Key Points:
National wellness brand signs for 2,000 sq ft at Calle Collective, opening Q3 2026 at Joule House.
The space anchors Fisher Brothers' 26,000 SF cultural retail hub with 19 Miami murals.
Synergizes with Joule House residences, amplifying foot traffic in booming Wynwood.
Fisher Brothers is curating Wynwood's next cultural epicenter with Sunlife Organics as a flagship tenant in Calle Collective at Joule House, blending wellness retail with immersive street art to drive premium leasing and resident appeal.
Lease Details
The 2,000-square-foot space at 2200 NW 1st Avenue will feature Sunlife's organic smoothies, bowls, and provisions—including the viral Billion Dollar Smoothie—catering to health-conscious creatives. Represented by Masonre's David Abrams, Jeff Jacobson, and Eliot Goldschmidt, the deal underscores demand for experiential retail in art districts.
Property Highlights
Calle Collective spans 26,000 sq ft of public-facing walls adorned with 19 large-scale murals by local artists, curated with WXLLSPACE. It's a Wynwood Buggies tour staple (800 visitors/month) and Art Walk host (10,000+ attendees bi-monthly, doubling in winter). Joule House, an eight-story residential tower, offers 985–1,400 sq ft units with Rockwell Group amenities across 23,000 sq ft indoors/outdoors, managed by Bozzuto.
Timeline
Public access to Calle Collective is daily 9 a.m.–6 p.m.; Sunlife opens Q3 2026, aligning with Joule House's residential momentum.
Why This Matters for Investors / Landlords
Wynwood's retail vacancy hovers under 5%, and experiential tenants like Sunlife could command 15–20% rent premiums by boosting dwell time and cross-pollinating with 100+ unit residents. For landlords, this model—art + wellness in mixed-use—exemplifies how Fisher Brothers' "House" brand generates 95%+ occupancy, offering a blueprint for value-add plays in Miami's creative corridors.
A Vital Hub
Sunlife Organics' arrival cements Joule House as Wynwood's vitality hub, inviting investors to pursue branded retail synergies for outsized returns in Florida's hottest district.
Got News?