The Story Behind
A Singular Modern Mansion on Golden Beach's Private Sands
There is a particular moment — stepping through the grand entry of 255 Ocean Boulevard, the Atlantic horizon suddenly framing itself through walls of glass — when the full ambition of this residence becomes undeniable. Newly completed by the acclaimed development firm TREO in collaboration with SDH Studio, this is a home that has been conceived from first principles: what should a great modern beachfront estate actually feel like to inhabit?
The answer begins at the facade. Where lesser properties default to painted stucco, 255 Ocean presents an exterior of natural stone and cascading living greenery — a composition that blurs the boundary between architecture and landscape before a single interior threshold is crossed. The motor court and covered carport, defined by geometric concrete pavers laced with ribbon-grass, set a tone of considered precision that carries through every subsequent detail.
Inside, the scale is immediate and generous. Twenty-three-foot ceilings soar above a sculptural travertine staircase, its form echoing the organic, unhurried movement of coastal topography. Book-matched travertine floors extend the metaphor underfoot, their veining mapping a private geography that is unique to this address. Floating alongside the staircase, a stainless-steel elevator serves as both convenience and quiet architectural punctuation.
The home's principal social spaces unspool across multiple levels with the logic of a well-composed narrative. The beachside entertainment level opens to the outdoors with retractable glass walls, while a formal salon centers on a centerpiece marble bar of genuine sculptural presence. An upper-level media room and a dedicated private theater ensure that both intimate evenings and grand entertainments are equally well served. Throughout, white oak millwork and paneled walls exclusively crafted by La Dolce Vita introduce Italian joinery of the highest order — a through-line of warmth that prevents the home's modernist vocabulary from ever feeling austere.
The oceanfront kitchen is among the residence's most remarkable rooms. Two monolithic curved islands in book-matched stone anchor a space that opens entirely to the sea through floor-to-ceiling glass, while a breakfast television lounge and a separate chef's kitchen ensure that the room functions as fluidly as it photographs. Dornbracht fixtures throughout speak to a specification standard that leaves nothing to compromise.
The primary suite occupies its own wing of warm white oak, encompassing dual dressing rooms — one of which presents as a full jewel-box closet with custom dark-wood cabinetry and integrated LED illumination — and a bathroom whose centerpiece is a hand-carved soaking tub sculpted from a single uninterrupted block of stone. Floor-to-ceiling windows frame the ocean beyond a private terrace, so that the horizon is the first thing seen each morning.
Wellness has been woven into the architecture rather than appended to it. A dedicated fitness studio opens through glass walls to the pool and sea beyond; a massage room with dual treatment tables adjoins a private garden; a Finnish sauna and cold plunge complete a circuit that renders daily recovery a genuine ritual rather than an afterthought. Enhanced air-quality systems operate silently throughout.
Outdoors, a seventy-five-foot lap pool runs parallel to the shoreline, paired with an oversized jacuzzi, while the rooftop commands what may be the finest vantage point on this stretch of coast — an additional pool and spa set against an unbroken panorama of the Atlantic. A guest house, staff room, and dedicated office suite complete the offering. This is, in every considered detail, a home of lasting consequence.
Golden Beach is among the most quietly distinguished addresses in South Florida — a municipality so deliberately small in scale and so carefully preserved in character that its very exclusivity has become its defining quality. Incorporated as an independent town within Miami-Dade County, Golden Beach spans barely half a mile of Atlantic coastline between Hallandale Beach to the north and Sunny Isles Beach to the south, encompassing approximately sixty oceanfront lots. That number is not incidental; it is the architecture of the community itself, a hard geographic limit that ensures the private beach shared by its residents remains precisely that: private.
The town operates its own police department and maintains its own strict zoning and building codes — factors that have historically kept development restrained and architectural standards elevated. There are no hotels, no commercial strips, and no through-traffic corridors bisecting the beach. The result is a residential enclave of unusual tranquility for a location situated less than twenty miles from the heart of Miami and roughly ten miles from Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport.
The broader Sunny Isles Beach and Aventura corridor, which frames Golden Beach to the immediate south and west, offers a remarkable breadth of amenity within minutes of the front gate. Aventura Mall — one of the largest and most tenanted retail destinations in the southeastern United States, home to flagship locations of every major luxury brand — sits approximately three miles inland. The Turnberry Isle Miami resort and golf club, a longstanding landmark of South Florida's luxury hospitality landscape, is similarly close, offering world-class golf, spa, and dining in a setting that complements the residential ethos of the surrounding neighborhoods.
For those oriented toward the water, the Intracoastal Waterway runs parallel to the ocean just west of Golden Beach, providing direct boating access to the wider network of South Florida's coastal waterways, marinas, and barrier islands. The proximity to both Fort Lauderdale's boating infrastructure and Miami's Biscayne Bay makes this a particularly well-positioned address for those whose lifestyle extends offshore.
Culturally, the region sits at an intersection of influences that is distinctly South Floridian: the international sophistication of Miami's art and design world — anchored by Art Basel Miami Beach each December and the permanent institutions of Wynwood and the Design District — exists in productive tension with the more relaxed, resort-inflected rhythms of Broward County to the north. Residents of Golden Beach move between both registers with ease.
The town's school district connections and proximity to several well-regarded private educational institutions in the greater Miami and Fort Lauderdale areas make it a considered choice for families, while its concentration of ultra-high-net-worth residents and the resulting security and quiet have long attracted those for whom privacy is itself a luxury.
To acquire a home in Golden Beach is, in the most literal sense, to join a community of sixty. It is a distinction that no amount of square footage or amenity can replicate — the simple, irreplaceable fact of belonging to a place that cannot grow any further, on a beach that belongs only to those who live here.
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