Yanko Design

Snøhetta Wraps a New Miami Design District Office Building in a Stainless Mesh Sunscreen

Miami’s Design District has quietly become one of the most architecturally charged neighborhoods in the United States, and Snøhetta’s latest project only deepens that case. The Oslo and New York-based studio has unveiled designs for Sweetbird North, an eight-storey mixed-use building developed by Raycliff Capital, positioned next to the neighborhood’s iconic Museum Garage. It is one of the more visually inventive additions to a district already thick with bold architectural statements.

The building’s defining feature is its double-skin facade. A glass curtain wall sits closest to the structure, and then a second layer of stainless steel mesh wraps the entire building from base to roof, forming a series of columns that rise continuously upward from a metal-plated ground-level base. Large dimples punctuate the mesh at intervals, pushing the surface in and out to create an undulating, almost organic silhouette. The effect shifts depending on where the sun sits. At certain hours, the skin reads as a dense, reflective shell; at others it dissolves into near-transparency, revealing the planted terraces and occupied floors behind it.

Designer: Snøhetta

Snøhetta director Nathan McRae described the mesh as a “veil to the planting and occupied terraces of the offices beyond, providing a depth that varies with the sun and time of day, at times opaque and reflective, dissolving to the transparent.” It is a rare piece of facade design that rewards both a glance from the street and a longer study from across the block.

Programmatically, Sweetbird North is organized around a clean split. The first and second floors are given over to retail, while floors three through eight are dedicated to office space, designed with flexible floorplates to accommodate a range of configurations. The building is intended for tenants in the creative, luxury, and cultural industries — a natural fit for a neighborhood that has drawn names like Cartier, Bulgari, and a roster of significant cultural institutions in recent years. Planted terraces are woven throughout the office floors, designed to introduce what the team calls “permeability and calm” into what is otherwise a dense urban environment.

Construction is scheduled to begin in August 2026, with completion expected in 2028. Sweetbird North is part of a continuing westward expansion of the Miami Design District that also includes David Chipperfield Architects’ first residential building in the neighborhood and a sculptural retail block currently underway from Kengo Kuma and Associates. For a city that has seen its fair share of glass towers, a building that genuinely changes with the light is worth watching.

Exit mobile version