Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Fontainebleau Hotel as seen from Collins Avenue. Collins Avenue is home to many historic Art Deco hotels, and several nightclubs to the north.. North of 41st Street this boulevard lies between the Atlantic Ocean and the Indian Creek, lined by palm trees, and famous hotels from the 1950s and 1960s such as the Eden Roc and the Morris Lapidus-designed Fontainebleau Hotel, built in the curvy ...
Wolfie Cohen's Rascal House was a Jewish delicatessen located at the intersection of 172nd Street and Collins Avenue in Sunny Isles Beach, Florida. It opened in May 1954 and closed on March 30, 2008. Sporting a large neon sign in the front, the building was designed in the 1950s Miami Modern style.
3025 Collins Ave Streamline Lord Baltimore Hotel 1941 Roy France 3030 Collins Ave Streamline Sans Souci Hotel 1949 Roy France, Morris Lapidus 3101 Collins Ave Modern Rendale Hotel 1940 E.L. Robertson 3120 Collins Ave Art Deco Saxony Hotel 1948 Roy France 3201 Collins Ave Modern Atlantic Beach Hotel 1938 Roy France 3400 Collins Ave Art Deco
This Italian restaurant at a Miami Beach hotel closed in 2020. Now it’s reopening. ... Where: 1433 Collins Ave., Miami Beach (also accessible from Ocean Drive at 14th Place) Opening: March 27.
Head for Mofongo Restaurant Calle 8 in Little Havana for the most authentic tostones in the city, or Quillami, which uses tostones as a taco base. 9. Enjoy an Iconic Miami Burger
Stephen Talkhouse, 616 Collins Ave.: Still the Beach’s most popular live music venue, The Talkhouse puts the performers -- regular acts include local faves Nil Lara, Mary Karlzen and The ...
The Fontainebleau Miami Beach, also known as the Fontainebleau Hotel, is a hotel in Miami Beach, Florida. Designed by Morris Lapidus , the luxury hotel opened in 1954. In 2007, the Fontainebleau Hotel was ranked ninety-third in the American Institute of Architects list of " America's Favorite Architecture ". [ 2 ]
The Collins Waterfront Architectural District is a historic district in Miami Beach, Florida, that includes 110 contributing buildings and structures built in the late 1940s, 1950s and 1960s, centering on Collins Avenue. The predominant styles include moderne, Art Deco and Mediterranean Revival architecture, as well as the local Miami Modern style.