Go Back  Offshoreonly.com > General Discussion > Classic Offshore
Good News from the Miami Herald >

Good News from the Miami Herald

Notices

Good News from the Miami Herald

Thread Tools
 
Old 10-08-2008, 11:24 AM
  #1  
T2x
Allergic to Nonsense
Platinum Member
Thread Starter
 
T2x's Avatar
 
Join Date: Aug 2001
Location: Granite Quarry, NC
Posts: 5,011
Likes: 0
Received 17 Likes on 17 Posts
Default Good News from the Miami Herald

Miami Marine Stadium and the big Coppertone Girl sign that hung over Biscayne Boulevard for nearly 50 years, long-neglected icons of Miami's golden age of the '50s and '60s, should be saved for posterity, the city's historic preservation board decided Tuesday.
In unanimous 8-0 votes, the board conferred historic designation on both the stadium and the sign -- a move that protects the endangered stadium from demolition and allows the Coppertone Girl to be erected in a new home on upper Biscayne Boulevard, in the recently designated MiMo-centric historic district.
The votes represent a ringing endorsement of two extremes of Miami's mid-century architectural legacy, the high-modernist design of the s tadium and the Coppertone Girl's sunny vernacular.
Designation alone won't save the deteriorated, city-owned stadium on Virginia Key. It has been closed since 1992 and would require millions of dollars in repairs to reopen. But supporters say official historic status opens the door to substantial grants, tax credits and other sources of money that can help pay for the work.
PROPOSALS
The city also plans to issue a request for proposals soon for a private operator willing to manage the stadium, once the popular and fondly recalled site of concerts, powerboat races and Easter sunrise services.
Friends of Miami Marine Stadium, a nonprofit group that has pushed to save the facility, says numerous potential users have stepped forward, including the country's three main powerboating associations, the producers of the Orange Bowl game halftime show, and music promoters such as the Concert Association of Florida and the Rhythm Foundation.
''We're going to have a wond erful future for this stadium,'' said Becky Roper Matkov, executive director of Dade Heritage Trust, a designation supporter.
Both decisions, coming on the heels of the designation of the Miami Modern/Biscayne Boulevard district, also confirm growing interest by preservationists and the city in saving once-disdained buildings and designs of the modern era.
The stadium, which opened in 1963, falls short of the usual threshold guideline of 50 years to be considered for designation. But the city's preservation officer, Ellen Uguccioni, concluded it was so significant culturally and architecturally that it merited protection now.
Architect and University of Miami Professor Jorge Hernandez, a key backer of efforts to save the building, called it ``a sculptural, structural tour de force of modern design.''
Board members not only agreed, but expanded the boundaries of the protected stadium site far beyond what Uguccioni recommended to encompass the entire adjacent basin built to accommodate speedboat races. The board also included a chunk of the property fronting the stadium all the way to the Rickenbacker Causeway to ensure the stadium would remain visible from the roadway.
For the stadium, designation marks a watershed moment in a campaign that has drawn international interest. Until a group of preservationists, architects, rowers and boaters began lobbying to save the 1963 stadium earlier this year, the city was moving ahead with a new master plan for Virginia Key that likely would have done away with it.
PRIVATE GROUP
Since then, however, members of Friends of Miami Marine Stadium have garnered support from several producers and concert and boat-race promoters, as well as the World Monuments Fund, a major private group that promotes preservation of architectural and cultural sites.
Supporters, including its architect, Hilario Candela, say a renovated stadium could become a symbol of a revitalized Miami.
But one board member, Ji m Broton, expressed deep reservations even as he voted in favor of protecting the stadium. He said he hoped taxpayers would not be stuck paying tens of millions of dollars to repair a facility without a clear use.
City officials have said the stadium's future would hinge on finding feasible uses. Stadium supporters say they will work closely with the city to do so. ''We're in it for the long haul,'' Hernandez, the UM professor, said.
The designation of the Coppertone sign also came as a result of grass-roots efforts. The nonprofit MiMo Biscayne Association arranged for the deteriorated sign to be restored and hung on the facade of an office building at 7300 Biscayne Blvd.
The Coppertone Girl's neon lights dazzled Biscayne Boulevard for decades, until its home was demolished 13 years and it was moved -- sans neon guts -- to a far less-visible building on Flagler Street. The weather-worn sign was removed in May for restoration and donated by its owner -- Dade Heritage Trust -- to the MiMo Biscayne Association. The nonprofit group promotes revitalization of the historic district that highlights the 1950s Miami Modern architecture of upper Biscayne Boulevard.
Historic designation will give the sign an exemption from signage laws, said MiMo association president Fran Rollason.
Coppertone will cover restoration costs. Plans are to replace the sign's vanished neon with low-voltage LED lights, Rollason said. Solar panels could power the sign.
T2x is offline  
Old 10-08-2008, 12:07 PM
  #2  
Platinum Member
Platinum Member
 
Join Date: Mar 2005
Posts: 451
Likes: 0
Received 10 Likes on 10 Posts
Default

Originally Posted by T2x
Miami Marine Stadium and the big Coppertone Girl sign that hung over Biscayne Boulevard for nearly 50 years, long-neglected icons of Miami's golden age of the '50s and '60s, should be saved for posterity, the city's historic preservation board decided Tuesday.
In unanimous 8-0 votes, the board conferred historic designation on both the stadium and the sign -- a move that protects the endangered stadium from demolition and allows the Coppertone Girl to be erected in a new home on upper Biscayne Boulevard, in the recently designated MiMo-centric historic district.
The votes represent a ringing endorsement of two extremes of Miami's mid-century architectural legacy, the high-modernist design of the s tadium and the Coppertone Girl's sunny vernacular.
Designation alone won't save the deteriorated, city-owned stadium on Virginia Key. It has been closed since 1992 and would require millions of dollars in repairs to reopen. But supporters say official historic status opens the door to substantial grants, tax credits and other sources of money that can help pay for the work.
PROPOSALS
The city also plans to issue a request for proposals soon for a private operator willing to manage the stadium, once the popular and fondly recalled site of concerts, powerboat races and Easter sunrise services.
Friends of Miami Marine Stadium, a nonprofit group that has pushed to save the facility, says numerous potential users have stepped forward, including the country's three main powerboating associations, the producers of the Orange Bowl game halftime show, and music promoters such as the Concert Association of Florida and the Rhythm Foundation.
''We're going to have a wond erful future for this stadium,'' said Becky Roper Matkov, executive director of Dade Heritage Trust, a designation supporter.
Both decisions, coming on the heels of the designation of the Miami Modern/Biscayne Boulevard district, also confirm growing interest by preservationists and the city in saving once-disdained buildings and designs of the modern era.
The stadium, which opened in 1963, falls short of the usual threshold guideline of 50 years to be considered for designation. But the city's preservation officer, Ellen Uguccioni, concluded it was so significant culturally and architecturally that it merited protection now.
Architect and University of Miami Professor Jorge Hernandez, a key backer of efforts to save the building, called it ``a sculptural, structural tour de force of modern design.''
Board members not only agreed, but expanded the boundaries of the protected stadium site far beyond what Uguccioni recommended to encompass the entire adjacent basin built to accommodate speedboat races. The board also included a chunk of the property fronting the stadium all the way to the Rickenbacker Causeway to ensure the stadium would remain visible from the roadway.
For the stadium, designation marks a watershed moment in a campaign that has drawn international interest. Until a group of preservationists, architects, rowers and boaters began lobbying to save the 1963 stadium earlier this year, the city was moving ahead with a new master plan for Virginia Key that likely would have done away with it.
PRIVATE GROUP
Since then, however, members of Friends of Miami Marine Stadium have garnered support from several producers and concert and boat-race promoters, as well as the World Monuments Fund, a major private group that promotes preservation of architectural and cultural sites.
Supporters, including its architect, Hilario Candela, say a renovated stadium could become a symbol of a revitalized Miami.
But one board member, Ji m Broton, expressed deep reservations even as he voted in favor of protecting the stadium. He said he hoped taxpayers would not be stuck paying tens of millions of dollars to repair a facility without a clear use.
City officials have said the stadium's future would hinge on finding feasible uses. Stadium supporters say they will work closely with the city to do so. ''We're in it for the long haul,'' Hernandez, the UM professor, said.
The designation of the Coppertone sign also came as a result of grass-roots efforts. The nonprofit MiMo Biscayne Association arranged for the deteriorated sign to be restored and hung on the facade of an office building at 7300 Biscayne Blvd.
The Coppertone Girl's neon lights dazzled Biscayne Boulevard for decades, until its home was demolished 13 years and it was moved -- sans neon guts -- to a far less-visible building on Flagler Street. The weather-worn sign was removed in May for restoration and donated by its owner -- Dade Heritage Trust -- to the MiMo Biscayne Association. The nonprofit group promotes revitalization of the historic district that highlights the 1950s Miami Modern architecture of upper Biscayne Boulevard.
Historic designation will give the sign an exemption from signage laws, said MiMo association president Fran Rollason.
Coppertone will cover restoration costs. Plans are to replace the sign's vanished neon with low-voltage LED lights, Rollason said. Solar panels could power the sign.
That is some great news, Who wants to help me with an endeavor to build a powerboat museum, I would love to have a project like that as a life ambition, and a place to retire. Any thoughts?????????
7xchamp is offline  
Related Topics
Thread
Thread Starter
Forum
Replies
Last Post
T2x
General Boating Discussion
23
10-10-2008 08:51 AM
GoFastSonic
OPA/The Jersey Boyz
0
07-29-2008 10:33 AM
AppSysCons
Super Boat International
1
02-04-2007 08:53 AM
bryanh
Super Boat International
1
08-02-2006 08:16 PM
RedDog382
General Boating Discussion
16
02-14-2006 06:45 PM

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On



Quick Reply: Good News from the Miami Herald


Contact Us - Archive - Advertising - Cookie Policy - Privacy Statement - Terms of Service

Copyright © 2024 MH Sub I, LLC dba Internet Brands. All rights reserved. Use of this site indicates your consent to the Terms of Use.