Four Seasons Hotels and Resorts
Miami's poshest address? The Four Seasons Hotel at The Surf Club sits on 900 feet of pristine Atlantic beachfront in the Surfside enclave of North Beach in Miami.
Four Seasons Hotels and Resorts
Old and new: The Surf Club is a reimagined version of the historic social club of Miami's Jazz Age heyday where tire magnate Harvey Firestone once threw epic galas and frequent visitor Winston Churchill used to paint in his cabana.
William Hereford
Thomas Keller: The star chef has brought his talents to Miami.
Kevin Hayden
The Surf Club Restaurant by Thomas Keller: The new restaurant is Keller's first foray into Florida.
Kevin Hayden
Food for thought: The chef pays homage to Miami's beachside glamour with an impeccable menu of classic Continental dishes.
Deborah Jones
On order: One dish is pitch-perfect crab cakes paired with local vegetables.
Four Seasons Hotels and Resorts
Getting away: Guests at the Richard Meier-designed hotel will not have to compete for space like at bustling South Beach.
Four Seasons Hotels and Resorts
Italian Style: The chic Le Sirenuse restaurant and Champagne bar is a collaboration between Four Seasons and the owners of Le Sirenuse Hotel in Positano on Italy's Amalfi Coast.
Four Seasons Hotels and Resorts
Bits and bites: Chef Antonio Mermolia draws his inspiration from Le Sirenuse Positano's La Sponda.
Four Seasons Hotels and Resorts
In the details: The restaurant and bar were created from what remained of the original Surf Club building and feature original details such as fireplaces, wooden ceilings and dramatic arches framing sea views.
Four Seasons Hotels and Resorts
Checking in: The hotel features 77 rooms and suites that cantilever over the original clubhouse, with chic, residential-style interiors by Paris-based designer Joseph Dirand.
Four Seasons Hotels and Resorts
Color scheme: The palette of the rooms, using beige, white, green and blue, is designed to reflect the outside.
Four Seasons Hotels and Resorts
Feeling the vibe: The goal was to create something "not too flashy, not too lavish. When you walk in, you feel comfortable," says general manager Reed Kandalaft.
Four Seasons Hotels and Resorts
The glory days: The Surf Club harks back to the Jazz Age of the 1920s and '30s when Miami's glamour was more refined.
Miami, Florida CNN  — 

To many outsiders and visitors, Miami presents itself as a flashy town, obsessed with all things glitzy and glossy and over-the-top.

However, since opening in the Surfside neighborhood two years ago, The Surf Club has become the city’s most glamorous destination by going in the opposite direction—opting for quiet elegance and a serene environment away from the hustle of South Beach for its members, residents and guests.

Both well-heeled locals and savvy world travelers are drawn to today’s revamped Surf Club just as Winston Churchill, Harvey Firestone and their ilk were in the ’30s and ‘40s, as a retreat from a chaotic world.

From $2250 per night
Rates provided by Booking.com

Old-school Miami glamour

Four Seasons Hotels and Resorts
The hotel, pictured in its Jazz Age heyday.

The longtime social club opened in 1930 and was for years known for its cabanas, where members spent leisurely days—Churchill painted seascapes in his—and for its elaborately themed parties designed by set designers from Broadway and Hollywood.

Events famously featured a Ferris wheel on the sand, kayaking in the pool at night, and a parade of elephants strolling up the club’s dramatic entranceway, Peacock Alley.

Today, it’s more likely to be The Surf Club Restaurant by Thomas Keller or Le Sirenuse, the Italian restaurant and Champagne bar from the owner of the Positano luxury hotel of the same name, that draws the upper echelons of society to this stretch of the Atlantic Ocean.

Kevin Hayden
Michelin-starred chef Thomas Keller made chose the Four Seasons for his Sunshine State debut.

Today’s iteration of The Surf Club is more expansive than the original—with residences in three glass-fronted towers designed by Richard Meier and, above the original members’ clubhouse, a Four Seasons Hotel with chic, residential-style interiors by Paris-based designer Joseph Dirand.

Guest rooms are bright and airy, reflecting Dirand’s clean-lined modernist style. “The palette of the room reflects what you see outside your window,” says the designer, who has worked on flagship boutiques in Paris for fashion designers including Chloe, Balmain and Givenchy.

“The beige color, which is the sand, the green of the palm trees, a little bit of greenish-blue that continues the colors of the water and the sky. You almost feel like the landscape is coming inside and you are floating in the air.”

Miami’s brilliant natural light is used to great effect, while the furniture, such as the modular table that can be used for dining, lounging or as a desk, is functional and built for modern life.

Cabana Row

Hotel guests, residents and members (a small, exclusive group) all have access to the property’s 900 feet of pristine beachfront, and to the glamorous cabana lifestyle of Miami’s golden age—now with modern perks like air-conditioning and Wi-Fi.

Like the five studio cabanas (which are reserved as hotel rooms), the 42 daytime cabanas were also designed by Dirand, and share the hotel rooms’ simple aesthetic, with terrazzo floors, tropical rattan furniture, full bathrooms and expansive wooden decks.

Four Seasons Hotels and Resorts
The hotel's private beach means no jostling for space.

Daytime cabana guests (who pay rates between $350–$1,450 depending on day and season) have access to the hotel’s pools, the spa’s hammam, beach service, complimentary bikes and service from poolside restaurant and bar, Winston’s on the Beach.

Not surprisingly, the Surf Club’s spa is a gorgeous white-and-blue oasis of calm with private relaxation pods overlooking the ocean. What’s less expected is that the well-stocked Kids’ Club is as chic as every other part of the property, with terrazzo floors, palm-tree wallpaper and a sprawling green couch for lunchtime picnics after arts and crafts.

Best of the best

When The Surf Club’s owner, Nadim Ashi, founder and chief executive officer of Fort Partners, first encountered the property, the members club had lost some its luster. But the developer had a vision, and to execute it he called on the best of the best in every field—from Meier and Dirand to the Four Seasons as hotel operators of the highest caliber.

The attention to detail continues right down to the property’s Harlemlique à la mer boutique, featuring bedding, beach and resort wear from Istanbul, and Les Ateliers Courbet, a gallery of impeccably handcrafted decorative objets and home accessories.

Deborah Jones
Crab cakes are on the menu at The Surf Club Restaurant.

Perhaps the area where Ashi’s high standards are most evident is in The Surf Club’s restaurants and bars. The Surf Club Restaurant by Chef Thomas Keller is the first Florida venture for the Michelin-starred chef of French Laundry and Per Se. Here, the chef pays homage to Miami’s beachside glamour with an impeccable menu of classic Continental dishes made with the highest-quality ingredients.

The setting, designed by Martin Brudnizki Design Studio in the sleek style of Keller’s favorite era, the 1950s, is just as impressive, with its wood-paneled sheen, peacock and palm murals, plush banquettes and welcome champagne cart.

For lighter fare at lunch, The Surf Club recently unveiled its newest culinary outpost, MARE. The terrace restaurant has views of the pool and ocean, and serves light, coastal Mediterranean cuisine ideal for the balmy weather.

The stylish outdoor space was also designed by Martin Brudnizki Design Studio and features rattan chairs reminiscent of the ones found at the original club, along with colorful tableware handmade in Italy.

Four Seasons Hotels & Resorts / Christian Horan
Le Sireneuse Champagne Bar brings a literal bit of Italy to Miami.

Inside, adjacent to the terrace, is Le Sirenuse Restaurant and Champagne Bar, both of which were crafted from the original club’s ballroom, with restored fireplaces, wooden ceilings and dramatic arches. The lounge, anchored by a stunning green bar made from lava stone shaped into waves, is dotted with palms, couches and chairs in pale, natural shades, grouped into intimate pockets with flattering low lighting.

“The atmosphere is everything,” says Le Sirenuse hotelier Antonio Sersale, who worked with Dirand to channel his Positano hotel’s warmth into the new space. “”Glamour has to have depth. And to have depth it needs to draw people who are tastemakers. What really makes a place is the people.”

View this interactive content on CNN.com

For a glimpse at some of the first tastemakers who understood the allure of The Surf Club, today’s guests only need to step outside of Le Sirenuse and peruse the archival photos from the 1930s and ’40s that grace the walls of Peacock Alley.

“We wanted to share the history of this unique location,” says Dirand. “So many incredible people experienced it. And now The Surf Club still has a strong synergy with the city—not just the travelers but locals as well. It was forgotten for a little while but now everyone has discovered it again. It feels like something that has evolved naturally over the years—it’s timeless.”