Contributor Content

How Super Buddha and SuperSure Transformed Miami’s Wells Fargo Center Into a New Model for Workplace Design

Super Buddha 1.
SPACE305

Miami’s skyline tells the story of a city in motion. Over the past decade, Miami has become a magnet for technology firms, finance groups and next-generation entrepreneurs seeking a different rhythm of life. What began as a lifestyle-driven migration has matured into something more profound: a reimagining of what the modern workplace should feel like. As companies settle into Miami’s expanding business districts, they are exploring work environments that support health, creativity and psychological balance.

This shift reflects a broader cultural evolution. Workplaces across the country have been forced to adapt to new expectations around wellbeing, but Miami’s identity gives the movement a distinct kind of texture. The city’s connection to sunlight, color and nature makes it fertile ground for a new philosophy of workplace design, one that treats emotional clarity and environmental coherence as essential components of productivity.

SuperSure, an AI-driven insurance technology firm, has embraced this philosophy at the Wells Fargo Center. Their new 25,000-square-foot penthouse headquarters reflects the city’s ambition to build workspaces that nourish rather than exhaust. Instead of an office defined by hardware and tasks, the environment functions as a calm but energetic ecosystem that encourages focus and ease.

Super Buddha 3
Photo Credit: SPACE305

To create this atmosphere, SuperSure collaborated with the anonymous artist known as Super Buddha. His aesthetic practice blends Asian symbolism, color psychology, and spatial sequencing to create environments that regulate mood. The result is a corporate floor that feels unusually alive. Columns painted in gradients of yellow, red, and bronze evoke stability and uplift. Murals layered with short affirmations guide employees toward accountability and positivity without interruption.

Each room is composed with both emotional and aesthetic intention. A meditation suite invites mental reset, while other areas use tonal shifts to promote conversation, collaboration, or quiet concentration. The design reflects the belief that wellness is no longer a retreat located outside the office, but a practice built into its architecture.

Super Buddha 1.
Photo Credit: SPACE305

For Miami, this project represents more than one company’s design choice. It signals a new direction for the city’s evolving corporate culture. As more firms migrate south seeking clarity, lifestyle and creative energy, they are finding that Miami offers the physical and emotional conditions to build workplaces differently.

The Wells Fargo Center installation stands as early evidence. It suggests that Miami’s future as a business capital may be defined not just by ambition, but by the environments that support it.

Members of the editorial and news staff of miamiherald.com were not involved with the creation of this content. All contributor content is reviewed by miamiherald.com staff.

Follow More of Our Reporting on

Matthew Kayser
Contributor
Matthew Kayser is a professional writer, teacher, and musician. Born and raised on New York’s Long Island, he has since fallen in love with baseball, history, and rock n’ roll. The apples of his eye, however, are his amazing wife and four kids.
Get unlimited digital access
#ReadLocal

Try 1 month for $1

CLAIM OFFER