The Long Island is exactly what its name suggests: a private island residence set within the crystalline waters of the Florida Keys, where a single property commands its own stretch of land surrounded by open sea. Arrival here reshapes your sense of proportion. The house rises from the waterfront with walls of glass and clean modern lines, its architecture designed to dissolve the boundary between interior living and the endless horizon beyond. This is not a resort, not a hotel, but a home built for the kind of solitude that only true isolation can provide.
The residence accommodates up to sixteen guests across multiple bedrooms, each finished with the kind of understated coastal sophistication that lets the setting do the work. Floor-to-ceiling windows pull the turquoise shallows into every room. Common spaces are generous and open, flowing from living areas to expansive outdoor decks where the water is never more than a few steps away. A private pool anchors the outdoor living experience, flanked by lounge areas that look out across the Atlantic. The kitchen is fully equipped for groups inclined to cook together, and the scale of the property means that even a full house feels spacious and unhurried. A private dock extends from the island, offering direct water access for boats, kayaks, and the kind of spontaneous afternoon swims that define Keys living.
The surrounding waters of the Florida Keys are among the most celebrated in the Americas. Coral reefs, sandbars, and mangrove channels sit within easy reach by boat, and the fishing here draws enthusiasts from around the world. Key West lies to the south with its layered history, its galleries, and its restaurants built around the daily catch. Marathon and Islamorada offer their own quieter rhythms, with roadside seafood joints and charter operations that have been running for generations. But the real draw of The Long Island is the permission it grants to stay put, to let the tides set the schedule rather than an itinerary.
What lingers after a stay here is not any single moment but the cumulative effect of days spent at the edge of the continent, where the light shifts from silver to gold across water so shallow you can see the bottom for hundreds of feet. The Long Island offers something increasingly rare in luxury travel: genuine privacy, real space, and the kind of quiet that comes only when the nearest neighbor is the ocean itself.