Downtown

If you have always wanted to know what ‘Downtown’ really meant but have been too embarrassed to ask, Miami will clear this up for you. Come to Downtown Miami and you’ll find the financial centre, a separate entity that is really only occupied during the day by besuited office folk.  

Architecturally, Downtown Miami boasts one of the most impressive skylines in the United States, with rows of skyscrapers and the Four Seasons poking its shiny tinted glass head above the bank of towers, all set against a backdrop of shimmering blue water. To take in the view at its finest, book in at the Mandarin Oriental and sip a glass of champagne on your balcony as the sun goes down.

However, many would say that, like its grand appearance, Downtown is best enjoyed from a distance. Indeed, it’s not the shiny modern landscape that it appears to be. It can seem like a ghost town, with a few lunchtime bars for businessmen and an array of electronic stores and immigration houses. Businessmen in the towers stay above ground level during office hours, and then jump into the elevator to the subterranean car park and drive home when the working day is over. Some might venture out on a Friday to the Mandarin’s hip ‘Barefoot at the Oasis’ beach party.

The bad news about Downtown Miami is that if you take a wrong turn, you could find yourself in serious trouble. But the good news is that this is changing as investors pump cash into the area in the hope that the shopping malls and restaurants will follow. The much anticipated Performing Arts Center is seen as the catalyst for the Downtown face lift and the increasng number of posh apartment buildings that are under construction mean that the Downtown Miami renaissance is serious.

In terms of nightlife, Downtown is where it’s at: it’s South Florida’s answer to Ibiza, and home to two of the largest nightclubs for house and trance music in the state.  Nocturnal and Space are super-clubs that bring in top-name international DJs for their all-night sessions. South Beach nightclub owners, having revelled in their sense of security for almost a decade, are now taking mental notes that Downtown is quietly catching up with its 24-hour liquor licences.

Just outside the financial   district is the Design District, an area that is becoming noted for its partying – the rapidly devloping nefarious reputation of Pawn Shop, a favourite with the ‘more money than sense crowd’, and Grass – one of the area’s new hotspots.

If you’re on business here, note that the Four Seasons, Conrad and Mandarin Oriental hotels are highly rated and have considerably boosted the profile of the district; the Mandarin Oriental is incredibly popular with the glitterati and the wealthier tourists. The Mandarin’s restaurant, Azul, is one of the finest in the city; the delicious food is set off by one of the best views in Miami and is definitely worth a dinner.


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