
900 Biscayne Bay
The OG of Museum Row, and still one of the best values downtown

The crown jewel of the original Museum Row cycle. 67 floors, 292 residences, designed by Arquitectonica and developed by Leviev Boymelgreen, completed in 2009. Marquis was the last building built in the pre-recession wave and it shows, in a good way. The units are massive, the finishes are the best on the row (outside of One Thousand Museum), and some units are flow-through east-to-west, giving you both sunrise and sunset. The catch? It's a condo-hotel. You're sharing the building with the Grayson Hotel, and that comes with trade-offs. Private touchpad-controlled elevators open directly into most residences, with only 36 units per elevator, one of the best ratios on Museum Row.
Marquis attracts buyers and renters who want space and quality finishes above all else. These are people who prioritize the unit itself, large floor plans, good materials, flow-through layouts with dual exposures, over the building's social scene or amenity package. You'll find established professionals, families who need the square footage, and investors who appreciate the premium positioning. The condo-hotel setup means the building has a more transient feel than a pure residential tower. If you want the biggest, best-finished unit on Museum Row and don't mind sharing some spaces with hotel guests, Marquis is your building. If the hotel mix bothers you, 900 Biscayne is the pure residential alternative.
Marquis sits at the north end of Museum Row at 1100 Biscayne, the tallest tower on the strip at 67 floors. Same incredible bayfront location as the rest of the row, Museum Park across the street, Miami World Center developing behind, Kaseya Center down the road. Being the tallest gives upper-floor units some of the most commanding views on the entire row.
Two world-class museums directly across the street. This permanent green space protects east-facing bay views forever. The anchor of Museum Row.
The massive mixed-use development behind the building. More retail and restaurants coming, but west-facing units may lose sunset views to new towers. The neighborhood is actively filling in.
Shares the building with Marquis Residences. Separate lobbies but shared amenity spaces. This is the defining characteristic that sets Marquis apart from every other building on the row.
Home of the Miami Heat. Great for games and concerts, but event nights bring serious traffic congestion to the surrounding streets.
Free elevated train right behind the building. Easy connection to Brightline and Metrorail without needing a car.
East-facing views are permanently protected by Museum Park, that's locked in forever. West-facing units face Miami World Center, which is still building out. Sunset views from west-facing units will likely be impacted as new towers go up. The neighborhood trajectory is positive, more walkability, more restaurants, more retail every year. Marquis benefits from being the tallest on the row, so upper floors maintain views longer than shorter neighbors.
Elevator Density Rating
8
Passenger
2
Service
~5
Units/Floor
292
Total Units
Ultra high-speed private elevators controlled by touchpad. Elevators open directly into most residences.
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Marquis has 8 high-speed elevators for 292 units (36 units per elevator), which is excellent. The touchpad-controlled private elevators open directly into most residences. For a building this size, the elevator experience is genuinely impressive and a real differentiator on Museum Row.
Outside of One Thousand Museum (which is a different price universe), Marquis has the best unit finishes on the row. Quality stone, solid cabinetry, thoughtful layouts. The units were built to a higher standard than 900 Biscayne, Marina Blue, or 10 Museum Park.
Some units go from east to west across the entire building. You get sunrise over Biscayne Bay and sunset over the city. Dual exposure, cross-ventilation, and light from both sides. These are the units to target if you're buying.
Marquis shares the building with the Grayson Hotel. Separate lobbies, but shared amenity spaces including pools. You'll encounter hotel guests in the elevators, at the pool, and in common areas. This is the single biggest thing to know about this building.
For a building with units selling for $1M+, the pool situation is disappointing. The east pool has views but is small. The west pool is essentially the hotel pool with no views. Neither feels like a luxury residential amenity.
Units range from 1,477 to nearly 7,000 sq ft. Even the smaller units here are bigger than most 2BRs in Brickell. If square footage is your priority, Marquis is hard to beat on Museum Row.
The gym, sauna, and steam room are fine but feel like 2009-era amenities. They don't match the quality of the units themselves. The building invested in the residences, not the common spaces.
If you want a large unit with good bones that you can renovate into something spectacular, Marquis is one of the best options on the row. The floor plans are generous and the building structure is solid.
Street flooding during heavy rain, event traffic from Kaseya Center, west-facing views at risk from World Center development. All the standard Park West considerations apply.
Marquis is the ultra-luxury play on Museum Row. The units are massive, the finishes are the best on the row, and the flow-through layouts with dual exposure are genuinely special. At 67 floors, it's also the tallest, which means upper-floor views are commanding. The catch is the condo-hotel situation, sharing your building with the Grayson Hotel means hotel guests in your elevators and at your pool. The amenities, particularly the pools, don't match the price point. If you prioritize unit quality and space over amenities and a pure residential experience, Marquis is a strong 4-star building. If the hotel mix is a dealbreaker, 900 Biscayne gives you the pure residential experience next door. The private elevator access with a 36:1 ratio is a genuine luxury differentiator.
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