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MIAMI BEACH HOTELS

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Miami Beach: Hotels, Nightlife and More

Miami Beach is an extremely popular tourist spot for thousands of people each month. Not only are there tons of attractions, beautiful hotels and sandy beaches, Miami Beach offers the Art Deco Historic District.

This was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in the year 1979, and continues to show the biggest collection of art deco and more each and every day.

Other attractions include dozens of beautiful beaches perfect for swimming, surfing, sunbathing, fishing and more.

Miami offers many boat tours that combine snorkeling, parasailing, knee boarding and other water-sport activities for one price.

Staying in the hotels of Miami Beach is a vacation in itself.

The Beacon Hotel South Beach, The Romantic Sixty Sixty Resort In Miami Beach, Chesterfield Hotel, Suites and Day Spa, and Hotel Victor are just a few of the amazing hotels that the city offers.

Many are found right along the beach for a beautiful and romantic ocean view each and every day.
No matter what your price range is, you will find a Miami Beach hotel to suit your budget.

While you’re there, make sure to enjoy the exciting and famous nightlife that the city has to offer.

South Beach offers an area full of the most intense nightlife you have ever seen, such as Prive, The Fifth, and Rose Bar.

Check out Mango’s Tropical, Bed, or Jazid, found in Miami, to name just a few.

You’re sure to spot a celebrity or two when you visit Miami Beach, as well. Visit this intense city for an experience you will never forget.

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Miami is a major city located in the southeast corner of the U.S. state of Florida. Miami and the surrounding metropolitan area sits between the Miami River, Biscayne Bay, the Everglades and the Atlantic Ocean. It is the second largest city in Florida and the county seat (and largest city) of Miami-Dade County. It is also the largest city in the South Florida metropolitan area, which is comprised of Miami-Dade County, Broward County, and Palm Beach County making up the largest metropolitan area in the Southeastern United States.

Miami was officially incorporated as a city on July 28, 1896 with a population of just over 300. In 1940, 172,172 people lived in Miami, Florida. According to the 2000 census the city of Miami had a population of 362,470 while the larger metropolitan area had a population over 5 million.
The U.S. Census Bureau estimate of the population of Miami in 2004 was 379,724.

Miami's explosive population growth in recent years has been driven by internal migration from other parts of the country as well as by immigration. Greater Miami is regarded as a cultural melting pot, heavily influenced both by its very large population of ethnic Latin Americans and Caribbean islanders (many of them Spanish- or Haitian Creole-speaking).

The region's importance as an international financial and cultural center has elevated Miami to the status of world city; because of its cultural and linguistic ties to North, South, Central America, and the Caribbean it is sometimes called "The Gateway of the Americas." Miami, ranks along with Atlanta, Birmingham, and New Orleans, as one of the most important business centers in the Southeastern United States.

 

Climate


Miami, like the rest of South Florida, has a warm, humid subtropical climate year-round, and borders on a true tropical climate. The city occasionally experiences brief cold fronts during the winter, otherwise is warm or hot year round. The area does not experience temperate seasons and the year is instead divided into two six-month seasons. The wet season, which is hot and humid, lasts from May to October, when it gives way to the dry season, which features balmy temperatures besides scant rainfall. The Hurricane season largely coincides with the hot season.

In addition to its sea-level elevation, coastal location and position just above the Tropic of Cancer, the area owes its warm, humid climate to the Gulf Stream, which moderates climate year-round. A typical summer day does not see temperatures below 75ºF (21º C).

Temperatures in the high 80s to low 90s (30-35 °C) accompanied by high humidity are often relieved by afternoon thunderstorms, which are followed by more moderate temperatures, though still within very muggy conditions. During winter, humidity is significantly lower allowing for cooler weather to develop. Average minimum temperatures during that time are around 60ºF (15ºC), rarely dipping below 40ºF (4ºC), and the equivalent maxima usually range between 80 and 70 °F (27-21 °C).
During the dry, cool season, the Gulf Stream helps to moderate the effect of the cold fronts that often bring freezing temperatures to the more northerly portions of Florida.

Officially, Miami has never recorded a triple-digit temperature, the all-time maximum being 98ºF (37ºC), set on August 15, 1956, though extreme summer humidity often boosts the heat index to the 110s (43 to 48ºC).

The coldest temperature ever recorded in the city of Miami was 31 °F (-1 °C) on January 20, 1977. That same day, scattered snow flurries hit the area, Miami's first and only recorded snowfall since weather records began in the 1830s.

Miami receives abundant rainfall, one of the highest among major U.S.
cities. It receives annual rainfall of 150 cm (60 inches).

The South Florida metropolitan area, which includes the cities of Miami, Fort Lauderdale, and West Palm Beach, is the second largest metropolitan area in the world after Tokyo that receives regular cyclonic activity.

Hurricane season officially runs from June 1 through November 30, but has been known to start and end beyond those dates. The most likely time for Miami to be hit is during the peak of the Cape Verde season which is late August through the end of September.

Due to its location between two major bodies of water known for tropical activity, Miami is also statistically the most likely major city to be struck by a hurricane in the world, trailed closely by Nassau, Bahamas, and Havana, Cuba. Despite this, the city has been fortunate in not having a direct hit by a hurricane since Hurricane Cleo in 1964.

However, many other hurricanes have affected the city, including Betsy in 1965, Andrew in 1992, Irene in 1999, and Hurricanes Katrina and Wilma in 2005.

In addition, a tropical depression in October of 2000 passed over the city creating record rainfall and flooding. Locally, the storm is credited as the No Name Storm of 2000, though the depression went on to become Tropical Storm Leslie upon entering the Atlantic Ocean.

 

Transportation

Miami-Dade County Transit Buses in Miami Beach, Florida.Miami's main international hub is Miami International Airport, which is one of the busiest international airports in the world, serving over 35 million passengers every year.

Identified as MIA or KMIA by various world aviation authorities, it is a major hub and the single largest international gateway for American Airlines, the world's largest passenger air carrier; and is also served by many foreign airlines.

MIA is the USA's third largest international port of entry for foreign air passengers (behind New York's JFK and Los Angeles' LAX), and the seventh largest such gateway in the world (bested only by those two airports; combined with London's Heathrow, Paris'
Charles de Gaulle, Amsterdam's Schiphol, and Hong Kong's Chek Lap Kok international airports). Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport
(FLL/KFLL) also serves the metropolitan area, and actually handles more total passengers who are originating or ending their trip in south Florida than does MIA.

The main seaport, The Port of Miami, is the largest cruise ship port in the world, serving over 18 million passengers per year.

Additionally, the port is one of the nation's busiest cargo ports, importing nearly ten million tons of cargo annually. Among North American ports, it ranks second only to the Port of South Louisiana in terms of cargo tonnage imported/exported from Latin America.

Miami is connected to Amtrak's Atlantic Coast services.

Local public transportation includes Metrobus and Metrorail, a metro rapid transit system (both operated by Miami-Dade Transit). Furthermore, Tri-Rail, a commuter rail system, connects the major cities and airports of the South Florida metropolitan area. Several transit expansion projects are being funded by a transit development sales tax surcharge throughout Miami-Dade County.

Miami-Dade County is served by four Major Interstates (I-75, I-95, I-195,
I-395) and several U.S. Highways including US 1, US 27, US 41, and US 441.
Some of the major Florida State Roads (and their common names) serving the county are:

SR 112 (Airport Expressway) Downtown to MIA
821 (The HEFT or Homestead Extension of the Florida Turnpike: SR 91/Miami Gardens to US-1/Florida City) SR 826 (Palmetto Expressway) Golden Glades Interchange to US-1/Kendall SR 836 (Dolphin Expressway) Downtown to Turnpike via MIA SR 874 (Don Shula Expressway) 826/Bird Road to 878 SR 878 (Snapper Creek Expressway) Kendall to Turnpike/Homestead SR 924 (Gratigny Parkway) Miami Lakes to Opa Locka

 
 
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