The Deeded Office at One Twenty Signature, Explained
At One Twenty Brickell Signature, every residence comes with a private office on its own separate deed. It is furnished, glass-encased, and titled independently, which means you can live next to it, lease it on a six-month minimum, or sell it on its own. In effect you buy one home and own two deeded properties.
What exactly is the deeded office?
It is a dedicated, furnished office suite that conveys with your residence but sits on a separate deed. Each one comes glass-encased with a lockable entry, Wi-Fi, a desk and chair, two guest chairs, and pre-wiring for TVs, plus shared access to conference rooms, private elevators, and an on-site receptionist.
Because the office is separately titled, it is a real asset rather than a bonus room. That is the distinction that matters: a den is square footage, a deeded office is property you can transact independently.
Why does a separate deed matter?
A separate deed gives you options. You can keep the office for your own use, lease it to a tenant on a six-month minimum, or sell it to another owner in the building who wants a second suite. Each path is available because the title is independent of the residence.
I have walked buyers through this exact structure on the earlier PMG project, and the practical takeaway is the same: once you close, that office is something you can monetize or offload to recover part of your capital. It is flexibility you simply do not get from a standard condo.
Who is this actually for?
Three kinds of buyers tend to value it most. Remote professionals who want a real workspace steps from home and out of the living room. Small-business owners who want a Brickell address with a receptionist and conference rooms. And investors who want a second, independently rentable asset attached to a furnished residence.
If none of those is you, the office still adds resale appeal and rental optionality, so it is rarely dead weight. The building's office section lists the full feature set.
How does renting the office work?
The office carries a six-month minimum rental, which keeps it oriented toward genuine tenants rather than transient use. The residences themselves run on a more flexible program with daily, weekly, or monthly stays, subject to applicable law. So you have a furnished home you can rent flexibly and a titled office you can lease on a longer term, from one purchase.
How does it change the value equation?
When you price the residence, do not stop at the home. You are also acquiring a furnished, titled, income-capable office in one of Miami's most in-demand business districts. Factor the office's use value or rental potential into your return, and the entry price starts to read differently than a comparable condo without one. Talk it through with me and I will show you realistic numbers on the a quick call.