Volume éditorial

Répartition des publications

418 articles et brèves
+ 32 autres documents


En cours de relecture : 812
En cours de rédaction : 2
En cours de suppression : 0
Articles retirés : 1


Météo locale

Rubriques

  • Prix AAF-VMF « Métiers d’Art et Patrimoine » – Ouverture des candidatures
    Professionnels des métiers d’art, un coup de pouce à vos projets en participant au prix AAF-VMF « Métiers d’Art et Patrimoine » jusqu’au 1er septembre 2026 et tentez de remporter 10.000 €. L’article Prix AAF-VMF « Métiers d’Art et Patrimoine » – Ouverture des candidatures est apparu en premier sur Salon International du Patrimoine Culturel.
  • Our Positions at the June 9, 2026 Historic Preservation Board vendredi 12 juin 2026
    Read Time: 3 mins719-737 Lincoln Road- NOLI The Miami Design Preservation League strongly supports the proposed development at 719–737 Lincoln Road. This project represents a thoughtful and sophisticated addition to Lincoln Road, demonstrating […] The post Our Positions at the June 9, 2026 Historic Preservation Board appeared first on Miami Design Preservation League.

The Miami Beach Architectural “Art Deco” District: A Tale of Two Cities(1981)

Mise à jour le jeudi 24 juillet 2025 par Patricia Díaz Zeas

Read Time: 2 mins

Editors Note: The Barbara Baer Capitman archives “Historic Threads” project is partly sponsored by the Department of State, Division of Historical Resources and the State of Florida.

Courtesy of the Barbara Bear Capitman Archives

Jo Thomas’s piece in the New York Times emphasizes the efforts of preservationists, such as the Miami Design Preservation League, to save the 800 buildings of the Art Deco District, which represents a unique architectural history from the 1930s. She compares this struggle to broader conflicts in older cities between property rights and historical preservation. In contrast, William Safire’s article critiques the preservationists, arguing that their actions infringe on property rights and misapply principles of ownership.

Excerpts and quotes from the article are highlighted below in blue.

The buildings, decked with spires and spirals, wrapped with rounded corners and adorned with terrazzo sunbursts and glass flamingos, hint at youth and endless summer, but then they have always traded on illusions.
In the 1930’s when most of the Art Deco hotels and apartment buildings in what is now the Miami Beach Architectural District were built, they offered fashionable places to escape the winter and overlook the Depression. Here was a building looking like a steamship, there one like a vacuum cleaner. The guests were enchanted. Many of them decided to
stay.

The struggle between the owner’s right to destroy and rebuild in the name of profit and property rights, and the community’s right to save in the name of history and what some see as beauty.

The post The Miami Beach Architectural “Art Deco” District: A Tale of Two Cities(1981) appeared first on Miami Design Preservation League.

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