About the Miami Area
Vibrant and charged with the energy of Caribbean rhythms, Miami
means big-city sophistication and seductive beaches to those who
plug into its unique brand of electric charge. A railroad into the
old Indian trading post started Miami down its path as Florida’s
most dynamic city and a few works of modern engineering made Miami
Beach a sudden hotspot of the 1920s. With a colorful arts scene,
world-class shopping, water sports splendor, professional sports
and a load of family attractions,
Miami makes one of the nation’s most well-rounded metropolitan
destinations.
Miami skyline
The greatest influence upon the city’s modern-day personality
came with the influx of Cuban refugees that began in the 1960s.
They settled in an area dubbed
Little
Havana, where salsa music blares, men play dominoes in the park and
breezes carry strong whiffs of café con leche. Miami’s overall
cuisine and arts scene sway Cuban, blended with other local
Caribbean influence. Floribbean cooking, a Miami invention, fuses
Florida and island technique and products into one of the most
popular styles to have hit in many decades.
Key Biscayne
holds popular tourist attractions, busy recreational marinas and
fantastic beaches. Windsurfing and sailing are foremost along its
windy causeway, known as Hobie Beach.
Miami
Sea aquarium ranks as one of Florida’s first marine attractions,
but keeps up-to-date with dolphin interaction programs and
environmentally inclined exhibits. Nearby marinas offer everything
from boat rentals to diving excursions. There are more ways to
play at Crandon Park, a huge beach park with amusement rides,
tennis and bike paths. At the island’s southern tip, a state
park protects a historic lighthouse and the beach that fronts it.
Coral Gables,
one of the nation’s first planned developments, was built almost
entirely out of the coral limestone quarried there. The quarry
itself was turned into Venetian Pool, an exotic swimming hole with
romantic stone bridges and waterfalls. Gracious Spanish
colonial-style homes line twisty streets vegetated lushly and
sequestered aesthetically from the big-city world.
Another of Miami’s old neighborhoods, Coconut Grove
keeps up with the times as a lively shopping and nightlife scene.
Visit a Gilded Age Italian-style palace at
Vizcaya Museum
and Gardens and one of the state’s oldest science museums, which
is next door but slated to move downtown in coming years.
A grand, new performing arts hall also will soon open downtown.
Along the downtown waterfront,
American Airlines Arena
hosts NBA’s Miami Heat and Bayside Marketplace provides a
festive atmosphere for shopping, dining or catching a tour
Open-air marketplace in a Miami neighborhood boat, many of which
specialize in spying on celebrity homes.
Trend-setting Bal Harbour
Village, a barrier island at the northern tip of Miami Beach, is
home to two oceanfront resorts, the Bal Harbour Shops (with 100
flagship stores such as Louis Vuitton, Hermes and Gucci) and a
number of see-and-be-seen eateries.
The majority of celebrities live on islands along MacArthur
Causeway, which leads to
South Beach, a.k.a. SoBe,
Miami’s acclaimed district for naughty and nice. Two family
attractions – Parrot Jungle Island and
Miami
Children’s Museum – have also moved along the bridge’s
causeway in the vicinity of Miami’s busy cruise ship port. Ocean
Drive, SoBe’s much-photographed street, faces a wide, bustling
beach and is lined with its historic Art Deco gems. Intimate, chic
hotels have taken up in the jauntily painted masterpieces, their
lively cafés spilling onto the sidewalk with hip clientele,
wannabe fashion model servers, and Latin tunes. A block off Ocean,
all-night clubs and drag bars pick up the tempo. Edgy art
galleries and museums, chi-chi restaurants, and the most
design-forward of restored hotels contribute to SoBe’s
reputation as it follows Collins Avenue along Miami Beach’s
Golden Mile and to the newly fashionable neighborhoods of
North Miami Beach,
Sunny Isles
and, on the mainland, Aventura.
Haulover
Park offers scores of recreation and chic hotels, spas and golf
resorts accommodate in style.
At its southern extremes, the Miami
area turns agricultural and natural in Homestead,
tropical fruit capital and home to a grand new auto-racing
speedway. Homestead is also gateway to two extraordinary national
parks. Biscayne National Park introduces a world accessible by
boat, a world best seen through a snorkel mask. A 40-mile road
takes you through Everglades National Park and its subtle beauty,
to Flamingo, where a modest lodge and scores of water and land
adventure await. East of town, along
Tamiami
Trail, lies another Everglades access. Nearby, the Miccosukee
Indian tribe attracts visitors with a modern casino and a
cultural attraction that includes airboat rides to old-style clan
camps.
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