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1663-16 Art Deco/Preservation 00006475 MON MAR 16 1987 ED: FINAL SECTION: LOCAL PAGE: 1B LENGTH: 16 . 06" MEDIUM ILLUST: SOURCE: CHRISTOPHER WELLISZ Herald Staff Writer DATELINE: MEMO: BISCAYA SERVED MANY MASTERS In several incarnations during 62 years of existence -- swank resort, army barracks, old-age home and finally crumbling wreck -- the Biscaya Hotel blew in and out of the lives of thousands who came to stay and play in Miami Beach. In its youth, the Biscaya was part of a breed of fashionable bayside hotels that sprouted in the 1920s, the years of giddy optimism when pioneer developer Carl Fisher lured settlers to a palm-studded mecca with speedboat races, polo and high living. During its dotage, when the Biscaya stood crumbling and empty, filled with stray cats and vagrants, windows broken and yellow paint peeling, the old building became a symbol of a tourist city in eclipse and urban redevelopment gone awry. In its final gasps, the Biscaya once again became a symbol of hope, at a time when history had become a profitable venture and preservationists saw the seeds of a brighter future in the city' s tired old buildings. By then, though, it was too late. "I never thought I 'd see this happen, " Beach Fire Chief Braniard Dorris said, watching bulldozers gouge out the walls in preparation for the Biscaya' s final demise. "It ' s a shame. It ' s a classy old building, but it ' s unsafe. " The 242-room, 10-story Biscaya was born in 1925 at the foot of the old County Causeway, now the MacArthur. Christened the Floridian, it was adorned with a red-tile roof and ornate loggias in the style of a Mediterranean palace. A grand front stairway led to an elegant ballroom with high ceilings. In the tourist ' s mind, the Floridian was always associated with its sisters to the north -- the Flamingo, Fleetwood, Nautilus and King Cole. The Biscaya outlived them all. "It brings back memories, it sure does, " said Sidney Saltz, 75, who was the dining room captain from 1936 to 1940, the year before the Army took it over for a barracks. He remembers flowers on every table, finger bowls, fine silverware and big band music. "It had nothing but French service -- a la carte, " he said. "We had dancing every night during dinner hour. " After the war, the Biscaya went through a series of owners . It was run for a time as one of the area' s first retirement hotels. Housing violations piled up. By the time its last owner, Harvey Goodman, took over, the Biscaya was a tired old matron. Goodman said he planned to restore the building, but a 10- year building moratorium in South Beach stopped him. In 1977 it was closed down, and it continued to crumble until the Metro- Dade Unsafe Structures Board ordered it razed. In its final weeks, the Biscaya provoked a huge fight between the city and preservationists who made a last-ditch effort to save it. Two people were arrested when the bulldozers first went to work. "It' s a sad moment for the city, " said Beach preservationist Nancy Liebman. "I hope it will teach us to find ways of preventing this kind of thing from happening again. " Many others were happy to see it go, from firefighters who feared to enter its gloomy interior to Miami Beach publicist Gerald Schwartz, for whom the building was just bad public relations . Sunday he celebrated its demise with a champagne "demolition party" at his office across the street. ADDED TERMS: history END OF DOCUMENT. 1