Miami, Florida - Attractions

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Miami, Florida Travel Guide.

 


See

  • Ancient Spanish Monastery 16711 West Dixie Highway (near Sunny Isles), +1 305 945-1461, [1] – Mon-Sat 9AM-5PM, Sun 1PM-5PM (unless there is a wedding scheduled; call ahead or check the website for wedding dates). Originally built in Segovia, Spain in 1141, this monastery was originally to be a part of William Randolph Hearst’s property in California. Partly because he ran out of money and partly because the United States would not allow the monastery to be built in California, the monastery remained in New York Harbor until 1954, when a couple of businessmen bought the property and assembled it in Miami. Parts of the monastery have not been assembled because the government removed the pieces from numbered boxes and then placed the wrong pieces in the wrong boxes. Today the monastery is a church as well as a popular marriage location. As seen on the History Channel show Weird U.S. Adult admission $5, senior and student admission (with valid ID) $2.50, child admission $2.
  • Holocaust Memorial, center of Meridian Drive and Dade Boulevard, +1 305 538-1663 [2] – Daily 9AM-9PM. This memorial was created with the help of Miami Beach Holocaust survivors and sculptor Kenneth Treister in 1984. It was finally opened to the public in 1990. The most noticeable features of this memorial are its large arm with Holocaust victims trying to climb up the arm (it even has an Auschwitz tattoo similar to the ones issued at Auschwitz), its pool with a dedication to the “Jewish victims of the Holocaust” just outside the pool and sculptures of a mother and her children perishing to death surrounded by Anne Frank quotes. Behind the massive arm is the Garden of Meditation, dedicated to life, and a history of the Holocaust etched (with some covered-up errors) in granite. Surrounding the arm is a tunnel highlighted by an eternal flame. The tunnel has the names of the concentration camps sculpted inside of it and leads you to more sculptures surrounding the arm as well as names of victims of the Holocaust etched in granite and items such as Jewish candles placed by visitors honoring the memory of the dead. Free.
  • Coral Castle, 28655 South Dixie Highway, (305) 248-6345 [3] – An odd complex of stone structures, built with enormously heavy stones, and allegedly by one man, without the help of modern equipment.
  • Venetian Pool, 2701 DeSoto Blvd (in Coral Gables), +1 305 460-5306 (email info@VenetianPool.com, additional phone number +1 305 460-5357) [4] – Open 11AM-5PM every day, but call to verify hours. In the 1920s Denman Dink transformed this limestone quarry into a pool with a waterfall, an area for kids and an area for adults. The water in this pool comes from a spring and is drained daily. In addition to the swimming facilities there is a snack bar (you cannot bring outside food into the Venetian Pool) and lockers. Swimming lessons are also offered here. The Venetian Pool is best known for having Esther Williams and Johnny Weissmuller (the silver screen’s first Tarzan) swim here. $6 eople 13 years and older, $3 children under 13 $ (between November and March); $9 people 13 years and older, $5 under 13 (between April and October).
  • Bayfront Park, 301 Biscayne Boulevard (in Downtown Miami) – This park has two amphitheaters (one large and a one smaller) and hosts live performances. This park also has memorials for the astronauts who perished in the Challenger spaceship accident, former president John F. Kennedy (the JFK Torch of Friendship), and a fountain dedicated to Claude Pepper, a distinguished US congressman.
  • Oleta River State Recreation Park, 3400 N.E. 163rd St, +1 305 919-1846 [5] – Daily 8AM-sunset. The largest urban park in Florida has trails for biking, a beach for swimming, picnic areas and a playground for kids. Get a canoe or kayak to row to a mangrove island within the park. Several animals such as eagles and fiddler crabs also make their home here. Fourteen cabins with air conditioning are also on the premises, but bathrooms, showers and grills are located outside the cabins and guests should bring their own linens. $5 for a vehicle carrying up to eight passengers, $1 bicyclists, pedestrians and extra passengers ($50.85 a night in a cabin).
  • Art Deco Welcome Center, 1001 Ocean Drive, +1 305 672-2014, [6] – Daily 10AM-10PM.
  • Miami Beach Chamber of Commerce, 1920 Meridian Avenue, [7] – Open Mon-Fri, 9AM-6PM, Sat-Sun, 10AM-4PM.
  • Greater Miami and the Beaches Convention & Visitors Bureau, 27th floor of 701 Brickell Ave,, + 1 305 539-3000, [8] – Open Mon-Ffri 8:30AM-5PM.

Museums

  • Jewish Museum of Florida, 301 Washington Avenue, +1 305 672-5044 (fax +1 305 672-5933) [9] – Tue-Sun 10AM-5PM. Closed on Mond and civil and Jewish holidays. This museum, located in a 1936 synagogue that hosted Miami’s first Jewish congregation, has a permanent exhibit detailing how Florida’s Jews arrived in Florida as well as their history in Florida and their customs. The museum also has videos to view while you’re inside the museum, temporary exhibits in the center of the synagogue and a gift shop. A small and fairly uninteresting museum. Adult admission $6, senior and student admission $5, family admission $12, children under six and members of the Jewish Museum of Florida free. Admission is also free on Sat.
  • Frost Art Museum, SW 107th Ave & SW 8th St (FIU-University Park), (305) 348-2890 [10] – Mon-Tue,Thu-F 10AM-5PM, Wed 10AM-9PM, Sat-Sun 12PM-4PM. Located at Florida International University, the Frost Art Museum has a large variety of 1960's and 1970's American photography, pre-Columbian artifacts dating back from 200 to 500 AD, ancient African and Asian bronzes, and a growing number of Caribbean and Latin American paintings and artwork.
  • Bass Museum of Art, 212 Park Ave, +1 305 673-7530 (fax +1 305 673-7062), [11]. Tue-Wed and Fri-Sat 10AM-5PM, Thu 10AM-9PM, Sun 11AM-5PM. This art museum, expanded by Japanese architect Arata Isozaki, houses several European artworks from the 15th to the 20th centuries. Baroque and Northern European artworks are the highlights of the Bass Museum’s collection. The Bass Museum also hosts touring exhibitions and the New Information Workshop, a computer laboratory that allows visitors to create their own artwork. $12 adults, $10 students and seniors, children under 6 years of age free. Free admission the second Thu of each month from 6PM-9PM.
  • Lowe Art Museum, 1301 Stanford Dr, (305) 284-3535 [12] – With many antique art, ceramics, pottery and sculptures ranging from Greco-Roman times, Renaissance, Baroque, Art of Asia, Art of Latin America, and ancient potteries, the Lowe Art Museum offers a great range of art through the centuries.
  • Vizcaya Museum and Gardens, 3251 South Miami Ave, +1 305 250-9133, (fax + 1 305 285-2004) [13]. European-inspired estate. Includes a main house filled with art and furnishings and ten acres of gardens on Biscayne Bay. $12 adults, $9 Miami-Dade residents with ID, patrons using wheelchairs, seniors 62 years of age or older with ID and students with ID, $5 children 6-12. Admission is free for children 5 years of age or younger.
  • Wolfsonian-Florida International University, 1001 Washington Ave, +1 305 531-1001 (fax +1 305 531-2133, e-mail pr@thewolf.fiu.edu, phone number for comments +1 305 535-2622) [14]. Mon-Tue and Fri-Sat 11AM-6PM, Thu 11AM-9PM, Sun 12PM-5PM. Back in the 1930s and 1940s this building was the headquarters of the Washington Storage Company, a facility where the rich could stash their valuables whenever they were out of town. Movie theater heir and Miami native Mitchell Wolfson, Jr. stored so much artwork here that he decided to buy the storage company and later give the building to Florida International University, hence the museum’s odd name. The Wolfsonian hosts a large modernist art collection on its upper three floors (the only floors, excluding the first floor, that are open to the public) that includes propaganda posters and postcards and Art Deco household items as well as touring exhibits. There is also a café, bookstore, fountain and a modernist-inspired artwork on the first floor. After paying admission, patrons enter the Wolfsonian with a sticker that has a picture of an artifact from the museum’s permanent collection. Adults $5, seniors, students with ID and children 6-12 $3.50.
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