Renderings revealed for proposed 21-story apartment tower in St. Pete

rendering of 21 story building with blue sky and white clouds.
Rendering courtesy of Stadler Development and Baker Barrios Architects.

John and Christopher of Stadler Development, a luxury real estate firm based in St. Pete, announced plans to build a 21-story apartment building at 446 4th St S, across from USF St. Pete.

Stadler purchased the 800 block on Central and was brought in Related as a partner to develop Camden Central (formerly The Icon), one of downtown St. Pete’s premier high-rises. While primarily operating out of St. Pete and Tampa, Stadler Development’s award-winning work appears all around Southern Florida.

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Designed by Baker Barrios Architects, the new building at 446 4th St. S. will contain 213 units, 2,250 sq ft of ground-floor retail space, and a 230-space screened parking garage (comprising the first six floors). The seventh floor will feature an amenity space and an outdoor deck, while the twenty-first floor will feature a rooftop pool and additional amenity space. 

street corner with traffic lights and a building
Rendering courtesy of Stadler Developments and Baker Barrios Architects.

Integrating the needs of key stakeholders

“This project will serve the needs of the key stakeholders of the Innovation District,” states Christopher Stadler, “including the hospitals and the University of South Florida in St. Pete.”

Stadler Development strategizes according to a “first-mover advantage” (being the first to introduce a development). That strategy extends beyond the Innovation District. John Stadler, along with John Barkett of Barkett Realty, spearheaded a public-private partnership to develop Trail’s Crossing Park under I-275, activating an underutilized area under the interstate and transforming it into a public park with a safe crossing to the Pinellas Trail.

Trail’s Crossing is expected to break ground later in 2025.

Stadler’s portfolio demonstrates an effort to integrate core community aspects with its developments. The new St. Pete project is no exception; it combines multi-family, retail, hospitality, office, and student housing.

rendering of a highway overpass with colorful support beams.
Concept of Trail’s Crossing courtesy of Baker Barrios Architects.

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