Street Economics™
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Key West is a chronically supply-constrained resort and military market where constraint guarantees premium value, but investability requires specialized operators, high capitalization, and tolerance for insurance and entitlement friction.
Palm Springs is a dense workforce housing node and neighborhood retail center in Palm Beach County (Tier B—Sector-Specific). It is investable with operator expertise focused on optimizing existing assets rather than generic institutional development.
Miami Shores is a highly affluent, tightly regulated inner-ring village with near-zero commercial vacancy and capped retail supply. Investability is niche and operator-driven, with opportunities limited to boutique retail/F&B, medical office, and edge housing near Barry University.
Hollywood, Florida is a Tier A, market-ready coastal infill city with tight, competitive conditions driven by geographic constraints. Investability is strong, but climate exposure, affordability strain, and corridor bottlenecks pose structural risks to long-term operations and value.
Rockledge is a mature, land-constrained Space Coast suburb with tight housing and commercial conditions driven by aerospace expansion. The market is Tier A (Market-Ready), favoring infill, redevelopment, and value-add modernization over greenfield deployment.
Palm Coast is a Tier A market-ready suburban growth node with tight, supply-constrained commercial inventory and predictable absorption. The core risk is an employment vacuum alongside infrastructure bottlenecks and density resistance.
Hendry County is a Tier B sector-specific inland market where private capital can work, but success requires operator expertise and tolerance for concentration risk. Structural upside centers on logistics and workforce housing, not generic retail or office.
Collier County is a high-barrier, structurally polarized Tier A market where coastal UHNW demand collides with severe land constraints and a worsening workforce housing deficit, creating tight commercial fundamentals alongside entitlement friction.
Delray Beach is a Tier A, market-ready community with tight retail and housing fundamentals, premium pricing, and strong investor demand. Key risks include labor drain from affordability, regulatory friction, and mobility bottlenecks.
New Port Richey is a Tier A market-ready community where downtown is de-risked and investable, while climate exposure, insurance friction, and US-19 corridor obsolescence constrain broader momentum.