RESIDE 2025 | Sarasota/Tampa Bay

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EXTRAORDINARY PROPERTIES / SARASOTA/TAMPA BAY EDITION

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Curating the Exceptional:

A JOURNEY THROUGH ELEVATED LIVING IN PARADISE

Artfully uniting extraordinary people with extraordinary properties along Florida’s Gulf Coast

As we present our 2025 edition of RESIDE, we are proud to highlight two distinct regions that set the standard for inspired living. From Sarasota’s cultural vitality to the serene coastal beauty of its barrier islands, and Tampa Bay’s timeless sophistication to the vibrant surrounding communities of St. Petersburg, Clearwater and Pinellas County, this stretch of Florida’s west coast o ers an unmatched lifestyle. Each destination is a harmonious blend of natural splendor, cultural re nement and architectural excellence, presenting an irresistible invitation to call this paradise home.

Premier Sotheby’s International Realty remains a beacon of distinction in the world of luxury real estate. RESIDE o ers a curated showcase of extraordinary residences, celebrating not only the distinction of our communities but also a gateway into the illustrious world of Sotheby’s International Realty® and Sotheby’s auction house. Within these pages, you will nd properties of unparalleled beauty and artistry paired with inspiring narratives that re ect the cultures and aspirations of the

extraordinary people we serve.

Our legacy is also de ned by a profound commitment to the communities we call home. Since 1983, relationships have been the cornerstone of our success. We extend our deepest gratitude to our loyal customers who have entrusted us with their most signi cant real estate journeys, and to our exceptional global advisors whose unwavering dedication and expertise continue to set new benchmarks of excellence.

At Premier Sotheby’s International Realty, we believe a home is more than an address. Each one, the gateway to an extraordinary way of living. Because every home is unique. Just like you. Just like us.

1310 S Lake Shore Drive. Grand sophistication reaches its pinnacle in this Neo-Classical Italian Renaissance-inspired estate on Little Sarasota Bay. The breathtaking property sits on 1.21 bayfront acres with ultra-luxe, pristine spaces reminiscent of the Versace Mansion.

Up Front

6 Artisan

The ceramicist Ebitenyefa Baralaye is inspired by history and faith

8 Trends

How jewelers are turning their hand to beautiful objects for the home

10 Architecture

Sensitivity rules for Ferguson & Shamamian and an exceptional renovation in Maine

12 Interview

The British designer Kit Kemp on recreating her magic mix of fine art and interiors at her hotel in Tribeca

Features

14 Leveling Up

The cohort of women artists breathing new life into contemporary textile art

22 Acquired Taste

East Coast husband-and-wife tastemakers

Chris Mitchell and Pilar Guzmán discuss their manifesto for American elegance

28 Happy Place

Tour a corner of Paris that boasts a glittering cultural past and equally impressive present

Photos: Paul Raeside; Fran Ç ois Dischinger and Adrian Gaut.

Living

38 Gallery

Discover our most extraordinary properties and explore some of our favorite places and experiences.

from top left: The exterior of a house by architects Ferguson & Shamamian, from “A House in Maine” by Nina Campbell with Giles Kime, published by Rizzoli; 641 Key Royale Drive. This is island living at it’s finest. Indulge in resort- style outdoor amenities including direct boating access to the Gulf, a bayside bar, and fire pit, perfect for relaxing and entertaining (page 75); 301 1st Street S #PH-3501. Prepare to be mesmerized by this exceptional penthouse like no other. Walls of glass give way to iconic city and water views while the living and dining spaces exude tranquil luxury (page 96).

Reside magazine is published twice a year with two runs each by Sotheby’s International Realty

Sotheby’s International Realty

Publisher Kristin Rowe

Cultureshock

Editor Nancy Groves (maternity leave)

Acting editor Francesca Perry

Editorial team Rachel Potts, Alex McFadyen, Deniz Nazim-Englund

Head of creative Tess Savina

Art editor Gabriela Matuszyk

Designer Ieva Misiukonytė

Production editor Claire Sibbick

Chief subeditor Ro Elfberg

Subeditors Helene Chartouni, Michelle Corps, Susie Wong

© Sotheby’s International Realty. 2025. Information here within is correct at the time of printing.

Premier Sotheby’s International Realty

Senior Creative Director

Frank Russell

Senior Designer Alexander Canino

Designer Lisa Hoppe

Vice President of Communications

Elise Ramer

Communications Team

Andrew Jarosh, Madison Musico, Nick Poirier, Cindy Wu

A Sarasota architectural masterpiece that redefines modern luxury and exudes sophistication. This iconic residence, designed by renowned architect Carl Abbott, begins with undeniable curb appeal with an expansive travertine walkway and a serene Zen garden. (page 48)

Clockwise

ARTISAN

Spiritual bodies

Sculptor Ebitenyefa Baralaye discusses Black history and identity and how they both shape his work

A gauzy plaster and burlap form mounted on a wooden frame, “Revelator,” 2016, is an imposing sculpture. “I was thinking about what it means for someone to exist between heaven and earth, manifesting things that are heavenly, while being grounded in the material,” says sculptor Ebitenyefa Baralaye.

Below: Baralaye working on “Serpent I,” 2019

Right, from top: Ebitenyefa Baralaye, “Portrait II,” 2021, “Invisible Man,” 2022, and “Apreye,” 2022

The work is part of the collection at the International African American Museum (IAAM), which opened in Charleston, South Carolina, in 2023. It is on the site of Gadsden’s Wharf, once the largest slave port in the U.S.—up to 40% of enslaved Africans disembarked there. Baralaye feels the acquisition is appropriate: “For a lot of enslaved people, holding on to a hope that was bigger than themselves was key to dealing with the oppressive reality of their lives.”

Baralaye was born in Nigeria, grew up in Antigua, studied ceramics at the Rhode Island School of Design and the Cranbrook Academy of Art, and is now based in Detroit. He is Assistant Professor at the Stamps School of Art & Design at the University of Michigan. Primarily working with clay, he often incorporates other natural materials such as wood, plaster, and fiber. “I’m very much interested in Black and African abstraction, particularly from West Africa, and I speak through that lens,” he says. “I also think about what it means to represent the identity of Blackness now, here in the U.S.”

Another motivation is his faith and his interest in spirituality. An arresting series of glazed stoneware busts refers to the significance the head is given by the Yoruba people, who believe it is where the soul resides, and Baralaye has since expanded the series to include the entire body.

The IAAM spotlights the history and achievements of Black Americans.

According to the museum: “Baralaye’s work perfectly fits our mission of telling the untold stories of the African American journey.”

Baralaye’s work has also been shown at a number of international galleries including Friedman Benda, Shoshana Wayne Gallery, and David Klein Gallery in the U.S., and the Korea Ceramic Foundation in South Korea. In his 2023 exhibition, “Making Space: Tracing Tomorrow” at Friedman Benda Los Angeles, he showed decorated terracotta and stoneware vases. What Baralaye refers to as “finial” forms, these pieces take inspiration from Yoruba sculptor Olowe of Ise, who worked as a royal artist for the Arinjale (king) of Ise in the 19th century.

Baralaye says that works such as “Revelator” capture the joys and power of the African American experience. “It’s important for me as a Black person to understand history,” he says. “But it is also important for the things that speak to Black creativity to not simply be in response to Black struggle.”

Deniz Nazim-Englund

Visit iaamuseum.org

Ebitenyefa Baralaye, “Revelator,” 2016

TRENDS

Jewelers branch out

From classic heritage labels to contemporary brands, designers turn to adorning houses as well as customers

Although different in scale, jewelry and homeware are both mainstay adornments that come to define us, and are often charged with sentimental value. As such, it is not surprising that jewelers will often try their hand at creating homeware.

Since its founding in 1847, Cartier has supplied stylish objects for the home, such as a practical inkstand and desk clock from 1908 in beautiful lilac enamel with diamond and sapphire details. To celebrate the successful moon landing mission in 1969, the firm produced a gold, lacquer and enamel replica of the “Eagle” module used by the Apollo 11 astronauts. Today, Cartier customers can find dainty musical boxes or a panther-shaped piggy bank.

The Italian fine jewelry brand Buccellati has long presented refined silverware—or, as Creative Director Andrea Buccellati says, “been involved in the Art de la Table world.” First unveiled at Milan Design Week, the brand’s collaboration with the historic Florentine porcelain manufacturer Ginori 1735 “has been crucial to offer a complete range of tableware articles with a true Buccellati style,” says Buccellati. The range continues the Double Rouche decorative motif of repeated curves that appears across the brand’s jewelry and silver table accessories.

Homeware also provides jewelers with a larger canvas for their craft. Brazilian designer Silvia Furmanovich—whose fresh aesthetic uses the wood marquetry technique across jewelry—has extended her range to homeware.

Furmanovich chose PAD London to debut a collection of mirrors and jewelry boxes made using her signature technique, featuring evocative nocturnal skies and natural motifs. Furmanovich’s output also extends to stools and tables.

The Greek jeweler Lito has created a successful collaboration with U.S.-based artisanal homeware brand L’Objet. The line includes vases, trays, bookends, and more, bearing Lito’s distinct evil eye motif. Jewelbright porcelain plates feature resin and gold detailing, and a bronze magnifying glass is inlaid with resin “lashes.”

For Paris-born, London-based jewelry designer Anissa Kermiche, homeware has become a solid second pillar of her brand after intense online interest during the pandemic. Her wares are all infused with her tongue-in-cheek humor, from the Breast Friend vase, which takes the form of a female bust, to the Can Candlestick, in the shape of two dancing legs.

For Kermiche, the transition was a no-brainer: “It is jewelry for the house.” Milena Lazazzera

Clockwise from left: Can Candlesticks by Anissa Kermiche; bookends from L’Objet’s collaboration with Lito; Marquetry Mushroom Stool by Silvia Furmanovich; Breast Friend vase by Anissa Kermiche; stool and jewelry box, both by Silvia Furmanovich

ARCHITECTURE

Blending in

An estate in Maine has been revived and refreshed—in a truly traditional style—thanks to the sensitive efforts of architects Ferguson & Shamamian

There could not be a more perfect spot for happy family vacations than this 350acre estate in Maine, set in a deep cove overlooking two miles of ocean shoreline. Three generations relished sailing, swimming, and picnicking under their favorite tree, though the white clapboard house—built for the family in 1910, in the Greek Revival style—became somewhat dilapidated; there were no showers, and work needed doing. So the family’s fourth generation called in award-winning architects Ferguson & Shamamian to set the house to rights and preserve it for future generations.

The practice, founded in 1988, is known for its thoughtful, traditional approach to design, and for its sensitive response to regional architectural character. “We try not to put our ego or personal stamp on a project,” says partner Scott Sottile, who led the team. “We shy away from doing anything that feels discordant.”

The family wanted to be out of the house for just one summer, so work began with the estate’s farm buildings. Local inspections of old barns provided inspiration, and an existing ancient farm wall was taken apart.

“We looked at how its stones had been laid and copied that for the farm buildings,” says Sottile. These, while looking suitably bucolic, house a tennis pavilion, a pool house with guest rooms and the Play House: a gym and bowling alley that converts into a nightclub.

As you enter the estate, you drive through an orchard and farmland, weaving through woods that lead to a stream with a stone bridge—its design was inspired by the bridges constructed as new byways through the Acadia National Park by

philanthropist John D. Rockefeller Jr as a gift to the inhabitants of Maine.

“To get the DNA of the house, we salvaged all we could of the old building and stored the pieces in a warehouse so we could exactly replicate its details, including the clapboard exterior, the millwork on the pillared porch and the yellow cedar shingles on the roof—now nicely weathered, and traditional to this part of Maine,” says Sottile. The old house was torn down, its footprint moved 12 feet for a better view of the ocean and enlarged to 20,000 square feet.

The “picnic tree” was, of course, carefully preserved, and distinguished landscape architect Deborah Nevins gave the estate an air of having developed slowly over time. The elegant interiors by British designer Nina Campbell are celebrated in the book “A House in Maine.” Campbell

reprised her role as the designer of London members’ club Annabel’s with the Play House, which, by night, is entered through a traditional British telephone box, painted unconventional purple—simply dial 007.

Ferguson & Shamamian undertakes the same intense research for projects in sunnier climates; in Florida, Texas or California, the initial inspiration might be a Tuscan villa or a Provençal farmhouse. “Our work is rooted in history. It is important to give everything the appropriate level of attention,” says Sottile. “So it feels like a piece of art.” Elfreda Pownall

“Collaborations: Architecture, Interiors, Landscapes: Ferguson & Shamamian Architects” by David Masello and “A House in Maine” by Nina Campbell are published by Rizzoli

Left: The facade of the estate. Above: the garden fountain

INTERVIEW

Bringing the art in

At British designer Kit Kemp’s hotels, art, craft, and design take center stage. Her latest opening in New York is a case in point

The celebrated British artist Sir Howard Hodgkin’s largest-ever set of prints was also his last: he was in his late 70s when he created the 20-foot vibrant splashes of color that make up “As Time Goes By.” The interior designer Kit Kemp saw them in his studio shortly before Hodgkin died. The huge work now hangs in the bowling alley of Kemp’s Ham Yard Hotel in London.

It is one of the 11 establishments that Kemp and her husband Tim have opened under the Firmdale Hotels family. When the couple unveiled the Warren Street Hotel in Tribeca last year, their third in New York, after Crosby Street and The Whitby, patrons were also treated to the city’s newest gallery of art and crafts.

On the walls of any Firmdale hotel, one can see pieces by stellar artists such as Anselm Kiefer, Louise Bourgeois, Jim Dine, Alexander Calder, Sir Terry Frost, Tony Cragg, and Fernando Botero. “We have bought work by great artists, but it’s also wonderful to discover new ones just before they find fame,” says Kemp. “It’s about what I see, about falling in love with a piece of art, rather than buying a name—it’s all very democratic.” One prized “find” was Ugandan artist Sanaa Gateja, whose beaded textile works she bought for the Warren Street Hotel. “We start collecting long before a hotel opens,” she says. “Now he is having exhibitions in New York and everywhere—but we got there first.”

If all of the Firmdale properties are distinguished from their blander rivals by their use of original pieces, signature design flourishes do the same job. There are bold patterns and colors, and tall headboards, often with a hand-stitched appliqué design, as the focal point of every bedroom. “One room is orange, with a huge black and

white headboard. I recently overheard a family party—in town for a wedding—who were astonished to see that every bedroom in the Crosby Street Hotel is decorated differently,” she says.

Among Kemp’s many flourishes at the Warren Street Hotel is a monumental veined black marble sculpture by Tony Cragg. It stands in front of the ornamental beaded Gateja artwork, which more than holds its own in the foyer, along with a bold geometric work by British painter Vanessa Jackson, whose abstract work she first saw at the Royal Academy of Arts’ Summer Exhibition in London. The hotel also displays fantastical childlike painted scenes by a favorite

Spanish artist, Ramiro Fernández Saus, as well as ceramics. “Something made by hand appeals to all of the senses in an easy, not insistent way,” she says. Huge pots by Carol Wainwright and Daniel Reynolds both feature, while charming painted plates by Robina Jack fill a larger dresser in The Orangery.

A chandelier by the textile-designerturned-lighting-artist Gareth Devonald Smith was also commissioned for the foyer, and there are “curving minaret-like baskets, reaching floor to ceiling” by the Argentinian basket-maker Cristián Mohaded. Collections of smaller pieces—for example, original design sketches for Sèvres vases—work alongside large abstract canvases. It is a rich

mix. “The important thing is to let the art breathe, give it space,” Kemp says. She applies the same principle to her use of color: “It’s good to be bold without getting frantic, it’s about how you balance color and pattern. With every interior, you should want to sit there forever.”

Her mission is to make hotels that are both exciting and original. Those Howard Hodgkin prints in London were joined by 36 pairs of eBay-bought bowling shoes in clear plastic cases. She seems to have succeeded again at Warren Street.

Elfreda Pownall

firmdalehotels.com

Left: Eileen Cooper, “Dancing and Solitude,” 2015, on display in The Whitby, New York.
Above: Kit Kemp in her Hyde Park home; Room 1408 at The Whitby Hotel features a custom headboard

LEVELING UP

A new generation of women are putting textile art back on the map. Emma Crichton-Miller investigates the genre’s resurgence

Mary Little, “Anderson” (from “The Double Series”), 2022

When the powerful traveled in pomp between the windswept castles and drafty churches of medieval and Renaissance Europe, tapestries were the preeminent visual art form. Weavers in Flanders and France produced portable masterpieces from the cartoons of leading artists, including Raphael and Peter Paul Rubens. When Henry VIII’s collection of more than 2,450 tapestries was valued for sale during the English Civil War, many were priced at thousands of pounds, well beyond the value of any other item in his inventory.

Since then, textiles have slipped down the hierarchy of art forms. As houses have become warmer, paintings and sculpture have generally taken center stage as decorative and cultural objects. Textiles became synonymous with carpets, curtains and clothing. However, the past century has seen a resurgence of interest among artists in textiles as a creative medium, largely led by women.

When German Bauhaus student Anni Albers was diverted to weaving from glasswork and painting, she transformed the potential and reputation of thread. She fled Nazi Germany in 1933, traveling with her artist husband Josef to the USA, and was honored in 1949 with a show at MoMA (Museum of Modern Art) in New York—the first solo exhibition for a textile artist. As she wrote in her 1971 book “On Designing”: “Besides surface qualities, such as rough and smooth, dull and shiny, hard and soft, textile also includes color and, as the dominating element, texture, which is the result of the construction of weaves. Like any craft, it may end in producing useful objects, or it may rise to the level of art.” Her compelling explorations of the limits of the medium take their place in the history of 20th-century abstract art.

Albers became a key figure in the evolving American Fiber art movement, which included pioneering figures such as Claire Zeisler, who produced towering sculptures from knotted and braided threads, and the influential Lenore Tawney, whose free-form installations subverted the typical weaving grid to create fluid patterns. The movement peaked in the 1980s, but an Albers retrospective at London’s Tate Modern in 2018 was a sign of revived interest in her legacy.

In Europe, meanwhile, Polish sculptor Magdalena Abakanowicz, barred from exhibiting her paintings by the Communist leadership for failing to conform to the Socialist Realist style, was offered a place to work in the studio of weaver Maria Laszkiewicz. She went on to develop groundbreaking 3D works called “Abakans,” made from coarse sisal, a plant fiber used in rope and carpets. Initially confusing to critics and collectors, these powerful sculptures, with their enveloping dimensions and visceral textures, have come to be appreciated as fine art.

In a 2010 interview, Abakanowicz said: “The ‘Abakans’ irritated people. They came at the wrong time. In fabric, it was the French tapestry; in art, pop art and conceptual art; and here was a huge, magical thing.” In 2016, “Abakan Rouge III,” 1971, sold for nearly $78,000 (€75,000) at an

“ LIKE ANY CRAFT, TEXTILE MAY END IN PRODUCING USEFUL OBJECTS, OR IT MAY RISE TO THE LEVEL OF ART
Bea Bonafini, “Slick Submissions,” 2018, installed at the Palazzo Monti in Brescia, Italy. Left: Magdalena Abakanowicz
Cecilia Charlton, “Somerset [passage of time, sunset],” 2021

auction in Poland, while a major Abakanowicz retrospective took place at Tate Modern in 2022-23.

Contemporaries of Abakanowicz are also finding new fame. Olga de Amaral, who lives and works in Bogotá, Colombia, produces shimmering gold textiles, partly inspired by the pre-Colombian examples that influenced Albers, as well as mixed-media hanging works and floor sculptures combining wool and horse hair, linen, gesso, and acrylic paint. She was the focus of the touring exhibition “Olga de Amaral: To Weave a Rock,” which began at the Museum of Fine Arts Houston before moving to Michigan’s Cranbrook Art Museum in 2021. Through their intensity, her works reflect the focus and time required to create them. She has said: “As I build these surfaces, I create spaces of meditation, contemplation and reflection… Tapestry, fibers, strands, units, cords, all are transparent layers with their own meanings, revealing and hiding each other to make one presence, one tone that speaks about the texture of time.”

Sheila Hicks, meanwhile, studied under Josef Albers at Yale and, aged 84, she delighted audiences at the 2017 Venice Biennale with her mountain of multicolored balls of yarn in the former Arsenale. She says: “Textile is a universal language. In all cultures of the world, textile is a crucial and essential component.” As she points out, the expressive power of the medium is embedded in our language; both text and textile trace their etymology to the Latin word “texere”—to weave.

Behind these pioneers there is a new generation of artists drawn to textile for its potential to communicate. Jacqueline Surdell, who trained as a painter, works with heavy cotton rope and brightly colored yachting cord to create wall sculptures. Building them is physically demanding: she uses her body as a weaving shuttle, carrying kilos of industrial weft in and out of the warp. While her works honor the history of industrial labor in her home city of Chicago, they also explore social constructs. Surdell says she is influenced by “iconic feminist artists who were using textile to question gender binaries and things like that.” They include Harmony Hammond, co-founder of New York’s first women’s cooperative art gallery in New York, and the Indian artist Mrinalini Mukherjee, whose biomorphic forms in hemp and jute often evoke unconventional sexualities.

New York-based Sagarika Sundaram similarly tackles cultural shifts and new identities. Using raw natural fiber and dyes, she engages with the past and present of felted textiles in Central Asian nomadic culture. Her handmade forms often mirror those found in nature, from blood vessels to rivers.

She began her career at the National Institute of Design in Ahmedabad, western India, where design was embedded in social awareness. Today, Sundaram combines commercial work—on rugs, for instance—with her fine art practice (on show in both New Delhi, India, and at Alison Jacques gallery in London this year). The difference is that “art opens up questions, it opens up a conversation. It’s almost a probe, a gesture that creates a space for something around it,” she says.

In London, the Royal College of Art (RCA) has also emerged as an important center for experimentation with textiles. Like Sundaram, Northern Irish artist Mary Little trained in design—specifically furniture. After a move to California, she now works with cut-and-stitched, unbleached cotton canvas to craft evocative pleated and curved hangings; their pockets of light echo the hills of her native island. Also in London, American Cecilia Charlton enrolled on the RCA’s painting MA in 2018, though it was in embroidery and weaving that she found the most fertile outlet for her interests. Charlton’s layered pieces call on the history of formal abstraction, folk pattern, math, and the cosmos.

Italian artist Bea Bonafini enrolled on the same course in 2014—“to react to the painting world”—and was encouraged to be interdisciplinary. “I had performance, food, and textiles. I had machines from the fashion department. I was getting into ceramics, I was painting on leather. I was making sculptures out of salty bread dough and staining them. I was trying to figure out how to manipulate materials in different ways and not narrow myself down,” she says. More recently, she has been working with commercially produced domestic carpets, creating densely allusive images using an inlay technique. She is fascinated by the transformation of her material, “because it goes from being something with a horizontal surface to a vertical surface, from something that could be domestic to something of the fine arts— elevating it to this other realm.” 0 Emma Crichton-Miller writes about art, craft and design

Clockwise from top left: Cecilia Charlton in her studio; Jacqueline Surdell, “Melancholy of Always: Sunset in the Rockies (after Albert Bierstadt)” (detail), 2020; Magdalena Abakanowicz, “Brown Textile 21 (Tkanina 21 brązowa),” 1963
How one stylish couple created a recipe book for successful interiors. It involves embracing the wine spills, says Helen Barrett

ACQUIRED TASTE

Don’t be scared of using black” is one tip in “Patina Modern,” a book by Chris Mitchell and Pilar Guzmán that sets out nine principles for designing “warm, timeless interiors.” Their instructions are clear, attainable and sometimes a little offbeat: “Take a bird’s-eye view of the room,” is another. The couple talk readers through their own taste, and the covetable interiors of their houses in Brooklyn and Long Island, though neither trained as interior designers, and they describe themselves as auto-didacts.

Guzmán, an editor, has long worked with America’s chief lifestyle experts Martha Stewart and Oprah Winfrey, while Mitchell is also from a publishing background. (“Our first love is storytelling: magazines and content,” he says.) Their skill lies in mixing their refined lifestyle with chatty, upbeat and forthright advice.

Do the couple ever break their own rules? “All the time,” says Mitchell. “But I would liken them to the rules of grammar. You can break them if you know them. And the thing that separates people who are a little at sea with interior design and people who knowingly veer is taste.”

In “Patina Modern,” they set out to make anyone—even those who might feel at sea— think they can achieve such nebulous ambitions as “taste” and “style,” with a few simple rules.

Guzmán grew up in Los Angeles in an artistic family and a house full of antiques. She describes waking at dawn to be first at the flea market and taking out a subscription to Architectural Digest at the age of eight. Mitchell, who says he is a “modernist by instinct,” grew up “in the most conventional of American homes.” “Then we arrived at something in our intersection,” says Guzmán.

“‘Good taste’ has been democratized with social media,” she adds. To counter blandness, they advise us to expand our design knowledge and hone our eyes by pursuing curiosities, accumulating what Mitchell calls “rabbit-holes of discovery.”

In Mitchell and Guzmán’s world, every object is given space to breathe. The one trend they avoid is maximalism: the piled-on clutter and pattern-upon-pattern that has been so

Left: With neutrals reinforced in the couple’s New York dining room, black accents in Arne Jacobsen chairs and a David Weeks chandelier punctuate the space. Right: Earth tones feature throughout
In the Bridgehampton kitchen, a minimalist Gaggenau cooktop and sink fit into the island, and fridges hide behind panels

Clockwise from right: Modern and antique pieces in neutral colors blend together seamlessly in a peaceful living room; Chris Mitchell and Pilar Guzmán; a shallow, hanging oak credenza saves space below mirrors by Uno & Östen Kristiansson; patinated leather on an Arne Jacobsen Swan chair in the New York living room, where a framed boro textile fragment counters the ornate pier mirror

fashionable in recent years. “A lot of Americans have taken cues from the U.K. and the layering in ancestral homes,” says Guzmán. “It’s a harder thing to manufacture in the U.S. in a meaningful way, and our eyes have gotten a little tired of it. I think it has run its course, especially in the American adaptation.”

“There’s a terrific quote by [U.S. architecture critic] Paul Goldberger,” says Mitchell. “He says the problem with humor in architecture is that the joke gets old but the building remains. And that’s true in interior design. Exuberant florals are super fun, but you might get tired. Our approach is to have fun, absolutely. But do it with accessories. Change is easier.” Or do it “in a smaller room, like a powder room,” Guzmán suggests.

“ OUR EYES HAVE GOTTEN A LITTLE TIRED OF MAXIMALISM. I THINK IT HAS RUN ITS COURSE ”

The book’s title refers to the couple’s guiding principle to mix old and new: sharp, sculptural ceiling lights with art-deco brass side-lamps, say, or custom leather banquettes with curvilinear Victorian woodwork. It is not an entirely original trick, but they had to learn it themselves, the result of years of trial and error over several renovation projects.

They also advise learning to live with patina—the scars and the imperfections that showcase the history of a home: scuffs on furniture legs, spilled-wine splotches on leather upholstery, the torn edges of a framed vintage poster. They even suggest buying broken or damaged antiques and collectibles, to be restored if necessary.

Guzmán and Mitchell’s book is an admirable attempt to transcend the fleeting trends and advice of the digital age with a set of solid, consistent principles. It is, I suggest, a design book that follows a cookery book format. “That was our inspiration!” says Mitchell.

“Imagine if cookbooks showed only perfect photographs of food without recipes,” he says. “Many interior books are like that: they give you rooms and houses but don’t give you the formula to get there. We insist on utility.” 0 Helen Barrett writes about architecture, design and the arts

HAPPY place

Get to know the Parisian neighborhood
Saint-Germaindes-Prés—and the artists, gallerists and boutiques that already call it home—with local resident and art writer Sarah Belmont

Moved suddenly today…” wrote the artist Eugène Delacroix in his diary on December 28, 1857. He had grown tired of commuting from Paris’s 9th to its 6th arrondissement, while decorating the chapel of the Saint-Sulpice church. “My accommodation is indeed charming. I felt some melancholy after dinner, finding myself transplanted… Woke up the following day with the most gracious sun rising above the houses opposite my window. The view over my little garden and the smiling aspect of my studio convey a feeling of pleasure.”

His new home was in the Place de Furstemberg—a peaceful, unassuming square in the neighborhood of Saint-Germain-des-Prés. After a glittering career at the vanguard of French Romanticism—he had “a sun in his head and thunderstorms in his heart” according to one obituary—he died here, holding his maid’s hand, in 1863. Delacroix heavily influenced the Modernists and, thanks to campaigning by Maurice Denis, Paul Signac and Édouard Vuillard, among others, in the 1920s, his apartment and studio became a museum, which holds over 1,000 of Delacroix’s works and overlooks a quiet garden.

This central spot, a 10-minute walk to the Louvre across the Seine, hints at a bucolic past. Before becoming the glamorous cultural center of the Left Bank, astride the 6th and 7th arrondissements, Saint-Germain-des-Prés was a small medieval town. It was named after the bishop who co-founded the church of Saint Vincent, now known as the church of Saint-Germain-des-Prés.

Later, this was the district where 17th-century enlightenment thinkers and future revolutionaries gathered. After the Second World War, intellectuals and creatives took over, and jazz began drifting from basements on rue de Rennes. From the writer Marguerite Duras to philosophers Jean-Paul Sartre and Simone de Beauvoir, singers Léo Ferré and Juliette Gréco, directors Jean-Luc Godard and François Truffaut, and the sculptor Alberto Giacometti,

Left: Eugène Delacroix’s former apartment, now a museum dedicated to his work. Below: Detail of a mural by Delacroix in Saint-Sulpice church. Below right: La Palette, one of Picasso’s favorite bistros

they were all to be spotted drinking and/or smoking on the terrace of Café de Flore. Luxury boutiques began surfacing in the 1970s. Families who have been here for generations call themselves germanopratins—they are the historical inhabitants of Saint-Germain-des-Prés.

The area naturally still draws newcomers. “I decided to open here in 2004 because the neighborhood is filled with niches in various fields, such as gastronomy, fashion, crafts… Saint-Germain-des-Prés is a cradle for the arts,” says the artist and chocolatier Jean-Charles Rochoux, to be found at 16 rue d’Assas, and who casts ambitious confections as a sculptor might use bronze. “It was the obvious choice. The proximity of the Académie des beaux-arts and the galleries all around are a source of inspiration for me.”

Before you explore delectables by Rochoux and others, the ideal way to begin a tour of these streets is after a good night’s sleep at Pavillon Faubourg SaintGermain. The boutique hotel spans three 17th-century buildings on rue du Pré aux Clercs. (When this area was still a meadow, it was a popular dueling spot.) A winter garden—with its green walls and sculpted chimney— provides another oasis in the city center. Renovated in 2021 by the Chevalier group, the hotel pays homage to Irish author James Joyce, who stayed in the 1950s to finish his Modernist masterpiece “Ulysses,” with a suite taking his name and the restaurant named Les Parisiens as a nod to Joyce’s “Dubliners.” Author T.S. Eliot was also a visitor. And what better way to get ready to explore than with a quick dive into the spa’s indoor pool?

Once refreshed, take a left, a right, and another left onto rue de Luynes. Here, behind a navy-blue-framed window display, is a fashion must. Boutique owner Julie de Libran was born in France and grew up in California before studying fashion in Milan and Paris, where she started her career working for Gianfranco Ferré at Dior, then for Gianni Versace and at Prada, Louis Vuitton, and Sonia Rykiel. In 2019, the designer launched her own label and, later, this atelier, where she fits customers. Each dress is made and sold in limited quantities, ensuring their quality, rarity and sustainability. “All my friends and favorite spots are in Saint-Germain, where I live and enjoy biking around. It is like a village to me,” she says.

While its cafe culture is historic, Paris’s coffee culture is not. Ten or 15 years ago it was hard to find a good cup of joe but, somehow, bitter hot water

“ SAINT-GERMAINDES-PRÉS IS A CRADLE FOR THE ARTS
Top: Singer Juliette Gréco in the 1950s, with the Saint-Sulpice spire behind her. Above: The Pavillon Faubourg Saint-Germain hotel; and its James Joyce Suite (left)

served by grumpy waiters has turned into refined brews and lattes to go. Located immediately to your left after leaving de Libran’s boutique, Noir is famous for rotating and roasting a short selection of beans. The SaintGermain venue was the second branch to open from this young brand, which was founded in January 2021. The interiors are by Batiik Studio, a Parisbased firm created by Rebecca Benichou in 2014. The earthenware crockery is custom-designed by Atelier Maen. Its bestselling cookies, with a pinch of fleur de sel, are to die for.

If time allows, walk along boulevard Raspail—or through its food market—up to Square Boucicaut, named after a founder of renowned department store Le Bon Marché, which overlooks the square. The store’s name translates to “good deal”—deceptive, considering it is one Paris’s chicest stores, and has its own art collection. While the main building of Le Bon Marché features fashion and interiors, an art deco extension—La Grande Épicerie de Paris—is dedicated to global gastronomy. On that topic, local Japanese restaurant Hando is a few minutes’ walk away, with its setting as beautiful visually as its handrolls are to consume. The interior is inspired by renowned minimalist architects Tadao Ando and George Nakashima, and its chef Lee Cheng insists seaweed is sourced from a particular village in Japan’s Chugoku region.

Tradition still reigns, however, and most cafes in the area serve bread from Poilâne. The bakery was established in 1932 and, three generations later, is an institution known for its sourdough-based recipe and its Punitions (“punishments”) shortbreads. The line outside suggests they are nothing of the sort. Lionel Poilâne, the son of founder Pierre, believes in “retro-innovation”—making the best of tradition and modernity. In 1993, Lionel was named chevalier de l’ordre national du mérite (Knight of the National Order of Merit) for services to the economy. Apollonia Poilâne, a Harvard graduate, now keeps the love for her grandfather’s loaves alive.

Nearby is Place Saint-Sulpice, the beating heart of Saint-Germain-des-Prés. It is home to one of the oldest Saint Laurent boutiques (there is a fragrance named after the square). Café de la Mairie is a meeting place for those in the movie industry, and Delacroix’s murals still stun in their ambition and dynamism in the church of SaintSulpice—the second-largest in Paris.

Returning full circle, art-gallery-filled rue Jacob is just off Place de Fustemberg. This leads to Ladurée and its mouth-watering macarons at the corner of rue Bonaparte and, in the direction of the Seine, Éditions Diane de Selliers. This publishing house issues illustrated literary masterpieces, such as Dante’s “Divine Comedy” featuring 92 exquisite drawings by Sandro Botticelli based on the poem, which were lost until the 17th century, and Charles Baudelaire’s iconoclastic poetry collection

“ ALL MY FRIENDS AND FAVORITE SPOTS ARE IN SAINT-GERMAIN, WHERE I LIVE AND ENJOY BIKING AROUND. IT IS LIKE A VILLAGE TO ME
Storefront of Noir Coffee Shop & Torréfacteur on rue de Luynes.
Left: Fashion designer and boutique owner Julie de Libran at home

Officine Universelle Buly 1803, founded as an apothecary at the start of the 19th century, is now a luxury beauty store

“The Flowers of Evil” paired with paintings by symbolists such as Edward Munch and Gustave Moreau, whom he inspired.

Just along the river is the glorious Académie des beaux-arts, which remains a prestigious art school. Would star alumni such as Jean-AugusteDominique Ingres or Jacques-Louis David have visited the nearby Officine Universelle Buly 1803?

Founded as an apothecary at the beginning of the 19th century, it retains its wood-paneled interior and offers intriguing perfume products, such as an “oriental watercress and Sardinian parsley” soap and a “Scottish lichen” shower oil.

In the parallel rue de Seine opposite square Gabriel-Pierné—a park named after a 20th-century French musician—lies Galerie Jacques Lacoste. This gallery specializes in decorative arts, with a strong focus on French pieces from the 1930s and 1950s—in particular designer Jean Royère, who injected a shapely sense of fun into Modernist interiors. Meanwhile Galerie Kreo, on the nearby rue Dauphine, represents 21st-century decor. Founders Clémence and Didier Krzentowski worked in the sports industry before showcasing limitededition works by figures from Virgil Abloh to Hella Jongerius. The couple are also known for their expertise in 20th-century French and Italian lighting. Karl Lagerfeld was a long-time client, and both dealers were made Officers dans l’Ordre des Arts et Lettres (Officers in the Order of Arts and Letters).

Look out for La Palette, a listed historical monument on the rue de Seine. The legendary bistro was a favorite of Cézanne and Picasso, and it is still a place to spot writers typing away, or artists engrossed in conversation. The entrepreneur Thierry Bourdoncle bought the premises in 2009. “This place is unique, and has always reflected to me the soul of the Parisian lifestyle,” he says.

Another fan of the area is gallerist Kamel Mennour, who now has three locations in the Saint-Germain-des-Prés area. Representing Daniel Buren, Alicja Kwade, Ugo Rondinone, Camille Henrot, Lee Ufan, and Anish Kapoor, among others, the star dealer has Sylvie Patry, former deputy director for collections and curatorial affairs at Musée d’Orsay, as the gallery’s artistic director.

“This is where I live and work when I don’t travel the world,” says Mennour of the neighborhood. “Though imbued in culture, Saint-Germain was still a sleeping beauty when I first opened the gallery, at 60 rue Mazarine, and the idea then was to put it back on the map. Now I am glad to say that contemporary art, including my curatorial work, has contributed to its revival.”

Heading back towards the river and bearing left, you’ll find the Musée d’Orsay, home to the world’s greatest collection of Impressionist art. Or, bearing right, Île de la Cité is home to Place Dauphine, one of Paris’s quaintest squares. It may feel like a village, but city living doesn’t get much better than this. 0

Sarah Belmont is a Paris-based writer

“ THIS PLACE IS UNIQUE, AND HAS ALWAYS REFLECTED TO ME THE SOUL OF THE PARISIAN LIFESTYLE ”
Galerie Kreo, where founders Clémence and Didier Krzentowski champion 21stcentury decor. Left: Gallerist Kamel Mennour, who has three locations in the Saint-Germain-des-Prés area

Lido Shores | Lido Key

$24,700,000 | 1067 Westway Drive Joel Schemmel | 941.587.4894

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Oyster Bay Estates

$27,650,000

$24,700,000 | 1067 Westway Drive 6 bedrooms, 7 full baths, 2 half baths Joel Schemmel | 941.587.4894 premiersir.com/id/A4639326

Lido Shores | Lido Key

Ritz-Carlton Residences, Sarasota Bay

$12,599,000 | 555 Quay Common #PH-2002 4 bedrooms, 4 full baths, 1 half bath Julia Decastro & Donna Deloach | 941.812.5176 premiersir.com/id/A4634985

San Remo Estates | West of Trail

$9,975,000 | 3638 San Remo Terrace

4 bedrooms, 4 full baths, 1 half bath Joel Schemmel | 941.587.4894 premiersir.com/id/A4635545

San Remo Estates | West of Trail

$9,250,000 | 3631 San Remo Terrace

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Sarasota

$7,350,000 | 5727 Riegels Point Road

3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, 1 half bath

Peg Davant | 941.356.4552 premiersir.com/id/A4618421

San Remo Estates | West of Trail

$6,945,000 | 1389 Tangier Way

4 bedrooms, 4 full baths, 1 half bath

Joel Schemmel | 941.587.4894 premiersir.com/id/A4635543

SARASOTA

Ritz-Carlton Residences, Sarasota Bay

$6,799,000 | 555 Quay Common #1603

3 bedrooms, 3 full baths, 1 half bath

Donna Deloach & Julia DeCastro | 239.825.1168 premiersir.com/id/A4633544

Indian Beach | Sapphire Shores

$6,600,000 | 4311 Bay Shore Road

4 bedrooms, 5 full baths, 1 half bath

Joel Schemmel | 941.587.4894 premiersir.com/id/A4633705

Aria | Longboat Key

$6,499,000 | 2251 Gulf Of Mexico Drive #301 4 bedrooms, 4 full baths, 1 half bath

Roberta Tengerdy & Carolyn Collins | 941.321.2292 premiersir.com/id/A4620097

Longboat Key

$6,295,000 | 4651 Gulf Of Mexico Drive #402 4 bedrooms, 4 full baths, 1 half bath

Jo Rutstein & Moriah Taliaferro | 941.587.9156 premiersir.com/id/A4627248

Siesta Key | Bay Island

$5,950,000 | 749 Freeling Drive

4 bedrooms, 4 full baths, 1 half bath

Judie Berger | 941.928.3424 premiersir.com/id/A4632580

Sarasota

$5,895,000 | 6722 Hawkins Road

5 bedrooms, 6 full baths, 1 half bath

Laura Stavola | 941.447.4875 premiersir.com/id/A4628334

Sarasota

$5,549,000 | 1479 Bay Point Drive

4 bedrooms, 3 full baths

Louis Wery | 941.232.3001 premiersir.com/id/A4628286

Siesta Key | Bay Island

$5,500,000 | 3460 Flamingo Avenue

1 bedroom, 1 full bath

Judie Berger | 941.928.3424

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Ritz-Carlton Residences, Sarasota Bay

$5,279,000 | 555 Quay Common #1103

3 bedrooms, 3 full baths, 1 half bath

Julia Decastro & Donna Deloach | 941.812.5176 premiersir.com/id/A4634990

The Estates at TerraNova

$5,250,000 | 32206 Grand National Drive

4 bedrooms, 3 full baths, 1 half bath

Andrew Tanner & Hannah Herrig | 941.539.0998 premiersir.com/id/A4630642

Sapphire Shores

$5,250,000 | 320 South Shore Drive

4 bedrooms, 3 full baths Mike Warm | 941.525.2740 premiersir.com/id/A4630678

Golden Gate Point

$5,200,000 | 188 Golden Gate Point #202

3 bedrooms, 3 full baths, 1 half bath

Kimberly Ide | 401.487.6928 premiersir.com/id/A4633822

Ritz-Carlton Residences, Sarasota Bay

$5,149,000 | 555 Quay Commons #802

Donna Deloach & Julia Decastro | 239.825.1168 premiersir.com/id/A4633539

Ritz-Carlton Residences, Sarasota Bay

$4,949,000 | 555 Quay Common #1105

Donna Deloach & Julia DeCastro | 239.825.1168 premiersir.com/id/A4634988

Ritz-Carlton Residences, Sarasota Bay

$4,674,000 | 555 Quay Common #905

Donna Deloach & Julia DeCastro | 239.825.1168 premiersir.com/id/A4633543

Plaza at Five Points Residences

$4,985,000 | 50 Central Avenue #16S

Thomas Netzel | 941.539.0633 premiersir.com/id/A4628358

Southbay Yacht & Racquet Club

$4,750,000 | 275 Lookout Point Drive Tamara & Todd Currey | 941.587.1776 premiersir.com/id/A4632453

The BLVD Sarasota

$4,599,000 | 540 North Tamiami Trail #1201

Katy McBrayer & Montana Taplinger | 941.400.2406 premiersir.com/id/A4628340

Longboat Key

$4,500,000 | 4125 Gulf Of Mexico Drive #S201

Moriah Taliaferro | 941.504.9910 premiersir.com/id/A4633182

Harbor Acres

$4,475,000 | 1340 Harbor Drive

Peter Laughlin | 941.356.8428 premiersir.com/id/A4631373

Ritz-Carlton Residences, Sarasota Bay

$4,349,000 | 555 Quay Commons #402

Julia Decastro & Donna Deloach | 941.812.5176 premiersir.com/id/A4634993

Siesta Key

$4,495,000 | 815 Tropical Circle

Joel Schemmel | 941.587.4894 premiersir.com/id/A4617836

Ritz-Carlton Residences, Sarasota Bay

$4,399,000 | 555 Quay Common #705

Julia Decastro & Donna Deloach | 941.812.5176 premiersir.com/id/A4630991

Longboat Key

$4,000,000 | 415 L Ambiance Drive #C703

Kathleen Wingate & Steve Branham | 813.731.3332

premiersir.com/id/A4628857

Longboat Key

$3,995,000 | 535 Sanctuary Drive #C807

Dennis Girard | 941.809.0041 premiersir.com/id/A4628990

Longboat Key

$3,950,000 | 591 Putting Green Lane

Roberta Tengerdy & Carolyn Collins | 941.321.2292 premiersir.com/id/A4632662

Ritz-Carlton Residences, Sarasota Bay

$3,799,000 | 555 Quay Common #301

Donna Deloach & Julia DeCastro | 239.825.1168 premiersir.com/id/A4630984

Founders Club

$3,950,000 | 3809 Founders Club Drive

Donna Soda | 941.961.5857 premiersir.com/id/A4592692

West of Trail

$3,950,000 | 1718 Prospect Street

Tom Hedge & Monica Barth | 941.587.6660 premiersir.com/id/A4635160

L'Ambiance | Longboat Key

$3,745,000 | 415 L Ambiance Drive #C403

Joel Schemmel | 941.587.4894 premiersir.com/id/A4629709

The BLVD Sarasota

$3,695,000 | 540 North Tamiami Trail #604

Joel Schemmel | 941.587.4894

premiersir.com/id/A4632942

Aqualane Estates

$3,575,000 | 1739 Shelburne Lane

Carolyn Barker Collins & Roberta Tengerdy | 941.320.0722

premiersir.com/id/A4633775

Avondale

$3,250,000 | 1810 Lincoln Drive

Mike Warm & Jeff DeJongh | 941.525.2740 premiersir.com/id/A4634563

Baywood Colony Westport

$3,639,000 | 5800 Tidewood Avenue

Roger Grenier & Nancy Grenier | 941.993.2908

premiersir.com/id/A4630683

Golden Bay | Golden Gate Point

$3,445,000 | 166 Golden Gate Point, Penthouse #70

Joel Schemmel | 941.587.4894

premiersir.com/id/A4629705

Sanderling Club | Siesta Key

$3,200,000 | 7665 Sanderling Road

Joel Schemmel | 941.587.4894

premiersir.com/id/A4622464

Indian Beach | Sapphire Shores

$3,195,000 | 653 40th Street

Andrew Tanner | 941.539.0998 premiersir.com/id/A4631509

Queens Harbour

$3,150,000 | 3606 Fair Oaks Place

Dennis Girard | 941.809.0041 premiersir.com/id/A4632238

Orange One

$2,995,000 | 1611 4th Street

Frank Lambert & Anita Lambert | 941.920.1500 premiersir.com/id/A4605775

Southpointe Shores | West of Trail

$3,155,000 | 1701 Sandalwood Drive

Joel Schemmel | 941.587.4894 premiersir.com/id/A4613231

Sarasota | Founders Club

$3,100,000 | 3129 Founders Club Drive

Judie Berger | 941.928.3424 premiersir.com/id/A4615437

Orange One

$2,995,000 | 1611 4th Street #B6

Frank Lambert & Anita Lambert | 941.920.1500 premiersir.com/id/A4616019

Bay Island Shores

$2,950,000 | 508 Siesta Drive

Kevin Milner | 941.539.3287

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Wild Blue at Waterside

$2,850,000 | 1209 Blue Shell Loop

Laura Stavola | 941.447.4875 premiersir.com/id/A4627295

L'Elegance on Lido Beach

$2,800,000 | 1800 Benjamin Franklin Drive #A304

Sharon Meier & Thomas Netzel | 407.927.5669 premiersir.com/id/A4629951

Hampton Lakes

$2,850,000 | 3582 Recurve Circle

Charles Totonis & Joe Harris | 941.524.8299 premiersir.com/id/A4615611

Orchid Beach Club Residences

$2,800,000 | 2050 Benjamin Franklin Drive #B603 Jo Rutstein | 941.587.9156 premiersir.com/id/A4632803

Southbay Yacht & Racquet Club

$2,695,000 | 312 Yacht Harbor Drive

Thomas Netzel & Sandy Netzel | 941.539.0633 premiersir.com/id/A4631221

Sanctuary at Longboat Key

$2,690,000 | 545 Sanctuary Drive #A803

Louis Wery | 941.232.3001 premiersir.com/id/A4634468

Sara Sands

$2,650,000 | 5165 Sandy Cove Avenue

Darlene Gamble & Jaci Krawtschenko | 941.323.3212 premiersir.com/id/A4630479

Skye Ranch

$2,500,000 | 9224 Starry Night Avenue

Robert Sherman | 941.313.1301 premiersir.com/id/A4630280

Founders Club

$2,650,000 | 3548 Founders Club Drive

Jerry Zaback | 941.350.6885 premiersir.com/id/A4624992

Bayso

$2,599,000 | 301 Quay Commons #1111 Louis Wery | 941.232.3001 premiersir.com/id/A4629810

Vue Sarasota Bay

$2,489,000 | 1155 North Gulfstream Avenue #908

Thomas Netzel | 941.539.0633 premiersir.com/id/A4630107

Siesta Beach

$2,450,000 | 4937 Oxford Drive

Carolyn Barker Collins & Roberta Tengerdy | 941.320.0722 premiersir.com/id/A4634241

Queens Harbour

$2,395,000 | 3521 Fair Oaks Lane

Kathleen Wingate & Steve Branham | 813.731.3332 premiersir.com/id/A4634660

Siesta Key | Sanderling Club

$2,350,000 | 1221 South Basin Lane

Judie Berger | 941.928.3424 premiersir.com/id/A4632327

Orange One

$2,428,200 | 410 North Orange Avenue #218

Frank Lambert & Anita Lambert | 941.920.1500 premiersir.com/id/A4603674

Wild Blue at Waterside

$2,395,000 | 8367 Sea Glass Court

Joe Harris & Charles Totonis | 941.539.0974 premiersir.com/id/A4634044

Villa Ballada

$2,264,000 | 430 Kumquat Court #302

Frank Lambert & Anita Lambert | 941.920.1500 premiersir.com/id/A4588306

Villa Ballada

$2,263,000 | 430 Kumquat Court #402

Frank Lambert & Anita Lambert | 941.920.1500 premiersir.com/id/A4576785

Gardens of Ringling

$2,245,000 | 2492 South Milmar Drive

Andrew Tanner | 941.539.0998 premiersir.com/id/A4629016

Vue Sarasota Bay

$2,200,000 | 1155 North Gulfstream Avenue #1406

Moriah Taliaferro | 941.504.9910 premiersir.com/id/A4634352

Hudson Bayou

$2,250,000 | 1732 Hillview Street

J. Walter Almeida | 941.757.7550 premiersir.com/id/A4631892

Siesta Isles

$2,200,000 | 5576 Contento Drive Lisa Gullick | 941.364.4000 premiersir.com/id/A4632863

South Creek

$2,195,000 | 1862 Island Way

Nancy Endara | 941.323.1700 premiersir.com/id/A4631910

Sarasota Plantations

$2,195,000 | 5645 Churchill Downs Road

Bill Blume & Liz Nason | 941.525.6257 premiersir.com/id/A4634600

Siesta Key | Beach Terrace

$1,995,000 | 5400 Ocean Boulevard #17-4

Judie Berger | 941.928.3424 premiersir.com/id/A4611574

The Oaks | Bayside | Osprey

$1,795,000 | 75 Osprey Point Drive

Joel Schemmel | 941.587.4894

premiersir.com/id/A4628121

Phillippi Creek

$2,000,000 | 5544 Dinah Lane

Tom Hedge & Monica Barth | 941.587.6660 premiersir.com/id/A4634949

Sarasota

$1,900,000 | 4865 Featherbed Lane

Janet Boyden | 770.595.8139 premiersir.com/id/A4629363

Premier on Main

$1,795,000 | 62 Audubon Place

Andrew Tanner | 941.539.0998 premiersir.com/id/A4629654

Hidden Harbor

$1,997,000 | 5112 Jungle Plum Road

Mike Warm & Tamara Currey | 941.525.2740 premiersir.com/id/A4634398

Sarasota

$1,875,000 | 2425 Floyd Street

Roberta Tengerdy & Carolyn Collins | 941.321.2292 premiersir.com/id/A4629328

Sanderling Club | Siesta Key

$1,765,000 | 7618 Midnight Pass Road

Joel Schemmel | 941.587.4894 premiersir.com/id/A4631568

Pelican Harbour & Beach Club

$1,735,000 | 4241 Gulf Of Mexico Drive #202

Cindy Fischer & Michael Seamon | 941.465.1124 premiersir.com/id/A4633615

Villa Ballada

$1,698,500 | 430 Kumquat Court #310

Frank Lambert & Anita Lambert | 941.920.1500 premiersir.com/id/A4576629

Siesta Key

$1,675,000 | 749 Tropical Circle

Judie Berger | 941.928.3424 premiersir.com/id/A4632266

Villa Ballada

$1,701,500 | 430 Kumquat Court #405

Frank Lambert & Anita Lambert | 941.920.1500 premiersir.com/id/A4542214

Siesta Key

$1,695,000 | 5140 Windward Avenue

Judie Berger | 941.928.3424 premiersir.com/id/A4634995

St. Armand Towers North

$1,650,000 | 1 Benjamin Franklin Drive #121

Mike Warm & Jeff DeJongh | 941.525.2740 premiersir.com/id/A4629193

Siesta Key | Sanderling Club

$1,700,000 | 7247 Turnstone Road

Judie Berger | 941.928.3424 premiersir.com/id/A4562819

Emerald Pointe South

$1,695,000 | 1906 Harbour Links Circle #14

Charles Totonis & Joe Harris | 941.524.8299 premiersir.com/id/A4635421

Sunset Beach

$1,650,000 | 2105 Gulf Of Mexico Drive #3303

Dennis Girard | 941.809.0041 premiersir.com/id/A4632024

LakeHouse Cove at Waterside

$1,639,000 | 764 Tailwind Place

Joe Harris & Charles Totonis | 941.539.0974 premiersir.com/id/A4630968

Harbor House

$1,500,000 | 174 Golden Gate Point #11

Kimberly Ide | 401.487.6928 premiersir.com/id/A4634124

LakeHouse Cove at Waterside

$1,449,000 | 7917 Mainsail Lane

Donna Soda | 941.961.5857 premiersir.com/id/A4635257

Bayso Sarasota

$1,629,000 | 301 Quay Commons #1406

Moriah Taliaferro | 941.504.9910 premiersir.com/id/A4621235

L'Elegance on Lido Beach

$1,495,000 | 1800 Benjamin Franklin Drive #A1003

Chris Wetzig | 941.350.8083 premiersir.com/id/A4634212

LakeHouse Cove at Waterside

$1,380,000 | 8253 Grande Shores Drive

Donna Soda | 941.961.5857 premiersir.com/id/A4635250

Bent Tree Village

$1,500,000 | 7317 Crape Myrtle Way

Carlos Santos | 941.735.8302 premiersir.com/id/A4627692

Artistry

$1,479,900 | 8983 Baroque Terrace

Christopher Bush & Angie Walters | 941.404.9504 premiersir.com/id/A4627647

Grand Bay

$1,325,000 | 3060 Grand Bay Boulevard #162

Judy Mitchell | 941.275.6838 premiersir.com/id/A4633219

Siesta Key | Somerset Cay

$1,300,000 | 9122 Midnight Pass Road #33

Judie Berger | 941.928.3424 premiersir.com/id/A4632324

Condo on the Bay Tower II

$1,288,000 | 988 Blvd Of The Arts #810 Carlos Santos | 941.735.8302 premiersir.com/id/A4625722

Beachplace

$1,190,000 | 1065 Gulf Of Mexico Drive #105

Moriah Taliaferro | 941.504.9910 premiersir.com/id/A4633471

Alinari

$1,299,000 | 800 North Tamiami Trail #1111

Moriah Taliaferro | 941.544.2608 premiersir.com/id/A4625324

Sarasota

$1,299,000 | 2415 Floyd Street

Robert Sherman | 941.313.1301 premiersir.com/id/A4627912

Premier on Main

$1,250,000 | 2170 Fruitville Road Frank & Anita Lambert | 941.920.1500 premiersir.com/id/A4620441

Whispering Sands

$1,250,000 | 20 Whispering Sands Drive #501 Liz Arme | 941.266.4003 premiersir.com/id/A4620251

Sea Pines

$1,175,000 | 6925 Gulf Of Mexico Drive #24

Kathleen Wingate & Steve Branham | 813.731.3332 premiersir.com/id/A4634689

Villa Ballada

$1,166,100 | 430 Kumquat Court #308

Frank Lambert & Anita Lambert | 941.920.1500 premiersir.com/id/A4541398

Villa Ballada

$1,166,000 | 430 Kumquat Court #408

Frank Lambert & Anita Lambert | 941.920.1500 premiersir.com/id/A4576621

Villa Ballada

$1,099,000 | 430 Kumquat Court #208

Frank Lambert & Anita Lambert | 941.920.1500 premiersir.com/id/A4588256 Prestancia

$1,145,000 | 7738 Calle Facil

$1,145,000 | 2194 Fruitville Road

Prestancia

$1,085,000 | 7620 Club Lane

Joel Schemmel & Sharon Chiodi | 941.587.4894 premiersir.com/id/A4623374

$1,095,000 | 1111 North Gulfstream Avenue #6B Tom Hedge | 941.587.6660 premiersir.com/id/A4629984

Joel Schemmel & Sharon Chiodi | 941.587.4894 premiersir.com/id/A4610479 Siesta Key | Peppertree

$1,075,000 | 1080 West Peppertree Lane #506A Judie Berger | 941.928.3424 premiersir.com/id/A4632312

Frank

& Anita Lambert | 941.920.1500 premiersir.com/id/A4634728

| 899

| 941.356.5260 premiersir.com/id/A4632491

Villa Ballada

$1,030,600 | 430 Kumquat Court #203

Frank Lambert | 941.920.1500

premiersir.com/id/A4540588

Shoreview at Waterside Lakewood Ranch

$995,000 | 7989 Grande Shores Drive

Charles Totonis & Joe Harris | 941.524.8299

premiersir.com/id/A4626715

Bay View Heights

$899,000 | 1773 Harmony Lane

Katy McBrayer | 941.400.2406 premiersir.com/id/A4625278

Sarasota

$1,025,000 | 5750 Midnight Pass Road #105E

Peg Davant | 941.356.4552 premiersir.com/id/A4632461

Gulf & Bay Club

$925,000 | 5760 Midnight Pass Road #702

Robert Sherman & Janet Boyden | 941.313.1301 premiersir.com/id/A4623167

Payne Park Village

$879,900 | 2320 Lindstrom Street Cari Miller | 203.722.4509 premiersir.com/id/A4631501

Sarasota

$999,999 | 2218 Webber Street

Lily Buzey | 941.702.3461 premiersir.com/id/A4618558

LakeHouse Cove at Waterside

$925,000 | 8089 Sandstar Way

Gloria Bracciano | 941.229.4000 premiersir.com/id/A4631896

Arlington Park

$850,000 | 2127 South Jefferson Avenue Peter Laughlin & Natalie Laughlin Tanner | 941.356.8428 premiersir.com/id/A4628081

Longboat Key

$850,000 | 605 Jungle Queen Way

Kimberly Freiwald & Sherrall Van Leeuwen | 941.256.6775 premiersir.com/id/A4635778

LakeHouse Cove at Waterside

$835,000 | 969 Crosswind Avenue

Joe Harris & Charles Totonis | 941.539.0974 premiersir.com/id/A4632391

Longboat Key at Casa Del Mar

$799,900 | 4621 Gulf Of Mexico Drive #16B

Dennis Girard | 941.809.0041 premiersir.com/id/A4632978

Sarasota

$785,000 | 435 South Gulfstream Avenue #1005

Louis Wery | 941.232.3001 premiersir.com/id/A4626385

Longboat Key

$849,900 | 826 Bayport Way #826

Dennis Girard | 941.809.0041 premiersir.com/id/A4619094

Gillespie Park

$819,000 | 530 Gillespie Avenue

Robert Sherman | 941.313.1301 premiersir.com/id/A4625505

Country Creek

$795,000 | 4457 Sandpine Lane

Andrew Tanner & Natalie Laughlin Tanner | 941.539.0998 premiersir.com/id/A4624513

Laurel Lakes

$749,000 | 2886 Grazeland Drive

Larry Johns & Jill Johns | 941.704.8386 premiersir.com/id/A4634102

Rivendell

$837,000 | 790 Shadow Bay Way

Tamara & Todd Currey | 941.587.1776 premiersir.com/id/A4635163

Eagles Point at The Landings

$819,000 | 5440 Eagles Point Circle #405

Peg Davant | 941.356.4552 premiersir.com/id/A4634481

Willowbend

$789,000 | 518 Luminary Boulevard

Tamara & Todd Currey | 941.587.1776 premiersir.com/id/A4633812

Stoneybrook Golf & Country Club

$749,000 | 8737 Pebble Creek Lane

Darren Beddoe | 407.353.8810 premiersir.com/id/A4634840

Longboat Harbour Towers

$740,000 | 4401 Gulf Of Mexico Drive #203

Nisey Carbone | 941.685.3607 premiersir.com/id/A4634553

Prestancia | Villa D'Este Dr

$715,000 | 7242 Villa D Este Drive Ellen Kirkegaard | 414.803.2304 premiersir.com/id/A4634079

Sarasota

$695,000 | 1558 4th Street #406

Frank Lambert & Anita Lambert | 941.920.1500 premiersir.com/id/A4524969

Meadow Walk

$665,000 | 1057 Meadow Breeze Lane

Robyn Sadlo | 941.812.4219 premiersir.com/id/A4628564

Pelican Harbour & Beach Club

$725,000 | 4234 Gulf Of Mexico Drive #Y1

Mike Seamon & Cindy Fischer | 941.586.1802 premiersir.com/id/A4632572

Sarasota | Palmer Ranch

$699,900 | 8752 Bellussi Drive Judie Berger | 941.928.3424 premiersir.com/id/A4633612

Downtown Sarasota

$669,000 | 1500 State Street #303

Maureen Morris & Matt Morris | 941.350.0807 premiersir.com/id/A4623132

Isles of Sarasota

$629,000 | 5759 Benevento Drive Jessika Arman | 941.587.4202 premiersir.com/id/A4634113

Willowbend

$719,000 | 521 Luminary Boulevard

Tamara & Todd Currey | 941.587.1776 premiersir.com/id/A4631006

Osprey

$698,888 | 758 Sarabay Road #5 Michael Christo | 508.735.6797 premiersir.com/id/A4634883

Rivendell

$669,000 | 1109 Scherer Way

Tamara & Todd Currey | 941.587.1776 premiersir.com/id/A4631130

Prestancia

$600,000 | 4501 Murcia Boulevard #7

Joel Schemmel & Sharon Chiodi | 941.587.4894

premiersir.com/id/A4630990

Seaplace

$595,000 | 1975 Gulf Of Mexico Drive #G4-306

Ellen Kirkegaard & Michael Seamon | 414.803.2304 premiersir.com/id/A4633662

Bayview Acres

$499,500 | 1725 Pocatello Street

Tom Hedge | 941.587.6660 premiersir.com/id/A4632492

Sutton Place

$435,000 | 605 Sutton Place #205

Cindy Fischer | 941.465.1124 premiersir.com/id/A4634505

Baywood Colony

$355,000 | 5940 Driftwood Avenue #15

Michele NeSmith | 941.330.3429 premiersir.com/id/A4635377

Willowbend

$585,000 | 1219 Chalet Court

Tamara & Todd Currey | 941.587.1776 premiersir.com/id/A4633973

Sarasota

$469,000 | 3888 Shady Brook Lane

Holly Switow | 941.735.3186 premiersir.com/id/A4631204

Indian Beach Highlands

$420,000 | 839 40th Street

Carolyn Barker Collins & Roberta Tengerdy | 941.320.0722 premiersir.com/id/A4618873

Baywood Colony

$335,000 | 5826 Driftwood Place #34

Michele NeSmith | 941.330.3429 premiersir.com/id/A4635120

Sunrise Preserve

$517,000 | 8792 Rain Song Road

Tamara & Todd Currey | 941.587.1776 premiersir.com/id/A4632720

Sarasota | University Parkway

$439,000 | 4119 Via Sienna Circle

Vittoria Rutigliano | 941.962.5867 premiersir.com/id/A4624188

Sarasota

$400,000 | 2724 Ashton Road

Kevin Milner | 941.539.3287 premiersir.com/id/A4632943

Baywood Colony

$315,000 | 5936 Driftwood Avenue #16

Michele NeSmith | 941.330.3429 premiersir.com/id/A4635125

The Concession

$4,099,000 | 19405 Ganton Avenue

4 bedrooms, 4 full baths, 1 half bath

Donna Soda | 941.961.5857 premiersir.com/id/A4633627

The Lake Club

$3,890,000 | 8532 Pavia Way

4 bedrooms, 5 full baths, 1 half bath

Laura Stavola | 941.447.4875 premiersir.com/id/A4634077

The Concession

$3,199,000 | 19458 Beacon Park Place

Donna Soda | 941.961.5857

premiersir.com/id/A4636045

The Lake Club

$2,475,000 | 17230 Salerno Drive

Donna Soda | 941.961.5857 premiersir.com/id/A4630682

Lakewood Ranch

$2,099,950 | 16435 Daysailor Trail

Tom Hedge | 941.587.6660

premiersir.com/id/A4619414

Panther Ridge

$2,600,000 | 20504 65th Avenue East

Laura Stavola | 941.447.4875

premiersir.com/id/A4630586

Bradenton

$2,150,000 | 3101 Riverview Boulevard

Thomas Netzel & Sharon Dolan Meier | 941.539.0633

premiersir.com/id/A4625189

Lakewood Ranch Country Club Village

$1,694,000 | 7041 Beechmont Terrace

Laura Stavola | 941.447.4875

premiersir.com/id/A4631517

Palma Sola Sound

$1,895,000 | 7800 18th Avenue West

Hannah Herrig | 941.737.5518 premiersir.com/id/A4631132

The Isles at Lakewood Ranch

$1,649,000 | 8050 Redonda Loop

Donna Soda | 941.961.5857

premiersir.com/id/A4636259

River Club South

$1,399,000 | 9420 Old Hyde Park Place

Donna Soda | 941.961.5857 premiersir.com/id/A4634867

The Isles at Lakewood Ranch

$1,835,600 | 8276 Redonda Loop

Donna Soda | 941.961.5857

premiersir.com/id/A4630061

The Isles at Lakewood Ranch

$1,599,000 | 7924 Redonda Loop

Donna Soda | 941.961.5857 premiersir.com/id/A4625862

Bradenton

$1,390,000 | 5730 Braden River Road

Kevin Milner | 941.539.3287 premiersir.com/id/A4615365

Country Club East

$1,795,000 | 16003 Kendleshire Terrace

Gloria Bracciano | 941.229.4000 premiersir.com/id/A4635625

Esplanade Golf and Country Club

$1,547,000 | 4811 Cabreo Court

Donna Soda | 941.961.5857 premiersir.com/id/A4613411

Key Royale

$1,200,000 | 635 Dundee Lane

Laurie Mock | 941.232.3665 premiersir.com/id/A4622194

Hidden Lagoon

$1,199,000 | 901 30th Court East

Nathan Mathers & Shellie Young | 941.720.0408 premiersir.com/id/A4630753

Bradenton Beach

$1,100,000 | 210 66th Street

Holly Switow | 941.735.3186 premiersir.com/id/A4619206

Country Club East

$895,000 | 14622 Castle Park Terrace

Nancy Endara | 941.323.1700 premiersir.com/id/A4632209

Bradenton Beach

$1,150,000 | 212 66th Street

Holly Switow | 941.735.3186 premiersir.com/id/A4618467

Cortez

$1,050,000 | 3860 Mariners Way #413

Kevin Milner | 941.539.3287 premiersir.com/id/A4634768

Country Club East

$875,000 | 16442 Hillside Circle

Donna Soda | 941.961.5857 premiersir.com/id/A4631332

Rosedale Golf and Country Club

$1,125,000 | 5145 96th Street East

Mia McKeehan | 941.726.0898 premiersir.com/id/A4617650

Esplanade Golf and Country Club

$945,000 | 13947 Messina Loop

Mary Ann Hartmann | 407.466.1538 premiersir.com/id/A4635103

Lakewood Ranch

$824,000 | 7131 Sandhills Place

Katy McBrayer & Montana Taplinger | 941.400.2406 premiersir.com/id/A4634263

Polo Run

$815,000 | 17335 Polo Trail

Joe Harris & Charles Totonis | 941.539.0974

premiersir.com/id/A4631448

Palma Sola Bay Club

$599,000 | 3450 77th Street West #102

Frank Lambert & Anita Lambert | 941.920.1500 premiersir.com/id/A4632459

Bradenton

$430,000 | 2510 Nightingale Lane

William Surgeon | 727.318.7363 premiersir.com/id/TB8338833

Hidden Meadows

$689,999 | 6300 26th Avenue East

Nathan Mathers | 941.720.0408

premiersir.com/id/A4634871

Lakewood Ranch Country Club Village

$579,000 | 7074 Woodmore Terrace

Gloria Bracciano | 941.229.4000 premiersir.com/id/A4631078

Palms of Manasota

$300,000 | 106 49th Court East

Jessica Bell | 850.509.5512

premiersir.com/id/A4628361

West Bradenton

$649,000 | 603 38th Street West

Jennifer Garrabrant & Jaci Krawtschenko | 941.228.3554 premiersir.com/id/A4633365

Parrish

$495,900 | 2338 126th Drive East

Lisa Ripley | 920.475.4151 premiersir.com/id/A4634036

SARASOTA’S MOST EXTRAORDINARY NEW ADDRESS

Bold design. Breathtaking views. Boundless possibilities. This is 1000 Boulevard of the Arts, where striking residences mingle effortlessly with a hospitality inspired lifestyle. A curated collection of premium amenities and downtown indulgences create a singular way of life that’s everything but ordinary. Come live the art of having it all.

1- to 3-Bedroom Luxury Residences

Artist’s Concept

Casey Key

$8,450,000 | 507 Casey Key Road

5 bedrooms, 6 full baths, 1 half bath

Lori Carey & Leslie DuFresne | 941.780.3427 premiersir.com/id/A4632022

Casey Key

$6,475,000 | 1109 Bayshore Road

4 bedrooms, 5 full baths, 1 half bath

Lisa Napolitano & Tamara Currey | 941.993.0025 premiersir.com/id/N6135111

Casey Key

$4,995,000 | 681 Casey Key Road

4 bedrooms, 4 full baths, 1 half bath Peter Laughlin | 941.356.8428 premiersir.com/id/A4630341

Casey Key

$4,500,000 | 426 North Casey Key Road

3 bedrooms, 2 full baths

Valerie Dall'Acqua & Lisa Napolitano | 941.445.7295 premiersir.com/id/A4583445

Casey Key

$3,795,000 | 409 Casey Key Road

Mike Warm & Jeff DeJongh | 941.525.2740 premiersir.com/id/A4634744

Casey Key

$3,200,000 | 1608 Casey Key Road

Lisa Napolitano | 941.993.0025 premiersir.com/id/N6136051

Casey Key

$2,900,000 | 4029 Casey Key Road

Valerie Dall'Acqua | 941.445.7295 premiersir.com/id/A4632619

Casey Key

$3,750,000 | 1620 Casey Key Road

Mike Warm & Jeff DeJongh | 941.525.2740 premiersir.com/id/A4634851

Casey Key Estates

$2,900,000 | 1040 Gulf Winds Way

Lisa Napolitano & Valerie Dall’Acqua | 941.993.0025 premiersir.com/id/N6134052

Casey Key

$2,675,000 | 325 Casey Key Road

Joel Schemmel & Sharon Chiodi | 941.587.4894 premiersir.com/id/A4638278

Nokomis Bayfront

$3,799,000 | 603 Harbor Shore Drive

Jaci Krawtschenko & Jennifer Garrabrant | 941.284.3789 premiersir.com/id/A4634794

Venice Island

$875,000 | 510 Harbor Drive South Roberta Gainer | 407.561.0515 premiersir.com/id/N6135446

Grand Palm

$849,000 | 11897 Hunters Creek Road

Kim Vogel | 941.254.1996 premiersir.com/id/N6135883

Aria

$989,000 | 245 Corelli Drive

Kim Vogel | 941.254.1996 premiersir.com/id/N6135920

Boca Royale

$859,900 | 1720 Grande Park Drive

Bob Linthicum | 941.228.9206 premiersir.com/id/N6136220

Boca Royale

$759,900 | 4 Dominica Drive

Bob Linthicum | 941.228.9206 premiersir.com/id/N6135174

Venice

$739,000 | 21042 Anclote Court

Maryanne Kurtz & Megan George | 941.441.6624 premiersir.com/id/N6136019

Punta Gorda

$649,000 | 1750 Jamaica Way #0234

Deanna Huber | 727.307.2024 premiersir.com/id/TB8324227

Port Charlotte

$560,000 | 13457 Drysdale Avenue

Lily Buzey | 941.702.3461 premiersir.com/id/A4620350

North Port

$485,000 | 4743 Butterfly Lane

Ron DoorenBos | 941.525.6322 premiersir.com/id/N6136547

Nokomis

$725,000 | 217 Malina Court

Tamara & Todd Currey | 941.587.1776 premiersir.com/id/A4633871

Venice Island

$645,000 | 828 Nokomis Avenue South

Roberta Gainer & Sandra Simic | 407.561.0515 premiersir.com/id/N6136047

Pinebrook South

$549,000 | 1363 Brookside Drive

Megan George | 941.726.1998 premiersir.com/id/N6136136

Port Charlotte Sub

$450,000 | 4223 Fonsica Avenue

Lily Buzey | 941.702.3461

premiersir.com/id/A4634456

Grand Palm

$669,000 | 1675 Still River Drive

Beth Sargent | 941.716.1277 premiersir.com/id/N6136339

Sorrento East

$629,000 | 2269 Lakewood Drive

Jody Callan | 941.525.8707 premiersir.com/id/N6136296

Caribbean Village

$519,900 | 11601 Parrotfish Street

Frannie Smith | 941.236.1796 premiersir.com/id/N6136322

Turnberry Place

$450,000 | 1420 Turnberry Drive

Carolyn Collins & Roberta Tengerdy | 941.320.0722 premiersir.com/id/A4628135

Venice

$450,000 | 11584 Dancing River Drive

Crystal Cosby | 941.882.0070 premiersir.com/id/N6136207

Suncoast Lakes

$385,000 | 2760 Suncoast Lakes Boulevard

Lily Buzey | 941.702.3461 premiersir.com/id/A4627639

San Lino

$359,900 | 900 San Lino Circle #922

Roberta Gainer & Laura Harris | 407.561.0515 premiersir.com/id/N6135375

Port Charlotte

$300,000 | 2318 North Chamberlain Boulevard

Carlos Santos | 941.735.8302 premiersir.com/id/A4617267

Nokomis

$440,000 | 205 Carlino Drive

Kevin Stanley | 941.716.0564 premiersir.com/id/N6136400

Venice

$385,000 | 1300 Indus Road

Peggy Olson & Dan Olson | 941.223.0686 premiersir.com/id/N6136357

North Port

$324,995 | 3819 Ragen Street

Megan George | 941.726.1998 premiersir.com/id/N6130621

Rotonda West Long Meadow

$419,000 | 139 Long Meadow Lane

Mia McKeehan | 941.726.0898 premiersir.com/id/A4618856

Capri Isles

$375,000 | 631 Ironwood Circle #148

Peggy Olson & Dan Olson | 941.223.0686 premiersir.com/id/N6135699

Grand Palm

$312,000 | 12583 Sagewood Drive

Amy Pfister | 941.899.4939 premiersir.com/id/A4632609

Downtown Naples Living Is Now Within Easy Reach

Welcome to an exclusive community of just 35 exquisite residences at the gateway to 5th Avenue South in downtown Naples. With its marina and picturesque boardwalk, Palazzo Bayfront Naples is mere steps away from the waterfront, endless dining, shopping, galleries, and the newly opened Gulfshore Playhouse. Palazzo offers more than just a designer residence; it’s a rare opportunity to own a piece of downtown Naples.

New Naples Luxury Condominiums from $2 Million

PalazzoBayfront.com Sales Gallery: 465 Bayfront Place, Naples | 239-427-2527

Artist’s Rendering
Artist’s Rendering

Avila in Tampa

$5,490,000 | 602 Guisando De Avila 6 bedrooms, 7 full baths, 2 half baths Jose Cardenas | 281.827.0223 premiersir.com/id/TB8317970

Northbridge at Lake Pretty

$3,595,000 | 9903 Menander Wood Court 4 bedrooms, 4 full baths, 2 half baths Kathleen Wingate | 813.731.3332 premiersir.com/id/A4634224

Oldsmar

$2,490,000 | 1942 Muirfield Way 5 bedrooms, 4 full baths, 2 half baths Jose Cardenas | 281.827.0223 premiersir.com/id/TB8321611

Avila

$2,100,000 | 16920 Villalagos De Avila 4 bedrooms, 3 full baths, 1 half bath Mary Renfroe | 813.230.7409 premiersir.com/id/TB8332093

Wesley Chapel

$1,549,900 | 8621 Ivy Stark Boulevard

Paul DeSantis & Travis Germain | 813.439.4816 premiersir.com/id/TB8344121

South Tampa

$1,050,000 | 4950 Bayshore Boulevard #23

Karen Hegemeier | 813.368.7433 premiersir.com/id/T3551596

Wesley Chapel

$950,000 | 7183 Heather Sound Loop

Paul DeSantis & Travis Germain | 813.439.4816 premiersir.com/id/TB8330583

South Tampa

$1,248,642 | 3424 Ohio Avenue

Sherry Wolfe | 727.637.8168 premiersir.com/id/TB8335994

Lutz

$950,000 | 1203 Oxbridge Drive

Mary Renfroe | 813.230.7409 premiersir.com/id/TB8301137

Riverview

$835,000 | 13010 Wildflower Meadow Drive

Janet Moore & MJ Benavente | 813.892.0998 premiersir.com/id/TB8330755

Tampa

$760,000 | 7714 South West Shore Boulevard

Kali Denault | 217.280.0407 premiersir.com/id/TB8338818

Zephyrhills

$570,000 | 35942 Saddle Palm Way

Michelle Toth & James Toth | 507.923.8466 premiersir.com/id/TB8327836

Zephyrhills

$425,000 | 2941 Adams Cross Drive

Jackie Montana & Crystal Dukes | 813.784.1540 premiersir.com/id/TB8334353

Tampa

$344,800 | 20461 Berrywood Lane

Andrea Simpson | 813.624.5003 premiersir.com/id/TB8301777

Haines City

$725,000 | 3086 Landings Court

Jessica Bell | 850.509.5512 premiersir.com/id/A4619572

Lutz

$550,000 | 281 Villa Corte Drive

Karen Hegemeier & Alee douglass | 813.368.7433 premiersir.com/id/TB8305142

Brandon

$425,000 | 1616 Bondurant Way

Jacqueline Kenny | 716.713.5685 premiersir.com/id/TB8337070

Wimauma

$340,000 | 5520 Blue Azure Drive

Janet Moore & Mary Jane Benavente | 813.892.0998 premiersir.com/id/U8247462

Lithia

$595,000 | 6029 Gannetdale Drive

Michelle Toth & James Toth | 507.923.8466 premiersir.com/id/TB8323670

Tampa

$445,000 | 345 Bayshore Boulevard #1603

Michelle Toth & James Toth | 507.923.8466 premiersir.com/id/TB8323040

Medley at Mirada

$419,900 | 32015 Cannon Rush Drive

Bonnie Allen | 941.444.9590 premiersir.com/id/A4629039

Wimauma

$310,000 | 5552 Logan Cave Avenue

Janet Moore & MJ Benavente | 813.892.0998 premiersir.com/id/U8248911

$12,995,000 | 1571 Oceanview Drive 7 bedrooms, 8 full baths, 3 half baths Robyn Gunn | 727.421.7234 premiersir.com/id/TB8336934

Tierra Verde

LIVE IN Striking Beauty

From its seclusion along Gulf Shore Boulevard between lush gardens and the turquoise Gulf, Olana is home to a private collection of only 12 beachfront residences. Each full-service residence is over 10,000 square feet and features unobstructed 80-foot Gulf views.

by

Downtown St. Petersburg

$8,690,000 | 301 1st Street South #3501

4 bedrooms, 5 full baths, 1 half bath

Robyn Gunn | 727.421.7234 premiersir.com/id/U8230005

St. Petersburg

$4,499,000 | 3942 14th Street NE

4 bedrooms, 3 full baths, 1 half bath

Sarah Wood | 727.422.6664 premiersir.com/id/TB8318025

Snell Isle

$3,999,000 | 930 Monterey Point NE

Lisa Farmer | 727.200.2176 premiersir.com/id/TB8338138

St. Petersburg

$3,750,000 | 1925 Beach Drive SE

Angela Grieco & Nikki Priest | 727.455.7595 premiersir.com/id/TB8326353

Old Northeast

$2,425,000 | 220 14th Avenue North

Nick Janovsky | 813.391.8291 premiersir.com/id/TB8339673

Belleair Beach

$3,890,000 | 3341 Gulf Boulevard

Kelly Ackley | 727.515.6504 premiersir.com/id/TB8313239

Belleair

$3,149,000 | 6 Hibiscus Lane

David Grieco & Angela Grieco | 727.458.5872 premiersir.com/id/U8250845

Snell Isle

$2,000,000 | 808 Monterey Boulevard NE

Carole McGurk | 727.510.9593 premiersir.com/id/TB8325182

Indian Rocks Beach

$1,800,000 | 820 Gulf Boulevard #1-#3

Kelly Ackley | 727.515.6504 premiersir.com/id/TB8334472

Dunedin

$1,790,000 | 55 Edgewater Drive

Maria Azuaje | 317.371.0935 premiersir.com/id/TB8328902

Clearwater

$1,695,000 | 2855 Sunstream Lane

Sherry Wolfe | 727.637.8168 premiersir.com/id/TB8309319

Indian Rocks Beach

$1,800,000 | 822 Gulf Boulevard #4-#6

Kelly Ackley | 727.515.6504 premiersir.com/id/TB8334649

Marina Bay

$1,749,000 | 18 Franklin Court South #A Kara Brooks | 727.313.1233 premiersir.com/id/U8250403

Tarpon Springs

$1,475,000 | 2878 Post Rock Drive

Jennifer Russell | 727.249.3339 premiersir.com/id/TB8331733

St. Petersburg

$1,800,000 | 4329 Helena Street NE Sherry Wolfe | 727.637.8168 premiersir.com/id/TB8335367

Redington Shores

$1,699,900 | 18077 3rd Street East Launa Lishamer & Michael Lynch | 727.492.1954 premiersir.com/id/TB8339296

Marina Bay

$1,400,000 | 21 Crescent Place South Kara Brooks | 727.313.1233 premiersir.com/id/TB8335498

Belleair

$1,349,000 | 8 Belleview Boulevard #203

Angela Grieco & Nikki Priest | 727.455.7595 premiersir.com/id/TB8311770

Indian Shores

$1,150,000 | 19519 Gulf Boulevard #603

Rich Rippetoe & Greta Hart | 727.902.1437 premiersir.com/id/TB8327393

Seminole

$1,099,900 | 9031 Baywood Park Drive

Michael Perez | 727.422.6943 premiersir.com/id/TB8327022

Clearwater Beach

$1,299,999 | 800 South Gulfview Boulevard #903

Andrea Simpson | 813.624.5003 premiersir.com/id/TB8306706

Clearwater Beach

$1,150,000 | 1660 Gulf Boulevard #803 Rich Rippetoe | 727.902.1437 premiersir.com/id/TB8327800

Historic Kenwood

$955,000 | 2430 6th Avenue North

Anja Prusac | 727.481.4347 premiersir.com/id/U8251811

Tarpon Springs

$1,279,900 | 1580 Mac Chesney Drive

Karen Apa | 727.776.7678 premiersir.com/id/TB8319780

Driftwood on Central

$1,100,000 | 19 29th Street North #7

Nick Janovsky | 813.391.8291 premiersir.com/id/U8252956

Driftwood on Central

$950,000 | 2859 Central Avenue

Nick Janovsky | 813.391.8291 premiersir.com/id/U8241694

St. Pete Beach

$950,000 | 5000 Gulf Boulevard #704

Ezekiel Walters | 727.310.8408

premiersir.com/id/U8253772

Indian Shores

$895,000 | 19451 Gulf Boulevard #806

Grete Hart | 727.851.0088

premiersir.com/id/TB8326881

St. Pete Beach

$849,000 | 370 59th Avenue

Caryn Rightmyer & Bill Caulfield | 727.409.9696

premiersir.com/id/TB8338225

Driftwood on Central

$900,000 | 17 29th Street North

Nick Janovsky | 813.391.8291

premiersir.com/id/U8252952

Downtown St. Pete

$870,000 | 340 1st Street North #I

Tiffany Weidner | 727.386.3952

premiersir.com/id/TB8326450

Driftwood on Central

$800,000 | 41 29th Street North

Nick Janovsky | 813.391.8291

premiersir.com/id/TB8307218

St. Petersburg

$895,000 | 860 25th Avenue North

Lisa Story | 727.667.3355

premiersir.com/id/TB8319068

Bayway Isles

$850,000 | 5200 Brittany Drive South #4-1102

Tyler Jones & Jen Dunn | 727.452.8497

premiersir.com/id/U8199801

Redington Shores

$799,000 | 17980 Gulf Boulevard #103

Michael Perez | 727.422.6943

premiersir.com/id/TB8334458

St. Petersburg

$770,000 | 644 3rd Avenue South #508

David Grieco & Nikki Grieco Priest | 727.458.5872 premiersir.com/id/TB8335286

St. Petersburg

$749,900 | 5530/5530 7th Avenue North

Sarah Wood | 727.422.6664

premiersir.com/id/U8255260

Pasadena

$699,000 | 1848 Shore Drive South #501

Aimee Smith | 727.304.8776 premiersir.com/id/U8218239

St. Petersburg

$675,000 | 487 9th Avenue North

Dawn Hulett | 727.612.8558 premiersir.com/id/TB8336872

Gulfport

$599,900 | 6338 8th Avenue South

Kara Brooks | 727.313.1233 premiersir.com/id/TB8316494

Indian Shores

$549,900 | 19531 Gulf Boulevard #205

Rich Rippetoe & Greta Hart | 727.902.1437 premiersir.com/id/TB8338725

St. Petersburg

$719,000 | 3192 Nautical Place South

Lisa Story | 727.667.3355

premiersir.com/id/TB8329741

St. Petersburg

$645,000 | 1 Beach Drive SE #2311

Michael Perez | 727.422.6943 premiersir.com/id/U8228081

Largo

$549,900 | 11245 Bella Loma Drive

Sarah Wood | 727.422.6664

premiersir.com/id/TB8338535

Palm Harbor

$548,000 | 1620 Tay Court

Michael Perez | 727.422.6943 premiersir.com/id/TB8318371

Seminole

$465,000 | 14052 89th Avenue

Cheryl Havener | 727.420.6445 premiersir.com/id/TB8337118

Seminole

$439,000 | 8630 118th Street

Michael Perez | 727.422.6943 premiersir.com/id/TB8337804

St. Petersburg

$410,000 | 3862 21st Avenue North

William Surgeon | 727.318.7363

premiersir.com/id/TB8326641

Dunedin

$499,999 | 989 Virginia Street

Alee Douglass | 727.330.5305 premiersir.com/id/TB8315238

Clearwater

$439,900 | 2301 Harn Boulevard

Rich Rippetoe | 727.902.1437 premiersir.com/id/TB8326545

Kenneth City

$429,900 | 6086 46th Avenue North

Launa Lishamer | 727.492.1954

premiersir.com/id/TB8327792

Clearwater

$384,990 | 1363 Essex Drive

Paul DeSantis | 813.439.4816

premiersir.com/id/TB8339177

Snell Isle

$495,000 | 1365 Snell Isle Boulevard NE #6B

Judy Holland & Anja Prusac | 727.481.4347 premiersir.com/id/TB8334127

Dunedin

$439,000 | 2233 Curlew Road

Paul DeSantis & Chris Curran | 813.439.4816 premiersir.com/id/TB8331016

Treasure Island

$424,900 | 9825 Harrell Avenue #202

Hope Kent | 727.685.9093

premiersir.com/id/TB8336936

Lido Shores | Lido Key

$6,100,000 | 1003 Westway Drive

Joel Schemmel | 941.587.4894 premiersir.com/id/A4614995

Lido Shores | Lido Key

$3,600,000 | 1051 Westway Drive

Joel Schemmel | 941.587.4894 premiersir.com/id/A4614997

Palma Sola Park

$2,700,000 | 1201 Alcazar Drive

Peter Laughlin | 941.356.8428 premiersir.com/id/A4634074

Bay Point Park

$5,549,000 | 1479 Bay Point Drive

Louis Wery | 941.232.3001

premiersir.com/id/A4623431

Siesta Key | Bay Island

$5,500,000 | 3460 Flamingo Avenue

Judie Berger | 941.928.3424 premiersir.com/id/A4633793

Manasota Key

$2,925,000 | 5070 North Beach Road

Joel Schemmel | 941.587.4894 premiersir.com/id/A4635662

Siesta Key

$2,850,000 | Roberts Point Road

Joel Schemmel | 941.587.4894 premiersir.com/id/A4618142

Odessa

$1,950,000 | 18122 Gunn Highway

Paul DeSantis & Brandon Hentrich | 813.439.4816 premiersir.com/id/T3522954

Longboat Key

$1,900,000 | 6549 Gulf Of Mexico Drive

Holly Switow | 941.735.3186 premiersir.com/id/A4634739

Sanderling Club | Siesta Key

$1,765,000 | 7618 Midnight Pass Road

Joel Schemmel | 941.587.4894

premiersir.com/id/A4632972

Siesta Key | Sanderling Club

$1,700,000 | 7247 Turnstone Road

Judie Berger | 941.928.3424

premiersir.com/id/A4627192

Bradenton

$1,295,000 | 4203 51st Street East

Kevin Milner | 941.539.3287

premiersir.com/id/A4616800

Seminole

$1,099,900 | 9031 Baywood Park Drive

Michael Perez | 727.422.6943

premiersir.com/id/TB8325903

South Tampa

$620,000 | 4615 South Woodlynne Avenue

Maria Azuaje | 317.371.0935

premiersir.com/id/TB8332891

St. Petersburg

$1,850,000 | 1101 9th Street South

Nick Janovsky | 813.391.8291

premiersir.com/id/TB8320665

Port Charlotte

$90,000 | 4458 Bayview Street

Gwen Heggan | 941.468.1297

premiersir.com/id/N6135626

Rotonda West | Long Meadows

$62,000 | 100 Mark Twain Lane

Lily Buzey | 941.702.3461

premiersir.com/id/A4624374

Longboat Key

$1,300,000 | 720 Tarawitt Drive

Moriah Taliaferro | 941.504.9910

premiersir.com/id/A4633465

Indian Rocks Beach

$850,000 | 372 12th Avenue

Michael Lynch | 727.458.3945

premiersir.com/id/TB8325851

Rotonda West | Long Meadows

$62,000 | 223 Marker Road

Lily Buzey | 941.702.3461

premiersir.com/id/A4624372

Port Charlotte

$23,000 | 1180 Davenport Drive

Catherine Seress | 941.928.1187

premiersir.com/id/A4635254

North Port

$21,000 | Raven Street

Gwen Heggan | 941.468.1297

premiersir.com/id/N6136126

Introducing the outstanding global real estate advisors from our Sarasota and Tampa Bay regions

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Dennis Blazey
Jessica Bell
Toi Ahrens Estes
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Palazzo at Bayfront is downtown Naples’ newest collection of luxurious residences located in the waterfront shopping and dining destination, Bayfront of Naples. With just 35 residences nestled within this upscale oasis, Palazzo at Naples will offer spacious floor plans ranging from 2,100 to 3,100 square feet of living area, resort-style amenities and exclusive proximity to name-brand shopping and five-star dining, all just steps away from famed Fifth Avenue South.

As the new jewel of Old Naples, Olana is home to 12 Randall Stofftdesigned, private beachfront homes. Extending over 10,000 square feet, the remarkably spacious residences feature floorto-ceiling glass walls with 80 feet of clear views over the water and enviable sunsets. Uniquely, all amenities are located within the homes, creating a truly private enclave for residents. A resortstyle pool sits among lush botanical gardens and the pristine beachfront is mere steps away.

Elevate your Sarasota living experience at 1000 Boulevard of the Arts. With adventurous contemporary design, 1000 Arts fuses sumptuous condominium residences with the vibrant atmosphere of the Hyatt Centric Harborside boutique hotel. Perfectly positioned, residents will be immersed in waterfront vistas that stretch across The Quay harbor, The Bay Park and the coastal shoreline of Sarasota Bay. For those seeking a spirited blend of excitement and sophistication, 1000 Boulevard of the Arts is the address of choice.

for pricing and availability

Anticipation is rising as a stunning new addition to Sarasota’s downtown prepares for its debut. Located in the heart of the city, just steps from Gallery Row, this destination offers a seamless blend of coastal charm and vibrant city energy. With Sarasota Bay, the marina and the skyline as its backdrop, the area is a symphony of natural beauty and cultural sophistication. Be among the first to reserve your seats for the premiere of Adagio Sarasota.

Nestled in one of the Gulf of Mexico's most coveted locales, Orange One epitomizes modern luxury and urban sophistication. Discover our exclusive collection featuring 10 three-level townhomes, 10 condominiums and 10 business suites, each meticulously crafted to redefine your notion of home. Whether you desire the expansive comfort of a townhome, the intimate elegance of a condominium or the functional opulence of a business suite, Orange One offers the ultimate sanctuary tailored to elevate your lifestyle.

Residential starting from $2,428,200 Retail starting from $400,000 OrangeOneFL.com 941.920.1500

Perfectly positioned in Sarasota’s desirable uptown district, Premier on Main boasts a captivating collection of 23 contemporary townhomes. Three- to four-level townhomes with elevators and twocar garages feature luxuriously appointed living spaces with two, three and four bedrooms, ranging from 1,850 to 2,500 square feet, some with rooftop decks to ensure effortless entertaining. Surrounded by stunning skyline scenes, Premier on Main offers an outstanding modern oasis just moments from the city’s cultural charms.

From $1,045,000 PSIR.us/PremierOnMain 941.920.1500

Now under construction — be prepared to fall in love with The Ritz-Carlton Residences, Sarasota Bay. Discover a life of luxury that offers impressively large, exquisitely appointed residences enhanced by the timeless, legendary service of The Ritz-Carlton. Located on the sparkling Sarasota Bay in The Quay, the residences provide exclusive access to the Harbor Club and exciting private amenities and services.

The Ritz-Carlton Residences, Sarasota Bay are not owned, developed or sold by Marriott International, Inc. or its affi liates (“Ritz-Carlton”). KT Sarasota South, LLC uses The Ritz-Carlton marks under a license from Ritz-Carlton, which has not confi rmed the accuracy of any of the statements or representations made herein.

From $3,700,000 to over $12,000,000 TheResidencesSarasotaBay.com 941.499.8704

Located in Sarasota’s eclectic Rosemary District, Villa Ballada will feature 22 contemporary residences above two ground-level retail spaces. Residents will enjoy exceptional urban living and the excitement of being in the midst of downtown dining, shopping and cultural happenings.

From $1,030,600

PSIR.us/VillaBallada 941.920.1500

The Estates at TerraNova offer an exquisite blend of expansive country estates, proximity to town centers and world-class equestrian competition. Over 1,000 acres of green pastures arranged into 5- to 20-acre estates provide a serene, natural setting where horses thrive. Bridle paths connect riders to TerraNova Equestrian Center. Nature trails provide an uncrowded, unspoiled nature experience along the Myakka River ecosystem. Miakka Golf Club, a by-invitation-only golfer's retreat, is located just north of The Estates.

Model Home Estate with Barn $9,950,000

Builder-Curated Residences from $2,999,000 Homesites from $306,000 TheEstatesAtTerraNova.com 941.213.0014

Introducing Bourbon Square at Roser Park, a luxurious new development offering three-bedroom, three-and-a-half-bath townhomes with two-car garages, kitchen islands, high ceilings and abundant windows. Bourbon Square also features four mixed-use homes with rare and highly sought-after store frontage along 9th Street. All units boast quartz countertops, luxury engineered hardwood flooring and sophisticated finishes. One fully commercial space is available as well. Located in the Roser Park area, Bourbon Square is a serene neighborhood within walking distance of downtown St. Petersburg.

From $840,000 PSIR.us/BourbonSquareAtRoserPark 813.391.8291

Welcome to The Enclave at Enderly Park, an exclusive pocket community offering refined living just minutes from Charlotte’s Uptown. This prestigious community blends modern sophistication with timeless charm, featuring 15 meticulously designed lots and only 11 homesites remaining. Each of the six luxurious floor plans showcases modern farmhouse elegance, offering three to four bedrooms, some with primary suites on the main level, and versatile spaces, such as offices, dens and bonus rooms.

THE REGENT AT EASTOVER

Situated in one of Charlotte’s most desirable neighborhoods, The Regent at Eastover is a private enclave of 32 luxury residences. With private elevators and second entrances, the residences feel like single-family homes with unrivaled amenities.

Nestled inside the gates of Linville Ridge Country Club, this neighborhood features 19 single-family homes with three- and four-bedroom floor plans. Each home will be built at an average elevation of 4,000 feet, situated on a minimum of one acre, with views of Grandfather Mountain and the Blue Ridge Mountains. Call for Pricing CottagesAtCranberryCove.com 828.742.4130

Situated within the highly sought-after Linville Ridge community and surrounded by spectacular long-range views, Split Rock Estates offers a magnificent mountain getaway. Set on a minimum of six acres, each estate lot boasts the ultimate in privacy with views that vary on every homesite. Opportunities abound within this unique enclave and residents can choose their own architect and builder to design and craft an exceptional custom retreat.

Perched atop the mountains of North Carolina, The Oaks at Linville Ridge will encompass 11 artfully designed single-family residences. These four- and five-bedroom residences will offer spacious outdoor living areas, two-car garages, long-range views and are golf cart-accessible.

The Vistas at Linville Ridge presents nine homesites encompassing three- and four-bedroom single-family homes. Explore this unique offering, located on the lower mountain, surrounded by the natural splendor of North Carolina’s High Country. The Vistas at Linville Ridge benefits from an enchanting woodland setting and members will enjoy the exclusive lifestyle amenities offered by the private Linville Ridge community.

BECAUSE EVERY RENTAL EXPERIENCE IS UNIQUE. JUST LIKE YOU. JUST LIKE US.

Discover all the advantages our rental division offers.

Elevated Experiences from the Gulf Coast Luxury Leader

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