The team behind The Wharf has been selected to develop Sea Salt Beach House, a proposed $18.7 million restaurant and event venue at Currie Park on West Palm Beach's Intracoastal waterfront, according to the operator's Instagram. The project still requires city approval before it can move forward.
What's being proposed
As proposed, Sea Salt Beach House would seat 378 guests across indoor and outdoor dining on the ground floor, with a second-floor ballroom designed for more than 300 people. The menu would be seafood-focused. That two-floor configuration divides the venue's programming between daily restaurant service and a private events operation large enough to function as a standalone hospitality business — a model that offsets the day-to-day volatility of restaurant traffic alone.
A private venue on public parkland
Currie Park is a city-owned green space along the Intracoastal Waterway north of downtown West Palm Beach, historically used as a public recreational area. A private dining and events development framed at $18.7 million would almost certainly require a long-term ground lease with the city — the terms of which would carry as much weight as the architectural program in determining whether this project ultimately gets built. The central question the city's review process will have to answer is how a private hospitality investment of this size fits within what has been a public recreational space.
Why the waterfront is the draw
The Wharf format, which the operators have deployed in other waterfront markets, layers open-air dining with programming and event capacity in a way that depends heavily on site exposure and access. Currie Park's Intracoastal position gives Sea Salt Beach House those raw ingredients. West Palm Beach's waterfront has drawn sustained interest from hospitality operators in recent years — CityPlace and the Clematis Street corridor anchor the broader downtown entertainment picture, while Intracoastal parcels with unobstructed water views and proximity to both residential and marina traffic remain among the most coveted positions in South Florida for large-format restaurant and event venues.
Why it matters for West Palm Beach
If approved, a 378-seat seafood restaurant with a 300-plus-person ballroom would be a significant addition to the city's waterfront dining and events capacity — and a test case for how West Palm Beach balances private hospitality development against public park access. The outcome could set a reference point for how the city handles future proposals on its remaining waterfront parcels.
What to watch
No approval timeline or projected opening window appeared in the Instagram post. The conditional framing — “if approved” — indicates the proposal is still in early stages of the city's review. The next signals to watch: whether a public hearing is scheduled, whether competing bids emerge for the Currie Park footprint, and how the city weighs private development against public park access as it evaluates the $18.7 million proposal.



