Pier Sixty-Six, the Fort Lauderdale marina resort, has released plans for a major waterfront expansion that would add four residential towers, 339 homes, new dining and retail, office space, marina upgrades, and additional public promenade to the existing property. The announcement, shared via the operator's Instagram, frames the proposal as the "next phase" of the resort's ongoing transformation — though no timeline, development team, architect, or permit filing has been publicly disclosed.
The plan follows what the operator describes as a "recent restoration" of Pier Sixty-Six, positioning the expansion as a continuation of a phased redevelopment rather than a standalone initiative. At 339 units across four towers, the residential program averages roughly 85 homes per building — a count that would push the structures into mid-rise or high-rise territory, depending on floor plates and unit sizes not yet specified.
The program's composition — residential, dining and retail, office, marina enhancements, and public promenade — consolidates multiple uses on a single waterfront parcel. The promenade component extends publicly accessible space as part of the campus, though the source does not detail the proposed linear footage or how it connects to the existing marina walkways.
What the proposal does not carry at this stage: a named architect or development partner, a construction or delivery window, residential pricing, or square footage figures for any of the commercial components. No zoning application or City of Fort Lauderdale permitting record has been publicly referenced in connection with the plan. Until a formal application enters the municipal pipeline, the four-tower configuration remains a stated intention rather than a filed proposal.
The next meaningful milestone is a formal pre-application meeting or filing with the City of Fort Lauderdale — the point at which program details, site plan, and project team would enter the public record and the proposal would become trackable through Broward County planning channels.



