The Lyta Group is a luxury real-estate development firm based in New York City.
Our Story
Founded in 1982, The Lyta Group is a privately held real estate firm focused on acquisition, development, and construction; recognized for its significant development projects that respond to community and end-user needs. Headquartered in New York and Miami, we steward each unique project from architectural zoning and feasibility studies all the way through development, construction management, and absorption. Our extensive experience over four decades has solidified The Lyta Group’s (TLG) ability to navigate varied markets across the United States, as well as luxury mixed-use developments in Central and South America, and hospitality developments across Western Europe. We are committed to projects that enhance the environments in which we invest, delivering long-term growth, robust investor returns, and strengthening communities as they continue to evolve.
The Lyta Group prioritizes a truly dynamic and progressive version of the family office in which long-term relationships with partners have been sustained and nurtured for over 40+ years. Despite technological advancements, real estate is still a business driven by people and their collective visions realized through a deeply connected network of collaborators, colleagues, capital partners, and community members. Our longstanding legacy underscores our success in navigating positive and negative cycles across all asset classes, mitigating risk, and thriving even in periods of economic downturn.
Defining Community
How do we contribute to a community as we endeavor to expand and continuously shape it? How is community figuratively underwritten? At TLG, we see many developments which lack overall vision beyond singular assets; all too often neglecting the binding fascia in which communities foster organic growth. Small businesses are crucial to keeping communities strong. An essential facet of our design ethos remains placing the creative vision not only in the hands of our architectural partners, but also underscoring the importance of small business needs within the morphology of the community’s future landscape.