Neighborhoods
From the dredged sandbar of Miami Beach to the swamp-built Venezuelan capital of Doral — the districts that each tell one part of how Miami actually works.
Miami Beach
A barrier island that was dredged into existence and has been re-dredged, culturally, every generation since — Miami's id, its shop window, and the most reinvented seven square miles in America.
Coral Gables
George Merrick's "City Beautiful" — America's most ambitious planned suburb of the 1920s, and the closest thing Miami has to old money in a city that rarely keeps it.
Coconut Grove
Miami's oldest neighborhood — founded before the city itself existed, shaped by Bahamian laborers and Yankee dreamers, and the place every other version of Miami eventually circles back to.
Brickell
Miami's financial corridor and most kinetic neighborhood — a street where one of Miami's founding families ran a trading post for half a century, then a banking district was built on top of it, then a vertical city was built on top of that.
Downtown Miami
The original city — the only part of Miami that was ever the whole of it. Hollowed out by the suburbs, kept alive by Latin American traders, and now being overwritten a third time by a wall of luxury towers.
Wynwood
The proof of concept that Miami can manufacture a neighborhood — and the open question of whether the manufactured version is the real one.
Little Havana
The first Latin American capital the United States ever absorbed — and the only neighborhood in America that became more famous as it became less itself.
Design District
Wynwood's mirror image and its rebuttal — a creative neighborhood that skipped the organic phase entirely, manufactured by a single developer and an LVMH fund as a finished luxury product.
Edgewater
The purest expression of the Miami neighborhood as investment product — a bayfront wall of luxury towers built fast, sold largely to Latin American buyers, and asking whether a place built as a portfolio asset can ever become a place people are from.
Bal Harbour
The rare municipality whose civic identity is a shopping center — a square of beachfront with a few thousand residents whose real export is the highest-grossing luxury retail in America.
Aventura
Doral's coastal twin — a Latin American expatriate capital conjured from literal swamp and organized not around a downtown or a port but around a shopping mall as its town square.
Doral
The inversion of the whole Miami formula — a Latin American city with no prior American city beneath it, built on drained swamp around a golf resort and conjured into a Venezuelan capital inside U.S. borders.
Little Haiti
The capital of the Haitian diaspora in the United States — a community that built the largest Haitian city in America and is now fighting developers to keep it.
Sunny Isles Beach
A barrier-island wall of luxury towers nicknamed "Little Moscow" — a pure vertical wealth-haven where the world parks money on the sand.
Key Biscayne
A deliberately sleepy island of wealth across the causeway from the city — an Anglo-and-Latin elite retreat that has chosen quiet over everything.
Surfside
A quiet, low-rise beach town that became a byword for the risks under Miami's beautiful, aging, overbuilt coast.
Overtown
The neighborhood that built Miami and was then demolished by it.
Liberty City
The enduring cost of how Miami treated the community that built it.
Hialeah
The un-glamorous engine room of Cuban Miami and the most thoroughly Latin American city in America.
Allapattah
A gritty, functional immigrant neighborhood watching the art-and-development wave arrive at its door.
Coral Way
A tree-canopied boulevard and the settled, leafy heartland of established Cuban-American Miami, running quietly between downtown and the Gables.
Mid-Beach
The dignified middle of Miami Beach, where mid-century resort glamour was reborn as 21st-century luxury.
Opa-locka
A boom-era Moorish fantasy city of domes and minarets that became one of the metro's most troubled, its Arabian Nights skyline presiding over hard decades.
Miami Springs
Glenn Curtiss's gentler planned town, a calm Pueblo-style garden suburb living quietly off the edge of Miami's airport.