Lincoln Road
Lincoln Road Mall | |
Lincoln Road as it looked in 2008 facing east at the intersection of Alton Road. The Regal Cinema is on the right. | |
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Location | Miami Beach, Florida |
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Coordinates | 25°47′26″N 80°8′11″W / 25.79056°N 80.13639°WCoordinates: 25°47′26″N 80°8′11″W / 25.79056°N 80.13639°W |
Architect | Morris Lapidus |
NRHP Reference # | 11000287[1] |
Lincoln Road Mall is a pedestrian road running east-west parallel between 16th Street and 17th Street in Miami Beach, Florida, United States. Once completely open to vehicular traffic, it now hosts a pedestrian mall replete with shops, restaurants, galleries, and other businesses between Washington Avenue with a traffic accessible street extending east to the Atlantic Ocean and west to Alton Road with a traffic accessible street extending to Biscayne Bay.
History
Originally, Lincoln Road was a forest of mangroves, as was most of Miami Beach. In 1912, Carl Fisher cleared a strip of the mangroves from the Atlantic (east) side of the island to the Biscayne Bay (west) side of the island and it eventually became the town's social center. Fisher himself, maintained a real estate office on Lincoln Road. Over time, Lincoln Road featured premium retail destinations like Bonwit Teller, Saks Fifth Avenue, and even Cadillac and Packard car dealerships.
In the 1950s, Miami Beach architect Morris Lapidus, whose credits include Miami Beach's Fountainebleau and Eden Roc hotels, was commissioned to redesign Lincoln Road. Lapidus' design for Lincoln Road, complete with gardens, fountains, shelters and an amphitheater, reflected the Miami Modern Architecture, or "MiMo", style that Lapidus pioneered in the 1950s. The Road was closed to traffic and became one of the nation's first pedestrian malls.
In 1997, landscape architect Martha Schwartz renovated the scenery after it had gone through deterioration during the 1980s. Schwartz renovated fountains that were in disrepair and replanted native palms.
Today, Lincoln Road features a state-of-the-art multiplex cinema, the architecturally acclaimed 1111 Lincoln Road parking garage, the acclaimed New World Center concert hall, the offices of Viacom Latin America, as well as over 200 designer boutiques, local merchants, national retail stores, and fine restaurants and bars. Lincoln Road is also home to the newly restored Colony Theatre, a performing arts venue, and ArtCenter/South Florida, a collection of studios and gallery spaces for artists. Street performers entertain a constant stream of tourists and locals on Lincoln Road. It is among the most popular destinations for visitors to the South Beach area.
Also, getting from one side of Lincoln Road to the other is now easier with the installations of Citi Bikes . Citi Bikes makes it easy to rent a bicycle and has multiple locations to return them across not only Lincoln Road, but in different areas of Miami Beach.
In 2006, the Miami Beach Preservation Board approved the closure of traffic of the west end of Lincoln mall for the purpose of extending the popular pedestrian mall west to Alton Road.
In 2010, Raymond Jungles designed an additional block to add to the mall. Jungles' created an urban oasis by using eye-catching materials and biofiltration plants
In 2011, the Florida International University School of Architecture opened a sister campus to its main campus at University Park, on Lincoln Road, with classroom spaces for FIU architecture, art, music and theater graduate students.[2]
On May 6, 2011, the thoroughfare was added to the National Register of Historic Places as Lincoln Road Mall.[1]
Gallery
- A small sample of available images below
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A street sign on Lincoln Road
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ArtCenter/South Florida
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Colony Theatre
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Lincoln-Drexel Building
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Miami Beach Community Church designed by Walter De Garmo
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Miami Beach Community Church
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Miami Beach Community Church at night
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Lincoln Road. |