Palm Beach (561) 202-9893-Lantana & Jog----Miami / Dade (305)-387-3035-----Martin / Stuart (772)-219-0908-----Broward / Fort Lauderdale (954)-771-2339

home

se habla español

employment

weekly specials

-prom

limo fleet

Limo contracts

CONTRACT

NEW YELLOW HUMMER

CADILLAC Limo

(New Hummer)

limo services

vip club specials

area nightclubs

area hotels

travel info

partners

about us

contact us

cities served

barter ideas

related links

link to us

useful links

employment


 

 

 

 

 

In Miami Florida


Well, it worked. Elegant homes were built along the new white-sand bulkheads of this beautiful engineered island for those lucky enough to afford them. There were some unforeseen additional benefits to the dredging of the bay and filling in of the sandpit-cum-mangrove swamp that had been the foundation of the new beachfront. Mosquitoes and sandflies no longer had a place to breed. High-stakes yacht races could be staged in the new deep water of Biscayne Bay, formerly a shallow lagoon. The great humorist Will Rogers was to write later about the playboy tycoon who largely built Miami Beach, Carl Fisher: "He was the first man smart enough to discover that there was sand under all that water. So he put in a kind of dredge, an 'all-day sucker' arrangement, and he brought the sand up and let the water go to the bottom instead of the top. Up to then sand had been used to build with, but never upon. . . . Carl discovered that sand could hold up a real estate sign, and that was all he wanted it for. Carl rowed the customers out in the ocean and let them pick out some nice smooth water where they would like to build, and then he would replace the water with an island, and you would be a little Robinson Crusoe of your own. Today the dredge is the national symbol of Florida."

Come See Our Exclusive H2 Hummer Limos Available For Viewing Now. 561-202-9893

Miami and its offshore vacation spot Miami Beach soon became famous as the new home--at least the new winter home--of the "nice" millionaires (as opposed to Palm Beach, already established as the home of the "naughty" millionaires). There were fishing expeditions, luncheons, teas and tennis at the posh hotels Royal Palm and Halcyon Hall. There were pageants, pig roasts and balloon fests, and land auctions resembled three-ring circuses, with giveaways of china and crystal and gewgaws, all incentives for the rich to buy, buy, buy.

And buy they did. The real estate entrepreneurs were delighted to find that dredging the waters was surprisingly inexpensive. There was no rock or coral to get in the way, only yielding, dredgeable sand, and so they dredged and dredged, creating more and more luxury waterfront property. Elegant hotels, in the latest architectural style that was all the rage, Art Deco, sprang up almost overnight. They housed and pampered the short-term "working rich" who came down for the season kickoff, the "must-go-and-be-seen" New Year's Day Ball at the Royal Palm Hotel (the Dupont Plaza now occupies its site on the north bank of the Miami River where it flows into Biscayne Bay), and stayed only a month or two each year. The William Jennings Bryans and William Kissam Vanderbilt IIs headed an all-star list of celebrity residents.

But exclusivity never remains for long. Witness Saratoga, Newport, Atlantic City. Once the millionaires were entrenched in Miami, the "second tier" of society discovered the newest hot resort. The professionals, including doctors and actors, arrived, soon followed by the upper middle class. It was inevitable that the "third tier" would eventually find out about the party down south, and decide to crash it. And so, the rest of society eventually came to consider Miami its playground as well. Business people are in business to make money, so how could they turn their backs on all the potential money-spenders that would escape to Miami during the winter months?Nightclubs in In Miami Florida

Today, there's not much left of the sand that drew America's wealthy to Miami Beach in the first place. Most of the island is built up, with hotels and restaurants everywhere. But among the hotels are some of the most fabulous in the world, and the most historic in America. South Beach (SoBe) alone boasts original Art Deco hotels dating from the 1920s, clustered together along the oceanfront and painted in a wild, delightful mix of pastel "Miami colors"--jewel pink and coral, sparkling sea turquoise, dewy frond green, sunny hibiscus yellow. Miami proper boasts a substantial number of these beauties, as well. Although many of them fell into neglect and disrepair during the bleak days of the Great Depression, they've been lovingly restored and are as inviting as ever. They beckon today's traveler, with promises of fine living and exquisite service. Who knows, a visitor may hear echoes of the footsteps of the intrepid leisure class who danced in their ballrooms so many years ago. Thanks to the foresightedness of the founding "pioneers," they have withstood the test of time and the elements. Like the "billion dollar sandbar" on which they were built, they were made to last.

Bash
655 Washington Avenue
305 538-2274

Crobar
1445 Washington Ave.
305-531-5027

Club ENVY
90 NE 11 St., Downtown Miami

Harrison's
411 Washington Avenue
Miami Beach
305-672-4600

Honey
645 Washington Avenue
305-604-8222

Jade
1766 Bay Road
305-695-0000

Jimmy'z @ The Forge
432 41 Street
305-604-9798

Life
3342 Virginia St, Coconut Grove
T: 305-445-8366

Mansion
1235 Washington Ave

Nerve
243 23rd Street
305-695-8697

Nikki Beach Club
1 Ocean Drive
305-538-1111

The Office
111SW Thirds ST
786-229-2886

Opium Garden/ Prive
136 Collins Avenue
305-531-5535

Oxygen Lounge
2911 Grand Avenue
Streets of Mayfair
Subterranean Level
Coconut Grove
305-476-0202

Pearl
1 Ocean Drive
305 673-1575

Score
727 Lincoln Rd.
305-535-1111

Space 34
34 NE 11 St. Downtown Miami
305-375-0001

State
320 Lincoln Road
305-531-2800

Studio
1801 Collins Avenue
@ The Shelborne Hotel,
South Beach.
T: 305-695-1770

Twist
1057 Washington Ave.
305-538-9478

 


THE LARGEST LIMOBUS IN FLORIDA

Limo In Miami Florida
 
Limousine In Miami Florida
 
 
22 PASSENGER LIMOUSINE BUS
Limousines In Miami Florida
 
 
Limobus In Miami Florida
 
 
HUMMER STRETCH

Hummer Limo In Miami Florida

 

 

Automatic Slims
1216 Washington Avenue
305-695-8476

Barcode
1437 Washington Avenue
Miami Beach
305-534-1711

B.E.D
929 Washington Avenue
305 532-9070

Blue
222 Espanola Way
305-534-2274

Jazid
1342 Washington Ave.
305-673-9372

Liquor Lounge
1560 Collins Avenue
305-672-7171

Lounge 16
423 16th Street
305-538-8282

Grass Restaurant & Lounge
28 NE 40th St.,
305-573-3355

Marlin Bar
1200 Collins Avenue
3056045063

Mynt
1921 Collins
786-276-6132

Purdy Lounge
1811 Purdy Avenue
305 531-4622

Pure Lounge
150 Ocean Drive
786-276-9005

Rose Bar@ The Delano
Collins Avenue

Royal Buddha Bar
758 Washington Avenue
305-538-0310

Rumi
330 Lincoln Rd,
305-531-7406

SkyBar @ The Shore Club
1901 Collins Avenue

SoHo Lounge
175 NE 36th St
305-576-1988

Tantra
1445 Pennsylvania Avenue
305 672-4765

Ted's Hideawy
124 2nd Street
305-532-9869

©2002 A1 Luxury Limousine Of South Florida Inc.