Friday, 11 January 2008

  • Vacation in Miami Neighborhoods

     

        Sizzling, sun-drenched Miami is hot again -- the place to be seen and to make a scene. Its heavy Latin American influence, glitterati-infused party scene, delightful art deco architecture, contemporary art boom, and beaches of white-as-bleached-teeth sand make this a city like no other.
     
    If you are planning to relocate or travel to Miami, you are not alone. Miami-Dade County, also known as Metro-Dade County, has experienced a 20 percent growth in population over the last ten years, much of it from recent immigrants. The county now contains the second largest percentage of foreign-born residents in the United States. While the City of Miami boasts the largest population, many new residents choose to live outside the city, in surrounding municipalities and unincorporated areas of the County.
     
    Population: 360,000. 60% Hispanic. Miami is the largest city in Miami-Dade County and a city of extremes: spectacular wealth living side by side with dire poverty. It is both a bustling international financial Mecca and a hotbed of Latin music and culture that is sweeping America. Originally a town of white Southern farmers and businessmen, Miami is less a "melting pot" than a sometimes uneasy co-existence of unique cultures and customs: white, African-American, Latino, Haitian, Jewish.
     
                                  
     
    Over a dozen of different neighborhoods. They are used by the city of Miami, usually for planning purposes. Each of the Neighborhoods has a tourism office to help improve the neighborhoods travel and tourism. This is a list of the most popular neighborhoods of the City of Miami in the U.S. state of Florida.
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
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