Inside Rob Bowen’s Vision for the New Neptune Flood Headquarters
Some projects start with a brief.
The best ones start with trust.
We started our new project based on this level of trust. The new Neptune Flood Headquarters in St. Petersburg’s Warehouse Arts District is the result of years of collaboration, shared language, and earned confidence between designer and client. This isn’t a one-off commission. It’s the next chapter in a long-standing creative partnership.
Commercial Design Trust Built Over Time, not Overnight
Rob’s relationship with entrepreneur and investor Trevor Burgess goes back years, to the early days of designing C1 Bank locations. Those projects weren’t just about brand rollouts or office layouts; they were about learning how Burgess thinks, moves, and builds.
That history matters. Because when a client trusts you completely, they ask you to lead, not just decorate.
And that’s exactly what happened here.
A 25,000-Square-Foot Statement in the Warehouse Arts District
Rising at 2133 2nd Avenue South, directly across from 3 Daughters Brewing, the new Neptune Flood headquarters is a 25,000-square-foot, three-story Class A office building.
This building is unapologetically industrial and engineered for Florida reality:
- Dark masonry exterior.
- Arched windows with architectural weight.
- Category 5 hurricane–rated construction.
- Built to perform, not just impress.
- Solar-ready planning.
- One of the largest backup generators in Pinellas County
It’s a structure that reflects Neptune Flood itself: resilient, modern, and serious about what it does.
Commercial Interior Design That Supports How People Actually Work
The headquarters includes:
- Private offices and collaborative workspaces.
- Conference and strategy rooms.
- Wellness-driven amenities like a two-story gym, yoga studio, sauna, and even a pickleball court.
- Terraces and breathing room that recognize productivity doesn’t come from compression.
Rob Bowen Design, in collaboration with T2 The SF, approached the interiors the same way they approach residential work: understand the people first, then design environments that support how they think, move, and recharge.
This is workplace design that understands performance is human.

Color inspiration for the commercial interior design for the project.
More Than an Office—A Multi-Entity Ecosystem
While Neptune Flood anchors the building, the project was designed to house multiple ventures under one cohesive vision. The headquarters will also include:
- Trevor Burgess’ family office
- TRB Development warehouse operations
- Offices for the Florida Smash Major League Pickleball team
- Bird Street Productions, Burgess’ documentary film company
Bringing these entities together requires more than spatial planning. It requires a design language flexible enough to support distinct functions while still feeling intentional and unified.
That’s where Rob Bowen Design thrives.
Designing for Power, Pace, and Purpose
This project isn’t about trendy office amenities or surface-level polish. It’s about creating an environment that reflects leadership, momentum, and clarity.
The interiors are being designed to:
- Support fast-moving teams and strategic thinking
- Balance industrial grit with refined execution
- Feel grounded, confident, and future-facing
- Align architecture, interiors, and brand identity seamlessly
Every decision—from circulation to material selection—is rooted in how people actually work, collaborate, and build companies at scale.
A Team Built for Projects of This Caliber
Projects like this don’t come together without serious talent behind the scenes. Rob is quick to acknowledge the collaborators currently bringing the vision to life:
- Interior Design: Rob Bowen Design + T2 The SF
- Architecture: Luttrell Architecture
- Construction: Loupin Construction
This is a team fluent in complexity, execution, and high-stakes delivery, exactly what a project of this scale demands.
A Defining Moment for the District
As the first new office building developed in the Warehouse Arts District, the Neptune Flood headquarters represents more than a corporate move. It’s a signal of where St. Petersburg is headed, and who’s shaping its future.
For the Rob Bowen Design, it’s another example of what happens when trust, experience, and vision align.
No posturing.
No over-designing.
Just architecture and interiors built with conviction.
