This prefab technique is also the way Universal builds their lower end hotels, like the Endless Summer Resort. VDH was built more traditionally. I’m wondering if there are any negative trade offs in quality that go along with this kind of cheap, fast construction.
As a licensed structural engineer who designs buildings similar in size to these, the difference in construction types is likely due to California being in a high seismic region versus Florida where wind is the controlling factor in the building's lateral design. In seismic regions, precast concrete core walls such as we see here can only be used up to a certain building height as either a code limitation on permitted structure heights or due to the complexity of wall-panel to wall-panel connections under large earthquake forces. Additionally, precast structures tend to be heavier which attracts larger earthquake loads versus traditional flat-plate concrete slab construction. There could also be other factors at play in the selection of systems such as cost, precast supplier backlog, building height limitations (precast would require a larger floor-floor height) building department politics, etc.
Precast construction is chosen when the building's geometry lends itself to column/wall spacing that works well with it, when speed of construction is important, and also when it is priced correctly (if the precast suppliers are too busy, precast will be more expensive, if they aren't busy enough, it will be much cheaper). There is nothing low quality, cheap, or troublesome with this construction method as there are many class A office buildings (highest office building class - think office buildings with high-end lawyers and bankers) constructed from precast without issue.
From an end-user standpoint, I don't believe it would be possible for anyone to tell the difference in building quality from these systems once the construction is finished and the building's finishes are installed. There would also be almost no discernable way for the general public to tell that this was even a precast building. Also please keep in mind that the pictures you are seeing are the structure only and will have final finishes and building cladding installed/applied to them so that the grey structural precast concrete won't be visible at the end.
Sorry for the nerdy engineering talk!