The Fontainebleau Miami is rising.
I am not talking about the reinvention of the famous
Miami Beach hotel, but rather the sudden emergence of a palatial 14-acre estate on the southwestern fringes of
Miami-Dade County.
After a brief
Miami-Dade property search, it turns out that the home belongs to one of the area’s top skyscraper designers;
Charles Sieger, designer of the urban
50 Biscayne, ultra luxurious
Apogee condominium in SOBE, and revolutionary
Portofino tower, among other projects.
It is a paradox to see one of the area’s top condominium designers, a proponent for urban life
I would assume, build a sprawling mansion on land situated outside of the urban development boundary.

The house itself is set back quite a distance from the street. I drove by recently catching this glimpse, perplexed that a house in this area could be built with such a short setback. I turned around and drove by again, realizing that this was only a “guardhouse” of sorts and that the “real” mansion lay somewhere behind a few acres of well manicured gardens, obelisks, and fountains. This area is no stranger to oversized palaces as we noted back in April in a post, which incidentally featured a picture of the entrance to this estate. 
I assume the home is modeled after the famous Fontainebleau in Fontainebleau, France, the same location where Charles Sieger studied in 1968 at the Ecoles D’Art Americaines according to his resume.
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