SPOT Market, a neighborhood market concept from Planta Baja Market Group, is headed to Flagler Village, according to the operator's Instagram account. The 4,000-square-foot space will occupy the ground floor of The Era, a mixed-use development on South Andrews Avenue — adding a market-format retail anchor to one of Fort Lauderdale's more active development corridors. No opening date has been announced publicly.
Per the Instagram post, Planta Baja Market Group describes SPOT Market as a concept contributing to the neighborhood's mix of dining, shopping, and lifestyle retail. The 4,000-square-foot footprint suggests a multi-category program rather than a single-tenant grocery, though the operator has not released details about vendor mix, service model, or build-out timeline through any public channel.
The Era sits on South Andrews Avenue, which has become Flagler Village's primary commercial spine as the district has built out. Ground-floor retail activation is a recurring feature of the neighborhood's mixed-use development pattern — buildings that pair street-level commercial tenants with the residential density they generate above. SPOT Market's position at The Era's base follows that logic directly.
Flagler Village, immediately north of downtown Fort Lauderdale, has been among the city's more consequential development corridors over the past decade. Residential towers and mid-rise mixed-use projects have arrived in sequence through the district, generating the kind of density that draws neighborhood-scale commercial tenants in turn. South Andrews Avenue, as the district's central axis, has absorbed a consistent run of new retail and food-and-beverage operators alongside that residential pipeline.
A neighborhood market at this scale — 4,000 square feet on a dense urban ground floor — functions differently depending on whether it skews toward specialty grocery, a multi-vendor food market, or broader lifestyle retail. How Planta Baja Market Group resolves that question will determine SPOT Market's role in The Era's commercial program and its relationship to the surrounding block.
With an opening timeline still unconfirmed, SPOT Market remains a project to track rather than a dated debut. The operator's social channels will likely carry the next details as the build-out advances. South Andrews Avenue's development trajectory has not shown signs of slowing — what arrives in SPOT Market's immediate vicinity between now and opening will shape the street-level context for its launch.


