Tuesday 13 September 2011

This is my hood

I just came across this article in my twitter feed and I had to share because it made me proud to be living in Brickell & for Blo to be opening here soon!



Brickell Rivals South Beach As Hottest Spot To Live, Work And Play

image
Above: Le Kabob allows customers to smoke out of the hookah while listening to live music
With its high-rise luxury condos, towering glass-lined skyscrapers and elevated trams zipping above streets and between buildings, the Brickell neighborhood in Miami is the epitome of modern American city living.
With the exception that most of its inhabitants are speaking Spanish.
But what can you expect from an area that has the largest concentration of foreign banks in the United States?
There is money on Brickell. Plenty of it. But most of it comes from South America.
However, Brickell can also be affordable on a healthy working wage (or two), especially if you compare it to South Beach.
“I find that newcomers usually have both South Beach and Brickell as top options,” saidJamey Cothran Prezzi, a Miami real estate agent who specializes in both areas.
“But in terms of what you get for the money, you can get a lot more bang for your buck in Brickell than in South Beach.”
For example, rent at the Icon South Beach, a luxurious condo designed by Philippe Starck, goes for about $3,000 a month, Prezzi said.
“And that’s without a balcony,” she said.
But rent at the Icon Brickell, which is also designed by Starke and just as luxurious, goes for about $1,950 for a 1-bed, 1-bath unit.
You won’t have a beach within walking distance, but you will have a balcony.
image
Rising Rents
However, rents in Brickell have sharply increased within the last year, due to the increased demand and dwindling supply.
“The average rent (for a 1-bed, 1-bath) is around $1,600 to $1,700 because there is not a lot of rental inventory anymore,” Prezzi said. “It’s super competitive.”
“Last year, they would have been $1,500 or a price people could negotiate. Now there is the list price and if you don’t want it, there are five other behind you who will.”
Ashley Rodriguez and her husband pay $1,575 for a one-bed, one-bath with small den at Latitude on the River.
“We locked in a good price two years ago up on a really high floor,” she said.
Scott Potchik, an underwear model from Ohio who is always posting pictures on Facebook of himself sitting in a pool with various women in bikinis, pays $2,300-a-month for a 2-bed, 2-bath unit.
He loves it there, but admits it is expensive.
“It’s great if you live and work in Brickell,” he said. “You’re living in a metropolitan city, close to the airport, close to the Keys, close to South Beach; the views from the condos are amazing, great food and lots of exciting development on the way.”
Most units come with a parking space and charge you about $150 per month for a second space, so that should be factored in before making a moving decision.
Nightlife
Like South Beach, many of the bars and clubs don’t stop serving until 5 a.m.
And while you won’t have endless blocks of nightclubs, bars and restaurants as you do on South Beach, you’ll have a concentrated section of diverse, thriving establishments ranging from Tobacco Road, the oldest bar in Miami, specializing in live blues acts, to Kukaramakara, a Colombian-owned restaurant and nightclub (pictured below), specializing in live Latin dance music.
image
And you’ll have everything in between from the corporate chain P.F. Changs to the locally owned Italian trattoria, Rosinella.
image
“We’ve been here since 1998 and have seen this place change very much,” said Angelo Filaccio, manager of Rosinella (pictured above with his staff), a very authentic and well-run trattoria owned by a local Italian family that makes some of the best tiramisu in Miami.
“I used to stand outside and when I saw a car coming, I knew they were coming here,” he said.
Now, they could be going to a number of other locations, including Rosa Mexicano, Dolores but you can call me Lolita, El Vato Tequila and Taco Bar, Blue Martini Lounge, Burger and Beer Joint, Fado Irish Pub, Perricone’s or Baru Urbano.
image
History
William and Mary Brickell moved to the area from Ohio in 1876, 20 years before Miami was incorporated as a city.
They bought large tracts of land south of the Miami River to Coconut Grove, which included what is now known as the Brickell area.
Mary continued developing the area after her husband died, creating a row of mansion’s along the bay that was known as “Millionaire’s Row” back then.
Chad Cohen of the Brickell Life blog describes Mary’s goals:
Most historians agree that William Brickell was more of a recluse while Mary was the power player in the marriage. She typically handled the business and earned a reputation as a cantankerous and stubborn woman. After William’s death in 1908, Mary set her sights on developing the neighborhood and laid
out her vision of what it should look like. She had a very definitive idea for how the region should be developed all the way down to the current landscaped median in the middle of Brickell Avenue. In December 1921, the year before she died, Mary Brickell wrote an open letter to the people of Miami describing what she wanted to do with her still ample property: “Many times in the past I have been urged to sell this tract to subdividers but I have not cared to part with it for a number of reasons. The average real estate operator has but one object in view: to develop the land to be subdivided as quickly and cheaply as possible, and to get it off his hands at an inflated value, and reap an exorbitant profit. But I have always had a vision of a subdivision ‘de luxe’ for Brickell Hammock.”
The mansions were long-gone by the 1980s, replaced by towering condos and Latin American banks, which were fueled by the cocaine economy of the time (and probably made Mary Brickell turn over in her grave).
image
And while the area has always withstood the Miami cycle of booms and busts, it has always come out gleaming.
And today is no exception. In the early part of the millennium, Miami was going through yet another development boom, which added to the area’s already high skyline.
Units were snatched up in record numbers by foreign investors, mostly from South America, but many from Europe as well.
But then came the bust and Brickell was left with a bunch of empty condos that were valued less than the buying price.
That opened up the area for renters, mostly young, single professionals who were unable to buy a condo, but could afford to rent one.
And that helped spark the nightlife, which provides a less-hectic and pretentious alternative to South Beach.
“Brickell is very laid-back and friendly, especially this place,” said Dimitri Секейра (pictured below), a bar manager at El Vato Tequila and Taco Bar, a place where barmaids climb up on the bar and pour tequila down your throat.
image
image
image
Above: Fado Irish Pub in Mary Brickell Village
The Culture Shock
For those whose only experience with Miami is South Beach, Brickell might provide a little culture shock because so many people are speaking Spanish on the streets, bars, clubs and restaurants.
But these are not the low-wage immigrants you’ll find in other parts of the city, but young, educated professionals from prominent South American families.
So most will be able to switch to English in a second.
“If you are one of those people who feels English should be the only language you hear, then you probably should move to Broward,” said Potchik, who happily describes himself as a “Gringo from Ohio.”
“If you like different cultures, good food and beautiful people, then you will love living in Brickell.”
Photos by Carlos Miller

image
image
image
image
Above: A group of Portuguese and Brazilian woman chatting over coffee at the Brickell Starbucks
image
Above: The Brickell Tennis Club
image
image
image
image
image
image
image
Above: The Brickell Citicentre is another shopping complex that will soon be built in the area
About the Author: Carlos Miller is a Senior Editor at Miami Beach 411. He also operates Photography is Not a Crime, a blog about photographer rights, New Media and First Amendment issues.

Monday 12 September 2011

Labour Day love

I am becoming very comfortable in my new city, making more friends and enjoying what the city has to offer (on a budget sometimes, since Blo is consuming most of my life right now).

I have an influx of visitors still, anyone that has moved here from another city tells me this is the norm and it will apparently never end....but I don't mind when it's good company! Speaking of, I had Anar & Nadia come down for Labour Day weekend, and they basically took me on vacation to the W in Ft. Lauderdale before moving to a hotel on South Beach. We had such a good time, and if I ever felt like I was in a re-make of The Hangover before, this weekend takes the cake! Let's just say somehow shoes ended up outside my condo, Tyson slept with his leash on, random chicks hanging around (yes, I mean baby chickens) & not remembering the last time we slept. Hell we almost had Mike Tyson make a cameo. I definitely do not want to piece this weekend together with pictures ;)

The InterviewHer event was fun and I definitely enjoyed the company I was with. While I was there I indulged in a little feather extension just for fun!


Incase you can't tell it's purple and black, just one lone little guy. In hindsight I wish I got 2-3 but we'll see. It's difficult to brush the area where it is attached (or more like painful when you forget!).










This past weekend was fun: Went to Mynt with a great group of girls & we randomly had a table next to Sammy Sosa, a former baseball player and Latin legend in sports. Nothing special, just thought I'd mention...because only in Miami have I seen a 45 year old pimped out in a white suit (and can still rock it) & order about 6 magnums of champagne and be considered 'cool'...
Oh and I was the ultimate wing-woman for my friend Diana, who calls me Vacanissima (translated as a Columbian term for 'Super cool'). In my quest to learn Spanish, I am learning a lot of other words too, that have no application for me in the outside world....need to get me a Rosetta stone asap! Most people think I am Latin-American already because of my name & skin tone...if I had some of the language down I could get away with it!

My friend & former University of Toronto housemate Khaled is in town from Vancouver so we had dinner at the local fave Dolores but you can call me Lolita, and caught up on the last year and a half. It was nice to see an old face...someone who remembers me as the blonde Portugese girl (as he may recall it) & our late night jogs and Tim Hortons pit stops.

Lastly, Sept 8th was Fashion's Night Out, a big evening of fashion where shopping areas host shows/events during the evening. Blo was at Zingara Swim Boutique in Aventura Mall on Thursday evening for a pop-up Blo bar, styling the women who wanted to freshen their 'dos!


Although I am getting comfortable in my hood, I am still directionally-challenged when it comes to getting around. I am not sure why, perhaps because I rely so heavily on GPS and when I don't have it I get lost. I also think it has to do with the setup of the city and beach, as in Toronto if you want to head towards the lake you know to drive South, and we don't have all these different bridges to get to the beach (and since south beach is really east of me...it makes no sense just yet).



Ordering glittery pumps online (even though I shouldn't be!)...

xo
Fatima