Gallery Art
Edgewater

Gallery Art

An arts-inspired 18-story, 183-unit mid-tier building in Central Edgewater with larger recession-era units, a 75-foot heated lap pool, and a no-nonsense approach to condo living. Value investor and rental-friendly with a 93 Walk Score.

3.0
333 NE 24th Street, Miami, FL 33137
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The Rundown

Gallery Art is an 18-story condominium completed in 2008, designed by Fullerton Diaz Architects with a 'Bohemian with a 21st century twist' aesthetic. The building contains 183 residences with a mix of one-bedrooms, one-bedrooms with dens, and two-bedrooms, ranging from 692 to 1,350 square feet. Because this is a recession-era product, the units are larger than what newer buildings in the area offer. The building features blue-green tinted floor-to-ceiling windows, ceiling heights ranging from 9 to 24 feet, and Italian kitchens with stainless steel appliances and natural stone countertops. Gallery Art sits on NE 24th Street in Central Edgewater, close to Biscayne Boulevard. While CondoBlackBook lists it as bayfront, the building is not a true waterfront building in the way that buildings directly on the bay are. Some units do have peeks of Biscayne Bay depending on their floor and position, but this is not a building you buy for water views. What you buy this building for is the location: a 93 Walk Score with Whole Foods, Publix, and Margaret Pace Park all within walking distance. The building has a mix of renovated and unrenovated units. The unrenovated units are feeling dated with their 2008 finishes. The updated units have been improved, but not to 2026 Miami luxury standards. This is more of a value investor and rental building than a lifestyle purchase. The amenity suite is surprisingly robust for a building of this tier, including a 75-foot heated lap pool, cabanas, a meditation garden, art gallery, wine cellar, media room, billiards lounge, and lava rock sauna. The building has been well managed with no HOA drama.

Who Lives Here

Gallery Art attracts value-conscious buyers, investors, and renters who prioritize location and space over luxury finishes. The building has a significant investor-owner population, which means a healthy rental market. You will find young professionals who want to be in Central Edgewater without paying waterfront prices, small families who need the larger recession-era floor plans, and investors who appreciate the building's rental-friendly policies and consistent demand. The arts-inspired common areas attract some creative types, but this is primarily a practical building for practical people. The vibe is unpretentious and community-oriented.

The Neighborhood

Gallery Art sits on NE 24th Street in Central Edgewater, close to Biscayne Boulevard and within walking distance of multiple grocery stores, restaurants, and Margaret Pace Park. The building is in the heart of the neighborhood's commercial corridor, which provides excellent convenience but also means exposure to the traffic and construction activity that comes with a rapidly developing urban area.

Whole Foods

4 min walk

Premium grocery store within walking distance for everyday shopping and prepared foods.

Publix

5 min walk

Full-service grocery store, a staple for everyday essentials and pharmacy needs.

Margaret Pace Park

5 min walk

Premier bayfront park with tennis, basketball, volleyball, dog park, and jogging path along the bay.

Biscayne Boulevard

2 min walk

Main commercial corridor with restaurants, cafes, shops, and services stretching through Edgewater.

Wynwood and Design District

5 min drive

Art galleries, restaurants, high-end retail, and nightlife. Miami's creative and luxury shopping epicenters.

What's Changing

Central Edgewater continues to see significant development activity with new luxury towers replacing older buildings and surface lots. The area around NE 24th Street has multiple proposed and under-construction projects that will bring more density, amenities, and services to the neighborhood over the next three to five years. This development will likely increase property values over time but also means years of construction activity, noise, and disruption in the immediate vicinity.

What You Get

Pool & Recreation

75-foot heated lap poolSpacious sun deckCabanas along pool deckOutside pool deck bar

Fitness & Wellness

State-of-the-art fitness centerLava rock saunaMeditation garden

Social & Entertainment

Art gallery / libraryMedia roomWine cellarArt studioLounge with billiards

Building Services

24-hour valet parking24-hour securitySecured lobby entranceAssigned garage parkingLarge storage roomsElevator

Elevator Experience

Elevator Density Rating

61units per
elevator
Good
More WaitLess Wait

3

Passenger

0

Service

~10

Units/Floor

183

Total Units

No private elevator access

Resident Intel

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Ryan's Intel

🟢Win

Amenity Suite Punches Above Its Weight Class

For a mid-tier building at this price point, Gallery Art has a surprisingly robust amenity package. The 75-foot heated lap pool is legitimate, not a plunge pool. You also get cabanas, a pool deck bar, a meditation garden, an art gallery and library, a wine cellar, a media room, an art studio, and a billiards lounge. Most buildings in this price range offer a pool and a gym and call it a day. Gallery Art's arts-inspired programming and social spaces give it more character than the typical entry-level Edgewater building. The lava rock sauna is a nice touch that you would not expect at this tier.

🟢Win

Recession-Era Units Are Larger Than New Construction

Because Gallery Art was completed in 2008, the units were designed with more generous floor plans than what developers build today. Two-bedrooms here run from 1,048 to 1,350 square feet, and even the one-bedroom-plus-den units are over 1,000 square feet. Compare that to newer Edgewater buildings where a two-bedroom might be 750 to 850 square feet. If you prioritize living space over brand-new finishes, the math works in Gallery Art's favor. The ceiling heights ranging from 9 to 24 feet add to the sense of spaciousness, and the floor-to-ceiling blue-green tinted windows bring in good natural light.

💡Insider Tip

This Is a Value Investor and Rental Building

Gallery Art is not a lifestyle purchase for someone seeking luxury. It is a building that makes financial sense for value investors and renters. The purchase prices are reasonable for Central Edgewater, the HOA fees are manageable at around $0.93 per square foot, and the rental demand is consistent given the location. If you are buying as an investment, the numbers tend to work. If you are buying to live in, understand that this is a building where the value proposition is space and location, not prestige or luxury finishes. The building has a significant percentage of investor-owned rental units, which is neither good nor bad, just something to be aware of.

💡Insider Tip

Renovated vs. Unrenovated Units Are Different Experiences

Gallery Art has a mix of renovated and unrenovated units, and the gap matters. The unrenovated units are feeling their 2008 age with dated finishes, original cabinetry, and older flooring. The updated units have been improved, but honestly, most renovations here have not been done to 2026 Miami standards. They are functional updates rather than luxury transformations. If you are buying, factor in renovation costs for unrenovated units. If you are renting, the renovated units command a meaningful premium but offer a noticeably better living experience. Ask to see both types before making a decision.

🟢Win

93 Walk Score with Multiple Grocery Options

Gallery Art's location in Central Edgewater delivers a 93 Walk Score, which is Walker's Paradise territory. You can walk to Whole Foods, Publix, and various restaurants and shops on Biscayne Boulevard. Margaret Pace Park with its tennis courts, basketball courts, volleyball, dog park, and jogging path along the bay is also within walking distance. The building is close enough to Biscayne Boulevard to access everything you need on foot, but set back enough on NE 24th Street to have slightly less traffic noise than buildings directly on the boulevard.

🟠Heads Up

Not a True Waterfront Building Despite Bay Proximity

CondoBlackBook lists Gallery Art as bayfront, and technically the building is close to the bay. But this is not a waterfront building in the way that Paraiso, Quantum on the Bay, or Aria on the Bay are waterfront buildings. You do not have direct bay access from the building, and most units do not have meaningful water views. Some higher-floor units have peeks of Biscayne Bay depending on their position, but if bay views are important to you, this is not the building. What you get instead is bay proximity: Margaret Pace Park and the bay walk are within walking distance, so you can enjoy the water without paying waterfront prices.

🟠Heads Up

All Standard Edgewater Trade-Offs Apply

Gallery Art gives you the full Edgewater package, good and bad. On the plus side, you have exceptional walkability, multiple grocery stores, restaurant options on Biscayne, and proximity to Wynwood, Midtown, and the Design District. On the minus side, you deal with traffic on Biscayne Boulevard, street flooding on the side streets during heavy rains and tropical storms, and ongoing construction as the neighborhood continues to densify. The area around NE 24th Street has seen significant development activity, and more construction is likely over the next three to five years.

💡Insider Tip

Ryan's Bottom Line: No-Nonsense Mid-Tier Building That Delivers on Location

Gallery Art is a solid, well-managed mid-tier building that does not pretend to be something it is not. It was not built to be luxurious, and it is not luxurious. What it is: a 183-unit building with larger-than-average recession-era units, a surprisingly good amenity suite for its tier, a 93 Walk Score location in Central Edgewater, and reasonable pricing. The building has been well managed with no HOA scandals or drama. If you are looking for an entry-level building that is all about location and value rather than prestige and luxury finishes, Gallery Art delivers. It serves a very particular audience: people who want to live in a good location in a decent building without paying a premium for a name or a lobby. This building does not pretend to have prestige, and that honesty is actually one of its strengths.

The Good & The Not-So-Good

Wins

  • +Surprisingly robust amenity suite: 75-ft heated lap pool, cabanas, wine cellar, art gallery, sauna
  • +Recession-era units are 20-40% larger than comparable new construction
  • +93 Walk Score with Whole Foods, Publix, and Margaret Pace Park nearby
  • +Well-managed building with no HOA drama or scandals
  • +Reasonable pricing for Central Edgewater location
  • +Pet-friendly with large pets allowed for owners

Watch Out

  • Not a true waterfront building despite bay proximity listing
  • Unrenovated units are feeling dated with 2008 finishes
  • Even renovated units are not to 2026 Miami luxury standards
  • Significant investor-owner population (can be pro or con depending on perspective)
  • All standard Edgewater downsides: traffic, street flooding, construction
  • Not a prestige or luxury building, no brand recognition
The Verdict

Ryan's Final Take

3.0

Gallery Art is a 2008-built, 18-story, 183-unit arts-inspired condominium in Central Edgewater designed by Fullerton Diaz Architects. This is a mid-tier to entry-level building that was not built to be luxurious, but it has held up well. The recession-era units are larger than what newer buildings offer, with two-bedrooms running from 1,048 to 1,350 square feet and ceiling heights up to 24 feet. The amenity suite is surprisingly good for the tier: a 75-foot heated lap pool, cabanas, meditation garden, art gallery, wine cellar, media room, billiards lounge, and lava rock sauna. The building has a mix of renovated and unrenovated units. The unrenovated units are feeling dated, and even the renovated ones have not been updated to 2026 Miami standards. This is more of a value investor and rental building than a lifestyle purchase. The location delivers a 93 Walk Score with Whole Foods, Publix, and Margaret Pace Park all within walking distance. The building is not truly waterfront, but some units have peeks of the bay. Gallery Art has been well managed with no HOA drama. If you are looking for an entry-level, no-nonsense, no-drama building in Central Edgewater that is all about location and value rather than prestige, Gallery Art is a solid choice. It does not pretend to have prestige, and that honesty is one of its strengths.

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