Condominium boom and the Intracoastal
The Intracoastal Waterway has shaped the physical and economic character of West Palm Beach and the broader South Florida region for more than 130 years, providing both a navigational corridor and a defining geographical feature around which residential development has continuously clustered. From the earliest leisure housing built along its banks in the late nineteenth century to the high-rise condominium towers that now line its shores, the waterway has served as a catalyst for successive waves of real estate activity. The most recent of these waves — a condominium boom that intensified in the early 2000s, contracted sharply during the 2008 financial crisis, and accelerated again between 2021 and 2026 — has transformed the skyline of the region, pushed development northward into communities such as Riviera Beach, Lake Park, and North Palm Beach, and raised fundamental questions about land use, affordability, and the future character of coastal Florida living.
Origins of the Intracoastal Waterway
The waterway that now anchors so much of South Florida's real estate identity has its roots in the infrastructure projects of the late nineteenth century. Efforts to dig and connect inland water passages along the Atlantic seaboard began during that era, with early excavation work undertaken in areas such as Winyah Bay in South Carolina.[1] These early dredging and channeling efforts, many of them authorized and executed by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, formed the foundation of what would eventually become a continuous inland waterway running along much of the eastern coast of the United States. The Atlantic Intracoastal Waterway was formally designated and placed under the management of the Corps of Engineers in the early twentieth century, and its maintenance as a navigable commercial and recreational channel has continued under federal authority ever since.
In South Florida, the Intracoastal Waterway runs parallel to the Atlantic coastline, separating the barrier islands — including Palm Beach and Miami Beach — from the mainland. This geography gave rise to two distinct real estate environments: the oceanfront island communities defined by direct beach access, and the mainland waterfront communities defined by views of and access to the waterway. The price differential between the two has historically been substantial. Properties on Palm Beach island routinely command multiples of what comparable square footage fetches on the West Palm Beach mainland side of the Lake Worth Lagoon, yet that mainland corridor has itself become one of the more competitive luxury markets in Florida. Both environments proved enormously attractive to developers and buyers, and the tension between supply, demand, and the finite nature of waterfront land has remained a defining feature of the South Florida property market ever since.
The Post-War Leisure Housing Explosion
While leisure housing along Florida's coasts had existed since the late nineteenth century, the market underwent a dramatic transformation after World War II. The combination of returning veterans, expanding middle-class prosperity, and new highway infrastructure made Florida an accessible destination for Americans seeking seasonal or permanent residences in a warm climate. The leisure housing market expanded rapidly after the war along both the east and west coasts of Florida, as developers moved aggressively to build communities oriented around the state's natural amenities.[2]
West Palm Beach and the surrounding Palm Beach County communities benefited substantially from this postwar expansion. The Intracoastal Waterway, already a navigable channel by that time, became an organizing axis for residential development. Boating culture, waterfront dining, and the aesthetic appeal of open water views drove demand for properties along its banks. Developers recognized that proximity to the waterway — even without direct oceanfront access — carried significant market value, and construction accelerated accordingly through the 1950s and into the 1960s. Florida's population roughly doubled between 1950 and 1960, from about 2.8 million to 5 million residents, and much of that growth settled in the coastal counties where the Intracoastal provided both a practical amenity and a marketing asset for new subdivisions and condominium projects.
Early Condominium Development and Community Response
As the post-war boom matured into the 1960s and 1970s, the condominium became the dominant vehicle for delivering high-density residential development to Florida's coastal communities. Florida's Condominium Act of 1963 — codified in Florida Statutes Chapter 718 — provided the legal framework that allowed individual units within a multi-story building to be sold as separate parcels of real property, and developers moved quickly to take advantage of the new structure. Chapter 718 governs the creation, sale, and management of condominiums in Florida and establishes the rights and obligations of unit owners, condominium associations, and developers; its passage in 1963 was a prerequisite for the high-rise residential market that subsequently transformed the state's coastline.
In areas near Boca Raton, projects such as the Boca Inlet Condo, situated near the Intracoastal bridge, and the sister towers of Sabal Point, located just north of the inlet, generated significant community debate when they were proposed and built.[3] These projects were among the earlier instances in the region of large-scale residential towers being inserted into established waterfront neighborhoods, and the controversy they generated foreshadowed debates that would recur throughout subsequent decades.
The objections raised by residents to these early towers touched on issues that remain familiar in contemporary development disputes: concerns about traffic, the visual impact of tall structures on lower-density neighborhoods, pressure on water and sewer infrastructure, and the broader question of who the new housing was intended to serve. Despite these objections, the projects moved forward, and their commercial success demonstrated to developers that there was sustained demand for waterfront condominium living in South Florida, even at price points that excluded much of the existing population.
The Early Twenty-First Century Boom and the 2008 Collapse
The condominium boom that took hold in South Florida in the early twenty-first century represented a significant escalation in the scale, cost, and ambition of waterfront residential development. Driven in part by historically low interest rates, loosened lending standards, and an influx of both domestic and international buyers seeking real estate investments, the market for luxury condominiums expanded rapidly across the region through the mid-2000s. In Miami and Miami Beach, where developable waterfront land had grown scarce and expensive, the dynamic began pushing activity northward.
Developers, recognizing the constraints of the most established luxury markets, began migrating north to Broward County locales such as Hallandale Beach, Hollywood, and Fort Lauderdale — communities that did not carry the same level of market cachet as Miami or Palm Beach but offered more available land and lower entry costs for development.[4] This northward migration reflected the maturation of a development cycle that had begun in the most desirable coastal locations and was spreading outward as those locations became prohibitively expensive or fully built out.
The boom collapsed with the broader housing market in 2008. South Florida, which had been among the most aggressively overbuilt residential markets in the country, experienced a severe correction. Condominium values dropped sharply across the region, projects that had launched presales halted construction, and developers who had acquired Intracoastal-adjacent land at peak prices faced foreclosure or distressed sales. The correction lasted several years, and the recovery was uneven: Miami's luxury waterfront market rebounded earlier and more completely than secondary markets further north, reflecting the continued depth of its international buyer pool. West Palm Beach and the communities along the northern Intracoastal corridor took longer to absorb the oversupply that had accumulated during the boom years.
Hallandale Beach and the Northward Spread
Among the communities that gained the most visibility during the northward spread of South Florida's condominium boom, Hallandale Beach emerged as a notable example of rapid transformation. The city began attracting new luxury residential buildings alongside investment in public amenities, with renovated parks and a growing number of leisure and dining options enhancing its appeal to buyers who might previously have looked exclusively at more established markets further south.[5]
The Hallandale Beach case illustrates a pattern that has played out across South Florida with some regularity: a community sitting at the edge of an established luxury market begins to attract development as land values in the core market peak, infrastructure investment follows residential development, and over time the community's identity shifts toward the higher end of the market. The Intracoastal Waterway runs through Hallandale Beach as it does through the communities to its north and south, and waterfront proximity has been a central selling point for the new residential towers built there.
For West Palm Beach, the northward pressure from Miami and Broward County had historically been indirect, given the city's distance from the most intense center of that expansion. That distance has effectively closed. The broader dynamics of the South Florida condominium market — scarcity of waterfront land, rising construction costs, and concentrated wealth among buyers — now shape West Palm Beach's development trajectory as directly as they do any market in the region.
The Post-2020 Acceleration
The pace of development accelerated sharply in the early 2020s as remote work flexibility, Florida's absence of a state income tax, and post-pandemic domestic migration made South Florida one of the fastest-growing luxury real estate markets in the country. West Palm Beach in particular emerged as a destination in its own right rather than simply a spillover market from Palm Beach island, attracting financial firms, hedge funds, and the high-net-worth individuals who followed them.[6] The relocation of major financial institutions to the area — including several prominent hedge funds and investment firms that established or expanded Palm Beach County offices between 2020 and 2024 — created a concentrated pool of wealthy prospective residents whose presence accelerated demand for luxury residential product along the Intracoastal corridor.
By 2026, construction cranes were visible across the downtown waterfront and along the Intracoastal corridor north of the city center, marking a construction cycle with few precedents in West Palm Beach's history. The branded residential model — in which luxury hospitality brands license their names and service standards to condominium developments — also expanded into South Florida during this period, with several projects in the broader region attaching hotel brand affiliations as a differentiating selling point to buyers accustomed to the amenity levels of five-star hotels.[7]
Current Development: The Luxury Corridor Takes Shape
The scale and ambition of projects underway in West Palm Beach as of 2026 reflects how completely the city has been absorbed into the South Florida luxury market. South Flagler House, a project by Related Companies — their first residential development in Florida — is under construction on the Intracoastal Waterway. The project comprises two towers with a combined estimated value of approximately $600 million, representing one of the most expensive residential developments in Palm Beach County history.[8] The buildings are designed to offer direct Intracoastal frontage, private docking, and amenity packages typical of the most competitive Miami towers. Related Companies, which developed Hudson Yards in New York City, selecting West Palm Beach for its Florida debut underscored how completely the city's waterfront had entered the national conversation about luxury residential development.
A separate 31-story residential project spanning approximately 215 feet of Intracoastal frontage has also advanced, with private docks and seaplane access to the Bahamas among its planned features — a selling point that illustrates how the city's waterway is being marketed to buyers for whom a boat slip is a baseline expectation rather than an upgrade.[9] In the spring of 2026, two additional condominium projects launched sales simultaneously in the downtown West Palm Beach area, testing whether the market could absorb multiple high-priced offerings concurrently.[10]
Individual transaction prices reflect the shift in buyer profile. In one recent sale, a couple who already owned an estate on Palm Beach island paid more than $19 million for a condominium on the mainland waterfront — a figure that would have been exceptional for West Palm Beach even a decade ago but now sits within the market's established top tier.[11] The buyer profile — island property owners treating the mainland waterfront as a secondary or investment acquisition — illustrates how thoroughly the price geography of the two sides of the Intracoastal has converged at the top of the market.
The Ultra-Luxury Segment and Palm Beach
At the highest end of the market, the competition for waterfront and oceanfront property in the Palm Beach area has taken on dimensions that set it apart from the broader condominium boom. The concentration of ultra-high-net-worth individuals in Palm Beach has produced real estate transactions of extraordinary scale. The financial profile of buyers active in this segment is illustrated by transactions such as the 2019 sale of a 24,000-square-foot condominium quadruplex atop 220 Central Park South in New York for $238 million — a buyer profile that is also active in the Palm Beach market, where oceanfront and Intracoastal land has become the subject of intense competition among billionaire purchasers.[12]
The presence of this ultra-luxury buyer pool in the Palm Beach area has effects that ripple outward into West Palm Beach's real estate market. As prices on the island of Palm Beach reach levels accessible only to a small number of buyers globally, demand spills across the Lake Worth Lagoon — the stretch of the Intracoastal Waterway that separates Palm Beach island from the West Palm Beach mainland — into waterfront properties on the mainland side. This cross-waterway dynamic has contributed to rising property values in the neighborhoods of West Palm Beach most directly adjacent to the In