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The administration also proposed paying above market value for a 1982 office building at 11222 Quail Roost Drive that would replace the South Dade Government Center about two miles away ...
The Government Center Metrorail station is located inside the building, giving it easy access to public transit. It is located in western downtown, on North First Street between West First and West Second Avenue. The building was completed in 1985. It is named after the former Mayor of Miami-Dade County and Mayor of Miami, Stephen P. Clark ...
The Miami-Dade County Courthouse, formerly known as the Dade County Courthouse, is a historic courthouse and skyscraper located at 73 West Flagler Street in Miami, Florida. Constructed over four years (1925–28), it was added to the U.S. National Register of Historic Places on January 4, 1989. [3] The building is 361 feet (110 m) tall with 28 ...
The Miami-Dade Board of County Commissioners is the governing body of unincorporated Miami-Dade County and has broad regional powers to establish policies for Miami-Dade County services. The government provides major metropolitan services countywide and city-type services for residents of unincorporated areas.
View of a building located at at 9250 W. Flagler St. in Miami, where Mayor Daniella Levine Cava wants to open a West Dade Government Center where the Miami-Dade County’s Solid Waste department ...
Known as the Assurant Center, the mostly 1980s-era office complex on the 79-acre site would allow Miami-Dade to shift most of its operations from the existing South Dade Government Center that ...
Tequesta Point is a complex of residential high-rises in Downtown Miami, Florida, United States. It consists of three skyscraper buildings located on Brickell Key, an urban island to the east of the Central Business District. Three Tequesta Point, the tallest of the three, was completed in 2001. It is 480 ft (146 m) tall, and has 46 floors.
Miami’s historic preservation board’s move disappointed activists and representatives of Native American tribes who had hoped the city would assert authority to protect the site from construction.