Published: April 14, 2026 Pillar: Property Features & Area Guides Primary Keyword: renovated vacation home Miami Word Count Target: 1,200 words
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There’s a type of property that only appears in a specific intersection of conditions: a great structure, a serious renovation, and someone who understood that the goal wasn’t just to update a house — it was to create a place that felt like an arrival.
Casa Bonita is that property. It’s a renovated vacation home Miami travelers come looking for when they’re tired of the predictable — hotel rooms with identical furniture and no personality, Airbnb condos that photograph well and feel hollow in person, “luxury” properties that mistake expensive finishes for character.
This one has character.
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Introduction: What Makes Casa Bonita Different
The name, Casa Bonita — Beautiful House — was there before the renovation. It was earned after.
This is a home that was structurally sound, well-located, and deeply dated when it came into its current chapter. What came next was a gut renovation guided by a clear aesthetic vision: bring in light, remove what was excess, use materials that age well, and furnish it the way you’d furnish a home you intended to actually live in.
The result is a renovated vacation home Miami guests describe in consistent terms: it feels like staying at a friend’s house — an extremely stylish friend who happens to have excellent taste and enough space for everyone.
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The Renovation Story: From Dated to Designer
The before-state of Casa Bonita was what you’d expect from a mid-century Miami home that had passed through several hands without a significant update: tile from the wrong decade, a kitchen layout that made no sense for the way families actually cook together, bathrooms that prioritized function over any sense of experience.
The renovation took approximately seven months and touched every room. The approach was subtractive before it was additive — walls came down, dropped ceilings came out, and the natural light that had been blocked for years flooded back in.
What stayed: The original terrazzo floors in the main living areas. Terrazzo is one of the few original mid-century materials that has aged into genuine style, and the decision to restore rather than replace them gives the house an authenticity that newer construction can’t replicate.
What came in: A kitchen redesigned around an island large enough for eight people to gather at, quartz countertops in a soft warm white, custom cabinetry with integrated hardware, and appliances that treat cooking as something worth doing rather than something to minimize. The master bathroom was fully reimagined with a walk-in rain shower and double vanity that would not feel out of place in a boutique hotel.
Every room received attention, not just the ones that photograph well.
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A Room-by-Room Tour
The Living Room Open, generous, and organized around a central conversation area that actually invites conversation. The sofa is the kind you sink into; the coffee table is glass and doesn’t crowd the room; the art on the walls is specific — curated, not generic coastal prints. The television is large without being the focal point of the room.
The Kitchen This is the heart of Casa Bonita, and it shows in how guests use the space. The island seats six comfortably. The open shelving displays the cookware rather than hiding it. The refrigerator is large enough for a week of groceries, which matters for groups who don’t want to eat out every meal.
The Bedrooms Each bedroom was renovated with equal attention. Primary suite: king bed, restored floors, blackout curtains, a bathroom that’s worth waking up for. Guest rooms: queen beds, quality linens, individual climate control so one person’s ideal temperature doesn’t compromise everyone else’s.
Outdoor Areas The backyard is where Casa Bonita reveals its Miami nature. A private pool, a shaded outdoor seating area, and enough space for a group to exist in different configurations simultaneously — some in the pool, some at the table, some on the lounge chairs. The outdoor kitchen means meals don’t have to interrupt the outdoor experience.
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The Neighborhood: Where Casa Bonita Is Located
Casa Bonita sits in one of Miami’s established residential neighborhoods — not the tourist corridor, not the high-rise district, but a real neighborhood with tree-lined streets and houses that have been there long enough to have personality.
Proximity matters here:
- Brickell: 10 minutes. Access to Miami’s best restaurants, bars, and the Metromover.
- Coral Gables: 12 minutes. Historic architecture, the Venetian Pool, excellent traditional dining.
- Coconut Grove: 10 minutes. Walkable, bohemian, and one of Miami’s most livable neighborhoods.
- South Beach: 25–30 minutes. Far enough to feel like a separate world, close enough to get there whenever you want.
- Miami International Airport: 20 minutes.
This is a neighborhood location, not an amenity location. The amenities are at the property. The neighborhood is where you live for a week like a Miami resident rather than a Miami visitor.
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Perfect For: Who Books Casa Bonita
Families — The combination of private pool, full kitchen, separate bedrooms, and outdoor space makes Casa Bonita genuinely family-ready. Children can be in the pool; adults can be in the kitchen; everyone can be together without feeling like they’re crowded into a hotel suite.
Friend groups — The open living plan, the island kitchen, and the outdoor areas all support the social rhythm of a group trip. Mornings that linger over coffee, afternoons that migrate between pool and dining, evenings that extend as long as the group wants.
Corporate retreats and small teams — Miami is increasingly on the itinerary for team offsites. A private home with a workspace-friendly kitchen island, reliable WiFi, private pool for team-building, and proximity to Brickell for meetings creates a retreat environment that hotels simply can’t match.
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Nearby: Best Spots Within 10 Minutes
The neighborhood around Casa Bonita has its own excellent nodes:
Coconut Grove: The Village of Merrick Park for outdoor shopping and dining. CocoWalk for casual evening options. Monty’s Raw Bar for waterfront seafood.
Coral Gables: Le Bouchon du Grove (French bistro, longtime local favorite). The Dutch (seasonal menu, excellent wine list). Matsuri (one of Miami’s best sushi establishments).
Brickell: Sugar rooftop bar (EAST Hotel, 40 floors up, the best view in the city for a drink). Carbone Miami for the reservation you planned around.
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Practical Takeaway
A renovated vacation home Miami comparison often comes down to: has the renovation been done thoughtfully, or has it been done quickly? Casa Bonita is the former. Seven months, real materials, real design attention, and the result shows.
If you’re traveling with a group that values space, prefers cooking some meals in, and wants to return to a home that genuinely feels like one — this is the property.
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How to Book Casa Bonita Direct
Casa Bonita is available for direct booking through Juvia Homes with no platform markup, direct communication with the host, and best rate guarantee.
→ See Casa Bonita availability and book direct at juviahomes.com
Advance notice is appreciated for groups; flexible check-in can often be accommodated with direct bookings during appropriate calendar windows.
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Related: Why You Should Always Book Miami Vacation Rentals Directly | Miami for Groups: The Best Private Rental Homes for Bachelorette Parties, Reunions & Retreats