Pier Sixty-Six
Pier Sixty-Six is a 32-acre waterfront mixed-use destination in Fort Lauderdale at 2301 SE 17th Street, anchored at the heart of the city's intracoastal corridor.
Official WebsitePier Sixty-Six is a 32-acre waterfront mixed-use destination in Fort Lauderdale at 2301 SE 17th Street, anchored at the heart of the city's intracoastal corridor. The historic property's redevelopment concluded in January 2025 with the reopening of a 325-room resort, 88 private residences, a fully reimagined marina, and an integrated district of restaurants, retail, and public waterfront amenities. The Phase I redevelopment — designed by Arquitectonica and developed by Tavistock Development Company — restored the landmark observation tower at the project's center and introduced the resort's dining program, members-only spaces, and resort-level amenities across the campus. In May 2026, Tavistock unveiled Phase II of the development: a proposed eight-acre mixed-use expansion that would add four 23-story towers rising 270 feet, distributing 339 additional residences across the four buildings. Building A, on a 1.4-acre north parcel, would deliver 101 residences; Buildings B, C, and D, on a 6.6-acre south parcel, would deliver 90, 75, and 73 residences respectively. The Phase II program adds ground-floor retail and restaurant space, second-level office space across all four towers, structured parking, and expanded marina facilities, alongside an approximately one-acre new water basin on the south side of the property that would extend marina access while increasing publicly accessible waterfront frontage. The Phase II proposal also calls for additional grocery, retail, and dining space, mobility improvements, future public art installations throughout the property, and a new community gathering space beneath the 17th Street Causeway Bridge — planned in partnership with the City of Fort Lauderdale and the Florida Department of Transportation — that would activate an underutilized area beneath the bridge as a new public amenity linking both sides of the waterfront development.