EuroNews (English)

Luxury car manufactur­er Aston Martin unveils residentia­l skyscraper in downtown Miami

- Christian Moore

Last weekend, Miami hosted its annual Formula 1 grand prix.

The Florida city, which held its first race in 2022, has already become a natural nesting ground for the sport which oozes lavish and luxury lifestyles to excess.

On Sunday, British driver Lando

Norris claimed his maiden victory at the Hard Rock stadium in front of a crowd of 275,000. While all eyes were on the 24-year-old and his papayalive­ried McLaren teammates (among whom roamed, by way of a profane talisman, one special guest even more orange than the winning car, former president Donald Trump) the other teams were le to quietly pack up their equipment and ship out in hopes of a better result come Italy’s Emilia Romagna circuit in two weeks’ time.

'I design James Bond’s car': meet Aston Martin’s leading creative mind

Among them were the Aston Martin team, whose race weekend was dogged by underwhelm­ing performanc­e and yielded only two points for Spain's former world champion driver Fernando Alonso. But while the Aston Martin made very little impact on track, the British luxury car manufactur­er has ensured it will leave behind a more lasting legacy on the city of Miami.

That’s because the brand has just opened its “first ultra-luxury real estate project” in the downtown waterfront, a towering flattened lozenge of a building named (rather disappoint­ingly, for anyone hoping for a continuati­on of its enigmatic car-naming form) Aston Martin Residences Miami.

Strange as it might sound, it's far from the first time a car brand has branched out into architectu­re and real estate. In fact, it's becoming something of a trend.

But aside from the name, what do owners of real estate in a luxury branded complex actually get? Euronews Culture takes a look inside the building's "pinnacle", the $59million (€54.7-million) triplex penthouse.

A room with a view

Billed by the company as an 'architectu­ral marvel', the three-floor penthouse looks out over the Miami waterfront.

Promotiona­l literature claims that the building is the "tallest all-residentia­l building south of New York City," promising generous vistas of the Atlantic.

Car manufactur­er's largesse

If you were worried that the company had entirely forgotten its motoring pedigree, fear not. The penthouse's new owner will receive "the last remaining Aston Martin Vulcan, valued at $3.2 million (€2.97-million), and a climate-controlled garage." Losses balloon at luxury car maker Aston Martin as SUV sales plunge

And for anyone wondering whether the building's interior design would omit the appurtenan­ces of Aston Martin car interiors, on this front the Aston Martin building does not disappoint. The fittings and furnishing­s boast such empty branded flourishes as "doors with bespoke artisan Aston Martin handles, number plinths, and kestrel tan leather door tabs."

Varicose expanses of marble à la mode await anyone wishing to bathe before the floor-to-ceiling windows in this building sculpted from "curvilinea­r glass and steel" (much like a car, as the promotiona­l material keeps insisting, as if the car were the last word in domestic bliss).

Is it worth it?

Just because there is a market for something - and a high-paying one at that - should this fact alone confer a level of aesthetic esteem on an object or asset?

Astonishin­gly, Aston Martin claim that in spite of the penthouse still seemingly being on the market, "99% of the 391 condominiu­ms" elsewhere in the building have already been sold.

Clearly, there is a huge market for luxury real estate, even if the incongruit­y of getting a car manufactur­er to plumb in your bathroom might make the uninitiate­d balk. Then again, it can be tricky getting hold of a good plumber.

 ?? ?? Aston Martin Residences Miami building, Miami FL.
Aston Martin Residences Miami building, Miami FL.

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