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What’s Up in Miami


THEN AND NOW South Pointe Pier


CIRCA 1935


The Minsky family successfully operated several burlesque theaters in New York City before opening productions in Chicago, New Orleans and Miami, where it was one of two popular businesses on South Beach’s Million Dollar Pier (the other was Hackney’s Seafood Restaurant). A trendy amusement center during the first half of the 20th century, the pier was a money pit for Ohio businessman George R. K. Carter, who built it in the late ’20s and spent a fortune adding a casino and a restaurant as well as repairing the structure after the 1926 and 1928 hurricanes damaged it—earning it the pricey moniker. After years of neglect, the city demolished the pier in 1984.


2017 South Pointe Pier, as it stands today, moved to its current location at the southernmost tip of Miami Beach in 1979, and it quickly became a hot spot in the up-and-coming Art Deco neighborhood. It was also a popular hangout for beachgoers, who often used it for fishing and diving—which wasn’t legal. The pier’s popularity fizzled by the early aughts, and the city eventually closed it in 2004. South Pointe reopened to the public in 2014 (10 years and $4.8 million later), bringing back the pedestrian walkways from its heyday as well as new cutting and washing stations for bait and fish, and recycling bins for fishing lines. ■ Virginia Gil


Española Way shows off a fresh look this summer. NEWS


Walk this way @instagram-name @instagram-name


ESPAÑOLA WAY NO longer looks its age. The 92-year-old, European-inspired strip between Washington and Pennsylvania Avenues appears as fresh-faced as it did when Al Capone and Desi Arnaz so famously strolled the boulevard. The City of Miami Beach introduced its updated look earlier this month with a series of improvements to the Mediterranean Revival–style digs: new Tudor-like pavers


Time Out Miami May 18–August 16, 2017 8


nearest the sidewalk cafés, such as the trendy date spot Tinta y Café, and a cobblestone walkway for pedestrians. It’s not just the street that’s modernizing: This summer, guests of Española’s El Paseo Hotel forgo postcards for social- media posts thanks to the spot’s Snapchat Spectacles loaner program. From your eyes to your feed, literally—no filter needed. ■ Virginia Gil


PHOTOGRAPHS: TOP: MINSKY’S BURLESQUE, CA. 1935. HISTORYMIAMI MUSEUM, 2006-399-36; CENTER: SHUTTERSTOCK


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