Alana is a 30-residence boutique condominium in Bay Harbor Islands, developed by Alta Developers with architecture by Revuelta Architecture International and interiors by Raymond Nicolas. The building is seven stories, non-waterfront, and is delivered — units are available now, not pre-construction. For buyers who want new construction quality in Bay Harbor Islands without a multi-year wait, Alana occupies a specific and limited position in the market.
Building Overview
Thirty residences in two- and three-bedroom configurations, ranging from approximately 1,229 to 1,662 square feet. The unit sizes are meaningfully smaller than the ultra-boutique buildings on the island — ALMA and MILA top out at 4,400 and 3,900 SF respectively — which positions Alana at a different price tier and buyer profile. The building's modern glass façade with floor-to-ceiling impact glass windows and sliding doors brings the terrace into the living space in a way that makes the units feel larger than the square footage suggests. Every residence has balcony access from both the bedroom and living areas — not just one or the other.
Interior finishes include walk-in closets in primary bedrooms, a Bosch appliance suite, Italian kitchens with quartz countertops and Italkraft cabinetry, and in-unit washer and dryer. Storage is available on the same level as each residence. The design approach described by the developer is designer-ready interiors — meaning the finish level is complete and livable but neutral enough to accommodate customization without starting over.
Architecture & Developer
Revuelta Architecture International has multiple Bay Harbor Islands projects in their portfolio, including Origin Bay Harbor Residences. Their approach in this market tends toward clean contemporary execution rather than statement architecture — which is either a feature or a limitation depending on what a buyer is looking for. For buyers who want the building to fade into the background and let the unit take precedence, this works. For buyers who want the building itself to be an identity marker, the boutique ultra-luxury projects on the island make a stronger claim. Alta Developers is the developer of record. Verify their entity structure and any remaining HOA reserve contributions before contract.
Raymond Nicolas handled interiors. The result across the building is consistent — same palette, same finish language, which is typical for boutique projects at this scale. Buyers who want to differentiate their unit from neighbors will find the designer-ready baseline a reasonable starting point.
Buyer Profile
The 1,229–1,662 SF range and two-to-three bedroom configuration make Alana relevant for buyers who want new construction in Bay Harbor Islands at an entry price point below the larger boutique buildings. The non-waterfront positioning is the primary trade-off — buyers who prioritize bay views or Intracoastal proximity will gravitate toward La Baia, Bay Harbor Towers, or 9900 West. Buyers who prioritize new construction quality, walkable island access, and finished-now delivery over water views will find Alana's position defensible. The Kane Concourse retail strip, the farmers market, and Ruth K. Broad Bay Harbor K-8 Center are all accessible from this address. The same walkability that applies to the rest of the island applies here.
Because the building is already delivered and occupied, buyers can evaluate actual unit conditions, meet the building management, and review the HOA's operational financials — a meaningful advantage over pre-construction commitments where all of that is projected rather than real.
How It Fits the Market
Alana sits below the ultra-boutique tier (ALMA, MILA, La Mare Signature) and competes most directly with Origin Bay Harbor Residences in the non-waterfront, completed-building segment. The decision between the two typically comes down to unit size preferences, floor positioning, and which building's HOA structure is more favorable at time of purchase. Both are non-waterfront, both are completed, and both are smaller-unit-footprint buildings relative to the waterfront towers. For buyers comparing Alana against resale inventory from the 1970s–1990s in the same price range, the new construction finish level and impact glass are usually the decisive factors — assuming the price differential between new and older vintage is within reason. For the full context on how Bay Harbor Islands new construction is priced relative to resale, see the Bay Harbor Islands real estate overview and the market trends page.