North Miami's waterfront is getting a building that does not fit neatly into any existing category. Continuum 12000 Sport and Wellness Residences is a 20-story, 263-unit development on Biscayne Bay that is built entirely around a wellness-first lifestyle concept. The project comes from Ian Bruce Eichner's Continuum Company, the same developer behind the original Continuum in South Beach, and it brings a 150,000 square foot amenity complex called the Mermaid Club plus something almost no other building in Miami can offer: 1.5 acres of grandfathered underwater land rights extending into the bay. Units start at $1.4 million. Construction is targeted for 2027.
This is not just another waterfront condo. The positioning is specific, the amenity program is massive relative to the unit count, and the underwater land rights create a structural advantage that cannot be replicated. Here is what the numbers look like and what it means for buyers evaluating North Miami's evolving luxury market.
Continuum 12000: The Essentials
Key Project Data
- Project: Continuum 12000 Sport and Wellness Residences
- Location: North Miami, Biscayne Bay waterfront
- Developer: Continuum Company (Ian Bruce Eichner)
- Height: 20 stories
- Units: 263 residences
- Starting Price: $1.4 million
- Amenities: 150,000 sqft Mermaid Club wellness center
- Unique Feature: 1.5 acres grandfathered underwater land rights
- Construction Target: 2027
The Eichner Legacy: From South Beach to North Miami
Ian Bruce Eichner is not a newcomer to Miami development. His original Continuum on South Beach, delivered in the mid-2000s, became one of the most recognizable luxury addresses on the beach. That project established a reputation for delivering amenity-rich buildings that prioritize lifestyle over pure density. Two towers, a private beach club, tennis courts, three swimming pools, and a location at the southern tip of South Beach made the Continuum a benchmark for what a luxury residential community could look like in Miami.
With Continuum 12000, Eichner is applying the same philosophy to a very different market. North Miami is not South Beach. The price points are lower, the buyer profile skews toward families and wellness-oriented professionals rather than seasonal residents, and the competitive landscape is defined by newer large-scale projects rather than legacy buildings. But the core thesis is the same: build something with enough amenity depth and lifestyle programming that the building itself becomes the primary reason people buy, not just the unit or the view.
The decision to move north is also strategic. South Beach land is essentially built out. North Miami's waterfront still has developable parcels, and the submarket is experiencing a wave of institutional-grade investment that is reshaping its identity. Eichner is betting that the same buyers who would have looked exclusively at South Beach or Surfside five years ago are now open to North Miami, provided the product justifies the address.
The Mermaid Club and Underwater Land Rights
The headline number is 150,000 square feet of amenity space, branded as the Mermaid Club. For context, that works out to roughly 570 square feet of amenity space per unit. Most luxury buildings in Miami deliver between 100 and 200 square feet of amenity space per unit. Continuum 12000 is operating at nearly three times the typical ratio.
The Mermaid Club includes floating pools on the bay, a full beach deck, private swim zones, an extensive fitness and spa complex, outdoor recreation areas, and waterfront lounging and dining spaces. The programming is designed around daily wellness routines rather than occasional use, which aligns with the growing buyer demand for buildings that support health-focused lifestyles as a core feature rather than an afterthought.
But the truly differentiating asset is the 1.5 acres of grandfathered underwater land rights. These rights predate current environmental regulations and allow Continuum 12000 to build amenities that extend into Biscayne Bay itself. No new development can obtain these rights today. They are a finite, irreplaceable asset that gives the building an aquatic playground that competitors simply cannot match.
"Underwater land rights in Biscayne Bay are a closed category. What Continuum 12000 holds cannot be duplicated by any future development, regardless of budget."
This matters for long-term value. When an amenity is structurally impossible to replicate, it creates a competitive moat that does not erode with new supply. Every new tower that opens in North Miami without waterfront amenities extending into the bay reinforces the scarcity of what Continuum 12000 offers.
Competitive Positioning: North Miami's Evolving Waterfront
Continuum 12000 enters a North Miami waterfront market that already includes two significant projects at very different price points and scales.
Competitive Comparison
- Aria Reserve: $750-$806/sqft, 62 stories (twin towers), 782 units, delivered 2025-2026. Large-scale waterfront community by Melo Group. Volume play with strong absorption.
- EDITION Residences: ~$975-$1,050/sqft, 55 stories, 185 units. Branded residences with hotel services. Premium positioning, smaller unit count.
- Continuum 12000: Starting $1.4M, 20 stories, 263 units. Wellness-focused with 150,000 sqft amenities and underwater land rights. Boutique scale, lifestyle-driven.
The positioning is deliberate. Aria Reserve captured the market for buyers who wanted waterfront living at scale with competitive pricing. The EDITION targets buyers willing to pay a premium for a globally recognized hospitality brand and hotel-level services. Continuum 12000 is carving out a third lane: buyers who prioritize wellness amenities, a more intimate building community, and assets like the underwater land rights that no other building can offer.
At 20 stories with 263 units, Continuum 12000 is dramatically smaller than Aria Reserve's 782 units and more boutique than the EDITION's 185. The lower density, combined with the oversized amenity program, creates a resident-to-amenity ratio that neither competitor can match. For buyers who have been priced out of branded residences but want something more lifestyle-oriented than a large tower community, this is the gap Continuum 12000 is designed to fill.
Market Context: What the Numbers Say
Continuum 12000 is launching into a Miami market defined by conflicting signals. Understanding the macro picture is essential for anyone evaluating a $1.4M+ pre-construction commitment.
On the demand side, the numbers are strong. Miami luxury condo sales are up 14% year over year. Between 50% and 70% of transactions are all-cash, indicating buyer strength and reducing lender exposure risk. Foreign buyers contributed $4.4 billion to the market, up 42% year over year, with 86% of that capital originating from Latin America. These are not speculative buyers chasing leverage. This is real capital seeking real assets.
On the risk side, the picture is more nuanced. Tariff uncertainty is pushing construction costs higher, which could delay timelines or force developers to adjust pricing. UBS rates Miami's bubble score at 1.73, elevated but below the 2.0 threshold that would signal outright overvaluation. Private lending defaults have tripled from 2% to 7%, a stress indicator worth monitoring even though it has not yet spilled into the institutional lending market.
Sources: UBS Global Real Estate Bubble Index 2026, Miami Association of Realtors Q1 2026 Market Report, National Association of Realtors International Transactions Report 2025.
For a project like Continuum 12000, the tariff risk is particularly relevant. A building that has not yet broken ground in 2027 is more exposed to construction cost escalation than projects already underway. Buyers should factor this into their timeline expectations and evaluate the developer's track record for managing cost overruns. Eichner's experience mitigates some of this risk, but it does not eliminate it.
Gerardo's Take: Who This Building Is For (And Who It Isn't)
Continuum 12000 is for buyers who have a specific lifestyle vision and are willing to pay for it. If wellness programming, waterfront recreation, and a boutique community are genuinely important to your daily life, this building delivers those things at a level that nothing else in North Miami can match. The underwater land rights are a real, quantifiable competitive advantage that will only appreciate in scarcity value over time.
This building is also a strong fit for families. The lower height, smaller unit count, and emphasis on outdoor recreation create a residential environment that feels more like a private club than a high-rise tower. For buyers relocating from the Northeast or Latin America who want bayfront living without the density of Brickell or the seasonal feel of South Beach, Continuum 12000 addresses that need directly.
Who should think twice? Investors focused primarily on rental yield. The wellness-first positioning and boutique scale mean this building will likely trade at a premium to comparable North Miami product, but it may not generate the rental demand that a 62-story tower with 782 units in a more established rental market would. If your primary objective is cash flow rather than lifestyle or long-term appreciation, the numbers may not work as well here.
Also worth noting: the 2027 construction timeline means you are committing capital with a longer horizon than projects already in vertical construction. If you need a shorter delivery window, look at buildings that are already topped off or approaching completion. If you are comfortable with the timeline and want to lock in pre-construction pricing on a genuinely differentiated product, Continuum 12000 deserves serious evaluation.