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Miami Art Deco Tour


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Desenvolvedor: iTourMobile LLC
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Tour Miamis elaborate Art Deco scene in this GPS guided audio tour to 28 locations with 26 minutes of narrated audio as we take you to some of the most popular art deco spots in Miami.

Eclectic and optimistic about the modern machine age, Art Deco aesthetics and style were popularized in the 1920s, 30s, and early 40s. Structures were characterized by lavish ornamentation, sleek curves, fanciful ship-like touches, a bold use of colors and textures, and shiny terrazzo floors. The style represents exuberance, glamorous luxury, and faith in progress. All the buildings have their own personality and charm and nearly 100 years after they were built, these candy-like edifices provide a great home for some of the worlds most famous restaurants, bars and hotels.

Today, the neighborhood of South Beach is on the National Register of Historic Places with more than 800 buildings noted as having historical significance. It is the first 20th century neighborhood so designated.

Around the turn of the 20th century, John Collins – at age 70 -- bought the property to develop an avocado grove. Talk about a mid-life crisis, the island had everything he would need to succeed in the venture except for access to the mainland, cleared farmland, soil and fresh water. He found the fresh water two years later. Collins begin building a bridge and dredging a canal to provide the access to the island before running out of money. So he sold the land to John and James Lummus who saw the potential as a destination resort but did not have the cash to see the project through. One of their daughters is said to have coined the term South Beach before anything was even built.

Enter Carl Fisher, a wealthy winter resident of Miami and an early pioneer of the area. He had invented and sold an automotive product to Union Carbide. He had the vision and the capital to turn the beach into a city and thus be poised to profit from the land boom of the 1920s. His funding helped to finish the bridge Collins had started and in 1913 it became the longest wooden wagon bridge in the world. Fisher saw the potential of making the island a residential and hotel boomtown.

The area continued to grow until the mid 1960s when the Art Deco buildings became relegated to a largely fixed-income, senior citizen retirement community. By the early 80s the area of South Beach was very run down and considered by many as a “pastel-colored slum.”

Seeds of the South Beach renaissance were first apparent in 1976 with the formation of the Miami Design Preservation League, which had the vision to see that the Art Deco style of the period buildings could be priceless assets. It would be nearly a decade for the renovations of the properties took off.

For this and more, download the Junket app, which features more than 100 tours in 40 cities!

https://apps.apple.com/us/app/junket-explore-your-world/id1297242830

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Subscribing to Miami Art Deco Tour allows you to take this tour for the duration of the subscription. The subscription will automatically renew unless the auto-renew is turned off at least 24 hours before the period ends. Subscriptions to Miami Art Deco Tour can be made for period of 1 week, 1 month, 6 months, or 1 year, with the subscription automatically renewing at the end of the period.

If you choose to subscribe to d, payment will be charged to your iTunes account, and your account will be charged for renewal within 24 hours prior to the end of the current period. Auto-renewal may be turned off at any time by going into your settings in the App Store after purchase.

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