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1663-26 Art Deco/Preservation THU FEB 18 1993 ED: FINAL SECTION: NEIGHBORS NW PAGE: 7 LENGTH: 28 . 74" LONG ILLUST: photo: The CARLTON HOTEL, Leonard HOROWITZ . SOURCE: DAVID KIDWELL Herald Staff Writer DATELINE: MEMO: HUE AND CRY Less than four years after his death, Leonard Horowitz ' s legacy to Miami Beach -- a pastel-colored playground famous the world over -- sits precariously close to a purple paint can. These days, it seems, Horowitz ' s pastels are out along the trendy thoroughfares of South Beach. Primaries -- with a frequent splash of cranberry mauve, sunsplash orange and verdigris green -- are in. From the bright yellows and oranges of the Leslie Hotel ( 1244 Ocean Dr. ) , to the lavender, purple and orange of the Cardozo ( 1300 Ocean Dr. ) , to the shades of aqua blue at The Marlin ( 1200 Collins Ave. ) , the commercial face of Miami Beach' s Art Deco District is changing colors again. A drive along Ocean Drive is testimony enough that developers have been struck with the idea that bold is beautiful. "Definitely, people are starting to get a little more aggressive with colors, " said Craig Robins, co-owner of Dacra Developers and a leader in South Beach' s make over. "I think it ' s OK, as long as it doesn' t get out of hand, " he said. "I don't see any reason to keep everything pastel. There' s one thing about paint -- it ' s totally harmless. It can change tomorrow. " Proponents of South Beach' s new look argue it is a courageous yet harmless artistic statement brought about by the same creative-minded investors who have brought South Beach out of the tourism doldrums. Opponents say it ' s merely a competition to see who can make his or her building the brightest and a symptom of a much greater problem: lack of distinct regulations on how historic buildings can be changed. "Application of bad color sense is in some cases as detrimental to the neighborhood as T-shirt shops, " said Tony Goldman, chairman of the Ocean Drive Association. Horowitz, an industrial engineer who in the 1980s began the transformation of South Beach into a pastel paradise, died in 1989 at age 43 . By that time, more than 150 buildings, once drab shades of white and sand, had become showplaces for Horowitz ' s vision, colored in subdued shades of lime sherbet and tropical sunsets. "I 'm very much a proponent of the Lenny Horowitz school of paint, " Goldman said. "Lenny was our Matisse. He knew color like no one knew color. He had this magical touch to the fourth and fifth color of a building. "On paper, it had no relationship to the other colors, but in application it always seemed to come together aesthetically, " said Goldman, owner of the blue and white Park Central Hotel at 640 Ocean Dr. "People are trying it today and it doesn' t seem to be working too well, " he said. "Good taste is a critical issue, and I 'm very interested in organizing the taste police. " To some degree, the "taste police" already exist. In the late 1980s, Beach commissioners legislated Horowitz ' s pastel vision and adopted a color chart from which developers could choose paints. "They are all pastels, " said planning director Dean Grandin. "But the ordinance is very broad. " He said that only the base, or background, coat of a building must be pastel and that the ordinance does not limit the use of paint on trim. "There might be some differences on what constitutes a pastel, or what on a building is trim, " Grandin said. "We haven ' t really focused on color violations because paint can always be changed with a stroke of the brush, " he said. "But if some of these developers are using extreme paints inappropriately, then they could have a problem. " He said code inspectors could cite them and force them to change the colors or face fines. That ' s an option advocated by the Beach ' s leading historic preservation group, the Miami Design Preservation League. MDPL sent a letter to commissioners last week urging them to enforce the color ordinance more strictly. To date, no developers have been cited. "We should not be encouraging a free for all in the district, with colors or anything else for that matter, " said Mike Kinerk, an MDPL board member. But Robins and other developers argue that the same criticisms befell Horowitz ' s color schemes at first. "Every single time I 've done a new color scheme on a building, it seems like people are jumping up and down screaming about how awful it is, " Robins said. "Then it pops up on the cover of a travel magazine, and everybody loves it. " Preservationists concede that Horowitz ' s color schemes were not altogether historically accurate. "There is some truth to that, " Kinerk said. "But the league feels that at least Leonard' s colors were drawn from some element within the building. "People will tell you that all these buildings were once painted white, but that ' s not altogether true. They were white, but almost all of-them originally had pastel trim. " Janet Aptaker, who wrote the letter to commissioners on behalf of MDPL, said the new colors on Ocean Drive represent an "excessive display of overkill . " "It ' s really scary to me, " she said. "I look down Ocean Drive and my heart breaks. It ' s becoming garish and carnival looking. Leonard Horowitz, I think, would be horrified. " ADDED TERMS: END OF DOCUMENT.