Miami Beach has never been short on spectacle. But head north, past the party-polished crowds, and you reach North Beach, a pocket of the city where the rhythm slows enough for you to actually hear the ocean. It’s here, on an unassuming residential street, that Maison Felix opened its doors last week. It’s the kind of hotel you stumble upon, then immediately hope stays a secret a little longer.
Designed by Felix Cohen and operated by Namron Hospitality, the boutique group behind Mexico’s cult-favorite La Valise hotels, Maison Felix is a soulful retreat that feels wildly different from the Miami Beach of postcards. This is a place built atmosphere, and a sense of belonging.
The hotel occupies a restored 1948 building, a structure Cohen preserved with a curator’s eye. Original terrazzo floors, exposed brick, and honest mid-century lines give the spaces a sense of place that can’t be faked. The design celebrates its history.
There are only 29 rooms and suites, all intentionally understated. Ground-floor suites open onto a palm-shaded courtyard where a slim pool glints beneath Miami’s soft northern light. Upstairs suites offer vaulted ceilings and a breezy lofted feel, with windows that catch the glow from sunrise to late afternoon. Inside the courtyard, the noise of the city disappears, replaced by birds, water, and the rustle of palms.
Cohen’s background in fashion is evident in every detail. Maison Felix is designed like a memory of endless summers, sun-worn, textured, tactile. His palette leans into burnt orange, terracotta, and sea-glass turquoise, a nod to both Mediterranean landscapes and Miami’s shoreline.
A custom pattern reminiscent of teak yacht decking runs through floors and select walls, quietly referencing days spent at sea. Natural stone, soft linens, and matte coastal fabrics keep everything grounded in texture rather than trend. Vintage mirrors and brass accents add a wink of European nostalgia, balanced by bold contemporary works from Miami artists.
Nothing feels over-styled. Everything feels intentional.
For Namron Hospitality, Maison Felix marks its U.S. debut after years of developing deeply atmospheric boutique hotels across Mexico—places known for their cinematic stillness and emotional resonance.
“For me, hospitality is not about excess, it is about emotion,” says Yves Naman, the brand’s founder. “Maison Felix is a sanctuary where presence, beauty, and belonging come together. In Miami Beach, we wanted to create a more soulful place, one where every guest feels at home the moment they arrive, embraced by warmth and a sense of joy.”
Their signature touch is here: high-touch, low-profile service; hosts who greet you by name; the feeling of staying at a friend’s beautiful beach house rather than navigating a lobby. Cohen echoes the sentiment: “We didn’t want a scene; we wanted a sanctuary.”
Maison Felix is built for a specific kind of traveler: the culturally attuned, globally mobile guest who cares more about authenticity than theatrics. It’s the kind of place where you wander down to the pool barefoot, grab a late lunch at a local café, or walk to a concert at the North Beach Bandshell without ever feeling like you’ve entered “tourist mode.”
The surrounding neighborhood remains refreshingly real, still dotted with family-run bakeries, independent galleries, and cafés where regulars greet each other by name. The hotel embraces this energy, encouraging guests to slip into the local rhythm.
Staff curate understated but meaningful experiences: discovering a hidden gallery, visiting a boutique run by a longtime local artisan, or finding the perfect quiet patch of beach just five minutes away.
The south-facing wing is ideal for families or friends traveling together, thanks to its concealed side entrance and connecting suites that can function like a private coastal compound.
North Beach has long been where Miami residents go when they want Miami without the chaos. But with Maison Felix—and a growing roster of thoughtful hospitality concepts—the neighborhood is entering a new era. It’s evolving, but without losing what makes it special.
With rates starting at $300 per night, it hits that sweet spot of accessible indulgence: elevated, atmospheric, and effortlessly stylish.
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