Miami Beach

עיר ב‏‎United States‎‏
גלה/גלי עסקים מקומיים בפייסבוק
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בדוק/בדקי ציוני דרך מקומייםראה/ראי את כל ‏ציוני דרך‏ ב‏‎Miami Beach‎‏
South Pointe Park
‏ ‏4.6‏

South Pointe Park, known locally as South Pointe, is a 17acre county urban park in metropolitan Miami, in the Miami Beach neighborhood of South Beach, Florida.HistoryThe Federal Government donated the land to Miami Beach in 1979, which used it as a home to police horse stables, a police intelligence unit and the Port of Miami's harbor pilots until all buildings remaining at the site were razed in 1984 to begin conversion a park. The federal government paid half the construction cost.Opening on October 25, 1985, it became the nineteenth public park in Miami Beach, built at a cost of $3.6 million (1984). Initial features included an amphitheater, two wooden observation towers, picnic pavilions, fitness courses and a 522ft wooden boardwalk over Miami Beach's last natural sand dune. During planning phases, city officials worried it would become a home to vagrants, and to discourage that they planned the park to be a home to frequent festivals and other events. The park became part of a larger plan in the 1980s to renovate the city's run down South Pointe area.Renovation plans were first drawn up in the city's 1995 master plan, but the 20-month, $22.5 million renovation wasn't completed until March 2009. Features added in the renovation included 20ft-wide walkways lined with Florida limestone and an ocean-themed children's playground.The park underwent a major renovation effort, completed in 2009. The Hargreaves Associates, of New York City, were hired to redesign the park at a cost of around $22 million (2008).

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WARNING!: South Point Park is a beautiful park, but I had an accident there last Saturday (April 9, 2016) that could have been fatal. I left the Play area with water spouts - Restrooms to walk to the boardwalk and then on out to the Point. Long story short, I rolled my ankle on the curb of a little ramp that I didn't know was there and didn't see partially hidden behind a post and in the late afternoon shade. And fell very hard on my shoulder and chest on the cement. Thankfully, I missed landing on my head by inches. My right ankle was badly dislocated and I had to put it back in place. One passerby ran out to the end of Point to alert a city employee on bicycle who rode to get me a bag of ice. Later I had to hobble on one leg back to the park entrance (~1/4 mile) to get a taxi back to Hallandale with what turned out to be cracked ribs and a badly sprained ankle, bruises and scraps. I am writing this, because it is not clear to me what purpose those little ramps serve, and they are very dangerous. And because I was distracted by the bicyclists riding fast in between walkers from both directions which is also dangerous. I would love to go back and visit this beautiful park again. However, I would strongly advise the city to fill those ramps in or at least put Warning Signs so you know they are there. And too force the bicycle riders to walk their bikes in these high traffic areas. And to direct the crowded flow of pedestrians. I feel very fortunate to survive this fall, and grateful for the people who rushed in to help a total stranger. Enjoy the park, just beware of the danger.

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