LAKE WORTH BEACH, FL (Boca Post) (Copyright © 2026) — Construction is well underway on a new multi-family project in Lake Worth Beach that’s being pitched as a mix of luxury apartments and workforce housing, with the Lake Worth Beach Community Redevelopment Agency supporting the development through an infrastructure grant.
The project, called Lake Worth Station, is unfolding at 906 North G Street in Lake Worth Beach, 33460, on a roughly 1.44-acre parcel in Palm Beach County. Plans call for a five-story building with 91 apartments and on-site amenities, including a dog park, a children’s playground, and bike racks.

The workforce component is a significant slice of the unit mix. Of the 91 planned apartments, 39 are designated as workforce housing. Palm Beach County defines workforce housing as housing reserved for tenants earning 60 to 140 percent of the area median income. County records report that as of 2024, the area median income was $104,000.
Units are planned in a range of sizes, from studios up to three-bedroom apartments. Floor plans are listed at 507 to 1,230 square feet.
Bridge Holding LLC is the developer, according to project information released with the development details. The firm assembled the property for $1.2 million in 2021.
Plans for the project have changed since earlier versions were floated. Initial plans called for 81 apartments, with layouts ranging from one-bedroom to two-bedroom units. The updated plan expands the unit count and broadens the mix to studio through three-bedroom layouts, a change described as aimed at meeting market demand.
The workforce housing piece is also being handled outside one of the state’s most talked-about housing tools. Bridge Holding LLC is not seeking incentives under Florida’s Live Local Act for this project. Instead, the development is taking on an obligation connected to GL Homes to provide workforce housing in the area, according to the project description.
T&G Constructor is listed as the general contractor. The building was designed by Martin Architectural Group.
For Lake Worth Beach residents, the near-term impact is straightforward: another active construction site in the North G Street corridor and a new block of apartments moving toward delivery. Longer term, the project adds both market-rate units and income-restricted workforce units that, by definition, are aimed at working households that often get squeezed between traditional “affordable housing” thresholds and rising rents.
The local public role runs through the Lake Worth Beach Community Redevelopment Agency, which is backing the project with an infrastructure grant. The CRA also uses commercial grant programs as part of its broader redevelopment work. Residents and business owners looking for more information on those programs are directed to contact the Lake Worth Beach CRA office or visit its website.

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