Deco District
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SoBe’s Art Deco District consists of some 800 preserved buildings, the cream of them along Ocean Drive. This splendid array of structures embodies Miami’s unique interpretation of the Art Deco style, which took the world by storm in the 1920s and ’30s. Florida’s take on it is often called Tropical Deco (see Tropical Deco Features), which befits the fun-and-sun approach to life. Often hotels were made to look like ocean liners (Nautical Moderne) or given the iconography of speed (Streamline Moderne).
For details about staying at SoBe’s Art Deco hotels See SoBe Deco-Dence
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1. Park Central
1. Park CentralA 1937 favorite by Henry Hohauser, the most famous architect in Miami at the time. Here he used the nautical theme to great effect.
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2. Beacon Hotel
The abstract decoration above the ground floor of the Beacon has been brightened by a contemporary color scheme, an example of “Deco Dazzle,” introduced by designer Leonard Horowitz in the 1980s.
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3. Colony Hotel
Perhaps the most famous of the Deco hotels along here, primarily because its stunning blue neon sign has featured in so many movies and TV series.
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4. Waldorf Towers
Here is one of the first examples (1937) of Nautical Moderne, where the style is carried to one of its logical extremes with the famous ornamental lighthouse on the hotel’s roof. Fantasy towers were the stock in trade for Deco architects.
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5. Breakwater Hotel
The classic Streamline Moderne hotel was built in 1939. It features blue and white “racing stripes,” which give the impression of speed, and a striking central tower that recalls both a ship’s funnel and Native-American totems.
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6. Beach Patrol Stations
Even the lifeguard stations are done up in Deco on South Beach. Looking perhaps more like a homemade flying saucer that has just landed on the beach, these pink and yellow follies embody the spirit of fun that pervades the lifestyle.
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7. Clevelander Hotel
Albert Anis used classic Deco materials – especially the glass blocks in the hotel’s bar, which is now a top South Beach neon-lit nightspot. Typical Deco features include vertical fluting, geometric decorative touches, the “eyebrow” overhangs shading the windows, and the stripy lettering on the sign.
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8. Leslie Hotel
The Leslie (1937) is cockatoo-colored, white and yellow with gray accents – a color scheme typical of those currently in favor along Ocean Drive. Originally, however, Deco coloring was quite plain, usually white with only the trim in colors. Nor were the backs of the buildings painted, since money was too tight in the 1930s to allow anything more than a jazzy façade. The Leslie’s interior has recently been renovated.
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9. Cardozo Hotel
A late Hohauser work (1939) and the favorite of Barbara Capitman (see The Story of Tropical Deco), this is a Streamline masterpiece, in which the detail of traditional Art Deco is replaced with beautifully rounded sides, aerodynamic racing stripes, and other expressions of the modern age. The terrazzo floor utilizes this cheap version of marble to stylish effect. It was reopened in 1982 and is now owned by singer Gloria Estefan.
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10. Cavalier Hotel
10. Cavalier HotelA traditional Art Deco hotel, which provides quite a contrast to the later Cardozo next door. Where the Cardozo emphasizes the horizontal and vaguely nautical, this façade is starkly vertical and temple-like. The temple theme is enhanced by beautifully ornate vertical stucco friezes, which recall the abstract, serpentine geometric designs of the Aztecs and other Meso-American cultures.
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Blue Moon hotel great the staff nice hotel clean. Nice central for all places...
about a year ago
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