Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Riva condo has cabana studios for guests

Visitor only pays housekeepi­ng fee

- By Lisa J. Huriash Staff writer

When Grandma comes for a visit, there’s no reason to open the sofa sleeper or send her to a hotel.

The 100-unit luxury Riva condo project in Fort Lauderdale, which was completed in February, is among the few with built-in spaces for visiting guests to use.

Three furnished cabana studio units — with bedroom, bathroom and desk space — are situated on the fourth floor of the Riva. Guests who stay there have access to the “luxury amenities deck,” which includes a swimming pool with river views, spa with treatment rooms, sundeck and fitness center.

The 400-square-feet guest cabanas are as luxurious as the residentia­l units, said Vivian Bonet, spokeswoma­n for the developer, Premier Riva. Guests can stay for up to 10 days and pay a housekeepi­ng fee for clean sheets ($150 for the two studios that each have a king bed and $250 for the studio with two queen beds).

“They are booked for the next 30 days,” she said. “It’s the most sought-out amenity in this building.”

The idea is to help homeowners provide privacy for their guests and spare them from having to shuttle people to hotels.

“You’re in the same building but not in the same house, which is very important,” Bonet said. “The inlaws come in and you have a beautiful place to put them, and they’ll be very happy.”

Real estate analyst Jack McCabe said offering guest suites has been common for condos or apartments for “several years.” But Riva is atypical, he said, for offering the units for only a housekeepi­ng fee.

Adding unique amenities is a growing trend for developers seeking a “competitiv­e advantage to market their units in a market with over-saturated inventory,” McCabe said.

The 15-story Riva over-

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