Witness the Rapid Transformation in Miami’s 5 Most Gentrified Neighborhoods

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  • Опубликовано: 6 сен 2023
  • We explore the most gentrified neighborhoods in Miami. Some of these before and after photos via Google street view are astonishing.
    Gentrification occurs when there is a substantial gap between the current value of a place, and its potential value. More capital is invested into the neighborhood and the type of people who live there change over time.
    A positive aspect of gentrification is that neighborhoods become much more dense with improved infrastructure like bike lanes and public parks. Who doesn’t love a walkable city?
    A negative aspect of gentrification is the potential displacement of current residents due to rising property taxes and house prices. Where is all the affordable housing?
    I feel like most people just think of South Beach when they hear Miami. I know I had that perception before visiting back in 2019.
    But it definitely has a lot more going on - there are over 25 different neighborhoods in Miami proper. all with their own distinct flavor.
    Miami has been all over the news with several different corporations moving their headquarters to the city. But it’s always been a haven for “snowbirds” from the Northeast.
    Gentrification has accelerated in Miami in large part thanks to Miami21.
    This new form-based zoning code's purpose was to direct the city toward transit-oriented, pedestrian-friendly growth, and away from disjointed, car-centered development.
    5 Most gentrified neighborhoods in Miami
    Little Haiti
    Edge water
    Wynwood
    Little Havana
    Overtown
    Image Credit
    upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedi...
    upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedi...
    flic.kr/p/2nYG5w5
    upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedi...
    flic.kr/p/STLzGd
    Music Credit
    Music: Circuit
    Musician: Jeff Kaale
    Resource Credit
    magiccitydistrict.com/masterp...
    www.bloomberg.com/news/articl...
    www.bloomberg.com/news/articl...
    www.miami21.org/PDFs/Miami21_S...
    www.axios.com/local/miami/202...
    www.theatlantic.com/business/...
    www.redfin.com/city/11458/FL/...

Комментарии • 78

  • @Yarmox
    @Yarmox Месяц назад +15

    Not just Miami, the entire South Florida region has buildings being built up in months now

  • @johnlabus7359
    @johnlabus7359 4 месяца назад +14

    Been here for 22 years now and it's astonishing what has happened in Miami during that short time window.

  • @WalshyFire
    @WalshyFire 8 месяцев назад +18

    Born and raised Miami. The citadel used to be a teen club called pac jam. The down side is we lost hoods like little san Juan. Crazy to see these old buildings. How quickly we have forgotten them. Thanks for this trip down memory lane.

    • @Bot_Marley
      @Bot_Marley Месяц назад

      before that it was a federal reserve bank branch of atlanta

    • @NTEDOG561
      @NTEDOG561 26 дней назад

      Fk atlanta ​@@Bot_Marley

    • @mrssmithh
      @mrssmithh 13 дней назад +1

      Dang I remember PAC Jam. Miami looks so different.

  • @robertofernandez7773
    @robertofernandez7773 Месяц назад +11

    I live in Miami Beach. For 20 years now. I'm happy for the growth and beautification and the amount of jobs and new hotels. But transit is a mess here. Rush hour around the clock. Heck, even at 11pm in a weekday traffic can be annoying. Rents are increasing like crazy and out of towners are buying the property. So. Personally is a mix bag. Lots of positives and lot of negatives,

  • @RasheedahsWifeSchool
    @RasheedahsWifeSchool Месяц назад +9

    I lived off of Biscayne in the late '80s. I had a job at Burger King after school and on weekends and I got a loan for an older condo. I couldn't afford the bus but the MetroMover was free. Hoy Como Ayer and Teatro de Bellas Artes were the spot. Abram's Fabrics was on Biscayne and 19th and they sold me the fabric for my curtains. It's now a vape and rims shop. I sold for $775k and got the hell out in 2017. Best decision I ever made. My beloved Miami is gone forever but a fond memory.

    • @alluringbliss4165
      @alluringbliss4165 Месяц назад

      Where did you move?

    • @RasheedahsWifeSchool
      @RasheedahsWifeSchool Месяц назад +1

      @alluringbliss4165 still in Florida but more north. I still have a house in Miami but not that condo and I rent out rooms in the house.

  • @bibby3027
    @bibby3027 10 месяцев назад +4

    Great video!

  • @JovansLorquet
    @JovansLorquet 6 месяцев назад +4

    Wow that’s super interesting. I know that owning in little haiti can be very lucrative now, because you can sell for a lot of money. However it’s sad that the culture and atmosphere of this area is lost, revitalizing the communities would have been better, but on the other hand, gentrification does increase the safety of an area.

    • @meowchael1
      @meowchael1 4 месяца назад

      Crime and the murder rate have increased dramatically the past few years.

  • @markprad
    @markprad 10 месяцев назад +8

    I live in Edgewater. With all this new construction, Edgewater only has two N-S streets. Biscayne Blvd and NE 2nd Ave. Traffic is already a nightmare. There is only buses and no rail. No closest MetroRail station in one mile west on 36th Street. If you walk you are fine, driving will get worse and worse in the area.

    • @cities4ppl
      @cities4ppl  10 месяцев назад +6

      Miami is probably the poster child for outgrowing itself without the proper infrastructure. Not to mention the potential climate disasters that could occur.

    • @1981menso
      @1981menso 10 месяцев назад

      @@cities4ppl They could be the Venice of the South; embrace rising sea levels.🤣

    • @Distress.
      @Distress. Месяц назад +1

      That's my main problem. Apartments going up everywhere TOD, but none of it is affordable and there's no investment in expanding transit.

  • @mounirsarhane8476
    @mounirsarhane8476 4 месяца назад +1

    do you want to make a video about Vilvoorde belgium, it has changed extremely much especialy the roads

  • @nelsonr1467
    @nelsonr1467 5 месяцев назад +36

    Basically kicking poor people out of Miami

    • @usecriticalthinking243
      @usecriticalthinking243 Месяц назад +7

      Literally adding density and the county has given the green light for tens of thousands of affordable apartments. Bernie bro propaganda

    • @JimBobe
      @JimBobe 16 дней назад

      @@usecriticalthinking243no no no no no no. Miami is FILLED with luxury apartments that are EMPTY year round b/c its the world’s money laundering pit for real estate. Russian and french BILLIONAIRES buy up entire buildings only for them to be occupied at around 10-20% capacity.
      This is whats wrong with Miami

    • @wonderwinder1
      @wonderwinder1 8 дней назад

      Exactly.

    • @mE-zx7pt
      @mE-zx7pt 7 дней назад +1

      ​​@@usecriticalthinking243"given the green light for thousands of affordable apartments. " Will believe it when I see it.

  • @maketrax1
    @maketrax1 5 месяцев назад +3

    Most people think of South Beach in relation to Miami because of the name Miami Beach. South Beach is a neighborhood of Miami Beach, which is a separate city from Miami. Most people outside of South Florida don't know this. Also, it's not the Florida Coast Railway, it's called the Florida East Coast Railway. Amazing to see all the changes going on with the new developments. Unfortunately, a lot of history is being destroyed in the process.

  • @JaniceCarter-ws7lu
    @JaniceCarter-ws7lu 2 дня назад

    It's going to happen everywhere but alot of people are not ready or getting involved to evolve with this changes to come..Freshly paved sidewalks and smooth roads will change any neighborhood it's getting close when you see that..prepare for change
    🙌🏼🙌🙌🏾🙌🏻🙌🏿

  • @makina323
    @makina323 Месяц назад +6

    The changes in miami from the last decade mirror the development of wynwood perfectly. It went from dingy but livable to a commercial corporate over populated hellscape, with nice weather T_T

    • @usecriticalthinking243
      @usecriticalthinking243 Месяц назад

      Muh hellscape, it has apartments coming up with retail & restaurants at the bottom. The hell yall whining about, go live in the new pork n beans apartments they’re building if you can’t afford it.

    • @makina323
      @makina323 Месяц назад

      @@usecriticalthinking243 yuppies need to f away to the drowning barrier island just like god intended.

  • @mechgator
    @mechgator 10 месяцев назад +2

    Was in the market to buy a single family property in early 2021, just as things started heating up. Looked at neighborhoods north of Little Haiti (North Miami), also close to Federal Highway near Aventura. As was looking to buy a rental that would serve as my permanent retirement home, crime stats, ft above sea level/flooding risk, were important considerations. Then switched focus to South West of the city, in the Coral Way, Coconut Grove, etc., and settled on a property there, due to being more of an established neighborhood, safer , and with lush vegetation, but mainly, due to easier access to metro rail.

    • @cities4ppl
      @cities4ppl  9 месяцев назад +1

      Sounds like you did your due diligence. Miami might be the hardest city to “figure out” as an outsider. Knowing where/when the metro will be expanding would be helpful.

    • @jeremylangton8711
      @jeremylangton8711 5 месяцев назад

      Hey, I’m about to graduate college and want to buy a home in Miami as well but a lot of the cheaper areas seem to be high in crime. How are you liking your area?

    • @mechgator
      @mechgator 5 месяцев назад

      @@jeremylangton8711 A couple of tips, look mostly in the SW area of Miami, that area might be a bit pricier but there is a reason (safer, more desirable, will avoid most of the boom and bust some other less desirable areas might be subject to) Look for opportunistic fixer upper value-add situation, and perhaps do some house hacking (it is very common to find single family homes in this area that has a separate efficiency or even a detached ‘casita’). Definitely avoid homes (including townhomes and condos) with HOA fees. Good luck!

  • @jetfan925
    @jetfan925 28 дней назад

    It's been 9 months since he last uploaded this video.

  • @kirillkolesnikov566
    @kirillkolesnikov566 6 месяцев назад +3

    It'd be interesting to see what's going to materialize out their I'd say overly ambitious plans but having lived here for 8 years and having seen many of the plans that would benefit the communities of "middle-class" people never built or delayed, it seems like here, the big money will always win even if the project is ugly or bad for the environment, walkability, etc, etc. Miami feels like a clash between some really ambitious and educated people and uneducated cleptocrats. NIMBYs are a huge problem as well. My neighbourhood was recently designated "historic" when it's full of ugly, falling apart buildings, and huge parking lots with 0 cars.

  • @gooffgoff89
    @gooffgoff89 26 дней назад

    Can you please tell me what map application you’re using? I’m interested in viewing cities via the map you’re using.

  • @wiiretime3704
    @wiiretime3704 День назад

    Remember when you could get a cheap apt in south beach studio for less then 1.500 a month didnt matter was small right on the beach lots of shopping and cafes was great now cant even get coffee for less than 5 bucks

  • @RobertoLopezstudyis
    @RobertoLopezstudyis Месяц назад +3

    Miami has lost its soul with these high rents and property values and lack of respect for our old architecture and history and the old residents are being pushed out like dogs because of these crazy rents. There are no jobs for the people who really want to work and new construction is blocking our views of the bay and beaches!

  • @305Simplify-gu8gh
    @305Simplify-gu8gh Месяц назад

    Long live Ricks Bar and Freestyle!!!!

  • @scottduke2809
    @scottduke2809 Месяц назад +2

    who uses population number of just a city proper? 400,000 people? that's a laugh, there are 6 MILLION people living in Miami. Little Haiti has no where close to "some of the highest property values" in Miami, it is a ghetto! it's a run down dump overtake by drugs and BAD strip club clientele. Little Havana is NOT considered West Brickell, the West Brickell neighborhood is called West Brickell. SW 1st to I-95. Everything on the other side of I-95 is Little Havana. miami is AMAZING and nothing like disgusting Houston. Love living here so much! the city needs to do a better job curtailing soaring rents and property prices (it's essentially a bubble funded by money laundering and investment group manipulation), protecting Biscayne Bay's marine ecosystem, and they need to flat out arrest everyone associated with an HOH! but again, i love it here.

  • @ShawnMKouri
    @ShawnMKouri 17 дней назад

    I like the growth that’s going on but a lot of the new homes that are being built in places like each little Havana are like luxury homes that would go for over 1 million. I mean mind you, the area doesn’t even call for that. And this is a theme in Miami and it’s pricing people out. I mean, if you’re gonna build homes build them for the masses. I mean people are getting priced out.

  • @chrisfields2014
    @chrisfields2014 10 месяцев назад +2

    Do Philly next

    • @cities4ppl
      @cities4ppl  10 месяцев назад +1

      It’s on the list!

  • @meowchael1
    @meowchael1 10 месяцев назад +4

    West Brickell.. that's hilarious

    • @cities4ppl
      @cities4ppl  10 месяцев назад +1

      Lol read it on a few blogs.

    • @johnlabus7359
      @johnlabus7359 4 месяца назад

      That's what they're calling it!

    • @filthysoap96
      @filthysoap96 День назад

      They can’t take our chickens!

  • @wafford11
    @wafford11 21 день назад

    where'd ya go?

  • @hobbyart364
    @hobbyart364 14 дней назад

    welcome to urban florida! more business in the south is nice

  • @baddudecornpop7328
    @baddudecornpop7328 2 месяца назад +1

    Ppl probably anticipating the new mixed use tower to provide housing, utility, and charm to the block..
    5:52 they got a fckin wells fargo 🤣🤣 I doubt that's what was in any of the artist's renderings.

  • @MordecaiDrex
    @MordecaiDrex 4 дня назад

    Focusing on mixed use and walkability is great but that architecture is horrendous. All the towers are just cookie cutter rectangles

  • @Tekniq182
    @Tekniq182 9 месяцев назад

    I purchased a 3bdr in the Paraiso District in Edgewater last summer. I absolutely love it. I was born in NYC and lived in Manhattan for the last 12 years so I'm used to seeing new development and high-rises all around so I'm glad to see all the new development in Miami. Where I live it is clean, safe, amazing views of the bay, and you're close to everything in Brickell, Design District, South Beach, etc... My wife was born and raised in Miami and she is excited to see her city evolving as well.

    • @cities4ppl
      @cities4ppl  9 месяцев назад +1

      I’m glad you found a place you really love. The views must never get old. I’m excited to explore more of Miami soon.

  • @JamesFFiT
    @JamesFFiT 10 месяцев назад +1

    Welcome to the Gold Coast of Australia! Just please put in a metro under it all before it’s too built up otherwise there will just be too many cars like LA, Vegas or New York. The best thing at the beach is also light rail/trams. Works great on the GC no car needed but subway is however faster for longer distances with many stops and has right of way away from traffic. Start tunnelling Miami!

    • @cities4ppl
      @cities4ppl  10 месяцев назад +1

      I’m not sure Miami has the political will or aptitude to build a subway. It’s more of a instant gratification type place but you are absolutely correct!

    • @JamesFFiT
      @JamesFFiT 10 месяцев назад

      @@cities4ppl yes as I said the Gold Coast of Australia. Lol

  • @frefri4628
    @frefri4628 10 месяцев назад +6

    I'm an armchair urbanist who follows all the channels and forums, including yours. In 2022 I took a year off to travel the world to figure out where to move. My top list ended up being Paris, Lisbon, Miami and Praia, Cabo Verde. Weird list for someone who's into urbanism right? Only Paris and Lisbon fit the bill. And why isn't Amsterdam and others on it?
    Thing is as much as I love good urban design, there's more to life than that. Eg, Amsterdam has terrible weather and tbh I find Dutch culture and lifestyle monotonic and boring. Lisbon is diverse and great but salaries too low. Paris is diverse and amazing but too cold and salaries too low. Cabo Verde you need a good remote job to live. Miami has mostly terrible urban planning but is diverse, fun, gives access to good USD high paying jobs and has nuggets of gold which if you chose your neighborhoods, activities and lifestyle wisely can be much, much more livable than it looks. So I ended up in Miami.
    I live car-free in Little Havana, walking distance to both Brickell and Ocho. Plenty of restaurants, supermarkets, pharmacies and every imaginable service within walking distance. I ride my electric bike to South Beach, Little Haiti etc in ~20 minutes. (Wynwood and Overtown in like five ten lol) (that's faster than driving, esp in case of traffic or even just if you include parking) I can take the TriRail and Brightline to Ft Lauderdale and beyond. I can even ride the Amtrak all the way up the East Coast. Not living in Kendall or Hialeah, and not having to drive everywhere, I'm simply not as affected by the bad aspects of Miami's terrible urban planning as most people fuming in traffic on I-95 on the daily are.
    Don't get me wrong, Miami gets a solid F in so many ways when it comes to urbanism, so I don't want to plug it too hard. But yeah def not just doable but outright enjoyable if you make the right choices.

    • @cities4ppl
      @cities4ppl  10 месяцев назад +2

      *standing ovation* This is what I’m talking about. Rather than lack the education/self awareness and complain about the built environment where you live, you put yourself out there and recognized what’s important to you and make it work.
      This is precisely why I make these videos. You are essentially the Miami equivalent to myself. You gotta hack certain things and accept certain trade offs.
      Miami has always been very appealing to me because I recognize that you can find the hidden gems/pockets that can exponentially improve your experience there.
      Cheers! Oh and does Paris get cold? Somehow didn’t even realize that. I have an overly romanticized view on most things Europe.

    • @BillyBob-bv1bk
      @BillyBob-bv1bk Месяц назад +1

      I did a similar decision but went with France instead Lyon to be specific. I love it here and the salaries are fitting for the standard of living in my opinion. I’m a miami native and I just can’t with the heat and humidity besides the horrible urban planning but to each their own :)

  • @lej_explains
    @lej_explains 9 месяцев назад +1

    Great video… Gentrification is inevitable with new development I think, and good social housing should be built quickly by the city with federal funding to offset this. It’s better than rent control on the market at least.

    • @cities4ppl
      @cities4ppl  9 месяцев назад

      Thank you! I agree with you. Rent control stifles development.

  • @thedirtybubble9613
    @thedirtybubble9613 2 месяца назад +6

    The original Miami looks infinitely better than the new crap. Gentrification has ruined this city. In some cities it's done better than others. But Miami is not like other cities in the US. It's tropical and colorful. What they are doing is destroying this city and it's bohemian flair. Not good.

    • @miles5600
      @miles5600 26 дней назад +1

      how? the older florida is covered in ugly parking lots and neglected property.

    • @thedirtybubble9613
      @thedirtybubble9613 26 дней назад

      @@miles5600 Have you ever lived in Miami? I have as a matter of fact I'm from there. Miami was never meant for overdevelopment for many reasons being. Anytime it rains in Downtown Miami, Biscayne Blvd now completely floods because of inadequate drainage/infrastructure due to the high rises that now tower over the boulevard. The whole city is eventually going to flood or sink if they just keep building and do nothing to improve the infrastructure. Also, understand with the gentrification comes loss of businesses, homes, cultures, etc. I have seen Miami go from a colorful, diverse, tropical city to another bland Nashville with palm trees.

  • @blahtime99
    @blahtime99 10 месяцев назад +9

    Gentrification is such a funny word. It's as if making neighborhoods nice and safe is a bad thing. The facelifts to the streets in these videos are undeniably a positive thing.

    • @cities4ppl
      @cities4ppl  10 месяцев назад +4

      I agree. If gentrification comes down to being priced out of your neighborhood then gentrification is happening everywhere, not just the urban core of big cities.

    • @yostepdaddi
      @yostepdaddi 10 месяцев назад +8

      It’s a tad more complicated than that lol

    • @shawnmichaels4805
      @shawnmichaels4805 9 месяцев назад +5

      Is going to get to a point somewhere in the future where some of us even being born in the U.S. has to move to another country.

    • @dwightk.schruteiii8454
      @dwightk.schruteiii8454 Месяц назад +1

      @@yostepdaddino its not. People who coin that term complicate it for their self righteous virtue signaling.

    • @Yarmox
      @Yarmox Месяц назад +1

      Right, when I was young you wouldnt want to cross those railroad tracks from downtown. Now the place is finally starting to earn its location.

  • @alexjames1397
    @alexjames1397 Месяц назад +1

    Miami has changed for the worst. Hasn’t been good there since 1959.

    • @NTEDOG561
      @NTEDOG561 26 дней назад

      Wow 1959? How old are you??

    • @alexjames1397
      @alexjames1397 26 дней назад +1

      @@NTEDOG561 Shh. You know too much.