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Diversity
is the theme that links Miami's urban lifestyle to areas
rich in culture and
tradition.
LITTLE
HAVANA
The
official name is Southwest Eight Street but everyone knows
it as Calle Ocho, the artery
that keeps the heart of Little Havana beating. Cubans
who fled the island in 1960
recreated their community west of Brickell Avenue, imbuing
it with nostalgia for their
heritage.
The vibrant
neighborhood, home also to many residents from Nicaragua
and Honduras,
has a distinct Latin flavor with signs and billboards
en español and music to match.
Everything is authentic: from the fruit stands and cigar
factories to the eat-at
windows of the cafeterias where patrons passionately discuss
politics.
Visit
the area's quaint shops to find embroidered guayabera
shirts, hand-rolled cigars
and Latin music or explore gift shops offering unique
items and Cuban memorabilia. Cultural
activities are blossoming along with art galleries, studios
and theaters.
Cultural Fridays take place the last Friday of each month
along Calle Ocho and
feature music, dance, poetry, visual arts and theater.
The historic Tower Theater is
alive with performances, cultural and educational programs
and multicultural films while Teatro
Ocho is home to Spanish-language theater.
Food
plays an essential part of life in Little Havana from
the anytime snacks of chicharones
(fried pork morsels) to croquetas, pastelitos and sugary
mouthfuls of
merenguítos. Dining is infused with many cuisines.
There are a variety of restaurants
serving authentic Cuban dishes and delicacies and others
serving traditional Spanish, Mexican,
Peruvian, Colombian and Argentinean food.
Every
March, thousands of revelers flock to the grand Hispanic
street festival called Calle
Ocho to celebrate the finale of Carnaval Miami. Little
Havana is one of the best places
to experience Cuban culture and Latin cuisine.
LITTLE
HAITI
Little Haiti spans
the old Miami neighborhoods of Lemon City, Edison Center,
Little River
and Buena Vista East with its heart at N.E. 54th Street
between Biscayne
Boulevard and North Miami Avenue. This bustling Creole-speaking
community continues
a traditional lifestyle amid stores selling familiar foods,
spices and music.
OVERTOWN
There is more to Overtown
than the Miami Arena. Before the highways sliced through
the area, Overtown
was a thriving center for Greater Miami's African-American
community. Now, hidden
between Downtown Miami and the civic center, Overtown
is welcoming the restoration
of buildings in the two block area designated as
Overtown Historic Village.
The Lyric Theater, once a venue for star-studded
performances; the home
of D.A. Dorsey, Greater Miami's first African-American
millionaire; and the
Greater Bethel AME Church celebrate Overtown's past as
it looks
to the future.
LIBERTY
CITY
Liberty City's roots
go back to the 1930s when people moved from Overtown.
Nowadays, Liberty City's
active African-American community spans the area from
NW 12th to 19th Avenues
and 62nd to 73rd Streets. Local artists display their
talent and
civic pride with colorful murals of African-American heroes,
notably slain civil
rights leader Martin Luther King Jr., decorating the exterior
walls of buildings. The
African Heritage Cultural Arts Center is a hub of activity
within the local
community. The five-building facility houses a black box
theater, visual arts gallery and dance,
art and music studios.
BRICKELL
AVENUE
Since the time William
and Mary Brickell (founding father and mother of Greater
Miami and the Beaches)
named a tree-lined thoroughfare after their homestead,
Brickell Avenue has
been associated with wealth and prestige.
Now the
international banking and business center of Greater Miami
south of the
Miami River is taking on a new role as a vibrant place
to stay, dine and reside. Luxury
condominium towers, hotels and the tallest building in
Florida are transforming Brickell Avenue's
skyline. And, instead of rolling up the sidewalks at night,
Brickell is thronged after
hours with residents and visitors dining in the area's
fine restaurants or shopping in
new neighborhood stores.
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