The first glimpse is cinematic. From the street, the façade is crisp and deliberate, a composition of stone, glass and warm wood that hints at the quiet authority inside. Step past the pivot door, and the volume opens like a drumbeat. A two-story great room drops your eyes straight through a wall of glass to a lap-worthy rectangle of blue and, beyond it, the Atlantic doing what the Atlantic does best.
The main living space is a master class in restraint. Pale floors keep the mood cool. A low, tailored sofa gathers around a sculptural coffee table, leaving the view to do the heavy lifting. On the far wall, limestone and marble frame a sleek fireplace. Everything feels intentional; nothing shouts. You can almost hear the waves from the sofa.
Slide the glass away, and the outdoors answers. The pool appears to hover at the lawn’s edge, an infinity ribbon that meets the horizon with a wink. Sun shelves invite feet to dangle. The summer kitchen sits ready for a midday ceviche, cold rosé nearby. Shade moves across deep terraces and the breeze slips through the palms. Entertaining here is not a plan; it is an instinct.
Back inside, the club room switches the palette to richer tones. Walnut wraps the walls. A bar glows beneath Holly Hunt pendants. The art goes bold, the seating invites you to sink in and the scene feels like a whispered invitation to linger after sunset. Around the corner, a glass wine display keeps your trophies in plain sight.
The kitchen could headline a design fair. Neff Living silver oak warms the cabinetry. Amalfi Blanco marble tops the island with an easy sheen. Silestone runs the perimeter like a track and appliances disappear into the millwork until called into service. A round breakfast nook perches at the pool’s glass corner, the waterline practically at eye level, a sunrise seat if ever there was one.
A private office claims the most enviable corner of the house. Floor-to-ceiling sliders tuck away, the ceiling paneling adds tailored texture and the water sits so close, you consider a quick swim between emails. It is the rare workspace that makes deadlines feel optional.
The primary suite keeps the tone serene — layered neutrals, gentle patterns and a balcony that frames palms and blue water. Poliform closets line up like couture. The bath is the showstopper, with a stainless soaking tub set on a bed of mosaic twin vanities in a soft driftwood stain and showers sheathed in marble and ombré glass tile that glints like sea spray. Dornbracht fixtures deliver that solid, just-right click. It is spa theater without the crowd.
Guest rooms take cues from boutique hotels. Clean lines. Custom millwork by Neff Living. Marble everywhere it matters. Each bath carries its own personality, from starburst patterns in Calacatta Oro and Azul to quiet mosaics that feel like polished shells. Privacy is a theme, comfort the rule.
Throughout the home, craftsmanship is the connective tissue. Built-ins and vanities are conceived by A La Mer and fabricated with the precision of a yacht interior. Floors in Ocean Reef stone keep a coastal cadence. Lighting behaves like jewelry, with pieces by Pagani, Jonathan Browning and Holly Hunt setting the mood without stealing the scene. Technology steps in when needed, then fades. Shades tuck away. Glass glides with a fingertip. An elevator saves your legs when the party migrates upward.
Speaking of up, the rooftop becomes its own chapter. There is space to host the entire cast, a fireplace to anchor the night and a coastline view that stretches until it forgets how to end. On clear evenings, the ocean reads like brushed steel and the breeze carries a hint of salt. It feels a little like a private resort, except the staff already knows your name.
This address is not only about spectacle; it is about flow, proportion and the pleasure of materials used with confidence. The house understands the rhythm of beach life, from morning swims that begin three steps from the terrace to late-night conversations in the club room when the city turns quiet. The result is both polished and human, a modern residence that relaxes as easily as it impresses.
Fort Lauderdale has no shortage of glass boxes near the sand, although few carry this level of authorship. Here, the ocean is not a backdrop. It is the co-author. And every photo you take will try, and probably fail, to capture how invigorating it feels to stand in the middle of this frame and look toward the water.






