National Post

Hottest new Miami address is a floating luxury house

Company eyes new breed of vacation rental

- Nikki Ekstein

Miami may be a city with a penchant for five-star hotels — many with eye-popping art and sprawling pool complexes — and yet, the most exciting place to sleep there may soon be a boat.

And no, it’s not a nine-figure yacht.

In January the coolest place to rest your head in Magic City could be a veritable floating mansion, hovering above the turquoise waters of the Atlantic Ocean, where room service gets delivered by a valet on a motorboat and the only pool is the one on your private rooftop deck.

Arkups, as they are called, are the newest twist on waterfront dwelling: The hurricane-proof homes can be docked at a marina, or they can be driven at 8.5 knots as far as 2,500 nautical miles into the ocean. The concept is nascent. Arkup’s first prototype — the US$5 million, four-bedroom, 4,350-square-foot Arkup75 — was finished in 2019, and there are few others. One, however, has been commission­ed by a Miami-based hospitalit­y company with the hopes of turning Arkup into a new breed of vacation rental.

“We see Arkup not as a real estate product but as a hospitalit­y product that’s much more convenient than going to the Maldives and getting an overwater villa,” says Andreas King-geovanis, chief executive and founder of Sextant Stays, who persuaded Arkup to create a smaller version of the Arkup75, which will enable companies like his to potentiall­y buy a number of them at a lower price. The new model, the Arkup40, is 2,380 square feet. It can be configured as a studio or as a two-bedroom for US$500,000 to US$900,000, depending on customizat­ions.

Sextant plans to have as many as 10 Arkup40s in its portfolio, which currently includes condo-style vacation rentals in Miami and New Orleans. More of a competitor to the serviced vacation rental site Sonder than to the home-sharing platform Airbnb, Sextant is a pandemic success story. It had only 60 furnished apartments available for rent in March 2020 but took over terminated leases from some of its rivals, growing eightfold amid the coronaviru­s crisis. Now it manages roughly 500 units in its two markets — all with access to techy amenities like pharmacy kiosks in the lobbies and keycard-enabled wine and spirits dispensers — with the goal of raising US$30 million funding by the end of the year, according to the South Florida Business Journal.

No doubt Arkups will be Sextant’s most attractive properties — there is nothing else like them for vacationer­s. And if King-geovanis has his way, the modular floating homes may eventually be linked together, forming a completely one-of-a-kind resort, the likes of which may not exist anywhere else.

But baby steps need to be taken first. The company’s first Arkup40 will be ready in December and take reservatio­ns starting in January, raising the question of how difficult booking will be.

King-geovanis says one thing that makes Sextant special is its “unique products like penthouses, not just cookie-cutter studios and one-bedrooms,” a portfolio that the company has achieved by working with developers from the ground up. Its buildings have luxurious private outdoor spaces and tend to be small, with as few as 15 units, which feature the ability to interconne­ct, allowing them to cater to groups.

Arkup certainly fits that model. In fact, the manufactur­er of “livable yachts” gave Sextant exclusive rights to rent out its prototype, the Arkup75, in 2020. King-geovanis filled it with travellers for four or five nights until it found a buyer. That turned out to be a successful experiment for King-geovanis, leading him to commission his own Arkup, which he now plans to rent for US$1,200 to US$1,600 a night.

If you live in Dubai or Singapore, chances are the single-unit Arkup40 won’t be worth the trip; cities in Asia and the Middle East have far easier and more ample access to five-star and full-service overwater accommodat­ions. But for those in the U.S. there’s little competitio­n for Sextant’s Arkup.

Some Sandals hotels in the Caribbean have opened overwater bungalow-style suites in recent years; there’s also the Palafitos at El Dorado Maroma, in Mexico, which is a few hours’ flight from New York City. Other long-awaited options that have been in the works since at least 2016 have yet to open, including the Viceroy in Bocas del Toro, Panama.

Even when factoring in Airbnb’s and Vrbo’s offerings, there is little in the way of floating hotels in North America. A spokespers­on for Vrbo points toward the company’s collection of houseboat stays as the closest alternativ­e. While there are upward of 200 in Florida, they don’t tend to hit the typical five-star notes. Airbnb, by contrast, features a few well-designed floating homes among its most popular stays, but they’re in places like Greece, Norway, and Bali.

That means it may be tough to score a booking with the Arkup40 — or at least until other hospitalit­y companies get in on Sextant’s game and begin purchasing them.

Unlike a yacht, owning an Arkup seems like a straightfo­rward propositio­n. “The boat is sitting out of the water most of the time, so you don’t have issues of saltwater corrosion or having to scrape the hull frequently,” King-geovanis says. Instead, the house just needs to be towed back to land once a week to connect to utilities and dispose of wastewater.

 ?? ARKUP ?? The hurricane-proof Arkups can be driven at 8.5 knots up to 2,500 nautical miles.
ARKUP The hurricane-proof Arkups can be driven at 8.5 knots up to 2,500 nautical miles.

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