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Miami and Miami Beach Properties,  America’s Riviera... 

 Miami has been famous for year round sun and fun. A vacation resort for northern the snow birds. Miami Beach is more than just sandy beaches and sparkling ocean. It is a cosmopolitan city which is home to numerous world-class restaurants, modeling, oceanfront condos, film and recording industries and pulsating nightlife...

World famous Ocean Drive or now referred to as Deco drive, is one of the busiest areas in Miami Beach. Deco Drive runs north-south, paralleling the beach, from 15th Street south to South Pointe Drive. Deco Drive is one of the most popular spots in 'South Beach'. It is famous for beautifully restored Art Deco Hotels, trendy cafes and nightclubs, Oceanfront Real Estate, and of course, "The Beach".

Lincoln Road, once known as one of the hottest shopping streets in the country, and known today as the cultural center of South Florida, is experiencing a retail rebirth. Lincoln Road is home to a 7 block pedestrian mall on a street stretching from the beach and Atlantic Ocean to Biscayne Bay. There are approximately 400 businesses within the commercial area.

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A former World War II shipyard is under contract for purchase by a developer who wants to make it part of downtown Miami's new riverfront - a strip where visitors can carouse by boat or by foot.

The Miami City Commission has approved rezoning 2.2 acres at 615 SW Second Ave., just east of the bridge. The change turns the high-density, mixed-use land from industrial to restricted-commercial designation.
Local developer Kevin Riley says he wants the site to become a blend of residential units, retail and a restaurant but that it's too early to give specifics.Downtown Miami sky line.

The parcel is owned by Marjorie O. Brickell and William O. Brickell of the Brickell Family Trust, with the contract purchaser of the property being Riverfront Village, which is owned 100% by Mr. Riley, according to city documents. Mr. Riley is the developer behind Brickell Station, set for completion in June 2005, with two residential towers of 700-plus units and ground-level retail at 1101 SW First Ave.


The Miami River is an important component of the new vision for the riverfront - a place where people will live, work, dine and stroll along the river's promenade.
The development would create an extension of the Brickell area riverfront, with an emphasis on the waterfront corridor. With the rezoning, up to 150 residential dwelling units per acre will be allowed on the site under city regulations.
Build-up along the city's riverfront is monitored by the Miami River Commission, which gave its blessing to this project's application before the city commission. The site was once the location of the now-vacant Brickell Shipyards.

Piece by piece, developers are creating a corridor of recreation and commerce along the river, that will encourage more people to enjoy the river. That's the vision for the area from the mouth of the Miami River to Fifth Street, with residences and retail along a public walkway and tie-up spaces for boaters. The city now requires developers there to incorporate a walkway, he said. As many as are under way, many more are planned. Miller said Friday. From Fifth Street to 22nd Avenue, he said to expect more mixed-use, small marinas and water-dependant businesses. At the river's upper end, from 22nd to 27th avenues, the area will be encouraged to remain home to water-dependant business and other marine industries.

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Coral Gables Real Estate

 

Key Biscayne Lighthouse

Coconut Grove - A Short History


The Pent and Frow families were the early settlers of Coconut Grove. In the 1800's both families were lighthouse keepers at Cape Florida and homesteaders in what is now Coconut Grove.

Another settler of that era was Edmund D. Beasley who homesteaded 160 acres bay front property. In 1873, after Beasley's death, his widow rented their home to Dr. Horace P. Porter. He lived there for only a year but during that time established a post office that he named "Cocoanut Grove." When Porter left the area, the post office was closed, but years later it was reopened using the same name.

"Jolly Jack" Peacock was another pioneer, an Englishman who settled in the south part of the Grove. He persuaded his brother Charles, then owner of a wholesale meat business in London, to join him. Charles Peacock, his wife Isabella and their three sons eventually settled in Coconut Grove and in 1882 opened the Bay View House, later called the Peacock Inn, the first hotel in the area. Black workers came from the Bahamas to work at the Inn and established the first Black community in Miami, along Charles Avenue. The Peacock Inn attracted all kinds of visitors including scientists, authors, and nobility, many of whom remained to make Coconut Grove their permanent home. Among the settlers were yacht designer and wrecker Ralph Munroe whose home, The Barnacle, is now a state historic site; homesteader Flora McFarlane, Coconut Grove's first schoolteacher and founder of the Housekeeper's Club (now The Woman's Club of Coconut Grove); and author Kirk Munroe.

The fledgling community grew and prospered, and by the early years of the 20th century, a school, library, Sunday school, chapel, and yacht club were built. Attracted by the climate, wealthy Northerners, such as James and William Deering and William Jennings Bryan made Coconut Grove their winter home. In 1925, the City of Miami annexed Coconut Grove, but it continued to retain its own identity.

After World War II, as the population of South Florida mushroomed, Coconut Grove continued to grow, and artists were an important influence.
 

Coconut Grove art, with its verdant landscape, serene bay front setting, and casual ambiance has always attracted artists. In the 1950's, artists from all over the US and as far away as Europe, settled in Coconut Grove and established studios. The Grove soon became known as an artists colony, and it was not unusual to see artists setting up their easels on the sidewalks and painting the local scene. By the 1960's there were many thriving art galleries as well as Grove House, an artists' co-op. In 1963, the Coconut Grove Arts Festival, now recognized as one of the leading arts festivals in the country, was established. Rising real estate prices in the 1980's and 1990's caused most of the galleries to close, but the artists have remained. In 1998, local artists formed The One Ear Society, a group that holds juried exhibits in donated spaces.

While much of the "old Grove" has disappeared, it is still possible to get a glimpse of what life was like in the past by visiting Villa Vizcaya, The Barnacle, and The Kampong, three vastly different Coconut Grove homes.

Deering traveled throughout Europe with interior designer Paul Chalfin purchasing furniture and works of art for the house. Construction began in 1914 and 1,000 craftsmen and artisans worked on the house for two years. Deering moved in on Christmas Day, 1916, arriving by yacht. All the furnishings Villa Vizcaya are just as they were in Deering's time, including such early 20th centuries amenities as a telephone switchboard, central vacuum cleaning system, elevators and fire sprinklers. Deering enjoyed nine winters at Villa Vizcaya before his death in 1925. Deering's descendants sold Villa Vizcaya to Miami-Dade County in 1952, and in 1970 it was placed on the Register of Historic Sites.

Villa Vizcaya, now a decorative arts museum set in the midst of magnificent formal gardens, was originally the home of International Harvester Vice President James Deering. Deering purchased the bay front property in 1910 and hired architect F. Burrell Hoffman, Jr. to design the house and an Italian Baroque farm village containing a dairy, poultry house, barns, garage, and staff housing. This village enabled Vizcaya to be entirely self-sufficient.

The Barnacle
Built in 1891 by Commodore Ralph Munroe, The Barnacle is the oldest home in Miami-Dade County still on its original site.

Munroe, a native of New York City, moved to Coconut Grove in 1886 and made his living by designing yachts and working as a wrecker, salvaging boats that had run aground in Biscayne Bay. A year after he moved to the Grove, he founded the Biscayne Bay Yacht Club and was its Commodore for more than 20 years.

The Barnacle, named for the distinctive shape of its roof, was designed as a one-story house facing Biscayne Bay. Three verandahs, and a skylight, which could be opened with a pulley, provided ventilation in those pre-air conditioning days. Munroe married in 1895 and when a larger house was needed for his growing family, he raised the house and built a new first floor below it. A library wing was later added.

The Munroe family continued to live at The Barnacle until 1973 when they sold the house and its furnishings to the State of Florida to be used as a museum. The Barnacle is operated as a State Historic Site by the Florida Department of Environmental Protection.
Coconut Grove properties and Coconut Grove's Dinnier Key marina
The Kampong
The Kampong, a seven-acre botanical garden, was once the home of botanist Dr. David Fairchild. Fairchild and his wife Marion purchased the property at 4013 Douglas Road in 1916, and called it The Kampong, meaning a cluster of houses in Malay.

As Chief of the Seed and Introduction Section of the US Department of Agriculture, Fairchild traveled all over the world collecting plant specimens and bringing them back to his Coconut Grove home. Scientists and world leaders such as Winston Churchill, Richard Leakey, Henry Ford, Thomas Edison, and Dwight Eisenhower have visited the Kampong. Another visitor was Fairchild's father-in-law Alexander Graham Bell, who invented a device for extracting fresh water from sea water while staying at The Kampong.

To this day, botanists and horticulturists come to The Kampong to conduct research. The Kampong, now part of the National Tropical Botanical Garden in Hawaii, is listed in the National Register of Historic Places.



Historical Sites
The Ralph M. Munroe House

The Ralph M. Munroe House, located in the community of Coconut Grove, is the oldest home in Dade County still in it's original location. Munroe, one of Coconut Grove's earliest settlers, was a noted yacht designer, photographer, and naturalist. Munroe constructed his home, which he called the Barnacle, in 1891. For 22 years he served as the "Commodore" of the Biscayne Yacht Club, during which time he designed over 55 different boats. His last surviving vessel, Micco, was destroyed by a hurricane in 1992. Commodore Munroe preserved the original tropical hardwood forest, known as a hammock, on his estate. Today, it is one of the few places where visitors can see a remnant of the once vast "Miami Hammock".

The Barnacle State Historic Site is located at 3485 Main Highway in Coconut Grove. The site is open from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Thursday through Monday except Thanksgiving, Christmas, and New Year's day. Admission. For more information write or call: The Barnacle State Historic Site, P.O. Box 330995, Coconut Grove, FL 33233: (305) 448-9445.

 

 
 
 
 

 

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1-800-646-2289 or 305-937-2238

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www.search 4 Miami homes.com

Turnberry International Realty

2875 North East 191 street, suite 601

Aventura, FL 33180