauderdale’s Riverwalk
park, Marina Lofts stitches together the final arm of the currently fragmented
public space along the New River.
BIG’s design
frames the space with a generous public promenade bounded towards south by a
3-phase series of residential towers, creating public life along the riverfront
while maintaining the existing marine activities of Fort Lauderdale. The two
initial housing towers are treated as one continuous building “breaking” at the
center to form an opening which allows maximum pedestrian activity to flow
between the buildings and extends the city life out to the waterfront.
“The project
fills the gap in the waterfront of Downtown Fort Lauderdale stitching the
existing fragments of promenade together into a new and revitalized river park
adding density and life to the scenic setting. The two buildings are torn open
to form a cave and a canyon – opening up for the neighborhood to reach the
river. A design made through subtraction rather than addition. ” Bjarke Ingels,
Founding Partner, BIG.
As both towers
ascend, the crack between them allows for flexibility in apartment sizes by
liberating the units from the structural grid and enabling living spaces to
scale up or down as desired. The solid infill of the void maintains privacy
between units by directing the windows in carefully-orchestrated locations.
The site of the
third tower is currently home to a 250-boat garage which remains intact as the
future tower straddles the entrance to the garage door allowing boats to easily
pass back and forth beneath its legs. The existing water taxi station is
augmented with shading structures and permanent pavilions to further activate
the connection across the river. The waterfront will be a lushly landscaped
park with ample setbacks from the water to provide more public space for the South Riverwalk.
A café, retail
and commercial spaces will occupy the lower levels of the building, bringing
life and activity to the neighborhood. In a city where daily life shifts
seamlessly between water and land, Marina Lofts augments both, contributing to
the vibrant density and connected public space along the New
River. The historical Rain Tree in the city, highly treasured by
the local community is preserved and given a more prominent position by
relocating and re-framing it as a centerpiece to a new Rain Tree park along the
promenade.
Location: Fort Lauderdale, Florida,
Usa
Partner
in Charge: Bjarke Ingels, Thomas Christoffersen
Project
Leader: Daniel Kidd
Collaborators: Bohler
Engineering, Beilinson Gomez Architects, Rosenberg
Gardner Design,
M2e
Project
Team: Chris Falla, Suemin Jeon, Andreia Teixeira, Marcella Martinez, Jenny
Shen, Michael Zhang
Size: 118.000 m2
Year: 2012
Client: Cymbal
Deveopment








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