A light-filled new construction waterfront home in Miami Beach — showcased by Diego Ramos of the Liz Hogan Group at Compass Florida, tailored for international buyers.

Nestled in Miami Beach, property HQL-22ABT represents a modern, light-filled interpretation of coastal living — a newly built waterfront detached house that balances refined design with everyday comfort.

Approach this home and the images make the feeling immediate: floor-to-ceiling glazing, neat lines and a terrace that frames the water. Listed at USD 7,690,000, the five-bedroom, six-bath residence spans roughly 3,587 square feet and sits on a generous 7,500 sq ft plot, offering both privacy and a direct connection to Miami’s coastal life.
As shown in the photos, the interior is deliberately bright — an elevated great room opens to the chef’s kitchen with Thermador and Miele appliances, granite counters and custom cabinetry. Those images also capture the indoor‑outdoor flow: an expansive patio, heated saltwater pool, summer kitchen and private dock that together extend living into the bay-front landscape.
The primary suite reads like a coastal retreat: a private terrace, dual walk-in closets with bespoke built-ins and a spa-style bath with soaking tub. Each additional bedroom is ensuite, one with its own terrace — thoughtful touches that make the home adaptable for family life, guests or rental use.

For buyers from abroad, Miami Beach offers lifestyle, liquidity and ease of access. This house exemplifies what many international purchasers seek: new construction with low immediate maintenance, climate-controlled interiors, dedicated garage and driveway parking, and waterfront access for boats and leisure. The images underscore those practical benefits alongside the aesthetic ones.
Beyond the room-by-room appeal, buyers should consider how a property like this performs: new builds in protected, gated enclaves often show strong demand and clearer maintenance histories, making them easier to evaluate from abroad.

Diego Ramos and the Liz Hogan Group bring 15 years of Miami expertise and an 88.54/100 agency rating to listings like this. Their approach translates local market nuance — zoning, coastal permits, marine access and neighborhood dynamics — into clear guidance for buyers who cannot be on the ground full time.
They curate properties with an eye for long-term stewardship: vetting construction standards, confirming finish quality, and assessing outdoor systems (pool, dock and landscape) so that international purchasers can feel confident about upkeep and operating costs before making a commitment.
From arranging virtual walkthroughs that highlight the sea views and terrace sequencing, to coordinating inspections and connecting buyers with local property managers, Diego’s team turns logistical complexity into a simple pathway to ownership.
The high-resolution images supplied for this listing are an intentional tool: they reveal sightlines from the primary terrace, capture pool orientation for sun exposure analysis, and show finishes so remote buyers can assess material quality — all aspects the group emphasizes in their consultations.

Miami Beach is both a cultural hub and a coastal ecosystem. International buyers should weigh lifestyle (beaches, dining, marinas) alongside climate resilience and long-term stewardship. New construction here often incorporates elevated finishes and modern mechanicals that can improve durability, but buyers should still enquire about flood mitigation, coastal insurance and materials resilient to salt air.
Practical tips from Diego for similar searches: confirm seawall and dock permits, review HVAC and corrosion‑resistant specifications, ask for energy and water-efficiency details, and consider local property management options to preserve value when the home is not occupied.

The supplied images carry the narrative of daily life here: morning coffee on the terrace with bay light, dinner parties that move between kitchen and poolside, and quiet evenings in a primary suite that opens to the stars. These visual cues help international buyers imagine use patterns, rental potential and seasonal rhythms.
While this is a new construction, international buyers attentive to sustainability should ask how materials and systems were chosen: energy-efficient appliances, saltwater pool systems, LED lighting, and whether landscaping favors native, drought-tolerant planting to reduce irrigation needs.

Confirm seawall and dock permits and maintenance responsibilities; request recent build specs for mechanical systems and corrosion-resistant materials; review energy and water-efficiency measures; discuss property management and rental rules for gated communities; ask about insurance history and flood mitigation strategies.
If this Miami Beach home speaks to your aspirations, Diego Ramos with the Liz Hogan Group at Compass Florida is positioned to guide international buyers through every step — from virtual inspection to post‑purchase stewardship. Reach out to discuss viewing options, financing considerations and climate‑aware ownership plans tailored to your needs.
British expat who traded Manchester for Mallorca in 2017. Specializes in guiding UK buyers to luxury Spanish estates with clear navigation of visas and tax.
This article is about the following agency
Further reading on sustainable homes



We use cookies to enhance your browsing experience, analyze site traffic, and personalize content. You can choose which types of cookies to accept.