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MIAMI | Downtown, Brickell, Omni, Edgewater


bobliocatt

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Here's a thread for news concerning the heart of Miami.

Areas covered:

Downtown Miami (Central Business District)

Brickell Financial District

Allapattah

Civic Center/Medical Center

Design District

Edgewater

Government Center

Little Haiti

Morningside

Omni

Overtown

Park West

Performing Arts District

Riverside

Upper East Side

Watson Island

Wynwood

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I'm going to try to get some pictures of this one. Anybody else plan on going?

http://www.bizjournals.com/southflorida/st...17/daily18.html

Everglades Hotel to implode

Starting Sunday, a Miami landmark built in 1926 will turn - temporarily - to rubble.

On that day, at about 8 a.m., Cabi Developers is to implode the 17-story Everglades Hotel in downtown Miami to make way for a new, two-tower condominium.

The developer said 50 pounds of dynamite and 137 pounds of steel cutting charges will implode the Everglades Hotel, clearing land for Everglades on the Bay.

First responders are to take advantage of the blast, with a multi-agency emergency services training drill and a fire drill.

Also, rescue and hazardous materials teams, with South Florida Urban Search and Rescue Team (USAR) and the City of Miami Police Department, are to train in conditions made to simulate the World Trade Center disaster.

Due to safety precautions, the developer said various downtown roads will be blocked off starting at 7 a.m. the day of the implosion. At 7:30 a.m., the area is to be secured, with an implosion ceremony with the developer and city officials beginning 25 minutes later.

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newsrelease.gif

Miami-Dade Transit Announces Temporary Service Interruption and Bus Detours Due to Everglades Hotel Demolition

Traffic Advisory

(Miami-Dade County, FL) -- Due to the demolition of the Everglades Hotel in Downtown Miami this Sunday, January 23, 2005, Metromover service will be temporarily closed between 7:30 a.m. and 9:00 a.m. During this interruption, free shuttle buses will operate along the Metromover alignment, which includes the Inner, Brickell and Omni loops.

All buses traveling northbound on Biscayne Boulevard between E. Flagler Street and NE 5th Street will detour to NE First Avenue. All buses traveling southbound on Biscayne Boulevard between NE Sixth Street and SE First Street will detour to North Miami Avenue. This bus detour will begin at 6:00 a.m. until 10:00 a.m. on Sunday, January 23, 2005.

For more information, call Miami-Dade Transit

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Personally I've always been fond of this building.

Posted on Sat, Jan. 22, 2005

Bacardi building sports spirited design

BY ENRIQUE FERNANDEZ

[email protected]

In the 1980s, when Biscayne Boulevard had deteriorated into a shabby, neglected strip, the Bacardi company was urged to move its North American headquarters to a nicer stretch, in Coral Gables.

But the Bacardi brain trust, as strong-willed as the Cuban family of rum-runners, artists and freedom fighters that founded the company, said no.

Good thing. Today, the Bacardi buildings rise majestically above a vibrant, reborn boulevard. And the company, which says its flagship brand of rum is the world's best-selling spirit, is being honored by the Wolfsonian Museum-Florida International University for its contribution to architecture, as embodied by the two Miami buildings that went up on the boulevard in the '60s and '70s.

Each year, as part of its Very Wolfsonian Weekend fundraiser, the museum hosts a party at a local building or buildings whose architecture is deemed distinctive but underappreciated. Wolfsonian director Cathy Leff, who scheduled tonight's party at Bacardi, said the buildings, with their blue tile, abstract designs and ornate stained glass, fit the bill. They constitute ''one of the best examples of how good architecture defines our city,'' she said.

For Bacardi, a company not known for spending money to polish its corporate image, tonight is a coming out party, of sorts.

Leff wants the community to see Bacardi, which she calls ''a very generous corporate citizen,'' as a model of how to be ``conscientious about the buildings we build and their quality.''

Bacardi archivist Pep

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Posted on Sat, Jan. 22, 2005

Everglades Hotel: From regal to rubble

THE EVERGLADES HOTEL, ONCE ONE OF MIAMI'S MOST PROMINENT BUILDINGS, WILL BE IMPLODED SUNDAY TO MAKE WAY FOR A CONDO

By ANDRES VIGLUCCI

[email protected]

Once celebrated, then stripped of her charms, scorned and just about forgotten, a grand old Miami lady will be laid to rest Sunday.

R.I.P., Everglades Hotel, 1926-2005. Victim of old age, neglect and, oh, about 137 pounds of potent explosives strapped to her innards.

Once the city's largest and most luxurious hotel, the 16-story Everglades will be brought down in a controlled implosion early Sunday to make way for a colossal condo project. With it will go the last vestiges of the row of 1920s skyscraper hotels that, along with the Everglades' close architectural cousin, the Freedom Tower, defined downtown Miami's skyline for 50 years.

The Everglades, 244 Biscayne Blvd., will suffer the same indignity accorded its one-time companions, the storied Columbus, McAllister and Alcazar hotels, all reduced to a pile of rubble, unlamented by all except those who care about Miami's history.

Historians believe only one other of the original hotel row survives, altered far beyond recognition. Behind the greenish tiled facade of the Riande Continental Hotel stand the bones of the old Watson Hotel, historians say.

''It's a shame we keep losing so much of our past,'' said Becky Roper Matkov, executive director of Dade Heritage Trust, the county's largest preservation group. ``We're building ourselves anew every decade or two. We wouldn't want to save everything, but to have so few things left from Miami's history is just sad.''

But there just wasn't that much of the original Everglades left to make a campaign to save it worthwhile, preservationists acknowledge. More than one effort at modernization had denuded the hotel's exterior of its Mediterranean Revival detail, including the towering cupola that once crowned it. It was sawed off in 1961, leaving a stump atop the building.

''It's been terribly messed up through the years,'' said Miami historian Arva Moore Parks. ``There's not much left of its original beauty.''

In fact, said City Commissioner Johnny Winton, what was left was simply ugly. Its replacement -- twin towers with more than 800 condo units -- will be a distinct improvement, he said. The new high-rise will retain the Everglades name in tribute to the old.

''I'm glad to see the Everglades go,'' said Winton, whose district includes downtown. ``I love the new design for that site. It's going to be beautiful.''

What the new Everglades won't have is the astonishing and colorful history of its predecessor -- host to many a visiting grandee, originator of the first TV transmissions in Miami, and role-player in the downfall of legendary Teamsters Union leader and alleged mobster Jimmy Hoffa. It was also among the first hotels in the South to open its door to black guests.

Upon its opening, The Herald pronounced it ''majestic,'' second in architectural distinction only to the then-new Dade County Courthouse , still standing tall on Flagler Street.

ECHOES OF SPAIN

Built for $3 million, the Everglades was one of several local buildings modeled after the Giralda tower in Seville, including the old Roney Plaza in Miami Beach, the Biltmore Hotel in Coral Gables and the Freedom Tower.

The Everglades was completed just in time for the disastrous 1926 hurricane, which washed bay waters over its ground floor. For a while it housed people made homeless by the storm.

Its rooftop Skylight Room, a popular site for dances and banquets, provided stunning and never-before-available views of Biscayne Bay.

''People were very excited when it went in, like the Ritz-Carlton or the Four Seasons today,'' Moore said. ``The early descriptions were incredible. It used to be a really fine place to stay.''

And so it was, for about 25 years. During World War II, it was leased by the Navy as living quarters for officers in Miami for training. Shortly after the hotel was returned to civilian use, an antenna was placed atop it, and in 1949 WTVJ used it to make the first television transmissions in Miami. Moore called the antenna the hotel's ``first desecration.''

By the 1950s, the new hotels in Miami Beach had begun eclipsing the downtown Miami hotels, which could not compete with sand and sea, said historian Paul George.

The Everglades' owners tried to adapt. And therein lies quite the tale.

To the rescue came Teamsters head Hoffa, with a $1 million mortgage and a $3 million loan from the union's pension fund for an expansion and renovation, resulting in radical alterations.

''There was no sense at all of historic preservation then,'' George said, chuckling ruefully.

So in 1959, a roof pool -- then a novelty -- and nightclub were added, requiring construction of a new support structure astride the building. The pool had a glass tank where a ''mermaid'' performed, drinking and smoking underwater. In went a convention hall and a parking garage, too. Down came the 30-foot steel-and-concrete cupola.

TEAMSTERS BUY IT

When the hotels' owners ran into financial trouble shortly afterward, the Teamsters bought the Everglades at the courthouse steps.

In time, Hoffa was convicted of taking kickbacks in return for arranging the loans to the Everglades and other properties. He famously disappeared shortly after his release from prison.

By the time the Teamsters unloaded the Everglades in 1978, the hotel was a faded relic, overshadowed by the downtown office towers erected that decade.

It enjoyed a last brush with notoriety in 1982, when the confabulating Sheik Mohammed Al-fassi and his entourage moved into 25 rooms for a couple of weeks. The management claimed they left $40,000 in unpaid bills.

The Everglades hung on for a couple more decades after that, catering to budget-minded visitors from Latin America and, most recently, hosting the sales center for the condo that will supplant it.

In 2002, a budget hotel chain struck a deal to buy the Everglades and restore it, but walked away after concluding it would be too expensive to do so.

The next year, the Everglades ceased operating as a hotel for good.

''It had a great run, it really did,'' historian George said.

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FYI, the local media are reporting that several streets will be closed to both pedestrian and vehicle traffic, from 6am to 10am. A perimeter is set up around:

  • NE 5th Street on the north

  • Biscayne Blvd between American Airlines Arena and Bayfront Park

  • E Flagler Street on the south

  • N Miami Ave on the west.

evergladesdemolition7cf.jpg

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Posted on Sun, Jan. 23, 2005

Residents: 'Historic' label not worth hassle

A homeowners association vote to not pursue historic designation has brought a simmering debate to the fore: Is historic designation for neighborhoods a boon or a nuisance?

BY MARIA E. HERRERA

[email protected]

For some, living in a historic Miami neighborhood lives up to the hype.

The houses are old, but chic. Homeowners take pride in the label, which carries prestige. Small homes fetch big money, while strict rules protect the neighborhood's original look and feel.

But for others, having ''historic'' slapped on their neighborhood means extra bureaucracy that can turn a simple thing like replacing windows into a six-month mission.

Homeowners in the Upper Eastside neighborhood of Belle Meade decided to make ''historic'' history -- recently voting 82-63 against pursuing official designation of their community by the city.

''They hold your property in their hands,'' said David Kerkhof, a Belle Meade resident who led the fight against the proposal, which first surfaced a year ago. ``The biggest impact that I can see is the historic preservation board controlling every facet of your home that faces the street.''

Belle Meade's association is the first to resist the designation since the city's original historic district, Morningside, was designated in 1984. The city now has seven such districts.

The Belle Meade vote doesn't bar the city's Historic and Environmental Preservation Board from designating the community as historic, but makes it more unlikely since the City Commission would have final approval.

Residents of Morningside and other designated neighborhoods, most in Northeast Miami, credit the protection of preservation laws with reversing blight while staving off intrusive development.

But the Belle Meade vote, which comes amid unprecedented redevelopment along the Biscayne Boulevard corridor, brought to the fore a debate over what some say are the drawbacks of historic designation.

FEARS OF HIGH COSTS

Some in Belle Meade say designation is unnecessary. Even without it, Belle Meade has already seen a sharp rise in property values. Opponents fear designation could stall further increases, and they contend that nitpicking by the city has led to higher costs and unnecessary delays in approvals for renovations in neighboring districts.

Some preservation backers say Belle Meade is making a mistake. They say the rules are reasonable and keep inappropriate construction like oversized ''McMansions'' out. Rising land values could now induce teardowns of old homes, they fear.

''It's true that there is an extra process,'' said David Treece, president of the Upper Eastside Miami Council, a Belle Meade resident who favors designation. ``But we have homes in Belle Meade that will never be built again.''

The benefits designation brought to neighboring Morningside are clear, said Ana Gelabert-Sanchez, director of Miami's Planning Department.

''It has experienced increased property values along with a binding sense of community,'' Gelabert-Sanchez wrote in an e-mail response to Herald questions.

Preservation laws helped residents defeat a proposed oversized mansion in the neighborhood two years ago, said Rod Alonso, former president of the Morningside Civic Association.

''They got the owner to agree to build a smaller house because the one he had proposed was out of scale with the neighborhood's historic character,'' Alonso said.

But Kerkhof and others in Belle Meade aren't buying it. To them, the cons outweigh the pros.

MOVEMENT'S GENESIS

The push for designation started in January 2004, when a Belle Meade resident approached the city's Historic Preservation Office.

The idea was at first supported by the homeowners association, until Kerkhof wrote and circulated a flier titled ''Historic or Hysteric?'' It urged residents to fight the designation.

Henry ''Hank'' Bonis, who joined Kerkhof in the fight, said he wants to ensure designation doesn't come up again. Because the city lacks specific guidelines for what constitutes acceptable repairs and renovations, homeowners have a hard time figuring out what's required. And the city's decisions often seem arbitrary, he said.

''It's strictly a case-by-case thing,'' said Bonis, who is now restoring his 18-room Mediterranean Revival home. ``The Historic Preservation Office presents that as a good thing, but I see that as a very bad thing.''

He and other opponents say historic designation can be unfair to property owners who can't afford the typically higher cost of making historically authentic repairs or renovations.

That has been the case for some in the up-and-coming Buena Vista East neighborhood, which was designated a historic district in 1987. New residents who paid half a million dollars for bungalows are living next to longtime residents who paid a fraction of that.

REGULATORY BURDEN?

''For us, it's very upsetting,'' said Wendy Stephan, president of the Buena Vista East Neighborhood Association. ``We have people that have been in the neighborhood for 30 years. They didn't move here because it was hip, but because they could afford it. We don't want to see historic regulation become burdensome on them.''

Stephan has bought and restored five homes in the neighborhood, including the 1924 home where she lives now, and has been before the preservation board several times. She found the board, which has the final word on approvals of repairs or additions, to be flexible. But she said the city's preservation officer, Sarah Eaton, who makes the initial decisions, can be overly strict and inflexible.

''No one in their right mind would go through that process if they thought they could avoid it,'' Stephan said. ``It's like you're a total supplicant when you go pull a permit.''

Eaton and the city say the vast majority of applications are approved quickly. Those cases that stretch out longer often involve homeowners who are adamant about doing work that is historically inappropriate, Eaton said.

And many end up being happy when they realize how good authentic work makes their home look, she said.

''We go out of our way to accommodate homeowners or contractors,'' Eaton said. ``If the information we need is not there, we explain exactly what is required to enable us to approve a permit.''

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