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jorge-fernandez
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chinseeahh
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hanowitz
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jdengler
North Beach Resort Historic Neighborhood
Stroll the sidewalk along Collins Avenue from 65th up through 71st St.
and it's nearly impossible to ignore the bustling activity: cars
zooming by, people patronizing busy shops, ethnic restaurants, and
newly constructed luxury hotels. With such energy in the air, it's also hard to believe that nearly 80 years ago, this area was virtually
deserted. Although Miami Beach city limits reached 87th Street back in
1924 and wealthy industrialists owned estates along Indian Creek and
the Atlantic Ocean up to 60th Street, a 1932 book called Along Greater Miami's Sun-Sea-Ara,
notes that a mere three buildings sat on the sand between 62nd and 71st
Streets. They were the Gulf Stream Apartments, east of Collins Avenue,
just below 63rd Street; the Deauville Casino (as in swimming pool, not
gambling establishment) at 67th Street; and the Deauville Bungalows at
71st Street.
What a difference a couple of decades made. After
World War II, the advent of air conditioning in buildings and the
ability for hotel owners to allow live entertainment to take place on
their premises (an ordinance to protect local nightclubs once forbade
such a practice) soon ushered in a lively glamorous era on Miami Beach
remembered so fondly by mid-century tourists and residents alike. The
Sherry Frontenac, designed by Henry Hohauser, was the first major hotel
built after the War.
Just a decade later, in 1957, the dazzling
Deauville hotel, designed by Melvin Grossman, was built on the site of
the old bathing casino which in 1926 had featured the state's
largest swimming pool. Still functioning today, the 12-story, 500-plus
room hotel was one of the early full-service resorts featuring onsite
restaurants, nightclubs, boutiques, a beauty salon, and even an ice
skating rink. It is perhaps most famous for hosting a performance by
the Beatles in 1964 and housing them as well.
The
Deauville's immediate neighbor to the north, the Carillon hotel,
also opened in 1957. Designed by the architect Norman Giller, the hotel
featured a sleek pedestal and a 14-story tower fronted by a striking
glass curtain wall. Part of the hotel (which contained the theater) was
demolished in 2002 for a condo conversion that didn't materialize.
The tower, however, remained. In 2004 the celebrated resort Canyon
Ranch stepped in with plans for a condo-hotel project featuring a
spectacular spa, of course.
The partial destruction of the
Carillon and the demolition of the Bel Aire Hotel at 65th and Collins
woke preservationists to the fact that a 10-block stretch approximately
from 60th to 70th Streets contained a dense concentration of Miami
Modern buildings along with a couple of Neoclassical Revival and
Streamline Moderne structures. These hotels, motels, and stores were
designed by a cavalcade of locally prominent architects such as Roy
France, Albert Anis, and L. Murray Dixon. Activism spurred the City of
Miami Beach into action. And in 2004, the North Beach Resort Historic
District was established. It begins at 65th Street and runs to 71st
Street, encompassing all but one of the structures on the east side of
Collins Avenue and buildings on both sides of Collins Avenue at 63rd
Street.
The historic district can be admired and experienced
from many perspectives: from the sidewalk that runs along Collins
Avenue; from inside of the hotels themselves; and from the beach, by
walking along the beachwalk pedestrian path that runs behind the hotels
and stretches from Allison Park to the south side of North Shore Open
Space Park. Canyon Ranch Living is now open for business,
adding a new vitality to the neighborhood. Truly "living" as
its name suggests. Appropriate for an area that has had many lives
over the years and whose future holds so much promise.



