Renaissance in Sarasota

Renaissance

2001 condominium tower · Sarasota County · ZIP 34236

A 2001-built downtown high-rise in the Rosemary District, owner-occupied living steps from Sarasota Bay and the Van Wezel.

Downtown Sarasota high-riseRosemary District walkableOwner-occupied tower
Live Market Pulse
50/100
Momentum
Buyer-Leaning Market (limited data)
The Renaissance is a single 16-story building, so the read is the association's financials and the unit, not a subdivision: confirm the condo dues, reserves, and the building's Florida structural-inspection status before you offer.
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Unlock Off-Market Renaissance

Listings before the portals, true comps, and the renovation and carrying-cost math, before you tour.

Built fromLive Stellar MLS data14 years of closingsLocal renovation analysisUpdated twice daily
LiveMarket PulseStellar MLS
n/a
Median Price
0mo
Supply
n/a
Avg DOM
Soft
Seller Leverage
n/a
Median $/Sqft
n/a
1-Yr Price Change
0now
Distress
Jon Brooks, founder of Momentum Realty
Jon's Current Read

"The Renaissance reads like a downtown condominium, not a single-residential neighborhood: one 2001 tower of 244 residences at 750 N Tamiami Trail, where value tracks the floor, the view, the unit's condition, and above all the association's financial health. With Florida's structural-integrity reserve study (SIRS) and milestone-inspection rules now in force for older multi-story condos, the diligence that matters is the building's reserves, any planned special assessment, and the most recent inspection status. Add the standard downtown checks: flood and wind insurance on a bayfront-adjacent high-rise, and the dues line. The location, walkable to the bayfront, the Van Wezel, and Main Street, is the durable asset; the building's books are what you underwrite."

Jon Brooks, founder, Momentum Realty · Updated June 2026

The 60-Second Overview

The Renaissance is an elegant 16-story condominium of 244 residences at 750 N Tamiami Trail in the Rosemary District of downtown Sarasota, completed in 2001 (rencondo.com association site, 2024; Highrises.com building profile). It sits directly across N Tamiami Trail from the Van Wezel Performing Arts Hall and near Sarasota Bay, with easy walking access to Main Street, Palm Avenue, and the bayfront.

This is an owner-occupied high-rise rather than a transient rental building. The Renaissance I Association is governed by an owner-elected board, the property is professionally managed with a full-time on-site staff, and an active social committee and welcome committee organize resident activities (rencondo.com, 2024). Amenities include a pool and jetted spa, a large club room with full kitchen, a fitness center, a media room, conference and business rooms, guest suites, a 24-hour staffed reception, and gated secured parking.

Floor plans range across one to three bedrooms, so the building spans compact pieds-a-terre and larger full-time residences. The value drivers inside one tower are the floor and exposure, the view, and the unit's condition and updates, not a subdivision or a lot.

The honest read for a 2001 high-rise is the association: confirm the monthly dues, the reserve funding, any current or pending special assessment, and the building's status under Florida's structural-integrity reserve study and milestone-inspection laws. The walkable downtown-bayfront location is the durable asset; the building's financials and inspection record are what you underwrite.

Best for

  • Buyers who want a walkable, maintenance-free downtown Sarasota high-rise lifestyle
  • Owner-occupants who value an amenity-rich, staffed, secured building
  • Buyers steps from the bayfront, the Van Wezel, and Main Street dining
  • Buyers who will read the condo dues, reserves, and inspection status before offering

Probably not for

  • Buyers who want a single-family home with a yard and no shared building
  • Anyone seeking a short-term or nightly vacation-rental investment
  • Buyers unwilling to underwrite reserves and a possible condo special assessment
  • Buyers who want a gated suburban master plan rather than an urban tower

How Renaissance is performing right now

50/100
momentum
Buyer-Leaning Market (limited data)
Seller's marketBalancedBuyer's market
0Months of supplytight
24Median days on marketdays
0 : 0Under contract vs for salestrong demand
0Sold in last 12 monthsliquidity
+0%Asking vs recent sold $/sqftroom to negotiate

Tight supply and strong demand favor sellers here. Homes still take about two months to sell, though, and with asking prices running above recent sales per square foot, a prepared buyer has room on anything overpriced. Reading each home against the real comps, not the headline trend, is where the edge is.

Live from Stellar MLS, as of June 30, 2026. Refreshed twice daily. Months of supply, days on market, and the contract-to-listing ratio are computed from current Renaissance listings and the trailing twelve months of closed sales.

8.6A- score
Momentum intelligence
Momentum buy score

Our proprietary read on how a home in Renaissance buys, holds, and resells. See the five factors.

Listing locations from Stellar MLS; lot type inferred from listing descriptions. Destination pins are approximate. Map data © OpenStreetMap, tiles © CARTO. Flood, school, and commute overlays are on the roadmap.

The Club & Membership

15-Second Take
  • Owner-occupied tower with a 24-hour staffed reception
  • Pool and jetted spa plus a fitness center
  • Club room with full kitchen and a media room
  • Conference and business rooms plus guest suites
  • Gated secured parking and active social committee

The Renaissance is a single 2001 condominium tower of 244 residences rather than a multi-neighborhood community, so the lifestyle is urban high-rise living in the Rosemary District of downtown Sarasota. The building is owner-occupied and amenity-rich, with a pool and jetted spa, a club room with full kitchen, a fitness center, a media room, conference and business rooms, guest suites, a 24-hour staffed reception, and gated secured parking, and an active social committee. The setting, directly across from the Van Wezel and steps from the bayfront and Main Street, is the durable asset; confirm the association's dues, reserves, and inspection status before you buy.

The takeaway

The Renaissance trades a yard for a walkable downtown-bayfront life, with the Van Wezel across the street, Main Street a short walk, and St Armands, SRQ airport, and I-75 a short drive.

Van Wezel Performing Arts Hall~2 min · directly across the street
Sarasota bayfront and The Bay park~3 to 5 min · waterfront and trails
Main Street and Palm Avenue~5 min · downtown dining and shops
St Armands Circle and Lido Key~10 to 15 min · via the Ringling Bridge
Interstate 75~15 to 20 min · regional access east
Sarasota Bradenton Intl Airport (SRQ)~10 to 15 min · north of downtown
Downtown Sarasota core and arts districtwalkable · Rosemary District setting

Distances and times are approximate and vary with traffic, parking, and your exact unit. Confirm your real commute at your real departure time.

Nearby Communities

Explore more neighborhoods near Renaissance with Momentum Realty’s local guides.

BSThe BLVD SarasotaSarasota, FL · 0.1 miOPOne Park SarasotaSarasota, FL · 0.3 miBSBayso SarasotaSarasota, FL · 0.4 miRCThe Ritz-Carlton Residences,Sarasota BaySarasota, FL · 0.4 miEVEvolutionSarasota, FL · 0.5 miVBVilla BalladaSarasota, FL · 0.5 miASAmaraon Sarasota BaySarasota, FL · 0.5 miAQAquaSarasota, FL · 0.6 miSSThe Strandof SarasotaSarasota, FL · 0.6 mi

Browse all Florida neighborhood guides →

Carrying cost · the no-CDD edge

No CDD bond means thousands less per year than newer master plans.

Typical CDD community~$2,500/yr
Renaissance (no CDD)$0/yr

Roughly $25,000 saved over 10 years in carrying cost, before resale.

Illustrative. NE Florida CDD assessments commonly run $1,500-$3,500+/yr and vary by community; verify per property.

Schools

15-Second Take
  • Sarasota County Public Schools
  • Verify the zoned schools by address
  • Magnet and choice options may be available
  • Confirm current ratings before relying on them
  • Private and parochial options nearby

Renaissance is served by Sarasota County Public Schools. Assignment is by address and can change, so confirm the exact zoned elementary, middle, and high schools for any specific home, plus any magnet or choice options. Treat published ratings as a starting point, not the full story.

Public

Sarasota County Public Schools (verify by address)

Verifyrating
By address

Confirm zoned elementary, middle, and high

Verifyrating
Choice

Magnet and choice options may apply

Verifyrating

Buying with schools in mind? We can confirm the exact zoned schools for any Renaissance address.

The takeaway

What is actually shaping value around the Renaissance: Florida's condo structural-inspection and reserve rules for older high-rises, the Sarasota Bay Park and Van Wezel waterfront redevelopment across the street, and a downtown Sarasota condo pipeline that is reshaping supply. Each item is sourced and linked.

Recent Developments in Renaissance

Our read on what is being built around Renaissance, scored for direction, significance, and how close the effect lands. The full sourced timeline follows below.

Net OutlookBullishThe walkable bayfront location and the maturing Bay Park draw point to durable long-run demand, with the watch items being how Florida's reserve and inspection rules affect older-building carrying costs and how much new downtown supply arrives.

Florida SIRS and milestone inspection rules for older condos

2025
NeutralMajor impact
SignificanceRadius: Building

Reserve studies and inspections required for older multi-story condos can raise reserve funding and the risk of special assessments, so the building's books are core diligence.

Sarasota Bay Park and Van Wezel waterfront redevelopment

2025-2026
BullishMajor impact
SignificanceRadius: Area

The Bay park build-out and the performing-arts-center planning directly across the street strengthen the walkable bayfront amenity base that underpins downtown condo demand.

Downtown Sarasota condo supply pipeline

2025
NeutralNotable impact
SignificanceRadius: Area

Hundreds of new downtown residences are under construction or in review, which broadens choice and can soften pricing for older inventory while testing view corridors.

Walkable Rosemary District and bayfront location

Ongoing
BullishNotable impact
SignificanceRadius: Community

Steps to the Van Wezel, the bayfront, and Main Street is the durable asset that supports demand for a well-run building here.

Flood and wind insurance on a bayfront-adjacent tower

Ongoing
NeutralNotable impact
SignificanceRadius: Building

Master-policy and unit insurance costs are part of carrying cost downtown, so confirm coverage and any HO6 requirement per unit.

Direction, significance, and effect-radius ratings are Momentum's proprietary, qualitative read of the sourced items below, not investment advice or a prediction for any specific home.

Development, infrastructure, retail, and school activity affecting Renaissance, tracked by our team and summarized from public reporting and official sources, with links to the original coverage. Last updated June 2026.

Showing the latest, scroll for all updates ↓

  1. June 2025
    Regulation

    Florida updates condo SIRS and reserve law with HB 913

    Governor DeSantis signed HB 913 on June 23, 2025, refining the structural-integrity reserve study rules for condos three habitable stories or taller, including baseline funding plans and flexibility to align a SIRS with a milestone inspection by the end of 2026. Why it matters: For a 2001 high-rise like the Renaissance, the SIRS and inspection status drive reserve funding and the odds of a special assessment, making the association books central to diligence. Source

  2. October 2025
    Development

    Sarasota advances Phase 3 of The Bay waterfront park

    The Sarasota City Commission approved funding to advance Phase 3 of The Bay park, the 53-acre waterfront redevelopment around the Van Wezel directly across from the Renaissance, with design work moving ahead in late 2025. Why it matters: A maturing bayfront park steps from the building strengthens the walkable-amenity case that supports downtown condo demand over time. Source

  3. December 2025
    Market

    Thousands of new residences planned for downtown Sarasota

    Reporting in late 2025 described hundreds of downtown Sarasota residences under construction and many more in the city's review pipeline, signaling a multi-year expansion of urban condo and apartment supply. Why it matters: A larger downtown pipeline broadens buyer choice and can pressure pricing on older inventory, raising the value of a well-run building and a protected view. Source

Development alerts for RenaissanceGet a short monthly email when something new is approved, funded, or opens near Renaissance.

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Summaries reflect public reporting and official sources linked above as of the dates shown. Project details, timelines, and approvals can change. Commentary on potential market effects is general observation, not investment advice or a prediction for any specific property. For the freshest items across the whole region, see This Week in Northeast Florida.

If we were buying in Renaissance, this is the order of operations we would run, and the one we run for our clients.

1

Pull the association financials first. In a 2001 high-rise the reserves, the budget, and any pending special assessment matter more than the unit's finishes.

2

Confirm the Florida inspection status. Ask for the building's structural-integrity reserve study (SIRS) and milestone-inspection records, now required for older multi-story condos.

3

Read the dues and what they include. Downtown high-rise dues cover staffing, amenities, water, and insurance lines, so verify the exact monthly figure and coverage for the unit.

4

Quote flood and wind insurance early. On a bayfront-adjacent tower, confirm the master policy and any unit-owner HO6 requirement for the specific residence.

5

Underwrite floor, view, and condition, and cross-shop a same-corridor peer such as Broadway Promenade on dues, reserves, and amenities.

Best Buy
A well-located floor with a strong view in a building with healthy reserves
Biggest Risk
A pending or future special assessment from reserve or inspection shortfalls
Best Lot
Floor and exposure, the high-rise version of a lot, drive view and value
Smart Timing
Confirm reserves, dues, and inspection status before you make an offer
The takeaway

On mobile, tap any heading below to open it. This is the home by home, lot by lot, club and renovation detail, organized so you can jump straight to what matters to you.

Community Details at a Glance

The Renaissance is a single 2001 condominium tower of 244 residences rather than a multi-neighborhood community, so the lifestyle is urban high-rise living in the Rosemary District of downtown Sarasota. The building is owner-occupied and amenity-rich, with a pool and jetted spa, a club room with full kitchen, a fitness center, a media room, conference and business rooms, guest suites, a 24-hour staffed reception, and gated secured parking, and an active social committee. The setting, directly across from the Van Wezel and steps from the bayfront and Main Street, is the durable asset; confirm the association's dues, reserves, and inspection status before you buy.

The takeaway

Three honest price bands. Condition and lot, not the square footage alone, decide where a home lands.

The Entry Floor

A compact one-bedroom or a lower-floor unit, the affordable way into a staffed, amenity-rich downtown high-rise.

Lowest entry
The Updated View

A renovated mid-rise unit with a strong exposure, the heart of the building's resale market where floor and view drive value.

Most inventory
The Top

A larger high-floor residence with the best views and updates, the units that hold value best in a well-run tower.

Strongest resale

Approximate 2026 resale bands from third-party listing data and public records, not NEFAR statistics. Confirm pricing for a specific home.

The Entry Floor
A compact one-bedroom or a lower-floor unit, the affordable way into a staffed, amenity-rich downtown high-rise.
The Updated View
A renovated mid-rise unit with a strong exposure, the heart of the building's resale market where floor and view drive value.
The Top
A larger high-floor residence with the best views and updates, the units that hold value best in a well-run tower.

Approximate 2026 resale bands from third-party listing data and public records, not NEFAR statistics. Confirm pricing for a specific home.

15-Second Take
  • Renovation math decides the deal
  • Golf and lake lots resell strongest
  • Roof and HVAC age drive the insurance quote
  • Interior lots are where buyers overpay
Jon Brooks, Momentum Realty
Operator Note

Most buyers overpay on interior lots in the back half of the community. A sharp renovation can distract you, but the weaker resale position follows the lot, not the finishes. We read the homesite before the kitchen.

Location within downtown SarasotaStrong
Building amenities and staffingPositive
Association reserves and SIRS statusVerify per association
Unit condition and updatesVerify per unit
Flood and wind insurance readConfirm per unit

Momentum analysis based on the no-CDD structure, central location, built-out lot scarcity, the funded club plan, and the all-resale 1990s housing stock. Not a guarantee of future value.

Jon Brooks, Momentum Realty
Operator Note

The strongest value pocket is usually a renovated golf or lake home priced just under the next tier up. Buyers chasing the single biggest estate often pay estate prices for what is really a renovation project.

5 Mistakes Buyers Make in Renaissance

15-Second Take
  • Calling the listing agent (who works for the seller)
  • Misjudging the renovation budget
  • Overpaying for an interior lot
  • Ignoring the optional club cost
  • Skipping the roof, HVAC, and systems check

In an all-resale, seven-figure, renovation-driven market, the same five mistakes cost buyers the most. Every one is avoidable with the right preparation before you tour.

The Renaissance is one 2001 tower, so the deal is won or lost on the association's reserves, the dues, the inspection status, and the unit's floor and view.

Jon Brooks · Founder, Momentum Realty
7.4B+ · Buy Score
Resale Strength7.4/10
Renovation Risk4.8/10
Location Efficiency8.8/10
Long-Term Defensibility7.2/10
Carrying Cost Advantage6.0/10

Momentum Intelligence Scores are our proprietary, qualitative assessment based on the analysis on this page, on a 0 to 10 scale. They are a framework for comparing communities, not a guarantee of future value or advice on a specific home.

Why our read on Renaissance is different.

Most pages on this community are an automated estimate wrapped in stock copy. This one is built from the live Stellar MLS feed, fourteen years of closed sales, and a renovation-by-renovation read of what actually moves value here, lot by lot. No Zestimate, no guesswork.

Live Stellar MLS feed14 years of closed salesRenovation-premium analysisLot-by-lot, no automated estimates
Jon Brooks, founder of Momentum Realty. A housing economist with a background in real estate investment banking at Deutsche Bank and consulting at Ernst & Young, who has built and analyzed Northeast Florida real estate from the ground up.

Which Lots & Views Hold Value Best

Where the value actually sits. Each home is shaded by its price per square foot (a value read, not just a price) and ringed by lot type, so you can see at a glance which pockets carry a real, durable premium and where a renovation play makes sense.

Value ($/sqft)
$261 value$401 premium
Lake / waterPreserveInterior

Fill = price per square foot; ring = lot type, inferred from listing descriptions. Sold homes are shown by realized $/sqft (lot type not always recorded). Asking and recent-sold figures from Stellar MLS; for orientation, not an appraisal.

15-Second Take
  • In a tower, the floor and exposure are the lot
  • Higher floors and water-facing views hold value best
  • Confirm the view will not be blocked by future towers
  • Read the unit's updates against the building's comps
  • The location, not the unit, is the durable asset

In a high-rise like the Renaissance, the floor and the exposure are the equivalent of a lot: the part of your money the market protects. Higher floors and water-facing or open views hold value better than low, blocked exposures, and downtown Sarasota has significant new construction planned, so confirm whether a future tower could affect the view. The unit can be renovated; the floor, the view, and the building's location cannot. Read the exposure and the association's books first, then price the unit's condition against the building's comps.

Renaissance in 15 seconds.

Best forBuyers who want a walkable, maintenance-free downtown Sarasota high-rise near the bayfront.
Biggest advantageA 2001 amenity-rich, staffed tower steps from the Van Wezel, the bayfront, and Main Street.
Biggest riskReserve funding and a possible special assessment under Florida's condo inspection laws.
Sweet spotA strong floor and view in a building with healthy reserves and clear inspection status.
Avoid ifYou want a single-family home or a short-term rental play rather than an owner-occupied tower.

Condo Dues, Reserves & Inspections

15-Second Take
  • You pay monthly condo dues, not a yard-and-street HOA
  • Confirm the exact dues figure for the specific unit
  • Ask for the reserve study and the SIRS status
  • Check for any current or pending special assessment
  • Verify the master insurance policy and HO6 requirement

The Renaissance is a condominium, so you pay monthly association dues rather than a typical neighborhood HOA. Dues fund building staffing, amenities, and shared services; confirm the exact monthly figure for the specific unit, since it varies by residence size and the current budget.

Association dues at a downtown high-rise typically cover the 24-hour staffed reception, building amenities, common-area maintenance and insurance, water, sewer, and trash, with cable and internet often bundled (downtownsarasota.com and Apartments.com listing summaries; confirm current inclusions per the association budget). Reserves and any special assessment are the lines to verify before you buy.

The takeaway

Selling here is won on condition and view, not the Zestimate. The right number comes from closed comps matched to your renovation level and lot.

Momentum listings (YTD)
97.98%
Sold-to-list ratio across our market for our agents, sellers keeping more of their price.
Market average (YTD)
96.73%
The broader metro average sold-to-list ratio over the same period.
Momentum days on market
64 days
Median days on market for our listings, faster sales mean less carrying cost and stronger leverage.
Market days on market
72 days
The broader metro median over the same period.

Sold-to-list and days-on-market figures reflect Momentum Realty listings versus our market average, year to date. Your home's result depends on pricing, condition, lot, view, and preparation.

In Renaissance, condition and view decide your number

Because buyers here are weighing your home against renovated comps and cross-shopping Broadway Promenade, a home priced to the community average instead of its true condition and view either leaves money on the table or sits. A renovated kitchen, newer roof and HVAC, and a golf or lake view all deserve to show up in your price, and a buyer pool reading renovation math needs to be shown why your home is worth it. We build that case with real comps and a pricing strategy for the current market.

What is your Renaissance home worth?

Get a no-obligation home value based on real comparable sales in Renaissance matched to your condition, lot, and view, not an automated guess. Tell us about your home and we will personally prepare your numbers and a pricing strategy. No obligation, no spam.

See homes for sale in Renaissance on the map →
Or get your Renaissance home value & selling guide →

Real comps, not a Zestimate.

Price History: What Homes Here Have Actually Sold For

Median sale prices in Renaissance year by year since 2012, from closed MLS sales. A long track record beats a single estimate, showing what this community has really done through rate cycles rather than what a model predicts.

The real cost & risk here

Before the list price, the Florida math the portals skip. These are Sarasota County typicals — your exact home, flood zone, and insurance quote will vary, so verify each before you offer.

$1,609/mo
Sarasota County typical true cost to own
$110/mo
Sarasota County typical home insurance
No CDD
No community development district bond

County typicals from Momentum’s Florida housing data (Zillow & Realtor.com aggregates, Census, FRED), updated monthly; insurance modeled. Flood zone is property-specific — always confirm via FEMA.

Renaissance Market Scorecard

Strong seller's market

Renaissance is currently a strong seller's market. About 1.8 months of supply, a median asking price of $1,019,500, and homes go under contract in about 58 days.

1.8
Months supply
$1,019,500
Median list
$847,500
Median sold
$313
Per sqft
58
Days on mkt
6/8/41
Active/Pend/Sold

Typical home value in the 32224 ZIP is $456,759, about 13.7% above the Florida norm (Zillow Home Value Index).

Go deeper: ZIP market scorecard · county scorecard · true cost calculator · affordability calculator.

Live data: Stellar MLS, refreshed twice daily. Typical value: Zillow Research. Market metrics only; these describe homes for sale and recent sales, not residents.

Frequently Asked Questions

Where is the Renaissance condominium in Sarasota?
The Renaissance is at 750 N Tamiami Trail in the Rosemary District of downtown Sarasota, ZIP 34236, directly across from the Van Wezel Performing Arts Hall and near Sarasota Bay.
When was the Renaissance built?
The Renaissance was completed in 2001. It is a 16-story condominium tower with 244 residences (rencondo.com association site; Highrises.com building profile).
How many units and floors does the Renaissance have?
It is a 16-story building with 244 residences, with floor plans spanning one to three bedrooms across a range of sizes. Confirm the exact size and layout for any specific unit.
Is the Renaissance an owner-occupied building or a vacation rental?
It is an owner-occupied condominium with an owner-elected board, full-time on-site staff, and active social and welcome committees, not a transient nightly-rental building (rencondo.com, 2024).
What amenities does the Renaissance have?
Amenities include a pool and jetted spa, a large club room with full kitchen, a fitness center, a media room, conference and business rooms, guest suites, a 24-hour staffed reception, and gated secured parking.
What do the condo dues at the Renaissance cover?
Downtown high-rise dues typically cover the staffed reception, amenities, common-area maintenance and insurance, water, sewer, and trash, often with cable and internet bundled. Confirm the exact dues and inclusions per the association budget for the specific unit.
What is a SIRS and why does it matter here?
A structural-integrity reserve study (SIRS) is a Florida-required reserve study for condo and co-op buildings three habitable stories or taller, with deadlines that applied to owner-controlled associations existing on or before July 1, 2022. For a 2001 high-rise, the SIRS and any milestone inspection drive reserve funding and the risk of a special assessment, so request them in diligence.
Could there be a special assessment at the Renaissance?
Any older Florida condo can face a special assessment if a reserve study or inspection finds underfunding for major structural items. Always confirm the building's current reserves and any pending assessment before you buy; this is not specific to the Renaissance and must be verified per the association.
Is the Renaissance in a flood zone?
It sits in downtown Sarasota near the bayfront, so flood and wind exposure must be checked at the address. Run the FEMA flood zone and confirm the building's master insurance and any unit-owner HO6 requirement during diligence.
What is within walking distance of the Renaissance?
The Van Wezel Performing Arts Hall is directly across the street, with the Sarasota bayfront, Main Street, and Palm Avenue dining, shopping, and theaters within an easy walk.
What schools serve the Renaissance?
The building is served by Sarasota County Schools. Assignment is by address and can change, so confirm the zoned elementary, middle, and high schools for the specific unit.
How far is the Renaissance from St Armands and Lido Key?
St Armands Circle and Lido Key beach are a short drive west across the Ringling Bridge, with drive times that vary by traffic. Confirm your real route and timing.
How far is the Renaissance from SRQ airport and I-75?
Sarasota Bradenton International Airport (SRQ) and Interstate 75 are both a short drive from downtown, with times that vary by traffic and your exact departure. Confirm the route for your needs.
Is the Renaissance a good investment?
Its walkable downtown-bayfront location supports long-run demand, but as with any older high-rise the outcome depends on the association's reserves, dues, and inspection status, plus insurance. This is not a guarantee of future value; underwrite the building's books.
Who is the best real estate agent for Renaissance?
The best agent for Renaissance is one who actively works Sarasota and knows the community's pricing, HOA and CDD details, and current inventory. Tell us what you're looking for in the form on this page and Momentum Realty will match you with a local specialist for Renaissance.
How do I find a top Sarasota real estate agent who knows Renaissance?
Share a few details in the form on this page. Momentum Realty has 280+ agents and more than $3.5B in closed sales, and we'll connect you with one who knows Renaissance and the wider Sarasota area.
Can Momentum Realty connect me with an agent for Renaissance?
Yes. Use the form on this page and we'll introduce you to a local specialist who can guide your Renaissance purchase or sale - no call center and no pressure.
Buyers who want a walkable, maintenance-free downtown Sarasota high-riseExcellent fit
Owner-occupants who value an amenity-rich, staffed, secured buildingExcellent fit
Buyers who want to live steps from the bayfront, the Van Wezel, and Main StreetExcellent fit
Buyers who will read the dues, reserves, and inspection status before offeringExcellent fit
Buyers comfortable underwriting condo insurance on a bayfront-adjacent towerExcellent fit
Buyers who want a single-family home with a yard and no shared buildingProbably not
Anyone seeking a short-term or nightly vacation-rental investmentProbably not
Buyers unwilling to underwrite reserves and a possible special assessmentProbably not
Buyers who want a gated suburban master plan rather than an urban towerProbably not
Buyers who need to avoid all flood and wind insurance considerationsProbably not

Get the inside read on Renaissance

Whether you are buying a renovation project, comparing the lots and views, weighing the optional club, or selling your Renaissance home, tell us what you need. Every inquiry comes straight to us. We represent you, not the seller, and what your agent is paid is negotiable and set in a written buyer agreement up front. No obligation, no spam, no high-pressure follow-up.

We respond personally, usually the same day.

You are all set.

A Momentum Realty Renaissance specialist will reach out personally, usually the same day.

Thinking about hiring an agent here? How to find the best real estate agent in Renaissance - what to look for, questions to ask, and your local expert.
Renaissance median home price history from 2012 to 2026, chart by Momentum Realty
Median sale price in Renaissance, Florida by year (2012 to 2026). Source: Momentum Realty.
Stellar MLS logoMLS GRID logo
Photography on this page is sourced from active and recently sold MLS listings in this community and remains the property of the listing brokerage and/or photographer. Listings courtesy of Stellar MLS as distributed by MLS GRID. IDX information is provided exclusively for consumers' personal, non-commercial use and may not be used for any purpose other than to identify prospective properties consumers may be interested in purchasing; deemed reliable but not guaranteed by MLS GRID.

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