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Dinastías

Las familias cuyas fortunas y apellidos atraviesan los negocios, la política y la cultura de Miami a lo largo de generaciones.

Dinastía

La familia Bacardi

The rum dynasty that fled Cuba and made Miami a headquarters — a family whose name is a global brand and whose exile is the template for Cuban Miami's business class.

Dinastía

La familia Fanjul

The sugar barons of the Cuban exile — a family that rebuilt a lost Cuban cane empire into a Florida and Dominican sugar dynasty, and into quiet political power across both U.S. parties.

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La familia Mas

From exile politics to infrastructure to soccer — the family of Jorge Mas Canosa, which built political power, then a construction empire, and now co-owns Inter Miami and Lionel Messi's stage.

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La familia Estefan

The first family of Latin pop — Gloria and Emilio Estefan, who carried Miami's Cuban sound to the world and built a music, restaurant, and real-estate empire on Miami Beach.

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La familia Diaz-Balart

The political dynasty of Cuban Miami — a multi-generational family that ran from pre-revolutionary Cuban politics through Congress and network news, and was once, by marriage, connected to Fidel Castro himself.

Dinastía

La familia Suarez

Two generations in the mayor's office — Xavier Suarez, Miami's first Cuban-born mayor, and his son Francis, the salesman-mayor of the post-2020 boom, a father-and-son arc through the city's political life.

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La familia Pérez

The condo dynasty — Jorge Pérez and the Related Group, who built more of vertical Miami than anyone and turned the skyline into the physical form of the Latam Capital Era.

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La familia Soffer

The family that built a city — Don Soffer conjured Aventura from swamp, and his children Jeffrey and Jackie run the empire it became, from Aventura Mall to the Fontainebleau.

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La familia Codina

The commercial real-estate dynasty that built working Miami — Armando Codina's office parks and corporate campuses that turned the Airport West flats into a Latin American business base, plus deep political ties.

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La familia Robins

The design-world development dynasty — Craig Robins and Dacra, who built the Design District as a top-down luxury-and-art neighborhood and made taste itself a real-estate strategy.

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La familia Huizenga

The serial billion-dollar entrepreneur and his heirs — Wayne Huizenga, who built three Fortune 500 companies and owned three pro sports teams, a one-man engine of South Florida business.

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La familia Arison

The cruise dynasty that owns the Heat — Ted Arison built Carnival into the world's largest cruise company, and the family's name sits on the basketball team and across Miami philanthropy.

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La familia Braman

The auto magnate as civic power and art patron — Norman Braman, whose car dealerships funded a world-class art collection, a hardball brand of civic politics, and a recurring role as Miami's check on power.

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La familia Frost

Pharma fortune turned philanthropy — Phillip and Patricia Frost, whose biotech wealth funded the science museum, the music school, and a swath of the institutions that carry their name across Miami.

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La familia Wolfson

Old Miami media money and the collector who spent it on design — the Wometco entertainment empire, and Micky Wolfson Jr., whose obsessive collecting became the Wolfsonian museum.

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La familia Galbut

South Beach development power — Russell Galbut and Crescent Heights, a major force in Miami Beach real estate and a fixture of the city's Jewish civic and development establishment.

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La familia Adler

A multi-decade Miami real-estate development family — the Adler Group, a quietly durable builder of the commercial and residential fabric of the metro across the booms.

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La familia Cisneros

The Venezuelan media empire that made Miami a base — the Cisneros family, builders of Venevisión and a hemispheric media and consumer fortune, with Miami a center of gravity for the diaspora's wealth.

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La familia Mendoza

The owners of Venezuela's largest private company — the Mendoza family of Empresas Polar, whose beer-and-food empire endured the country's collapse, and whose wealth and diaspora gravitate toward Miami.

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La familia Vollmer

A Venezuelan business dynasty with a Miami footprint — a family associated with Venezuela's storied rum house Santa Teresa and with the diaspora wealth that, like so much of it, found a base in South Florida.

Dinastía

La familia Phelps

The broadcasting dynasty of the northern Andes — a family long associated with Venezuelan radio and television, part of the hemispheric media wealth that gravitated, with its diaspora, toward Miami.

Dinastía

La familia Santo Domingo

Colombia's great beer-and-media fortune — the Santo Domingo family, whose Bavaria brewery became part of a global beer empire, and whose hemispheric wealth includes a Miami presence.

Dinastía

La familia Ardila Lülle

Colombia's industrial and broadcasting dynasty — the Ardila Lülle family, builders of the Postobón beverage empire and the RCN media group, part of the hemispheric wealth woven into Miami.

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La familia Brickell

William and Mary Brickell were pioneer traders who held the south bank of the Miami River, and their name became the city's financial district.

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La familia Goldman

Tony Goldman and his heirs revived South Beach's Art Deco district and later created Wynwood Walls, twice betting on neighborhoods before the market did.