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1627-17 Interviews AMMMMMM - Press [RETURN] to continue or type q to return to Menu: mh LAWRENCE TAYLOR, LONGTIME SOUTH BEACH HOTEL OWNER 12/25/1993 TH MIAMI HERALD Copyright/1'c) 1993, The Miami Herald DATE: Saturday, December 25, 1993 EDITION: FINAL SECTION: LOCAL PAGE: 4B LENGTH: 44 lines ILLUSTRATION: photo: Lawrence ylor (n) SOURCE/CREDIT LINE: MANNY GARCIA Herald Staff Writer MEMO: DEATHS LAWRENCE TAYLOR, LONGTIME SOUTH BEACH HOTEL OWNER Lawrence Taylor, owner of the Nemo Hotel on Miami Beach, died early Friday of heart failure, his daughter said. He was 79. Taylor died at Miami Heart Institute, daughter Shirley Demsey said. For 33 years, Taylor owned the Nemo, a 100-room, Spanish- style building with arched entryways at 116 Collins Ave. Through the years, Taylor and his hotel were at the center of South Beach's change from a blighted neighborhood into an international tourist attraction. During the 1970s, he rented rooms to retirees on fixed incomes. In 1980, he was one of several hotel owners caught in the middle of a dispute between the federal government and Miami Beach over who would pay the hotel bills for hundreds of Mariel refugees who flocked into South Florida. "I don't know how these people are going to survive, " said Taylor, who refused to evict the refugees. "He was very community and civic oriented, " Demsey said. Taylor also was vice chairman of Miami Beach's Minimum Housing Standards Board, although he blamed the city's failures at redevelopment for the neighborhood's decay. In October, Taylor sold the Nemo. "He was happy to see the area redeveloped, " his daughter said of the Art Deco movement. Born in New York, Taylor moved to Miami Beach after World War II. He had fallen in love with the area during an earlier visit and decided to make it his home. Gertrude, his wife of 59 years and a former beauty queen, joined him. Taylor was also president of several political organizations, including the Biscayne Democratic Club and Dade Better Government League. He also was a member of civic and religious organizations, including Temple Emanu-El. Besides his wife and daughter,. Taylor is survived by sons Tony and Lloyd, eight grandchildren, two great grandchildren and other relatives. Services begin at 1 p.m. Sunday at Rubin-Zilbert Funeral Chapel, 1701 Alton Rd. Burial will follow at Mount Nebo Memorial Garden Cemetery in Miami. KEYWORDS: OBITUARY TAG: 9303270485 1 of 2, 9 Terms mh RENEWAL RUINS BLOCK, THEN LOCKS SOME RESIDENTS IN 08/29/1982 THE MIAMI HERALD Copyright (c) 1982, The Miami Herald DATE: Sunday, August 29, 1982 EDITION: FINAL SECTION: SPECIAL PAGE: 7M LENGTH: 148 lines ILLUSTRATION: bw: Nemo Hotel SOURCE/CREDIT LINE: MICHAEL KRANISH Herald Staff Writer MEMO: SOUTH BEACH: WHERE DREAMS DIE - Special Section RENEWAL RUINS BLOCK, THEN LOCKS SOME RESIDENTS IN Venetian-style lanterns and neon signs announce Picciolo's Italian restaurant, lighting up one of the dreariest and deadliest blocks on South Beach. Inside, black-tied waiters serve a few families in gondola-style booths. When South Beach redevelopment was planned in 1976, Sam Picciolo thought it was a dream come true: He was serving 1,000 customers a night, business was great, and now his 750-seat landmark would be preserved, canals built around it to create a minature Venice. Customers would arrive on gondolas. 'Today, Sicilian-born Picciolo says, redevelopment has taken away his business, his neighborhood, and now wants his home. "I never, I swear, I never wanted to sell the business, " said Picciolo, sitting behind the 36-year-old restaurant in his immaculate white-and-blue wood-frame house. "If it weren't for redevelopment, I would never have had to sell." Picciolo's block on South Beach, between First and Second Street on Collins Avenue, has indisputably died because of redevelopment. Here is the tally: An abandoned bar and restaurant, a vandalized park, a closed fruit stand, an apartment house that has the cheapest rent in Miami Beach, and a hotel that produced more police calls than any other in the city. In the midst of all this is Picciolo's and the Concord Co- op, a condominium where 26 Jews and Italians have lived for years. Now most want to leave, but no one will buy on this block.Pills sold on street Next to Picciolo's valet parking lot, Black Ozzie arrives at 3 p.m. every day, peddling dilaudids to somebody outside the sloppy 1921-era Beachview Apartments, where rooms are as cheap as $475 a year. Half the tenants are Russian and Polish Jews; half are young Cubans and Americans. Precisely at 5 p.m., an addict comes back from a clinic with methadone, and his friends wait on a long bench like vultures. A prostitute wails. On the .portheast corner of Picciolo's block is the Tropicana Bar, closed by the city after a drug bust, fights and a liquor- license violation. A Cuban reopened it but found that the main customers, Mariel refugees, stopped coming when the government stopped mailing out $119 monthly assistance checks. Next door is an old grocery store, its outdoor fresh-fruit stand empty and rotting. Three signs have been posted in order on a now-broken window: "Welcome to our store." "For Rent. " "For Sale." , On the northwest corner is a children's park, littered with jungle gyms, swing sets and a few coil-spring horsey seats that have peeled their paint and lost their spring., The park, called Friendship Corner No. 1, has been fenced in and is closed at 6 p.m. , but kids break in after dark anyway, in the style of the South Bronx. Across the street is Friendship Corner No. 2, which had so many Italian patrons 20 years ago that the city replaced the shuffleboard courts with bocce lanes, an Italian bowling game. Now there are only a few Italians, who still play bocce daily. The promise was broken "I was 100 per cent for redevelopment, " says one bitter Italian, who wears 'a rumpled pants, a striped shirt and an old fedora. "I trusted them. I thought I would get a new place. Now my landlord kicked me out -- he's renting to four refugees in my old place -- and you should see the hole in the wall I have now. I can't live anywhere else." j Picciolo's restaurant is in the middle of the block. To the south is the Nemo Hotel, a Spanish-style 100-room building with Romanesque pillars and an open courtyard of dead and dying trees. For $50 a week, a Nemo patron gets an eight-foot by 10-foot room with peeling walls, broken floor and a ratty bed. The hallways reek of urine. The Nemo, consistently cited for hundreds of housing violations, is owned by Lawrence Taylor, vice chairman of the city's Minimum Housing Standards Board. "Minimum housing is just that: minimum housing," explains Taylor. "You can't expect me to spend a lot of money to fix this up when it's supposed to have been torn down for nine years for redevelopment." His is the lament of nearly every landlord in the redevelopment area, including the founding member of the Miami Beach Redevelopment Agency, David Klevens, who owns the nearby Biscayne-Collins Hotel, and has been sued by the city to fix housing violations. In the Nemo's sparesly furnished lobby, where the Redevelopment Agency once had its headquarters, is a Chamber of Commerce poster of a beautiful blonde wearing a swimsuit and holding a monocle to her eye. "Suddenly, Miami Beach is Very, Very International." the poster declares. Mixed clientele The rooms now are filled with refugees, aimless and poor Americans and an assortment of Miamians spending the weekend on the Beach. Outside, young men and women drink beer and watch the occasional traffic on Collins Avenue. At 2 a.m., the junkies and young prostitutes walk by, eliciting only catcalls. The Nemo, a block from the police station, provoked 216 police calls between July 19, 1981 and June 14, 1982, almost twice as many as any other address in Miami Beach. It is infamous among the officers for its stabbings, robberies and shootings. When asked about South Beach, the first thing police usually mention is The Nemo. "That place is the worst on South Beach, " says Sgt. Thomas Hunker, a 10-year veteran. Across from the southern side of The Nemo is the Four Freedoms, a Jewish nursing home, where the tenants stay inside, singing songs like Hava Nagila and playing cards. But, mostly, they stay in bed. The tenants of the Nemo sit directly across from the Concord Co-op, 101 Collins Ave. , an attractive two-story building built in 1959 by Aaron • Goldman. He found that New York Jews were yearning for an East Side in the sun but didn't want the unstable rents of an Ocean Drive hotel or apartment. So Goldman built the forerunner of a condominium: a tenant- owned apartment house called a co-op, similar to co-ops built by Jewish and socialist unions in New York City tp break the landlord monopolies. Most of those who bought at the Concord were owning their American Dream home for the first time: At 65. No one goes out at night Today, a half-dozen elderly tenants crouch outside the Concord in little chairs, staring at the tenants of The Nemo, who lie on concrete benches. The Concord tenants never leave their building after dark; they just sit. "This was a beautiful street when I bought here 15 years ago, " said Wolf Ascknazy, 78. "Now, it's no good, very dangerous. I moved here from New York to get away from the robbers. Here, it was beautiful, especially for Jewish people. Now look at it. " When World War II hit Poland, Ascknazy was forced onto a train to a Nazi camp at a place called Bromberg. His family was killed. He stayed at Bromberg for eight years. Then he came to New York, worked different jobs, vacationed on Miami Beach, loved it, and bought a little place at the Concord Co-op. { i .a • "Now it is worse than being in the Nazi camps, because I can't leave, " Ascknazy says. Other tenants mutter agreement: Sadie Mundelo, an Italian- born woman who left her Miami home 12 years ago for the tranquility of South Beach, locks her door at nightfall. David Finklestein, 82, fled Tsar Nicholas II's pogroms in 1909. He started work for 13 cents an hour in a Jersey City tailor shop, was a tailor all his life, and moved to the "very beautiful block" in 1965. He would leave if only he could. Twenty-two are trapped But the 22 tenants -- four have died since redevelopment was planned in 1976 -- cannot leave. Like 1,300 other elderly who own condominiums in the redevelopment area, the residents at the Concord cannot get a buyer at a fair price for a building that is supposed to be torn down, that is now surrounded by cheap hotels and crime. Now Sam Picciolo, who advocated redevelopment so fervently, is on the side of the Concord residents. The 1, 000 nightly customers dropped to just 50 by 1980. Nothing could be sadder to Picciolo than a virtually empty four- room restaurant, each table set'with a red tablecloth, four cloth napkins and four wine glasses. So he sold his property at one-third the market value to his former chef, Alfredo Santisi, who prays nightly that redevelopment will rescue the business. Already, he has reduced the kitchen staff from 52 to 17. As Picciolo's serves the early bird special into the night, the Concord residents lock their doors. The tenants of the Beachview and Nemo begin to take control of the street. "People are afraid to come down to our restaurant, " laments Santisi, the Picciolo's part owner."In 10 years, this block has changed 100 per cent. The neighborhood was splendid. Now you don't want to go out." And Sam Picciolo is having trouble getting to sleep. "If I knew then what I know today, I would never have supported redevelopment," he says. "As a businessman, it looked great to me, but look what it's done to this block." 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