A 2-bed, 2-bath new-construction loft inside downtown Orlando's dining and culture corridor — one of the strongest cash-flow plays at this price point in the city.

The Citrine is a brand-new downtown Orlando loft project built around the way professionals actually want to live downtown: open floor plans, double-height ceilings, oversized windows, walkable everything, and a corporate-rental profile that holds up year-round.
This is downtown's most efficient unit class for an investor: a 2-bed, 2-bath that works as a primary residence, an executive corporate rental, or a higher-end short-term play in the right block.
Downtown Orlando has been adding inventory carefully, with hard limits on what new construction can come to market. The result: stable rents, strong demand from finance/healthcare professionals at Amway Center–adjacent firms, and a tenant pool that includes Magic season ticket holders, conference attendees and Lake Eola downsizers.
Walk to Lake Eola Park, Amway Center, Dr. Phillips Performing Arts, and the Church Street Station dining row — the kind of "live the city" pitch that gets premium rent.
The efficient downtown investor unit — two leases at the same address.
Coffee, groceries, gym, performing arts — all on foot.
Fits the 30-day-plus executive market on Amway / Lake Eola.
Downtown loft inventory is intentionally capped — supports rent stability.
Free downtown circulator + commuter rail at the doorstep.
Quartz, stainless, oversized windows, in-unit laundry.
For international buyers: Passport, visa (if applicable), last three months of bank statements, employment references, and verification of income from your home country.
StressFree: We handle all the legal, financial, reservation, negotiation, return analysis and property management processes for you.
Investment thesis
Downtown Orlando is one of Central Florida's only truly walkable cores — the rest is car-based.
Amway Center + Dr. Phillips Performing Arts deliver year-round demand for premium short-stays.
Direct connections to Volusia, Seminole and Osceola counties — the rental tenant pool is bigger than it looks.