
Jeffrey Beers International Reimagines Pier Sixty-Six In Fort Lauderdale
Since the 1950’s, a prime site on the Stranahan River in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, has endured: first, as a Phillips 66 gas station, then as a two-story lodge, and finally, in 1965, as Pier 66, which encompassed a marina along the Intracoastal Waterway and a 17-story hotel with a rare-for-its-time revolving rooftop lounge in the spire. Rumor has it that the elevator took 66 seconds to reach this peak, and that the space made one whole rotation every 66 minutes. Today, that spire spins again thanks to a thoughtful renovation—its community significance reborn as the beacon of Pier Sixty-Six, a now 32-acre complex that encompasses residences, shops, and restaurants, plus the marina and a 325-key resort hotel, composed of the historic tower plus new lobby and guest-room structures, their interiors by Jeffrey Beers International and architecture by Garcia Stromberg and HKS.
“To give new life to a property with such a legacy requires a bit of soul searching,” begins Nora Liu Kanter, a partner at JBI. Along with copartners Michael Pandolfi and Tim Rooney, Liu Kanter succeeded founder, CEO, and Interior Design Hall of Fame special-tribute recipient Jeffrey Beers after his death in March 2024. (Beers’s older son Justin has taken up the gauntlet as chief development officer and managing member of the New York-based studio, which ranks 106th, up from 124th, among Interior Design’s Rising Giants.) “The challenge lies in capturing the past while bringing it into the modern day”—and winning the public’s love in the process, she adds.
Behind The Design Of A 325-Key Resort Hotel

Thankfully, the teams were up to the task. Drawing inspiration from the site’s mid-century yachting heritage as well as the tropical, coastal environment of South Florida, the resort’s architecture and interiors abstract nautical forms. The historic tower was preserved and restored, capped with Pier Top, a new lounge that “resembles the flybridge of an elegant yacht,” describes Christian MacCarroll, principal and office design leader at HKS, which also served as architect of record for the hotel’s interiors and comes in sixth on our 100 Giants ranking. For the new lobby and nine-story main structures, both attached to the historic tower, curved balconies, large expanses of glass, and a sail-like porte cochere, centered by a century-old banyan tree, announce the design references from the street. Inside, JBI’s interventions—wavelike ceilings and light fixtures; curvilinear stone, wood, and mosaic finishes; an energetic nature-inspired palette—underscore the scheme.
Amenities Include Fitness Centers, a Member’s Club, and Spa
The complex hosts a varied program, including the 500,000 square feet of hotel facilities, two fitness centers and pools, nine dining experiences, an events center, a members club, and a spa. All are conceived to hug the marina, directing views toward its 164 slips, where Joe Lewis, owner of Tavistock Development Company, which owns Pier Sixty-Six, docks his vessel. To guide resort guests, club members, residents, and public visitors through the spaces that surround this central apex, HKS employed “controlled access, intimate scale, and layered landscaping, reinforcing privacy without visual separation” to maintain the open, airy, indoor-outdoor experience the climate allows, MacCarroll says. From JBI, there’s an ocean-inspired throughline everywhere, but each area has its own unique “playfulness,” Rooney notes, “layering textures and color in a way that speaks to the vibrancy of the region.”
The journey starts in the sun-filled main lobby, a rounded glazed space preceding the historic tower that’s been envisioned as a modern yacht club, its ovoid bar faced in shimmering mosaics and lit by a dazzling crystal chandelier. White fluted columns, white-oak detailing, and gleaming white porcelain floor tile veined like marble enhance the sense of luxury. Curving forms continue throughout, where they pick up increasingly bold colors. In the guest rooms and suites, rich green, red, and blue seating meets softer yellows and oranges in the wallcoverings and upholstered headboards, the latter tufted to achieve a statement-making three-dimensionality. Teal cabinet fronts on mid century–inspired credenzas are textured to evoke the glimmer of moving water. In the 67 suites, some of them housed in the ground-up, four-story Harbour Villa building, its architecture, as well as that of Pier Sixty-Six’s four new residential buildings, by Garcia Stromberg, and the Zenova spa, hues are even softer, the pink, clay, and apricot tones referencing Florida’s sunrises and sunsets. The 3,000-square-foot presidential suite, in the historic tower, combines all these moves—pastels and pale millwork, intense hues, a rippled ceiling—with panoramic Atlantic Ocean vistas.
The concept has its most flamboyant iteration in the members club, where the Garden Room restaurant and Orchid Room lounge boast overt tropical references. The former greets diners with a peacock-motif mosaic floor and a lush oasis behind its host stand and continues the theme with flamingo-shape table lamps, feather-capped columns, and live greenery. But more subtle are the forms in the Orchid Room, its custom flower-inspired pendant fixtures hanging like abstract sculptures over café tables at curved banquettes paired with myriad custom chairs that wear a chic mix of fabrics. Pizzazz comes, again, through color: metallic turquoise wall paint, gold-detailed Memphis-inspired mirrors, a jewel-tone bottle tower anchoring the generous horseshoe bar.
As one moves through this multiroom lounge, visual discoveries unfold, in the same way they do across different zones of the resort property itself. “We were looking to create curiosity from one space to the next,” Rooney explains. For a project of this scale, it was crucial to avoid sameness. A client open to embracing a playful, site-specific interior palette was a bonus. “Marble and wood are timeless, signature materials for us,” Rooney adds. “This project was an exploration of pattern and color, with a whimsy that made it really fun to work on.”
PROJECT TEAM
AIJUN WU; TATIANA DARMOGRAY; JAVIER ODDO; KELSEY VERILLO; FANIA MUTHIA; DEBRA MCGOWAN: JEFFREY BEERS INTERNATIONAL. PETER STROMBERG; LEYLA MURILLO; CASEY LAMROUEX: GARCIA STROMBERG. MATTHEW CLEAR; JEFFREY BUSH; PATRICK BRADY; OLIVER COX; NICHOLAS BROW; PATRICIA LANZAS; ADAM FOX; DONALD CULVER: HKS. NELSON WORLDWIDE: ARCHITECT OF RECORD. EXP: LIGHTING CONSULTANT, MEP. PARKER INTERNATIONAL: PROCUREMENT. HOLLYWOOD WOODWORK; MCKENZIE CRAFT: MILLWORK. AMERICARIBE: GENERAL CONTRACTOR.
PRODUCT SOURCES FROM FRONT: LIGHT ANNEX: CUSTOM PENDANT FIXTURES (SUITE LIVING ROOM). FIL DOUX TEXTILES: SOFA FABRIC. OPUZEN: CHAIR FABRIC. ASCH: CUSTOM SCREEN. ARTE: SCREEN WALLCOVERING (SUITE LIVING ROOM), WALLCOVERING (SUITE BEDROOM). AKASHIC TILES: TILE (RESTROOM). MAC FAUCETS: SINK FITTINGS. KOHLER CO.: SINKS (RESTROOM), TUB, SINK, SINK FITTINGS (BATHROOM). PTY LIGHTING: CUSTOM FIXTURES (RESTROOM, GUEST-ROOM HALL), CUSTOM TABLE LAMP (RESTAURANT). LACQUERCRAFT HOSPITALITY: CUSTOM HOST STAND (RESTAURANT), CUSTOM CREDENZA (GUEST ROOM). IWORKS: CUSTOM PENDANT FIXTURES (VILLA LOBBY). MANUTTI: STOOLS. ARCHITEX: SOFA FABRIC. ROMO: PILLOW FABRICS. CHARTER FURNITURE: STOOLS (LOBBY BAR). PRECIOSA LIGHTING: CUSTOM CHANDELIERS (LOBBY BAR, PRESIDENTIAL SUITE), CUS- TOM PENDANT FIXTURES (LOUNGE). FLORIM: FLOOR TILE (LOBBY). KOROSEAL: WALLCOVERING (SUITE HALL, EVENT CENTER). SHAW: CUSTOM CARPET (SUITE HALL, GUEST ROOM). PHILLIP JEFFRIES: WALLCOVERING (SPA). NASCO: FLOOR TILE (SPA, GUESTROOM HALL, BATHROOM). TILE BAR: FLOORING (LOUNGE). CASAMANCE; THOMPSON FABRICS: PILLOW FABRICS. ECOSURFACES: FLOORING (GYM). BERNHARDT DESIGN: BENCH. WOLF-GORDON: CUSTOM WALLCOVERING (GUEST ROOM). RICHLOOM: CHAIRFABRIC. ICE RUGS: CUSTOM CARPET (MEDIA ROOM, PRESIDENTIAL SUITE). JUSTIN DAVID: WALLCOVERING (MEDIA ROOM). GARRETT LEATHER; TIGER LEATHER: LEATHER UPHOLSTERY (PRESIDENTIAL SUITE). THROUGHOUT LILY JACK: CUSTOM FURNITURE. MAJESTIC MIRROR: CUSTOM MIRRORS. SCUFFMASTER: PAINT.
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