
Hibiscus Island I, Miami Beach
Togu Miami: Design vision & Interior design
3Design architecture: Architect of Record
5400 SF – 500 m2
Architecture shaped by light and water
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You cross a wood bridge over a shallow pool to reach the front door. It is a small gesture, but it changes the experience. The noise of the street drops. The ground becomes hollow. By the time you enter, the house has already begun.
The plan is organized around a single axis that runs from the entrance to the bay. Every room refers to this line. The living spaces open onto it through floor-to-ceiling glass. The service areas step aside. From the front door you can see the water, and that view never lets go.
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Two volumes define the exterior: a solid base clad in white mineral render, and a lighter upper floor in natural wood that cantilevers over the terrace. The overhang is deep enough to shade the ground-floor glass in summer. The dark window frames hold the composition together and give it scale.
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Inside, the finishes are warm and plain. Wide oak boards, stone counters, brushed brass where the hand touches. The primary suite sits directly above the pool, on a terrace that projects beyond the building line. Lying in bed, you are over the water.
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The garden works hard. Two pools, an 82-foot lap lane along the boundary wall and an infinity edge facing the bay, are separated by dense tropical planting that screens the neighbors and holds the heat at a distance. The rooftop is open and unfinished, just a deck, a railing, and the whole skyline.









