Loading...
1674-16 Tony Goldman FRIENDS OF ART DECO LOOK BACK, LOOK AHEAD 01/12/1995 THE MIAMI HERALD Copyright (c) 1995, The Miami Herald DATE: Thursday, January 12, 1995 EDITION: FINAL SECTION: NEIGHBORS MB PAGE: 1 LENGTH: 105 lines ILLUSTRATION: color photo: Postcards shown in front of Art Deco hotel (a) ; photo: Marlin Hotel (a) , losellev Casteneda prepares for Art Deco Weekend (a) , Art Deco Weekend poster (a) SOURCE/CREDIT LINE: LYNN CARRILLO and RAFAEL LORENTE Herald Staff Writers JEFFERY A. SALTER / Herald Staff CHUCK FADELY / Herald Staff MEMO: COVER STORY See FESTIVAL PARKING box at end of text FRIENDS OF ART DECO LOOK BACK, LOOK AHEAD Once a row of unnoticed and crumbling old buildings, Ocean Drive is now the center for vogue and tourism. The strip has hosted two international parties in the past year and is gearing up for another big celebration this weekend. The 18th Annual Art Deco Weekend festival between Fifth and 15th streets starts Friday and continues through Sunday against a backdrop of renovated 1930s hotels. The festival has changed, along with the buildings and lifestyle it celebrates. In 1977, a few early members of the Miami Design Preservation League held the first festival to attract attention to the crumbling architecture of South Beach. Attendance was low. By 1986, attendance broke 100,000, and signs of renewed life were cropping up around South Beach, and particularly Ocean Drive. By 1992 the festival had grown to include lectures and films and a crowd of more than 400,000 people as Ocean Drive and the rest of South Beach were booming. Over the past year, the boom was heard internationally with delegates to two major events descending on the strip. Delegates to Pow-Wow, a convention last May of international tour operators and travel agents, were wined and dined at upscale restaurants. In December, media from around the hemisphere partied there during the Summit of the Americas. On the heels of this weekend's Art Deco Weekend is a concert Jan. 22 on the beach by famed Italian tenor Luciano Pavarotti. "Some years are more productive in terms of construction and some in terms of productivity," said Tony Goldman, chairman of the Ocean Drive Association and proprietor of the Park Central Hotel, 640 Ocean Dr. "This has been a very good year overall." Construction on Ocean Drive, although slower than previous years, has had significant accomplishments with the opening of three hotels and five restaurants. "Ocean Drive is like a beautiful smile," Goldman said. "When we first started the teeth were decayed, now we are nearing a pearly-white smile. " The Netherlands condominium, built at 1330 Ocean Dr. in 1935 as one of the largest hotels on Ocean Drive, reopened last year and houses a designer clothing boutique, the Island Trading Post and The Lab. "The Gianni Versace palace, which is near completion, stands as a real example of quality restoration, " Goldman said of the 1930 Mediterranean-style Amsterdam Hotel at 11th Street and Ocean Drive. Versace, the Italian designer, converted the building into his Casa Casuarina estate. Upcoming Ocean Drive developments include construction of a 20,000-square-foot retail complex and condominium at Ocean Drive and 15th Street and the beautification of Lummus Park, Goldman said. Meanwhile, merchants are primping for Art Deco Weekend, which attracts hundreds of thousands of people from all over South Florida and the world. This year's festival celebrates that diversity with a Latin American theme, which includes such performers as Cuban singer Celia Cruz and Israel "Cachao" Lopez. . The festival also will feature films and lectures highlighting Art Deco architecture from countries such as Brazil and Argentina. "We didn't understand that Art Deco existed in all these countries until recently, " said Mike Kinerk, co-chairman of the Art Deco Weekend Committee. "This is information that's only come to light recently because nobody really cared about Art Deco." Among the many exhibitors will be Jim Morrison, who is bringing 3,000 vintage postcards of Art Deco hotels to the 10th Street Auditorium, 1001 Ocean Dr. Morrison fell in love with South Beach's architecture 20 years ago during a postcard show in Melbourne. He drove to Miami Beach right after the show and was amazed by the dilapidated hotels full of retirees. Over the years, he watched the city change during frequent visits from his home in Maryland. "I'd come down every three years or so and then one year the neon was up, " Morrison said. "It just blew my mind." This will be Morrison's third year at the show. His visits in 1993 and 1994 were soggy ones, and Art Deco Weekend promoters are hoping for better luck this year. They've even bought rain gear to sell, just in case. Parking, as usual, will be a headache. Park and ride from Watson Island in Miami will not be available, so festivalgoers will have to rely on scarce street parking and a shuttle service from various city lots. The food available this weekend also will be different. For years, restaurateurs on Ocean Drive complained about the food vendors at the festival hurting their business. This year, there will be about half as many vendors and they'll be located in areas where there are few or no restaurants. The street's restaurants will take the vendors' place, offering pizza, sandwiches and special menus from which people can eat in a hurry. Many of the longtime vendors worry they will eventually be phased out altogether. "Every year they go to less and less vendors," said Bob Kasselakis, of Greek Flame Food. Kasselakis will be at 11th Street and Ocean Drive this weekend hoping to make up for the last two years when rain cut his business in half. "They have a problem with the restaurants, " he said. "I don't think it's fair. Everybody's got to make a living." CUTLINES: TRETTY AS A PICTURE: Some of the 3,000 vintage postcards of Art Deco hotels that will be on display at the 10th Street Auditorium, 1001 Ocean Dr. , are compared to the real buildings along the fabled street. DOLD IMAGES: The poster for this year's festival. GETTING READY: At the Art Deco Welcome Center at 10th Street and Ocean Drive, Miami Design Preservation League intern Iosellev Casteneda unpacks goods to be offered for sale at Art Deco Weekend Friday through Sunday. LOOKING BACK: The Marlin, at 12th Street and Collins Avenue, is among the many restored area buildings. TAG: 9501030505 90 of 283, 2 Terms mh A LONGER OCEAN DRIVE WINS FAVOR ON BEACH 09/20/1992