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Available in salons worldwide.
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EFFORTLESS VOLUME EXPERIENCE BODY, LIFT AND MOVEMENT. INTRODUCING THE VOLUME COLLECTION BY MOROCCANOIL. www.moroccanoil.com
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AVENTURA: ARTEFACTO HOME 17651 BISCAYNE BLVD. 305.931.9484 CORAL GABLES: ARTEFACTO DESIGN HOUSE 4440 PONCE DE LEON BLVD. 305.774.0004 DORAL: ARTEFACTO WAREHOUSE CONCEPT 3290 NW 79 TH AVE 305.639.9969 BRAZIL 25 LOCATIONS | WWW.ARTEFACTO.COM
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Premier Sales Group, Inc. a Licensed Real Estate Broker is the Exclusive Sales Agent. • ONE Sotheby’s International Realty, Global Marketing Partner. The Ritz-Carlton Residences, Miami Beach are not owned, developed
or sold by The Ritz-Carlton Hotel Company, L.L.C. or its affiliates (“Ritz-Carlton”). 4701 North Meridian, L.L.C. uses The Ritz-Carlton marks under a license from Ritz-Carlton, which has not confirmed the accuracy of any of the statements or representations made herein. ORAL REPRESENTATIONS CANNOT BE RELIED UPON AS CORRECTLY STATING THE REPRESENTATIONS OF THE DEVELOPER. FOR
CORRECT REPRESENTATIONS, REFERENCE SHOULD BE MADE TO THE DOCUMENTS REQUIRED BY SECTION 718.503, FLORIDA STATUTES, TO BE FURNISHED BY A DEVELOPER TO A BUYER OR LESSEE.
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THIS O SELL, WITH
oped
DESIGNED for LIFE
Introducing a Limited Collection of Exquisite Condominium Residences. Designed by Piero Lissoni. Priced from $2 million to over $25 million. Sales Gallery Now Open. For a Private Appointment, Please Call 305-953-9500. TheResidencesMiamiBeach.com
THIS OFFERING IS MADE ONLY BY THE OFFERING DOCUMENTS FOR THE CONDOMINIUM AND NO STATEMENT SHOULD BE RELIED UPON IF NOT MADE IN THE OFFERING DOCUMENTS. THIS IS NOT AN OFFER TO SELL, OR SOLICITATION OF OFFERS TO BUY, THE CONDOMINIUM UNITS IN STATES WHERE SUCH OFFER OR SOLICITATION CANNOT BE MADE. PRICES, PLANS AND SPECIFICATIONS ARE SUBJECT TO CHANGE WITHOUT NOTICE. OBTAIN THE PROPERTY REPORT REQUIRED BY FEDERAL LAW AND READ IT BEFORE SIGNING ANYTHING. NO FEDERAL AGENCY HAS JUDGED THE MERITS OR VALUE, IF ANY, OF THIS PROPERTY.
.
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5564_Corporate_Oceandrive-Magazine-February-2014.indd 2-3 O03896.indd 1
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MAKE YOUR MAN BLUSH.
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TL-Ocean Drive AD_01.08.14.indd 1 49691.indd 2
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PARAISO BAY
Luxury WATERFRONT Residences
PARAISOBAY.COM
SALES GALLERY 305.521.1093
Sales by RELATED REALTY in collaboration with FORTUNE DEVELOPMENT SALES
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ACRES OF GARDENS
AND PARK EXCLUSIVE BEACH CLUB, MARINA AND WATERFRONT RESTAURANT
Obtain the property report required by federal law and read it before signing anything. No federal agency has judged the merits or value, if any, of this property.
Oral representations cannot be relied upon as correctly stating the representations of the Developer. For correct representations, reference should be made to the documents required by section 718.503, Florida Statutes, to be furnished by a Developer to a buyer or lessee. This offering is made only by the prospectus for the condominium and no statement should be relied upon if not made in the prospectus. This is not an offer to sell, or solicitation of offers to buy, the condominium units in states where such offer or solicitation cannot be made. Prices, plans and specifications are subject to change without notice. The Developer is PRH NE 31st Street LLC (“DEVELOPER”) which has a license to use the trademarked names and logos of The Related Group pursuant to a licensing agreement. The graphics and text reflected are the copyrighted property of Developer. The renderings illustrate and depict a lifestyle; however amenities and attractions are subject to change. While there are water views at the property, views may vary. The marina and restaurant are all subject to the Developer obtaining all necessary and appropriate permits, none of which have been obtained. Any restaurant is intended to be privately operated by a third party operator from a commercial space.
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BRICKELLHEIGHTS.COM
T 786.422.0657
SALES CENTER 75 SE 6TH STREET SUITE 101 MIAMI, FL 33131 SALES BY RELATED REALTY IN COLLABORATION WITH FORTUNE DEVELOPMENT SALES
Obtain the property report required by federal law and read it before signing anything. No federal agency has judged the merits or value, if any, of this property. Oral representations cannot be relied upon as correctly stating the representations of the developer. For correct representations, make reference to this brochure and to the documents required by section 718.503, Florida statutes, to be furnished by a developer to a buyer or lessee. Brickell Heights_OCEAN_DRIVE_SPREAD_JAN_2014 2.indd 1 O03882.indd 2
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This is no depend graphic this publ graphic defined disclosu Develop unless o
MIAMI’S NEW CENTER
Visionary Design | World Class Restaurants | Fitness Lifestyle by Equinox | Luxury Designer Residences
This is not intended to be an offer to sell, or solicitation of an offer to buy, condominium units to residents of CT, ID, NY, NJ and OR, unless registered or exemptions are available, or in any other jurisdiction where prohibited by law, and your eligibility for purchase will depend upon your state of residency. This offering is made only by the prospectus for the condominium and no statement should be relied upon if not made in the prospectus. Any sketches, renderings, photographs depicting lifestyle, or unit finishes, or design finishes, graphic materials, plans, specifications, terms, conditions and statements contained in this brochure are proposed only. The managing entities, fitness facilities, amenities, and restaurants proposed within the condominium and referred to are accurate as of the date of this publication; however, there is no guarantee that the same will be involved at, or following, the completion of the condominium. The Developer (as is defined herein below) reserves the right to modify, revise or withdraw ay proposed unit finishes, design finishes, graphic materials, plans, specifications, terms, conditions, statements, managing entities, fitness facilities, amenities, and restaurants, or all of same, in its sole discretion and without prior notice. This Condominium is being developed by 9SMA, LLC (“Developer” as this defined term is used above and hereinafter). Developer has a limited right to use the trademarked names and logos of The Related Group and of Crescent Heights, IP, LLC. pursuant to separate license and marketing agreements with each. Any and all statements, disclosures and/or representations shall be deemed made by Developer and not by The Related Group, nor by Crescent Heights, IP, LLC. EQUINOX® is a registered trademark of Equinox Holdings, Inc and is used pursuant to a licensing agreement between the Developer and Equinox Holdings, Inc. Soul Cycle® is a registered trademark of Soul Cycle, LLC and is used with permission of Soul Cycle, LLC. The project graphics, renderings, photographs, and text provided herein are copyrighted works owned by the Developer unless otherwise noted or credited to another. © 2013, 9SMA, LLC. All rights reserved unless otherwise credited to another. Unauthorized reproduction, display or other dissemination of such materials is strictly prohibited and constitutes copyright infringement.
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HYDE STYLE COMES TO H O L LY W O O D
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es and urpose bilities. enities, nspired es may icy for e and riers to ational
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LUXURY DESIGNER RESORT CONDOMINIUMS HYDE HOTEL SOUL-INSPIRED SPA FULL SERVICE BEACHCLUB STATE-OF-THE-ART GYM OCEANFRONT RESTAURANT
HYDEBEACHHOLLYWOOD.COM
T 954.391.5999
Sales by RELATED REALTY in collaboration with FORTUNE DEVELOPMENT SALES
Obtain the property report required by federal law and read it before signing anything. No federal agency has judged the merits or value, if any, of this property.
Oral representations cannot be relied upon as correctly stating the representations of the Developer. For correct representations, make reference to the documents required by section 718.503, Florida Statute, to be furnished by a developer to a buyer or lessee. This is not intended to be an offer to sell, or solicitation to buy, condominium units to residents of CT, ID, NJ, NY and OR, unless registered or exemptions are available, or in any other jurisdiction where prohibited by law, and your eligibility for purchase will depend upon your state of residency. This offering is made only by the prospectus for the condominium and no statement should be relied upon if not made in the prospectus. Prices, plans and specifications are subject to change without notice. The Related Group is not the project developer. Hyde Hollywood is being developed by 4111 SOUTH OCEAN DRIVE, LLC (“Developer�), which has a limited right to use the trademarked names and logos of The Related Group pursuant to a license and marketing agreement with The Related Group. Any and all statements, disclosures and/or representations shall be deemed made by Developer and not by The Related Group. The sketches, renderings, pictures, illustrations, and statements are proposed only, and the Developer reserves the right to modify, revise or withdraw any or all of same in its sole discretion. All prices are subject to change at any time and without notice, and do not include optional features or premiums for upgraded units.
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L T N H 49762.indd 2
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REAL ESTATE DEVELOPERS SINCE 1981
investments
REAL ESTATE DEVELOPERS SINCE 1981
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Sales Center Located at 1450 South Miami Ave., Miami, FL 33130 Tel. 888-236-5468 • www.BondonBrickell.com
1/17/14 8:32 AM
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Created by INNOVART.US
ORAL REPRESENTATIONS CANNOT BE RELIED UPON AS CORRECTLY STATING THE REPRESENTATIONS OF THE DEVELOPER. FOR CORRECT REPRESENTATIONS, MAKE REFERENCE TO THIS BROCHURE AND TO THE DOCUMENTS REQUIRED BY SECTION 718.503, FLORIDA STATUTES, TO BE FURNISHED BY A DEVELOPER TO A BUYER OR LESSEE. OBTAIN THE PROPERTY REPORT REQUIRED BY FEDERAL LAW AND READ IT BEFORE SIGNING ANYTHING. NO FEDERAL AGENCY HAS JUDGED THE MERITS OR VALUE, IF ANY, OF THIS PROPERTY. We are pledged to the letter and spirit of U.S. Policy for the achievement of equal housing throughout the Nation. We encourage and support an affirmative advertising, marketing and sales program in which there are no barriers to obtaining housing because of race, color, sex, religion, handicap, familial status or national origin. All images and designs depicted herein are artist’s conceptual renderings, which are based upon preliminary development plans, and are subject to change without notice in the manner provided in the offering documents. All such materials are not to scale and are shown solely for illustrative purposes. No guarantees or representations whatsoever are made that existing or future views of the project and surrounding areas depicted by artist’s conceptual renderings or otherwise described herein, will be provided or, if provided, will be as depicted or described herein. Any view from a unit or from other portions of the property may in the future be limited or eliminated by future development or forces of nature and the developer in no manner guarantees the continuing existence of any view. These materials are not intended to be an offer to sell, or solicitation to buy a unit in the condominium. Such an offering shall only be made pursuant to the prospectus (offering circular) for the condominium and no statements should be relied upon unless made in the prospectus or in the applicable purchase agreement. In no event shall any solicitation, offer or sale of a unit in the condominium be made in, or to residents of, any state or country in which such activity would be unlawful. This condominium is being developed by Parcel C2 Property, LLC, a Florida limited liability company (“Developer”), which has a limited right to use the trademarked names and logos of Codina Partners pursuant to a license and marketing agreement with Codina Partners. Neither Codina Partners, nor Armando Codina, is the developer of this condominium. Any and all statements, disclosures and/or representations contained herein shall be deemed made by the Developer and not by Codina Partners or Armando Codina and you agree to look solely to Developer (and not to Codina Partners, Armando Codina and/or any of their respective affiliates) with respect to any and all matters relating to the marketing and/or development of the Condominium and with respect to the sales of units in the Condominium.
1/14/14 2:58 PM
LIVE. PLAY. WORK. LEARN. A DOWNTOWN EXPERIENCE THAT DELIVERS MORE
Created by INNOVART.US
CITY LIFE REIMAGINED, AT DOWNTOWN DORAL. DOWNTOWN DORAL SALES CENTER
8500 NW 52ND Street, Doral FL 33166 T. 786.522.5303 www.downtowndoral.com
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Exclusive sales by Interiors by
ADRIANA HOYOS
Architectural design by
SIEGER SUAREZ
1/14/14 2:58 PM
42,000 SQ. FT of
SPA WONDERLAND
You EAU it to yourself PAUSE . PLAY . PERFECT .
Repeatedly lauded as ONE of the TOP 10 SPAS of the WORLD
EAU SPA is the winner of ELEVEN 2013 Spafinder Wellness 365™ Readers’ Choice Category Awards for Best for Girlfriend Getaways and Bachelorettes, Best for Romance, Best for Weddings, Best Pet-Friendly Spa, Best Urban Hotel Spa, Favorite Spa for Yoga, Best Beach Spa, Best for Accommodations, Best for LGBT, and Best Interior Design
.com
facebook.com/iloveeauspa at
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100 South Ocean Boulevard, Manalapan, FL 33462 561.540.4960
12/20/13 9:44 AM
MILES AWAY FROM MAINSTREAM
Introducing
I
magine a place where the allure of Palm Beach meets carefree bliss. Where the intimacy of a private beach fuses with the warmth of the staff. Where luxury and sophistication blend with laid-back perfection. We invite you to enjoy a Palm Beach retreat experience unlike any other.
New-Fashioned Palm Beach Luxury
one hundred south ocean boulevard manalapan florida 33462 t 1.800.328.0170 eaupalmbeach.com
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Pal azzo di Sp i ag g i a
F U R N I S H E D E XC LU S I V E LY BY F E N D I C ASA 5 BE DR O OM S | 7.5 BAT HS GR AN D SALON | PRIVAT E INDO OR PO OL | FA M ILY R O OM | O U T DO OR SUMMER KITC HEN FIRE PL ACE | E M BO S S E D CR O CODILE LE AT HE R CLO S E TS LU XU RY LIV ING, E XCLU S IV E RE TAILE R FOR FE NDI CA S A, IS LO CAT E D IN T HE M IA M I DE S IGN DIS T RICT T E L: 305-438-1660 ORAL REPRESENTATIONS CANNOT BE RELIED UPON AS CORRECTLY STATING THE REPRESENTATIONS OF THE DEVELOPER. FOR CORRECT REPRESENTATIONS, REFERENCE SHOULD BE MADE TO THE DOCUMENTS REQUIRED BY SECTION 718.503, FLORIDA STATUTES, TO BE FURNISHED BY A DEVELOPER TO A BUYER OR LESSEE. THIS OFFERING IS MADE ONLY BY THE PROSPECTUS FOR THE CONDOMINIUM AND NO STATEMENT SHOULD BE RELIED UPON IF NOT MADE IN THE PROSPECTUS. THIS IS NOT AN OFFER TO SELL, OR SOLICITATION OF OFFERS TO BUY, THE CONDOMINIUM UNITS IN STATES WHERE SUCH OFFER OR SOLICITATION CANNOT BE MADE. PRICES, PLANS AND SPECIFICATIONS ARE SUBJECT TO CHANGE WITHOUT NOTICE. WE ARE PLEDGED TO THE LETTER AND SPIRIT OF THE U.S. POLICY FOR ACHIEVEMENT OF EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY THROUGHOUT THE NATION. WE ENCOURAGE AND SUPPORT AN AFFIRMATIVE ADVERTISING AND MARKETING PROGRAM IN WHICH THERE ARE NO BARRIERS TO OBTAINING HOUSING BECAUSE OF RACE, COLOR, RELIGION, SEX, HANDICAP, FAMILIAL STATUS OR NATIONAL ORIGIN.
ACQ 2193 Ocean Drive 12x20 2.14.indd 1 49727.indd 2
ACQ 2193 Ocean Drive 12x20 2.14
1/14/14 4:20 PM
Introducing the
WORLD’S FINEST PENTHOUSES The World’s Finest Residences PE N T HO USE COLLE CT ION PRICE D FR OM $21 M ILLION TO $55 M ILLION | 8,000-20,000 SQUA R E F EET RE SIDE NCE S AVAIL ABLE FR OM $7,500,000 TO $8,500,000 | 4,600 S QUA R E F EET
Now Under Construction DELIVERY 2014/2015
S A L E S O F F I C E L O C AT E D AT T H E AC Q U A L I N A O C E A N R E S I D E N C E S A N D R E S O R T
1 7 8 7 5 COLLINS AV E NU E , S U IT E 504, S U NNY IS LE S BE ACH, M IA M I, FLOR IDA 33160 BY APPOINTM E NT ONLY T E L: 305 933 6666
w w w.M a nsionsAtAcqua lina .com
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“WATER AND BREEZES DEFINE FLORIDA. THEY ARE THE ESSENCE OF THE OCEANFRONT. THEY ALSO SHAPE REGALIA.”
BERNARDO FORT BRESCIA, FAIA ARQUITECTONICA
RESIDENCE PER FLOOR
SPACIOUS RESIDENCES WITH MORE THAN 7,600 SQUARE FEET OF LIVABLE SPACE STARTING AT 8 MILLION LOCATED IN SUNNY ISLES BEACH, MIAMI, FLORIDA FOR INFORMATION ABOUT REGALIA PLEASE CALL +1.855.836.9273 OR EMAIL YOUR REQUEST TO INFO@REGALIAMIAMI.COM WWW.REGALIAMIAMI.COM
O R A L R E P R E S E N TAT I O N S C A N N O T B E R E L I E D U P O N A S C O R R E C T LY S TAT I N G OR LESSEE. THIS OFFERING IS MADE ONLY BY THE PROSPECTUS FOR THE CONDOMINIUM BE MADE. PRICES, PLANS AND SPECIFICATIONS ARE SUBJECT TO CHANGE WITHOUT NOTICE. ANY PARTICULAR UNIT WITHIN THE CONDOMINIUM. THE DEVELOPER DOES NOT GUARANTEE THE ACHIEVEMENT OF EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY THROUGHOUT THE NATION. WE ENCOURAGE EQUAL HOUSING
OPPORTUNITY
49327.indd 1
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THE AND ACT FUT AND
ING NIUM TICE. THE RAGE
OCCUPANCY SPRING 2014
T H E REPRESENTATIONS OF THE DEVELOPER. FOR CORRECT REPRESENTATIONS, REFERENCE SHOULD BE MADE TO THE DOCUMENTS REQUIRED BY SECTION 718.503, FLORIDA STATUTES, TO BE FURNISHED BY A DEVELOPER TO A BUYER AND NO STATEMENT SHOULD BE RELIED UPON IF NOT MADE IN THE PROSPECTUS. THIS IS NOT AN OFFER TO SELL, OR SOLICITATION OF OFFERS TO BUY, THE CONDOMINIUM UNITS IN STATES WHERE SUCH OFFER OR SOLICITATION CANNOT ACTUAL IMPROVEMENTS MAY VARY FROM RENDERINGS AND ARE USED SOLELY FOR ILLUSTRATIVE PURPOSES. ACTUAL VIEWS MAY VARY AND MAY NOT BE AVAILABLE IN ALL UNITS. VIEWS CANNOT BE RELIED UPON AS THE ACTUAL VIEW FROM FUTURE VIEW FROM THE PROPERTY OR FROM A SPECIFIC UNIT AND MAKES NO REPRESENTATION AS TO THE CURRENT OR FUTURE USE OF ANY ADJACENT PROPERTY. WE ARE PLEDGED TO THE LETTER AND SPIRIT OF THE U.S. POLICY FOR AND SUPPORT AN AFFIRMATIVE ADVERTISING AND MARKETING PROGRAM IN WHICH THERE ARE NO BARRIERS TO OBTAINING HOUSING BECAUSE OF RACE, COLOR, RELIGION, SEX, HANDICAP, FAMILIAL STATUS OR NATIONAL ORIGIN.
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A WORLD THAT DEFIES CONVENTION FORTUNE INTERNATIONAL SITE: 16901 Collins Avenue, Sunny Isles Beach, FL 33160 SALES CENTER: 17070 Collins Avenue, Suite 250, Sunny Isles Beach, FL 33160 T 888 640 6045
JADESIGNATURE.COM
ORAL REPRESENTATIONS CANNOT BE RELIED UPON AS CORRECTLY STATING REPRESENTATIONS OF THE DEVELOPER. FOR CORRECT REPRESENTATIONS, MAKE REFERENCE TO THE DOCUMENTS REQUIRED BY SECTION 718.503, FLORIDA STATUTES, TO BE FURNISHED BY A DEVELOPER TO A BUYER OR LESSEE. PROJECT IS BEING DEVELOPED BY SUNNY ISLES BEACH ASSOCIATES, LLC. WHICH HAS A RIGHT TO USE THE TRADEMARK NAME AND LOGO OF FORTUNE INTERNATIONAL. FEATURES, ILLUSTRATIONS, GRAPHICS AND DEPICTIONS ARE CONCEPTUAL AND PRELIMINARY ONLY AND ARE FOR CONVENIENCE OF REFERENCE. DEVELOPER EXPRESSLY RESERVES THE RIGHT TO MAKE MODIFICATIONS, REVISIONS AND CHANGES IT DEEMS DESIRABLE IN ITS SOLE AND ABSOLUTEDISCRETION WITHOUT NOTICE. THIS IS NOT INTENDED TO BE AN OFFER TO SELL, OR SOLICITATION TO BUY, IN ANY JURISDICTION WHERE PROHIBITED BY LAW. Architect of Record - ADD Inc.
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F P C
H P R
M
, F O N
FORTUNE INTERNATIONAL PRESENTS AN INCOMPARABLE COLLABORATION HERZOG & DE MEURON PYR LED BY PIERRE-YVES ROCHON RAYMOND JUNGLES
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SIMPLE PERFECTION IN MIAMI
Soaring fifty-seven stories above Sunny Isles Beach, Jade Signature is an invitation to the avant-garde.
Residences starting at $1.95 million
10/7/13 9:41 AM
I DON’T WANT REALISM. I WANT MAGIC!” — Former Coconut Grove resident Tennessee Williams Freethinkers and pioneers, artists and iconoclasts – they’ve always thrived in Miami.
Visit our New Sales Gallery 2665 South Bayshore Drive, Suite 500 Coconut Grove, FL 33133
Which is why our latest development has been inspired by the free spirit of innovation and creativity that lies at the heart of Miami’s Coconut Grove. Be inspired at Grove at Grand Bay
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by Bjarke Ingels WSJ’s 2011 Innovator of the Year for Architecture
Priced from 3.7 million North Tower 95% sold South Tower 70% sold
3-7 bedroom residences Coconut Grove, FL groveatgrandbay.com
Sales by Cervera Real Estate 305 929 8646 Owned and Developed by
Broker participation welcome. Oral representation cannot be relied upon as correctly stating the presentation of the Developer, for correct representation, make reference to the documents required by section 718.503 Florida Statutes, to be furnished by the Developer or Buyer or Lessee. Not an offer where prohibited by State Statutes. Plans, features and amenities subject to change without notice. All illustrations are artist conceptual renderings and are subject to change without notice. This advertisement does not constitute an offer in the states of NY or NJ or any jurisdiction where prior registration or other qualification is required. Equal Housing Opportunity. All plans and renderings are conceptual and are subject to change without notice.
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1/16/14 8:46 AM
On location at The Cypress Room 3620 NE 2nd Ave, Miami, FL 33137
The Miami Design District is a creative neighborhood and dining destination dedicated to innovative art, fashion, architecture and food. Valet Parking from $3
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D IN H
A
P
P
E
N
S
W
H
E
G
R
E
IN
M IAM I D E S I G N D I STR I C T. N ET 39th to 41st Streets between NE 2nd Avenue and N Miami Avenue, Miami, FL 33137 Phone 305 722 7100
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• ELE • CON • MIAM ELEVA CONVE HAPPY FUN • • CON • MIAM VATED • BEA LUXUR CONVE • MIA LEISU •MIAM •ATED • BEA • LUX CONVE • MIAM ELEVA BEAUT • HAP FUN • • CON • MIAM ELEVA HAPPY LUXUR CONVE MIAMI • HAP LEISU BEAUT MIAMI • CON • MIA ELEVA HAPPY LUXUR CONVE • MIAM ELEVA HAPPY FUN • • CON 49723.indd 2
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OPPORTUNITY
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ORAL REPRESENTATIONS CANNOT BE RELIED UPON AS CORRECTLY STATING REPRESENTATIONS OF THE DEVELOPER. FOR CORRECT REPRESENTATIONS, MAKE REFERENCE TO THE DOCUMENTS REQUIRED BY SECTION 718.503, FLORIDA STATUTES, TO BE FURNISHED BY A DEVELOPER TO A BUYER OR LESSEE. DRAWINGS AND DEPICTIONS ARE CONCEPTUAL ONLY AND SHOULD NOT BE RELIED UPON AS REPRESENTATIONS, IMPLIED OF THE FINAL DETAIL OF THE RESIDENCES OR OTHER PORTIONS OF 1 HOTEL & HOMES SOUTH BEACH. EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY.
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Great places are defined by nature We began with six-hundred feet of undisturbed beachfront and the intention to keep it as is. By letting the outside world flow seamlessly in, we created timeless spaces that bring more of the natural world’s comfor t and clarity into your life. This is the nature of South Beach.
One, two, and three bedrooms available for purchase now.
E XC LU S I V E S A L E S A N D M A R K E T I N G BY F O RT U N E D E V E L O P M E N T S A L E S
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1hotels.com / homes
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INTRODUCING A STUNNING NEW SANCTUARY DESIGNED BY ARQUITECTONICA. TWO BLOCKS SOUTH OF BAL HARBOUR S H O P S , O N C O L L I N S A V E N U E A N D 9 4 T H S T R E E T. 6 0 S PA C I O U S O C E A N F R O N T R E S I D E N C E S O F F E R I N G 3 , 4 0 0 TO OV E R 7 , 0 0 0 S Q UA R E F E E T O F L I VA B L E S PA C E A N D 3 0 0 L I N E A R F E E T O F P R I S T I N E P R I V A T E B E A C H F R O N T.
Oral  representations  cannot  be  relied  upon  as  correctly  stating  the  representations  of  the  developer.   For  correct  representations,  make  reference  to  this  advertisement  and  to  the  documents  required  by  section  718.503,  Florida  statutes,  to  This  is  not  an  offer  to  sell,  or  solicitation  of  offers  to  buy,  the  condominium  units  in  states  where  such  offer  or  solicitation  cannot  be  made.  Images  and  renderings  are  all  artist  conceptual  compositions.  Created  by  the  seventh  art.
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a new wave of luxury SALES LOUNGE CHATEAU GROUP 1 57 9 5 CO L L I N S AV E N U E SUNNY ISLES, FL 33160 305-944-4440 CHATEAUOCEAN.COM DEVELOPED BY CHATEAU GROUP
E XC LU S I V E S A L E S A N D M A R K E T I N G B Y
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DAY AND NIGHT
This is Life On The Water. The Best Part of Life on the Water Is Life IN the Water. Marina Palms offers highly refined living with extensive luxuries, services and amenities, including a residents-only Boat Club with everything you need for family fun on the water. And in the water.
Oral representations cannot be relied upon as correctly stating representations of the developer. For correct representations, make reference to the documents required by section 718.503, Florida statutes, to be furnished by the developer to a buyer or lessee. Obtain the property report required by federal law and read it before signing anything. No federal agency has judged the merits or value, if any, of this property. We are pledged to the letter and spirit of U.S. policy for the achievement of equal housing
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2-, 3- and 4-bedroom luxury residences, priced from the $700s North Tower Residences Sold Out. North Tower Penthouses & South Tower Residences Now Available. 17201 Biscayne Boulevard, North Miami Beach, FL 33160
866 209 6714
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throughout the Nation. We encourage and support an affi rmative advertising and marketing program in which there are no barriers to obtaining housing because of race, color, sex, religion, handicap, familial status or national origin. This ad does not constitute an offer to sell or a solicitation of an offer to buy a unit in the condominium. No solicitation, offer or sale of a unit in the condominium will be made in any jurisdiction in which such activity would be unlawful prior to any required registration therein.
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F ront Runners Colonel Charles A. Lindbergh (CENTER, wearing an aviator hat) stepping off his plane to deliver the first airmail from Panama to Miami, flying a Sikorsky S-38 amphibian for the voyage, February 13, 1929.
Flying High AVIATOR CHARLES LINDBERGH CHANGED CORRESPONDENCE FOREVER WITH THE WORLD’S FIRST FOREIGN AIRMAIL FLIGHT. BY JULIET IZON
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PHOTOGRAPHY BY STATE ARCHIVE OF FLORIDA, FLORIDA MEMORY
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oday, with e-mail arriving nearly instantaneously, it’s easy to forget how harrowing the journey of a single handwritten missive could be. Before the advent of airmail, letters would often take weeks to arrive on the opposite coast; packages from across the sea, even longer. But in Miami on February 13, 1929 (nearly two years after his famed trans-Atlantic flight), famed pilot Colonel Charles A. Lindbergh changed that paradigm forever. Clad in a stylish aviator cap and dark suit, he arrived triumphantly in Florida from Panama with the very first shipment of foreign airmail. With crowds watching, crews unloaded Santa-like sacks of letters, piling nearly a dozen of them at the pilot’s feet while the Miami postmaster looked on appreciatively. Lindbergh was chosen for the inaugural flight for both his fame and his encyclopedic knowledge of transatlantic routes and weather. In fact, just a year earlier, he had been named technical advisor for local airline Pan American Airways, a designation he held for 45 years. Although in the past Lindbergh had favored piloting landplanes, he utilized a Sikorsky S-38 amphibian for this trek to traverse the open waters. His gamble paid off; that model was eventually chosen by Pan Am for almost 40 of its planes. Pan Am, created in 1927 by entrepreneur Juan Terry Trippe, was a South Florida institution and one of the most important carriers of the 20th century. With headquarters originally located in Key West, before a 1928 move to Miami, the company became well-known for many firsts in aviation: round-the-world trips, multiple flight attendants, and even in-flight meals. While the company folded in 1991, its legacy—and the indelible imprimatur of Lindbergh’s contributions—remains. OD
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F ront Runners Cassius Clay (now Muhammad Ali) being restrained as he rushes across the ring after his victory over Sonny Liston, shouting, “Eat your words!” to ringside reporters.
South Beach Stunner FIFTY YEARS LATER, CASSIUS CLAY’S ASTOUNDING UPSET OF SONNY LISTON STILL RESONATES IN MIAMI. BY JULIET IZON
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PHOTOGRAPHY BY CENTRAL PRESS/GETTY IMAGES
M
iami, February 25, 1964: A scrappy upstart, barely out of his teens, is pitted against a veritable Goliath of boxing in that year’s world heavyweight championship at the Convention Hall. Yet 22-year-old Cassius Clay, considered the underdog against the veteran (and 32-year-old) fighter Sonny Liston, delivered an incredible upset. Clay’s nimble footwork and quick-as-lightning reflexes trounced the slower Liston, with the match ending in a technical knockout when Liston, spitting out his mouth guard, wearily declared that he could no longer continue. The person least surprised at the match’s outcome was certainly Clay. In fact, it was his boasting before the fight commenced that remains a pivotal moment in sports history. “I am the greatest!” he vigorously declared to reporters gathered for a press conference mere moments before he entered the ring. Shortly after, Clay celebrated his title by changing his name to Muhammad Ali. As his corner man and Miami legend Ferdie Pacheco put it, “Cassius Clay was born in Louisville. Muhammad Ali was born in Miami.” And indeed it was in Florida, training at Fifth Street Gym with legendary coach Angelo Dundee, where Clay first coined his signature phrase “float like a butterfly, sting like a bee.” South Beach is also where he reveled in his victory with friends including Malcolm X and Sam Cooke at popular haunt Hampton House. This February marks the 50th anniversary of the seminal match of Liston vs. Clay, a fight that boxing aficionados still mark as one of the most epic battles in the history of the sport. It was also the event that gave rise to the mythical and mysterious figure of Muhammad Ali—mouthy, brash, but a truly brilliant athlete. OD
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CALL 305.865.1100 OR VISIT SAKS.COM/BALHARBOUR. CALL 305.662.8655 OR VISIT SAKS.COM/DADELAND. DOWNLOAD THE SAKS APP OR FIND US ON FACEBOOK, TWITTER AND SAKSPOV.COM. * UP TO 3 MSGS/WEEK. TEXT STOP TO CANCEL, HELP FOR INFO. MSG&DATA RATES MAY APPLY. VISIT SAKS.COM/POLICIES FOR MORE INFO.
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EXPERIENCE THE MAJESTY OF SCANDINAVIAN LEATHER.
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FLORIDA’S LARGEST COLLECTION OF CONTEMP ORARY FURNITURE N MIAMI BEACH • 3025 NE 163rd ST • 305.944.8080 H O L LY W O O D • 4 1 5 0 N O R T H 2 8 t h T E R R A C E • 9 5 4 . 8 7 4 . 3 8 8 8
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February 2014 56 Front Runners 72 From the Editor-in-Chief 74 From the Publisher 76 ...Without Whom This Issue
Would Not Be Possible 81 Shot on Site 104 The List
People 110 In His Prime When restaurateur Myles Chefetz launched Prime 112 a decade ago, it set the tone for steakhouses around the country. Now, he looks to do the same with Prime Fish.
114 Glamorous Saving Dressed in designer labels from head to toe but at a fraction of the cost, model Ashley Stetts proves you can be frugal and high-fashion.
116 Sugar Rush Miamian Suzy Batlle serves a sweet taste of Cuba at her award-winning ice cream parlor in Little Havana.
118 Suited for Play The hospitality industry has met its match with Morgans Hotel Group Regional VP JP Oliver, for whom every day is like Saturday.
Singer Phil Collins and Orianne Collins expand their Little Dreams Foundation to Miami, helping children explore their life passions.
122 Grape Move West Coast wine purveyor Chris Radomski lands on the beaches of Miami, making his 2014 a good year for wine, family, and business.
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154 Against the Grain
Business partners Burton Wilkins and Tatanka Guerrero bring a surf-inspired backyard vibe to the beach.
PHOTOGRAPHY BY GARY JAMES
120 Big Dreams
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Š2013 Cartier
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February 2014 Culture 126 Creating the Creators PHOTOGRAPHY BY RANDALL SLAVIN
This month, young performers and artists show off their talents at a series of intense workshops in town, thanks to the National YoungArts Foundation.
134 See Worthy The Miami International Boat Show offers a preview of the latest, most lavish vessels about to hit our waters.
136 What Became of Baby Jane The Norton Museum of Art spotlights Andy Warhol’s cinematic muse and first superstar, Palm Beach’s own Jane Holzer.
140 A Riot of Nature A new exhibition by New York painter Larry Poons finds an unlikely roost in Key Biscayne.
142 It’s a Celebration! It’s no secret this town loves a good party, and come year’s end, celebrities, DJs, and all manner of jet-setters welcomed 2014 in style.
152 Dropping Anchor Tattoo artist Chris Núñez is growing roots in Wynwood with his new venture, Handcrafted Miami.
154 Against the Grain Launched by two Miami nightlife veterans, the low-key Sweetwater Beer Garden serves up some local love on the Beach.
Treasures 158 And the Oscar Goes to Legendary couturier Oscar de la Renta sets his sights on the fight against cancer at the annual Designed for a Cure benefit in Miami.
160 The Gem Guru Now at Bloomingdale’s Aventura, Roni Blanshay’s statement pieces take even a simple T-shirt from casual to glam.
162 Eye on Miami Sunglasses and custom eyewear get luxe upgrades this season with new technology and new launches.
64 OCEANDRIVE.COM
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200 Dream Come True
Cover star Anne V reflects on life in the fast lane. Zipped python jacket ($9,400) and draped jersey basque skirt ($1,800), Alexandre Vauthier. 55 Croisette, 415 Hibiscus Ave., Palm Beach, 561-355-4244; alexandrevauthier.com. Il Futuro handlet in yellow-gold vermeil ($538) and skinny curved bar ring in rose-gold vermeil ($290), Bijules. bijulesnyc.com
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LIFTING CONTOUR SERUM FY14 LM SINGLE PAGE AD - Ocean Drive Bleed: 10.25 x 12.25 INCHES Trim: 10 x 12 INCHES Safety: 9.5 x 11.5 INCHES
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N E I M A N M A R C U S - S A K S F I F T H AV E N U E
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February 2014 164 If the Shoe Fits Miami’s fashionistas show their philanthropic side at the Wine, Women & Shoes benefit for the Miami Children’s Hospital Foundation.
166 Optical Effects Dior’s new Dreamskin antiaging product, made from exotic blooms, leaves skin radiant and smooth despite our city’s neverending sun.
168 Chronomaster Miami men have a lot to choose from with this season’s sporty-chic chronometers.
Taste 173 Beach Delight
Features
178 Love Is in the Air Five local romancers serve up their favorite dishes and drinks to share, and reveal a more amorous side to the city.
182 Bubbling Up No longer just for special occasions, Miamians are discovering Champagne for everyday celebration.
184 Nouveau Shabu Shabu At the Fontainebleau’s new Mina 74, Michael Mina deconstructs his gourmet take on shabu shabu
188 Trials by Fire We follow chef and restaurateur Scott Conant as he visits friends from the culinary trenches and tunes up the team at Scarpetta for a big night.
200 Dream Come True Supermodel Anne V showcases high-octane spring fashion while reflecting on modeling, following her dreams, and using her fame to make a difference.
210 How Did We Get So Damn Delicious? These days, it seems every high-profile chef is launching a new eatery in Miami. OD takes a look at our culinary evolution, and sits down with some big names coming to dinner this year.
218 Basel Ramp Another ABMB came and went, with more art—and more parties—drawing a who’s who of collectors, dealers, and celebrities.
Returning to his Miami Beach roots, Michael Schwartz brings his winning formula to the iconic Raleigh Hotel with his latest eponymous restaurant.
176 Piece of Cake
210 How Did We Get So Damn Delicious?
Miami’s newest top chefs, like Francis Mallmann, are the toast of the town.
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PHOTOGRAPHY BY JAVIER PIERINI
Famed cake maker Sylvia Weinstock partners with The St. Regis Bal Harbour Resort for her edible couture creations.
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In 1839, Vacheron Constantin created the famous pantograph, a mechanical device allowing for principal watchmaking components to be reproduced with total precision. Elevating the quality of its timepieces even further, this invention, which also revolutionized Swiss watchmaking, would propel the brand into the future.
Patrimony Contemporaine Hallmark of Geneva, Pink gold case, Hand-wound mechanical movement RĂŠf. 81180/000R-9159
www.vacheron - constantin.com
www.thehourlounge.com
Faithful to the history upon which its reputation is built, Vacheron Constantin endeavours to maintain, repair and restore all watches it has produced since its founding: a sign of excellence and confidence, which continues to elevate the brand’s name and stature.
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February 2014 In an industry that’s still largely a boys’ club, these five female sommeliers are redefining the wine world in South Florida and beyond.
230 To All the Girls Legendary crooner Julio Iglesias returns home to Miami to perform his greatest hits, reminding us why he is the biggest-selling Latin artist of all time.
Eminent Domain 237 Brick-and-Mortar Beauty In luxe-loving Miami, the architectural packaging for our city’s high-end shopping boom is as impressive as the retail inside.
240 Miami Rising From ambitious projects going up in South of Fifth to hip-hop hotshots on the move, Miami’s real estate market intrigues as it grows.
257 East of Ordinary Mina’s Mediterraneo puts a fresh spin on Mediterranean dining on Miami’s Upper East Side.
Parting Shot 268 Going Up In a town where real estate marketing is practically a form of entertainment (with not one but two reality shows), are we living up to the hype?
ON THE COVER: Photography by Randall Slavin Styling by Taryn Shumway Hair by Bryce Scarlett at De Facto using Bumble and bumble Makeup by Quinn Murphy for Chanel at Art Department Manicure by Julie Kandalec using Dior Vernis
Zipped python jacket ($9,400), Alexandre Vauthier. 55 Croisette, 415 Hibiscus Ave., Palm Beach, 561-355-4244; alexandrevauthier. com. Il Futuro handlet in yellow-gold vermeil ($538) and skinny curved bar ring in rose-gold vermeil ($290), Bijules. bijulesnyc.com
218 Basel Ramp
Among the offerings at this past ABMB was architect Charlotte Perriand’s La Maison au bord de l’eau.
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PHOTOGRAPHY BY LOUIS VUITTON
224 Women of Wine
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JARED SHAPIRO Editor-in-Chief Deputy Editor BILL KEARNEY Assistant Editor JULIA FORD-CARTHER Executive Managing Editor DEBORAH L. MARTIN Associate Managing Editor/Beauty Coordinator KAITLIN CLARK Art Director ADRIANA GARCIA Photo Editor JENNIFER PAGAN Entertainment and Bookings Editor JULIET IZON Senior Fashion Editor LAUREN FINNEY Copy Editor JULIA STEINER Research Editor JUDY DEYOUNG
COURTLAND LANTAFF Group Publisher Associate Publishers SUSAN ABRAMS, MICHELE ADDISON Account Executives SUSANA ARAGON, MICHELLE CHALA, DINA FRIEDMAN, LAUREN SHAPIRO Vice President, Public Relations and Marketing LANA BERNSTEIN Event Marketing Manager CRISTINA PARRA Event Marketing Assistant SHANA KAUFMAN Assistant Distribution Relations Manager MICHELLE PETRILLO Sales and Business Coordinator DARA HIRSH Sales Assistants ANA BLAGOJEVIC, CRISTINA CABIELLES Office Assistant PELAYO VIGIL
NICHE MEDIA HOLDINGS, LLC Editorial Director MANDI NORWOOD Creative Director NICOLE A. WOLFSON NADBOY Executive Fashion Director SAMANTHA YANKS
ART AND PHOTO
Senior Art Director FRYDA LIDOR Associate Art Directors TIFFANI BARTON, ANASTASIA TSIOUTAS CASALIGGI, JUAN PARRA, JESSICA SARRO Senior Designer JENNIFER LEDBURY Designers ELISSA ALSTER, GIL FONTIMAYOR Photo Director LISA ROSENTHAL BADER Photo Editors JODIE LOVE, SETH OLENICK, REBECCA SAHN Associate Photo Editor KATHERINE HAUSENBAUER-KOSTER Photo Producer KIMBERLY RIORDAN Senior Staff Photographer JEFFREY CRAWFORD Senior Digital Imaging Specialist JEFFREY SPITERY Digital Imaging Specialist JEREMY DEVERATURDA Digital Imaging Assistant HTET SAN Fashion Editor FAYE POWER
FASHION
Associate Fashion Editor ALEXANDRIA GEISLER Fashion Assistants CONNOR CHILDERS, LISA FERRANDINO
COPY AND RESEARCH
Manager, Copy and Research WENDIE PECHARSKY Copy Editors DAVID FAIRHURST, NICOLE LANCTOT, DALENE ROVENSTINE Research Editors LESLIE ALEXANDER, MURAT OZTASKIN, AVA WILLIAMS
EDITORIAL OPERATIONS
Director, Editorial Operations DEBORAH L. MARTIN Editorial Relations Manager MATTHEW STEWART Online Managing Editor CAITLIN ROHAN Online Editor APRIL WALLOGA Social Media and E-Newsletter Editor ANNA BEN YEHUDA Digital Media Developer MICHAEL KWAN Digital Media Specialist ANTHONY PEARSON Senior Managing Editors DANINE ALATI, KEN RIVADENEIRA, JILL SIERACKI
Managing Editors JENNIFER DEMERITT, KAREN ROSE, JOHN VILANOVA
Shelter and Design Editor SUE HOSTETLER Timepiece Editor ROBERTA NAAS Arts Editor BRETT SOKOL
ADVERTISING SALES
Senior Vice President, Sales and Marketing NORMAN M. MILLER Account Directors TIFFANY CAREY, CLAIRE CARLIN, KATHLEEN FLEMING, KAREN LEVINE, MEREDITH MERRILL, ELIZABETH MOORE, GRACE NAPOLITANO, DEBORAH O’BRIEN, SHANNON PASTUSZAK, VALERIE ROBLES, RAYLENE SALTHOUSE Account Executives LYNN CHAFFIER, THOMAS CHILLEMI, MORGAN CLIFFORD, AMY DESILVA, JANELLE DRISCOLL, ALICIA DRY, VINCE DUROCHER, SARAH HECKLER, VICTORIA HENRY, CAROLYN LANDES, SHAMBRY MCGEE, MARY RUEGG, JIM SMITH, CAROLINE SNECKENBERG, KACIE TURPENEN, TERA WASHBURN, JESSICA ZIVKOVITCH, GABRIELLA ZURROW National Sales Coordinator HOWARD COSTA Sales Support and Development EMMA BEHRINGER, DANA BROCKWAY, EMILY BURDETT, BRITTANY CORBETT, OLIVIA DAVIS, JAMIE HILDEBRANDT, KELSEY MARRUJO, MICHELLE MASS, NICHOLE MAURER, RUE MCBRIDE, STEPHEN OSTROWSKI, MARISA RANDALL
MARKETING, PROMOTIONS, AND PUBLIC RELATIONS
Vice President, Integrated Marketing EMILY MCLINTOCK Integrated Marketing Director ROBIN KEARSE Integrated Marketing Manager JIMMY KONTOMANOLIS Creative Services Director SCOTT ROBSON Promotions Art Designers CHRISTOPHER HARDGROVE, DANIELLE MORRIS Event Marketing Directors AMY FISCHER, HALEE HARCZYNSKI, MELINDA JAGGER, JOANNA TUCKER Event Marketing Managers ANTHONY ANGELICO, CHRISTIAMILDA CORREA, LAURA MULLEN, LAUREN OLSON Event Marketing Coordinator ANI GAFKA
ADVERTISING PRODUCTION
Vice President, Manufacturing MARIA BLONDEAUX Positioning and Planning Director SALLY LYON Assistant Production Director PAUL HUNTSBERRY Production Managers BARBARA SHALE, BLUE UYEDA Production Artists MARISSA MAHERAS, TARA MCCRILLIS Distribution Manager MATT HEMMERLING Fulfillment Manager DORIS HOLLIFIELD Traffic Supervisor ESTEE WRIGHT Traffic Coordinators JEANNE GLEESON, MALLORIE SOMMERS Circulation Research Specialist CHAD HARWOOD
ADMINISTRATION, FINANCE, AND OPERATIONS
Director, Executive Operations MICHAEL CAPACE Executive Assistant ARLENE GONZALEZ Human Resources Director STEPHANIE MITCHELL Controller DANIELLE BIXLER Senior Director, Finance MICHELE EGAN Advertising Business Manager RICHARD YONG Financial Analyst AUDREY CADY Credit and Collections Manager CHRISTOPHER BEST Senior Credit and Collections Analyst MYRNA ROSADO Senior Accountant LILY WU Junior Accountants CHRISTINA LESCAY, NATASHA WARREN Senior Billing Coordinator CHARLES CAGLE Desktop Administrator ZACHARY CUMMO Infrastructure Administrator MOHAMMED HANNAN Facilities Coordinator JOUBERT GUILLAUME
EDITORS-IN-CHIEF
J.P. ANDERSON (Michigan Avenue), SPENCER BECK (Los Angeles Confidential), ANDREA BENNETT (Vegas), KRISTIN DETTERLINE (Philadelphia Style), ERIN LENTZ (Aspen Peak), LISA PIERPONT (Boston Common), CATHERINE SABINO (Gotham), ELIZABETH THORP (Capitol File), SAMANTHA YANKS (Hamptons)
PUBLISHERS
JOHN M. COLABELLI (Philadelphia Style), LOUIS DELONE (Capitol File), SUZANNE RUFFA DOLEN (Gotham), ALEXANDRA HALPERIN (Aspen Peak), DEBRA HALPERT (Hamptons), GLEN KELLEY (Boston Common), ALISON MILLER (Los Angeles Confidential), DAN USLAN (Michigan Avenue), JOSEF VANN (Vegas)
Vice President and Chief Financial Officer JOHN P. KUSHNIR Chief Technology Officer JESSE TAYLOR President and Chief Operating Officer KATHERINE NICHOLLS Chairman and Director of Photography JEFF GALE Copyright 2014 by Niche Media Holdings, LLC. All rights reserved. Ocean Drive magazine is published 10 times per year. Reproduction without permission of the publisher is prohibited. The publisher and editors are not responsible for unsolicited material, and it will be treated as unconditionally assigned for publication subject to Ocean Drive magazine’s right to edit. Return postage must accompany all manuscripts, photographs, and drawings. To order a subscription, please call 866-891-3144. For customer service, please inquire at oceandrive@pubservice.com. To distribute Ocean Drive at your business, please e-mail magazinerequest@nichemediallc.com. Ocean Drive magazine is published by Niche Media Holdings, LLC (Founder, Jason Binn), a company of The Greenspun Corporation. OCEAN DRIVE: 404 Washington Avenue, Suite 650, Miami Beach, FL 33139 T: 305-532-2544 F: 305-592-7356 NICHE MEDIA HOLDINGS: 100 Church Street, Seventh Floor, New York, NY 10007 T: 646-835-5200 F: 212-780-0003 THE GREENSPUN CORPORATION: 2275 Corporate Circle, Suite 300, Henderson, NV 89074 T: 702-259-4023 F: 702-383-1089
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FROM THE EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
Catching up with October cover star Lenny Kravitz at the Dom Pérignon Limited Edition by Jeff Koons party at Wall for Art Basel.
With shining December cover star Zoe Saldana at our Merrill Lynch and Baha Mar-sponsored The Art of the Party event at a private residence on Hibiscus Island.
ABOVE:
A sunny afternoon with Phil Collins at the Fontainebleau Miami Beach, where he announced plans for a Miami chapter of his Little Dreams Foundation; LEFT: One of my more memorable days in Miami, getting to hoop it up with the likes of Shane Battier and Ray Allen on the court at AmericanAirlines Arena thanks to the amazing team at Hublot.
up and you are still wearing the wristband from last night’s party (of course, of all the “we’ve all been theres,” this is probably the least harmful). That’s usually the sign of a good night. During the season, this tends to happen more often than not. As my 6-year-old daughter so matter-of-factly pointed out, “Daddy always goes to sleep with bracelets on.” Touché. But it’s all in good fun. Here at Ocean Drive and all across Miami, we’re constantly celebrating, acknowledging, and toasting new groundbreakings, debuts, championships; going to sleep with “bracelets” on is part of our DNA. This month’s celebration? Anne Vyalitsyna. While a whole team put in the effort to make this gorgeous story come to life, it’s the effortlessly beautiful Anne V who showed us why she is one of the most sought-after supermodels on the planet. There will be plenty of toasts this February, with the 13th annual Food Network South Beach Wine & Food Festival. It’s a month when our town is visited by a never-ending parade of foodies and “winos,” as if there weren’t enough of us—myself included—already here. Much like there was that post-Basel undertone that this was “one of the best Basel years ever,” so too is the anticipation surrounding this year’s SBWFF. We’re at the pinnacle of the culinary scene, and we’ve got Lee Brian Schrager interviewing some of the world’s most respected chefs (all of whom are, like LeBron once announced, “bringing their talents to South Beach”). There’s also Julio Iglesias and Phil Collins in Ocean Drive this month, along with some new columns you’ll notice as well—from “The Aesthetes,” a monthly column in which we’ll profile the important people amid the burgeoning Miami arts scene, to “New in Town,” which showcases someone who—like me—is recently new to the town of Miami. So enjoy the read between passed hors d’oeuvres and cocktails at SBWFF, and please, stack bracelets upon bracelets as you enjoy our amazing city.
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We’ve all been there. Those mornings when you wake
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FROM THE PUBLISHER
With Ocean Drive’s December cover star Zoe Saldana at Niche Media’s Art of the Party event.
With Hamptons Publisher Debra Halpert at Art Basel magazine’s Women in Arts luncheon at Lure Fishbar.
With Rasheda Cox and Amanda Curtis at Russian Standard Vodka’s Incredible Pursuits Finale at Haven Gastro-Lounge.
as some of the year’s largest events take place now in our own beachside backyard. For one, there’s the Miami International Boat Show, when the world’s yachting, sailing, and boating enthusiasts cruise into Miami Beach to shop for the latest, most thrilling vessels docking at our marinas from February 13 to 17. And as the boats set sail, the chefs move in for the 13th annual Food Network South Beach Wine & Food Festival, from February 20 to 23. With all of the attention Miami has been receiving for its burgeoning culinary culture, the 2014 festival will be a tasty one indeed. As in seasons past, the big-ticket event of the weekend is sure to be Wine Spectator’s Best of the Best sponsored by Bank of America and Merrill Lynch Wealth Management at the Fontainebleau Miami Beach. You will certainly find us sipping, tasting, and delighting in the world’s best food and beverage selections. To commemorate such an important month, we’re pleased to feature the must-know model and philanthropist Anne V. She’s one to watch—at such a young age, she’s already had an impressive career, with numerous fashion campaigns for houses like DKNY, Prada, and Roberto Cavalli, and appears as a mentor on the new season of The Face. As you can imagine, we’re honored to have this striking girl next door show off the year’s most inspired spring looks on our cover and in our annual spring fashion feature. 2014 has only just begun, but there’s much to do—be sure to check oceandrive.com to stay up to speed on how you can keep your calendar full. Hope to see you around town…
PHOTOGRAPHY BY WORLDREDEYE.COM
Although it’s the shortest month of the year, February packs a punch in Miami,
COURTLAND LANTAFF
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...WITHOUT WHOM THIS ISSUE WOULD NOT HAVE BEEN POSSIBLE FEBRUARY 2014
Brett Graff Graff is a former US government economist, syndicated columnist, and a contributor to a host of publications and news outlets, including The Miami Herald, Maxim, Glamour, Fox Business News, Yahoo! finance, The Los Angeles Times, and forbes.com. This month, she talks to National YoungArts Foundation’s Paul T. Lehr about the program’s Miami roots, on page 126. What subjects do you typically cover? I write about money and how the most interesting organizations in the world both earn and spend large sums. What can Miami offer artistic teens? Miami is loaded with culture— Wynwood Walls, New World Symphony—but let’s face it, people are intoxicated by the idea of coming here. For that reason alone, the number of artists, dealers, collectors, and musicians is constantly compounding.
Dave Hyde Hyde has been a South Florida Sun-Sentinel columnist since 1990 and has won numerous awards for his sports writing. He is the author of Perfection: The Inside Story of the 1972 Miami Dolphins’ Perfect Season. In this issue, he delves into the latest super yachts and boats from the Miami International Boat Show on page 134.
What’s one unforgettable meal you’ve had in Miami? It would have to be a dinner we
did with Nigella Lawson and Andrew Carmellini at last year’s SBWFF. The perfect pairing made the perfect meal. Any new
Randall Slavin California native Slavin has photographed Hollywood’s leading men and ladies for more than a decade. His work debuted in The New York Times Magazine; other assignments quickly followed, including GQ, Esquire, and Rolling Stone. He received the 2011 Hollywood Style Award for Photographer of the Year. Here, Slavin captured this month’s cover star, Anne V, on page 200.
restaurants in Miami you’re dying to try?
I eat out almost every night of the week, which means I get to try almost everything on my list. I try to get to a new restaurant within a few weeks of its opening. What are your favorite ingredients to cook with? I love experimenting with different spices. N.31, Moruno N.21, and Cancale N.11 are some of my favorites.
What are your favorite objects to shoot? Rare and exotic garden equipment— I’m a fourth-generation gardener. What was the inspiration behind the shoot with Anne V? A Wizard of Oz take on metallics. I
envisioned her as a modern Tin Man Aphrodite with long legs and tumbling blond hair.
PHOTOGRAPHY BY MELANIE DUNEA (SCHRAGER); SUSAN STOCKER (HYDE)
Lee Brian Schrager As founder and director of the South Beach Wine & Food Festival, Schrager oversaw the festival’s evolution from a one-day affair into a three-day event packed with celebrity chefs and attended by more than 60,000 foodies. On page 210, he interviews four globally acclaimed chefs who are bringing their talents to Miami.
Any notable details you saw? Megayachts being built with lighter, stronger material like carbon fiber, or moving the catamaran masts aft to make them faster. What boats are you expecting to find in Miami’s harbor? The biggest, newest, most technologically advanced boats in the water. Then I’ll look for something that fits my modest wallet, like a kayak.
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SEEN ON THE SCENE THIS MONTH
Elle of the Ball ONE OF THE WORLD’S ORIGINAL SUPERMODELS, ELLE MACPHERSON, JOINED PROMINENT ART PATRONS AT THE PÉREZ ART MUSEUM MIAMI PREMIERE GALA. BY JULIA FORD-CARTHER
PHOTOGRAPHY BY SETH BROWARNIK/WORLDREDEYE.COM
A
Elle Macpherson arrives at the PAMM Premiere Gala during Art Basel. Dress, Dolce & Gabbana. Clutch, Roger Vivier. Cuff, vintage Elsa Peretti. Shoes, Giuseppe Zanotti.
rguably the hottest ticket at this season’s Art Basel was the PAMM Premiere Gala, which attracted a swarm of celebrities, socialites, and art-industry insiders to the newly debuted PAMM. Among them, runway veteran Elle Macpherson looked lavish in leopard by Dolce & Gabbana, crystal peep-toe Giuseppe Zanotti booties, a pyramid-studded Roger Vivier clutch, and vintage Elsa Peretti gold cuffs. To welcome this new era in Miami’s cultural renaissance, Macpherson, alongside her new husband, Jeff Soffer, joined hosts Jorge and Darlene Pérez and hundreds of A-list attendees, including famed fashion photographer Bruce Weber, designer Naeem Khan, Martha Stewart, and Marc Anthony, who gave guests a Grammy-worthy performance. Collectively, the glam guests raised more than $2 million to support the museum. For Macpherson, who usually keeps a low profile, the evening was the culmination of a whirlwind Art Basel week of fashionable fêtes and private art previews, where she stunned at each, from a Louis Vuitton dinner to PAMM’s private collector’s tour.
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Rande Gerber and Cindy Crawford at the Art Basel Miami Beach VIP opening. Karolina Kurkova and Gerard Butler at the Roger Dubuis Art Basel Miami party at the W South Beach.
Kanye West and Kim Kardashian at Surface Magazine’s Design Dialogues with West, Jacques Herzog, and Hans Ulrich Obrist.
Nicky Hilton and Nicole Richie at Aby Rosen’s dinner and afterparty presented by Dom Pérignon at the W South Beach.
Amber Arbucci and Adrian Grenier at Arbucci’s “The Girl at Jellyfish Lake” exhibit at Ocean House.
A-List Art Fêtes
Martha Stewart at the Design Miami/ Collector’s Preview.
Art Basel has never been more glamorous, hosting a bevy of creatively inclined celebrities, industry insiders, and art dignitaries from every corner of the globe. It was a record week of big-ticket soirées, like Aby Rosen’s annual star-studded dinner, and even bigger art purchases at the Design Miami/Collector’s Preview, where Martha Stewart was spotted perusing, and the Art Basel Miami Beach official VIP opening, where supermodel Cindy Crawford strolled the aisles.
Eva Longoria at the Roger Dubuis Art Basel Miami party at the W South Beach.
Russell Simmons, Kate Krone, and DJ Ruckus at the Funkshui party at the Shore Club.
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François-Henry Bennahmias with Benjamin Moreau and Samuel Boutruche of Kolkoz at the Audemars Piguet space in the Collector’s Lounge at Art Basel Miami Beach.
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Serena Williams and Sir Nick Faldo at the Audemars Piguet space in the Collector’s Lounge at Art Basel Miami Beach.
Louise Bourgoin and Michelle Williams at Louis Vuitton’s beach barbecue and “La maison au bord de l’eau” exhibit at the Raleigh Hotel.
Tony Shafrazi, Paris Hilton, and Stephen Dorff at Aby Rosen’s dinner and afterparty presented by Dom Pérignon at the W South Beach.
Chelsea Tyler, Taj Tallarico, and Mia, Steven, and Liv Tyler at Mia Tyler’s “Kink” exhibit at Deja Vu Gallery.
Michael Turchin and Lance Bass at Tony Abrams’s Celebration of Arts event at the Versace Mansion.
A-Baseling We Go Jorge Pérez and Marc Anthony at the PAMM Premiere Gala.
Two of fashion and music’s biggest names, Tommy Hilfiger and Steven Tyler, made Art Basel a family affair as they celebrated their daughters’ art exhibits. Sports greats Serena Williams and golfer Sir Nick Faldo tried on new timepieces at the Audemars Piguet VIP area in the Collector’s Lounge at the convention center, while actress pals Louise Bourgoin and Michelle Williams saw Charlotte Perriand’s “La maison au bord de l’eau” come to life via Louis Vuitton at the Raleigh Hotel.
Michael Bay and Sam Keller at the Art Basel Miami Beach VIP opening.
Philippe Jousse, Stellan Holm, Pharrell Williams, and Jeff Soffer at the Design Miami/Collector’s Preview.
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Alexandria and Tommy Hilfiger with Alec Monopoly at Alexandria Hilfiger’s “Melting Water” exhibit at The Riviera South Beach.
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SHOT ON SITE ART BASEL PHOTOGRAPHS BY SETH BROWARNIK
David Arquette at his Bootsy Bellows pop-up at the Shore Club. Michael Burke, Ingrid Sischy, Pernette Perriand-Barsac, and Jacques Barsac at the Louis Vuitton Design Talk at the Raleigh Hotel.
Stacy Keibler and Jared Pobre at Artsy presented by Audi and Valentino at Soho Beach House.
Silvia Venturini Fendi and Delfina Delettrez Fendi at the Fendi Welcome Cocktail event for Design Miami/ at the W South Beach.
Theophilus London and Austin Paul at OddFellows Speakeasy’s grand opening.
SZA and Kendrick Lamar at their performance at Mana Wynwood.
Naeem and Ranjana Kahn with Kara and Steve Ross at the PAMM Premiere Gala. Damien Hirst, Jeffrey Deitch, and Peter Brant at Aby Rosen’s dinner and afterparty presented by Dom Pérignon at the W South Beach.
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Gianfranco D’Attis, Estelle, and Georges Kern at the IWC Art Basel Miami party.
1/16/14 5:30 PM
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SHOT ON SITE ART BASEL PHOTOGRAPHS BY SETH BROWARNIK
Klaus Biesenbach and Olafur Eliasson at Little Sun at YoungArts.
Kenny Scharf at his private reception at Ocean House.
Jean Nouvel at the Design Miami/ Collector’s Preview. J.J. Martin and Brian Atwood at the Wallpaper Handmade with Jaguar event at Design Miami/.
Alexandra Richards at the Official VH1 and Scope party.
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Cecilia Dean, Marina Abramovic, Matthu Placek, and Paul Lehr at YoungArts Foundation’s premiere of A Portrait of Marina Abramovic by Placek.
George Wayne, Sam Orlofsky, and Piotr Uklanski at Uklanski’s “ESL” exhibit at the Bass Museum of Art.
Walter Otero, Gabriel Dempsey, and Carlos Betancourt at the Walter Otero Contemporary Art party at the Bass Museum of Art.
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Dan and Kathryn Mikesell, Alex Gartenfeld, and Hew Locke at the Art Conductor Dinner Club dinner at Soho Beach House.
Maria Gabriela Brito at her Out There book signing at Marni. Larry Gagosian and Richard Meier at the Art Basel Miami Beach VIP opening.
Ron Arad and Asa Bruno at Arad’s opening event at Miami Iron Side.
Monica Kalpakian, Ines Rivero, and Nikki Simkins at the ShopBazaar VIP brunch at Soho Beach House.
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Johnny Pigozzi, Glen O’Brien, and Joseph Kosuth at the Artbinder and Christie’s Art Basel party at Mango’s Tropical Café.
Josh Wagner and Andre Saraiva at Chez Andre at Rec Room. Jeff Morr and Doron Valero at the North of Modern closing party.
Colombe de La Taille, Youssef Nabil, and Isabelle Kowal at Kowal + Odermatt Projects.
1/16/14 5:31 PM
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Philip Levine and Robert Zuckerman at Zuckerman’s brunch at the Riviera Hotel South Beach. Adriana De Moura, Flavio Briatore, and Frederic Marq at the Billionaire grand opening. Paul Solberg and Christopher Makos at the Miami Design District Association press reception.
Paul Lardi and Kristian Schmidt at Schmidt’s “Whale Shark Series” preview at Maps Studio.
Shareef Malnik and Nick D’Annunzio at Mark A. Reigelman II’s “Rockodile” exhibit at Lacoste.
Gabriel Rivera-Barraza, Alvin Valley, and Jorge Viladoms at Valley’s luncheon at Deja Vu Gallery.
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Justin Doss, Jim Moore, and Matthew Chevallard at the Del Toro x Italia Independent collaboration launch at the Del Toro Miami Beach pop-up.
JR (center) with Arturo Sandoval III and Sam Borkson of FriendsWithYou at Surface magazine’s Design Dialogues.
1/16/14 5:30 PM
Available at Bloomingdale’s, Aventura Mall • Miro’s Boutique, South Miami • Jennifer Miller, Palm Beach • Alene Too, Boca Raton
www.roniblanshay.com
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SHOT ON SITE PHOTOGRAPHS BY MANNY HERNANDEZ Dennis Rodman with Lisa and Donald Pliner at Donald Pliner’s 70th-birthday celebration at the Sagamore.
Bruce Weber and Nan Bush at the PAMM Premiere Gala.
Marcella and Daniel Novela at the PAMM Premiere Gala.
Rebecca Taylor and Stephen Brunelle at Taylor’s personal appearance at Neiman Marcus, Merrick Park.
Gina Gershon and Loree Rodkin at the Dom Pérignon Limited Edition by Jeff Koons event at Wall at the W South Beach.
Presents and Premieres
Beloved Miami-based designer Donald Pliner celebrated his 70th birthday with his wife, Lisa, and a close group of friends that included former NBA favorite Dennis Rodman. In Coral Gables, stylish shoppers had front-row access to designer Rebecca Taylor, who posed among her edgy prints and modern silhouettes at her personal appearance at Neiman Marcus.
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Courtney Denaro, Jessica HernandezLopez, and Stephanie Sayfie Aagaard at the Rebecca Taylor personal appearance at Neiman Marcus, Merrick Park.
Lisa Petrillo and Bill McCue at Donald Pliner’s 70th-birthday celebration at the Sagamore. Adrienne Bon Haes and Marvin Ross Friedman at the Pérez Art Museum PAMM Premiere Gala.
Mauricio Rojas and Christina Getty Maercks at the Art Miami vernissage in Wynwood.
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SHOT ON SITE PHOTOGRAPHS BY MANNY HERNANDEZ
Martin Rozenblum and Claire Breukel at the Unscripted art chat at the St. Regis Bal Harbour Resort.
DJ Irie and Bernie Yuman at Britto Central Gallery’s 20th anniversary on Lincoln Road.
Marile and Jorge Luis Lopez at the PAMM Premiere Gala.
Elena Breakstone and Paola Larrea Busch at the Unscripted art chat at the St. Regis Bal Harbour Resort.
Adriana Palma, Noelia Madiedo, Magda Gomes, and Monica Madotto at Uzca in the Design District.
Creative Vision Mario Cader-Frech and Jean de Meuron at the Unscripted art chat at the St. Regis Bal Harbour Resort.
Cultural creatives convened in Bal Harbour at the Unscripted art chat to hear sculptor Robert Chambers and famed developer Robert Wennett discuss the marriage of art and real estate. On Lincoln Road at the Britto Central Gallery, DJ Irie spun for pop-art icon Romero Britto and 150 high-profile guests as they celebrated 20 years of the gallery’s success. Wynwood’s pioneering family, Janet Goldman and her children Jessica and Joey, celebrated patriarch Tony Goldman as renowned pop artist Kenny Scharf dedicated his new Wynwood park to the late developer. Alan Faena and Ximena Caminos at the PAMM Premiere Gala.
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Deanna Franco and Mariela Tovar at the Rebecca Taylor personal appearance at Neiman Marcus, Merrick Park.
Janet and Joey Goldman and Jessica Goldman Srebnick at the opening of Tony’s Oasis Park by Scharf in Wynwood.
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SHOT ON SITE PHOTOGRAPHS BY WORLD RED EYE David Nesslein, Annie Dyas, and Sean Lightbourne.
Marysol Patton and Jill Zarin. Dan Hechtkopf and Kasey Ashcraft with Katherine and Jordan Niefeld. John Cox
Brandie Halverson, Ana Bolanos, and Cara Diorio. Paul and Caitlyn Balmer.
Basel Bash
Travis and Sarah Smith
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Niche Media, Ocean Drive, and Art Basel magazine cohosted The Art of the Party event with actress Zoe Saldana at a private bayside estate on Hibiscus Island. Sponsors Merrill Lynch, Baha Mar, and Swarovski Eyewear welcomed more than 500 VIPs who arrived to celebrate mixed-media artist John Cox, as they enjoyed canapés by Le Basque as well as signature cocktails courtesy of Solerno Blood-Orange Liqueur and Cherry Pie and Layer Cake Chardonnay from Hundred Acre Wine Group.
Josh Moody, Zoë Saldana, and Jeff Ransdell.
Nicole Boswell-Horstmeyer, Vanessa Sidi, Chelsea Davenport, and Tina Tolles.
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SHOT ON SITE PHOTOGRAPHS BY WORLD RED EYE
Viki Schaub, Ann Korologos, and Clem Schaub.
Nausheen Shah and Annelise Michelson.
Stacy Engman and Stephanie French.
Sue Hostetler, Agnes Gund, Ann Philbin, Tracey Emin, and Lisa Dennison.
Artful Attachés
Niche Media’s Art Basel magazine celebrated the art industry’s most influential women with an exclusive luncheon at Lure Fishbar at the Loews Miami Beach Hotel. Editor-in-chief Sue Hostetler and Nadja Swarovski co-hosted the luncheon, which also featured special guest speaker Ann Korologos to honor four women who have made a long-standing impact on the art community: Tracey Emin, Agnes Gund, Ann Philbin, and Lisa Dennison.
Roberta Chaplin, Katherine Nicholls, and Arlene Chaplin. Karen Wong and Anna Palmer.
Bonnie Clearwater and Stephanie Smith.
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Beth Rudin DeWoody, Mera Rubell, and Debra Scholl.
Rory Hermelee and Angela Goding.
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SHOT ON SITE
Steve Rosenthal, George Helmstetter and Anthony Burns at the Marina Palms Yacht Club & Residences Art Basel party.
Andrea Soriani and Ken Gorin at the Maserati VIP Lounge at the PAMM debut.
Irma Braman, Romero Britto, and Norman Braman at Britto Central Gallery’s 20th anniversary on Lincoln Road.
Jeff Bogart, Bob Drinon, Nick Doyle, and Scott Hersh at Premier Beverage’s Art Basel event. Marcos Corti Maderna and Ernesto Cohan at the Oceana Bal Harbour showroom.
Carlos Rosso, Jorge Perez, and Harvey Spevak at The Related Group’s Brickell Heights launch party.
Alison Spear, Don and Katrina Peebles, and Laurinda Spear at the VIP Preview of The Bath Club Estates.
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Daphne Brusso, Carmen Garcia, Caroline Stein, and Sonia Succar Ferré at the Pop-Up Piano Miami concert at The Related Group’s Paraiso Bay.
PHOTOGRAPHY BY ROBERT VIGON (BOGART); GUSTASVO CABALLERO/GETTY IMAGES FOR BRITTO CENTRAL INC (BRAMAN); BENJAMIN THACKER (BRUSSO); WORLD RED EYE (CONSTANTINI); EUGENE GOLOGURSKY/GETTY IMAGES (DEFORTUNA, SORIANI); ALBERTO E. TAMARGO AND ORLANDO GARCIA (ROSSO); ANDREW GOLDSTEIN (SPEAR).
Ana Cristina and Edgardo Defortuna at the Maserati VIP Lounge at the PAMM debut.
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T he List february 2014
Richard Post
Melissa Katz
Michael Pirolo
Matthew Johnson
David Martin
Beryl Lacoste Hamilton
Ben Arndt
Manuel Grosskopf
Scott Conant
James Stevenson
Louis Birdman
Yasmine Kotb
Tricia Johnson
Gregg Covin
Luis Pons
Chantel Christopher
Zaha Hadid
Gastón Acurio
Gary Shear
Bernardo Fort-Brescia
Myles Chefetz
Doni DiGiovanni
Laurinda Spear
Michelle Bernstein
Stephane Mercier
Valerio Morabito
Todd Erickson
Mikolaj Spenceley-Prada
Mayi de la Vega
Lee Brian Schrager
Dennis DeGori
Eduardo Costantini
Kris Wessel
Andrea Greenberg
Diego Ojeda
José Andrés
Rachel Redington
Monica Venegas
Allen Susser
Justin Hensley
Craig Goldstein
Norman Van Aken
Jeff Ransdell
Valerie Graves
Stephen Starr
Carlos Rosso
Cy Waits
Ingrid Hoffmann
Peggy Fucci
Cory McCormack
Tim Petrillo
Corina Biton
Mike Zig
Dewey LoSasso
Nicole Lozano
Danielle Zig
Masaharu Morimoto
Cece Feinberg
Dora Puig
Francis Mallman
Andrea Eastaugh
Nina Compton
Tony Mantuano
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Photographed at Pérez Art Museum Miami
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Merrill Lynch Wealth Management makes available products and services offered by Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith Incorporated, a registered broker-dealer and Member SIPC, and other subsidiaries of Bank of America Corporation (BAC). Investments involve risk, including the possible loss of principal investment. Neither Merrill Lynch nor its Financial Advisors provide tax, accounting or legal advice. Clients should review any planned financial transactions or arrangements that may have tax, accounting or legal implications with their tax and legal professionals. Asset allocation does not ensure a profit or protect against loss in declining markets. Banking products are provided by Bank of America, N.A., and affiliated banks, members FDIC and wholly owned subsidiaries of BAC. U.S. Trust, Bank of America Private Wealth Management operates through Bank of America, N.A., and other subsidiaries of BAC. ©2013 Bank of America Corporation. All rights reserved.
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RivieraHotelSouthBeach.Com 2000 Liberty Avenue Miami Beach, FL 33139
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PHOTOGRAPHY BY GARY JAMES
Myles Chefetz outside his top-grossing restaurant Prime 112. 110
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Superlatives PEOPLE, CULTURE, TREASURES, TASTE
VIEW FROM THE TOP
In His Prime RESTAURATEUR MYLES CHEFETZ READIES PRIME FISH, CELEBRATES 10 YEARS OF PRIME 112, AND SITS DOWN FOR WHAT MIGHT BE THE FIRST TIME IN 20 YEARS. BY JON WARECH
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yles Chefetz, the man known for shaking hands and back slapping with dice on a modern steakhouse concept in exchange for ownership in the hiscelebs on a nightly basis at his world-renowned Prime 112 (112 Ocean toric building. “Believe it or not, it was more of a real estate play for me,” he says. Dr., Miami Beach, 305-532-8112), just wanted to live the good life. A perfect blend of timing, location, and ambience, paired with Cheftez’s Burnt out on the Manhattan scene, the real estate attorney-turned-supper club connoisseur came to Miami in the mid-’90s with dreams of the year- reputation and a steakhouse concept that no one had seen before—chef driven, round vacation. “I thought that I had created a resort lifestyle for myself, to be with menu items like truffle mac and cheese and draws like applewoodhere in the winter and spending summers in the Hamptons,” says Chefetz, 55, smoked bacon at the bar—turned Prime 112 into an instant success. “Within a year, the restaurant was probably worth six times what the real who opened the South of Fifth modern American restaurant Nemo in 1995. “When we were doing 400 covers on a Saturday night in the summer, that’s estate was worth,” says Chefetz. “That never happens.” His day job of running Myles Restaurant Group— when I decided to sell everything I had in New York. number crunching, overseeing staff, haggling over [But] my resort lifestyle went down the tubes, and the cost of product—keeps him at his office above moving to Miami Beach [to just chill] out ended.” Big Pink. But it’s just an appetizer to the evening gig, Built on a mere $300,000 (“Today a liquor license which finds Chefetz micromanaging his multimilcosts $200,000”), Nemo broke the South Beach lion-dollar baby until the early morning hours. If he mold from day one. “I noticed that the restaurants sees a hand, he shakes it. If he sees a light bulb dimdown here were geared more toward one-night wonMYLES CHEFETZ ming, he changes it. ders,” Chefetz says. “They were all promoter driven. He could have expanded and opened in New I didn’t see any real good, solid food-based restaurants that could drive a crowd seven days a week. If people have to ask you York and Las Vegas and built a billion-dollar empire. “My entrepreneurial side is the voice in my ear that says, ‘You could do this what’s a good night to go to your restaurant, then you’re in trouble.” Despite the fact that it was located in what was then a fairly barren neighbor- so easily in New York and Las Vegas and be a huge success,’” he says. “But then hood, people had no trouble finding Nemo on a nightly basis. With its eclectic in my other ear is the voice that says, ‘You know what, Magic Johnson is commenu packed with both Asian and Indian influences, and hip décor, Nemo ing to Prime 112 tonight and he wants to see you….’ I start thinking about how perception equals reality, and someone’s perception may be that if Myles isn’t shifted the balance of power away from the promoter. Chefetz stayed on the block and opened retro diner Big Pink (157 Collins there, then maybe it’s not as good as it used to be.” For that same reason Chefetz rarely takes vacations. He was in Aspen once Ave., Miami Beach, 305-532-4700) in December of ’96 and sushi spot Shoji Sushi in March 2001, dominating the neighborhood. But by 2004, he was when he received the call that Bill Clinton and Tom Brady were both dining in again looking for a way out. He wanted to enjoy the tropical weather and sandy the restaurant. “I’m literally having heart palpitations that I’m not going to be beaches that had lured him to Miami in the first place, so he shifted his entre- there to orchestrate the evening,” he recalls. “I was actually able to get Tom preneurial mind to real estate and struck a deal at 112 Ocean Drive to roll the continued on page 112
“You can have a hundred Ferraris lined up out front, but if your food is off, you’re done.”—
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continued from page 111 Brady to go meet President Clinton, but I did it through a manager.” So instead of expanding outward, Chefetz manifested his destiny on one corner of South Beach, building Prime Hotel, a luxury boutique hotel, and Prime Italian (101 Ocean Dr., Miami Beach, 305-695-8484), a restaurant that adds items like a one-pound Kobe meatball to the popular Prime menu. Both are within steps of Prime 112 and Big Pink, allowing Chefetz to be everywhere at once. His concepts have gone global, with his versions of mac and cheese, creamed spinach, tuna tartare, and other menu items popping up in steakhouses worldwide. You’d think that now would be the time for Chefetz to finally enjoy that rest and relaxation he so desperately desired 20 years ago. After all, he has a perennially top-10-earning restaurant in the country (“We do north of $23 million a year”) and an almost four-year-old daughter running around the house keeping him busy during every last free second on his schedule. But instead he’s added to the empire with Prime Fish in the old Nemo location. At Prime Fish (100 Collins Ave., Miami Beach), Chefetz is bringing back some old Nemo favorites like the wok-charred wild king salmon and fun dishes from his youth—“I loved the fried clams at Howard Johnson’s as a kid,” he says—but the main Prime Fish hook is the à la carte fish sautéed, blackened, grilled, or steamed to the customer’s preference. “I’m looking at more of a healthier component,” says Chefetz. It also means more tasting, because while Chefetz is not a chef, his refined palate (developed as a teen from his mother’s cooking) helps to make sure the food is consistently perfect. “The food has got to be a slam-dunk, home-run winner every night,” he says. “You can have a hundred Ferraris lined up out front, but if your food is off, you’re done.” So that month-long trip to Italy or summer in Napa that he fantasizes about will have to wait. “I don’t know what the end of the story is for Prime 112. I believe you’re really only as good as your last meal. So, am I going to be with a walker walking around that place 20 or 30 years from now? I don’t know. I wish my daughter FROM LEFT: With Nicole were old enough; she’d be working in there and Al Reynolds at Prime 112; Dwyane right now, probably begrudgingly. She’s Wade at the restaurant only three and a half, so maybe two more after the Heat’s first championship win, years.” mylesrestaurantgroup.com OD in 2006.
FOOD FOR THOUGHT Chefetz takes a rare breather from his post atop Prime 112. Out of the restaurant, onto the court: “I play basketball. That’s my exercise now. I used to be a yoga guy. Before, I was a spinning guy. I do everything I can to not injure myself. My NBA player customers laugh when I tell them that’s what I do.”
Eating local: “I dine at Prime 112 every night, and my office is above Big Pink and I eat at Big Pink every day, and I have line checks and I taste things.”
Favorite celeb customer: “I have a lot [of celebrity customers]. This is a tough one. Alonzo Mourning because I look up to him for all he’s done in the community and he’s extremely loyal. He’s really a local icon, and he’s very loyal to me.”
“At this point, [I would be] retired. I was an attorney, and I could not imagine doing it again because I have to deal with lawyers all the time and they’re too expensive. If I were retired, I’d probably be eating in restaurants. I love going to Napa. People drink their way through Napa; I ate my way through Napa. I had never eaten so well in my life.”
PHOTOGRAPHY BY WORLDREDEYE
If he weren’t in this line of work…
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BEACH PATROL Ashley Stetts enjoying one of the many free pleasures the city has to offer: going for a walk on beautiful Miami Beach.
“Saving money never looked so good” is Stetts’s mantra, both on the blog and in life. From buying on Groupon to bidding on DVF dresses on eBay, Stetts lives the lifestyle she preaches, instructing consumers how “to sell their stuff on eBay or buy stuff on Craigslist. Sometimes people avoid these resources because they don’t know how. I make it easy.” Wearing half-priced Herve Leger is not a practice often seen here on the Bal Harbour- and Design District-decked fashionistas of Miami, but Stetts says, “I don’t care about what people are going to think of me.” She is speaking to Favorite place to eat: a larger audience. Mandolin Aegean That attitude is something she was taught Bistro. “I love the at a very young age, growing up in Toronto. chicken kebabs with “My dad didn’t make a lot of money,” she tzatziki sauce.” says. “He was a single dad, in his 30s raising Workout spot: a young girl, and never worried about status. “Flywheel in Miami Beach.” That was a huge lesson for me, to never be embarrassed.” While she admits they might Your own discovery: “Free Wednesdayhave gone to extremes to save a buck by night films at the adopting practices such as reusing paper Miami Beach towels—“we would use it, shove it underSoundScape park. neath the Windex bottle, and use it again the You’re able to enjoy next time”—it set the groundwork for a life’s the beautiful Miami night without having worth of saving money. “Every little dollar to pay a single dollar counts. One of my favorite quotes is ‘A small or worry about leak will sink a great ship.’” getting in or what One of her earliest memories of saving you look like.” money came at the discount grocery stores of Toronto, where they charge 10 cents a bag for your groceries. “Or at no cost you can use the box crates that the food is packaged and delivered in. We would carry the food out to our car in those crates,” she says. Fast forward a couple of decades, and that frugal childhood has made Stetts an expert in the world of saving money, penning columns for the Huffington Post, among others, and with appearances on shows like Good Morning America. Posing for Women’s Health, Marie Claire, Shape, Fitness, DRESSED IN DESIGNER LABELS FROM HEAD TO TOE BUT AT and Cosmopolitan, the work was semi-constant, but being a A FRACTION OF THE COST, MODEL ASHLEY STETTS IS INTENT model, Stetts never met a bag or a pair of shoes she didn’t ON SAVING THE WORLD—AND A DOLLAR—ONE DRESS AT love. And that gets expensive. “You have to look high end if A TIME. BY JARED SHAPIRO you want to book a high-end job.” The shopping part came easy. “Miami has Loehmann’s and T.J. Maxx. Loehmann’s has everything—like my favorite, Vince sweaters.” But this city also has something money can’t buy. “The atmosphere of t’s the moment all models dream of. The first, high-profile magazine cover that sends their career skyrocketing into the stratosphere. For Miami-based Miami—being by the beach and being able to go for walks allows me to have model Ashley Stetts, that was the November/December 2005 cover of more time to think,” she says. “I built the blog as a hobby. But now I am realWomen’s Health. But then came the paycheck. “I got paid $250 for that cover,” izing the value of it and building a brand as a money-saving expert. I don’t says Stetts. While the shoot itself hardly made her wealthy, it spawned an idea know where that’s going to take me; I’m still learning. But I do love Miami.” that has made her rich in other ways. Thus, thefrugalmodel.com was born. And that is priceless. OD
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Glamorous Saving
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BEACH PATROL “I decided to make bourbon, maple syrup, and bacon ice cream. People have gone nuts over it,” says Suzy Batlle, at her Azucar Ice Cream Company.
Abuela Maria, a heady mix of guava, cream cheese, and the ubiquitous Maria cookies that has become so popular that Batlle even trademarked it. “People will see me on the street and start screaming, ‘Abuela Maria!’ Not that I look like an Abuela Maria, I hope!” Batlle says. In fact, Azucar can trace its roots to Batlle’s actual grandmother. “She made ice cream for the family,” Batlle reminisces. “My grandfather was a sugar mill engineer, and they traveled throughout Central America and South America all the time for his job. Because of that, she was able to make ice cream from all different sorts of places.” Giving back: Each Growing up in Miami, Batlle sampled month Azucar raises her grandmother’s creations every day. money for a different But it wasn’t until she was laid off from local charity. “If I was her banking job in 2008 that she realized blessed with this she could turn a childhood predilection store, then I should be able to help out for sweets into a profitable career. Her and be a part of the first step? Securing a degree in ice cream community,” Batlle from the renowned program at Penn says. State Creamery, where dairy masters “Drink” your dessert: like Ben Cohen and Jerry Greenfield of One of the most Ben & Jerry’s first honed their skills. sought-after flavors is Sunday Morning, a Three years later, after perfecting her Bellini-like ice cream technique and flavors, Azucar launched with white peaches with great acclaim in a neighborhood and Champagne. that certainly knows its Cuban food. “Little Havana is probably more Cuban than Cuba itself!” Batlle remarks. Thankfully, her schooling paid off: “I was selling out from day one, which is the most unbelievable story in the world,” she says. And when it comes to refining and discovering new creations, the adage “It takes a village,” rings decidedly true here. “When I first opened, I had coconut and guava—the regular stuff like that,” she says. “But these guys at Dominoes Park were screaming that I wasn’t Cuban enough if I didn’t have mantecado [butter bun],” she adds with a laugh. Having never tasted the flavor, which has notes of cinMIAMI NATIVE SUZY BATLLE BRINGS THE DISTINCTIVE namon, Batlle relied on her taste testers in the park. “I FLAVORS OF CUBA TO HER AWARD-WINNING ICE CREAM would go back and forth with little trays of ice cream, and PARLOR. BY JULIET IZON these guys would try it and give me their critique,” she says. “One is saying [it needs] more cinnamon, while another one says, ‘No, it’s got too much!’ Finally we came amey, mantecado, Mulatica: delicious touchstones for many up with one everybody liked, and that’s the one I serve.” While Azucar is in no short supply of accolades, it is the validation from her Cubans. And, at Cuban-American Suzy Batlle’s ice cream parlor Azucar Ice Cream Company, they are also among the 70-plus flavors customers that brings Batlle the most joy. “I’ve actually had old people come of house-made confections. The wildly popular Little Havana spot—its name and cry,” she relates. “They like that we’re keeping the heritage going. A lot of means sugar in Spanish—opened in 2011 featuring a rotating list of ice creams people are losing [that]—their roots—but this is clearly Cuban,” she says specifically geared to the Cuban palate. The most beloved is certainly the proudly. 1503 SW Eighth St., Miami, 305-381-0369; azucaricecream.com OD
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AFTER HOURS
Suited for Play
JP Oliver skateboards past the Delano pool.
THE HOSPITALITY INDUSTRY HAS MET ITS MATCH WITH MORGANS HOTEL GROUP REGIONAL VP JP OLIVER, WHO SEEKS A UNIQUE OUTLET FROM THE TYPICAL DAY JOB. BY JASON FITZROY JEFFERS
PHOTOGRAPHY BY NICK GARCIA
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P Oliver zoomed to work on his 1100 Ducati motorcycle this morning. Yesterday, he drove the muscular vintage 1953 Ford F100 pickup truck, and the day before that, a sleek new Maserati sports car. Last Saturday, he skateboarded to the office, and he’s pretty sure he rode his bicycle in on Monday. And then there’s FlyWheel. “I have an obsession with wheels, and I’ve had it my entire life,” says Oliver with a chuckle. “I still think I’m 12 years old, I guess.” That sense of play is impressive considering how busy Oliver is. For the last five years, he has served as the regional vice president for Morgans Hotel Group, which puts the iconic South Beach hotels the Delano, the Shore Club, and the Mondrian under his wing. He’s also involved in new projects in the Bahamas and Colombia. It’s far from the average 9-to-5. In fact, it’s 24/7. “I love what I do,” says Oliver, who gets about four hours of sleep a night. “You commit to excellence and make every single thing you do count.” So how does he manage the non-stop pace? By indulging his inner 12-year-old before and after work. “Every day is like Saturday for me. Work is play. It’s been good for me, my guests, and my employees,” says Oliver. “I wake up at 5:30, and I probably get more done before most people have had their first cup of coffee than they’ll get done all day. There is no division between the week and the weekend for me. The phones are a little bit quieter on a Sunday than they are on a Monday, but that’s about it.” For Oliver, that means squeezing in a joyride during the morning commute, a workout before sunrise, or riding his skateboard to a meeting. Whipping through the properties he oversees or making a circuit through nightclubs like FDR and restaurants like Bianca after hours—he rarely eats at home—Oliver treats the city like his playground, both with the energy he brings to work and the joyriding he does around town. It’s a natural progression from his childhood in Melbourne Beach, Florida, where his family worked in the hospitality business. Miami, however, is an entirely different game, one he’s clearly mastered. “Miami is a vacation destination for those who live and work here as well,” says Oliver. “It’s a city that never sleeps, so it’s perfect for a person who never really sleeps. I can’t get enough of it.” OD
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Big Dreams SINGER PHIL COLLINS AND ORIANNE COLLINS CELEBRATE THE EXPANSION OF THEIR LITTLE DREAMS FOUNDATION INTO MIAMI, GIVING CHILDREN A CHANCE TO EXPLORE THEIR LIFE PASSIONS. BY JARED SHAPIRO
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What was the inspiration for your foundation? Phil Collins: I was always getting letters from ambitious kids who think they’ve got talent and want to get into the music business, asking if I could help them. Orianne had her own company organizing events, and we thought, Why don’t we form a foundation to help some of these kids? And because most of them were youngsters in their early teens, we just thought, “Little Dreams.” I drew the logo. It all fell into place very easily, the name, the logo. And when things seem to work that quickly, when things fall into place like that, sometimes that’s the best omen. The kids have such interesting goals, from motocross to karate. Orianne Collins: Children have their dreams. They come up to you and they say, “I want to become this, I want to do that.” So how can we help? Have you worked specifically with any of these kids? PC: More in the early days. We did our 10th-anniversary gala in Switzerland, about three years ago. I sang “True Colors” with all of the singers. I’ve done “Easy Lover” as a duet with one of the kids, and “You Can’t Hurry Love” with them as the backup singers. I’ve worked with the drummers, guitar players. I’m a very hands-on guy; I don’t just come in and sing. I believe in rehearsing and rehearsing, and you can only get better. And so sometimes that can rub off. You have many big names mentoring and helping out—Tina Turner, Natalie Cole, Phil Collins…. Who do you think will do that in Miami? OC: There are many local people that it would be nice if they would help. I know there’s Pitbull and a few others. Of course, Romero Britto is helping us. PC: I’m amazed when I watch the NFL and the NBA; those organizations are doing great work with kids. So you’re lucky to find someone who hasn’t got their own charity already. Obviously people only have X amount of time. These kids are so talented but just don’t have the opportunities. PC: They don’t have the opportunity and they don’t have the finances. If there’s X amount of money to go around, there’s other things that the family needs that don’t include dance tuition, that don’t include drum lessons. That’s where the foundation comes in with not only giving them the opportunity but also paying for the tuition and the guidance. ldf.cc OD
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Orianne and Phil Collins at the Fontainebleau Miami Beach, while announcing their Little Dreams Foundation is coming to the Miami area.
PHOTOGRAPHY BY FULL ACCESS/NEAL NACHMAN
ourteen years ago this February, Phil Collins and ex-wife Orianne Collins created the Little Dreams Foundation. Their mission was to fulfill the dreams of children who financially had no means to further their success in music, arts, and sports, and it’s paid off. Participants have gone on to be world-class figure skaters, Olympic sailors, world-ranking tennis stars, singers, and more. Now the Little Dreams Foundation is expanding into Miami. This March, the organization will start its search for local children to enlist in its programs. Here, Phil and Orianne, parents of two Miami children themselves, discuss their charity efforts.
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Grape Move WEST COAST WINE PURVEYOR CHRIS RADOMSKI LANDS ON THE BEACHES OF MIAMI, MAKING HIS 2014 A GOOD YEAR FOR WINE, FAMILY, AND BUSINESS. BY JON WARECH
The move to Miami wasn’t the first time Radomski, 48, followed his gut instincts. Growing up in Canada, he earned a college degree in biochemistry and went on to law school (in Canada and at the University of Detroit Mercy) before moving to the Caribbean to work in finance. But by the mid’90s, he decided to pursue his passion: wine. It started with a friendship. He and his partner, fellow Canadian Jayson Woodbridge, whom he met while skiing on Whistler Mountain, shared a love of wine and shook hands on acquiring property in Napa Valley to produce a small, single-vineyard Cabernet. “When we started the winery, we put everything we had into it,” he says of the bold move west. “It was an continued on page 124
Chris Radomski enjoying a glass of wine at The Standard.
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PHOTOGRAPHY BY GARY JAMES
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hen thinking of the best place to find a vintage Cabernet, Napa Valley probably comes to mind for a bottle of 2001, 2007, or even 2012. If you want a bottle of fine wine in Miami Beach in 2014, you have to ask a sommelier; grapes and sand don’t exactly mix. But for Chris Radomski, president of Hundred Acre Wine Group, Miami Beach is now officially wine country. “Over time my family, especially my wife, always asked [me] where I wanted to end up,” says Radomski, who moved his family to Miami Beach from California last August. “As time went on, we decided we wanted to be in a place where we could spend the rest of our lives and raise our family.”
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NEW IN TOWN FROM LEFT:
Radomski on the deck at The Standard; at the winery in Napa, testing recipes for Layer Cake’s cooking journal.
MIAMI NICE Sun, food, and surfing top Radomski’s love list. What are your favorite Miami restaurants? “I’m a big steak eater, so I love Prime 112 and Red. But I also love going for breakfast at Ice Box Café after I drop off the kids.” What daytime activities do you enjoy? “I’m a hardcore windsurfer. I’ve been busy with work and travel, but my goal for the new year is to take up kite surfing, which is sort of what all the windsurfers eventually graduate to.”
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The 30-ounce bone-in rib eye at Prime 112.
PHOTOGRAPHY BY GARY JAMES (STANDARD, STEAK)
“In my daughter’s school, there are kids from 40 different countries.”
Other than the weather, what’s the difference between where you grew up in Canada and Miami? “Canada is altogether different. I grew up in a lower-middle-class family, in the suburbs. I didn’t really experience much. There’s a major difference between where I grew up and a place like Miami or Southern California, which is more affluent. You don’t see Bentleys in Toronto.”
PHOTOGRAPHY BY TK; ILLUSTRATION BY TK
could be in a good school system and surrounded by the city’s “great mix of cultures,” the move also makes sense business-wise because of Hundred Acre’s international clientele. “I still have a significant West Coast travel component, but in terms of working and marketing our brands and running the business around the country, continued from page 122 [living in Miami is] not such a big deal. Dallas is close, all-in proposition for us.” The bet paid off in 2003, when they released [so is] Chicago and the whole Eastern Seaboard. their first vintage Hundred Acre Cabernet from California is really the only big travel ticket. For the rest their 2000 harvest. They made about 400 cases of of our brand, I travel around the world, so Miami is a the ultraluxury cult wine, received a top rating great place to travel out of.” It also helps that his distributor, Southern Wine & from Robert Parker, and had a hit, which over the years has earned five perfect scores from the crit- Spirits, is located right here in Miami Lakes. Keeping the distributors excited about the ics. “Before we made a brand is part of the job, so the idea of Cabernet, we probably lined up being able to call up a top representa100 different Cabs and French tive and take him or her to Prime 112 wines and not only tasted them on any given day is yet another busibut also went to the regions ness perk. where they’re produced, looked Things at home are also going well. at the soils, and gained that Between the neighbors and the famiknowledge,” Radomski says. lies at the kids’ schools, new friends of Since the first batch, the busiall different nationalities, cultures, ness has grown to include four —CHRIS RADOMSKI and religions surround Radomski and more wine brands: Cherry Pie his family. “I have to say that it’s been Pinot Noir, a small production out of Napa; Cherry Tart Pinot from Central interesting just to meet and interact with these people,” Coast, California; Layer Cake Wines, sourced he says. “In my daughter’s school, I think there are kids and produced from vineyards in California, from 40 different countries.” And new friends for Radomski usually lead to new Argentina, Spain, and Italy; and If You See Kay, a Cabernet-based wine from vineyards in business, so while time will tell whether this year will produce a successful vintage, there is no doubt that, Lazio, Italy. While Radomski and his wife, Gina, relocated both personally and professionally, 2014 looks to be a from California to Miami so their four children very good year for him. OD
Is there anything for the Canadian in you, or are you all sun and fun now? “For the Canadian [influence], I’ve been taking my son to the Scott Rakow [Youth Center] ice rink here. I’ve got to keep him skating.”
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SPIRIT OF GENEROSITY Shelly Berg (LEFT), jazz pianist and dean at University of Miami’s Phillip and Patricia Frost School of Music, gives pointers during a YoungArts Miami jazz master class.
Creating the Creators THE NATIONAL YOUNGARTS FOUNDATION ACCELERATES THE CREATIVE PROCESS IN MIAMI AND NATIONALLY THROUGH INTENSE WORKSHOPS AND MUCH-NEEDED FINANCIAL STIMULATION.
N
ational YoungArts Foundation President and CEO Paul T. Lehr has a lot to say. He can speak fluidly about how his Miami-based organization works to identify the nation’s most talented high school students, flying them to its campus on Biscayne Boulevard each year. And he is unmistakably skilled at discussing the distinctions in the 10 performance categories. It’s also clear that the stack of statistics he stores in his head is keeping pace with the growing scholarships the YoungArts organization facilitates, not to mention the famous alumni it produces (Nicki Minaj and Adrian Grenier, to name a few). But Lehr will not name—under any circumstances, not on and not off the record—the feature films in which he himself has appeared. “I was always getting roles, but there’s a reason I’m an arts administrator and not an actor,” he says with a laugh. “I am a classically trained pianist and thespian. Arts and music have always been at the center of my life.” Today, from his office seven stories above Biscayne Bay, Lehr is ensuring
art becomes a central and permanent part of life for an increasing number of American teens. More than 11,000 young people—a number that’s doubled over the past three years—ages 15 to 18 apply for the opportunity to come to Miami and perform, exhibit, or train with masters such as Mikhail Baryshnikov, Jacques d’Amboise, Plácido Domingo, Bill T. Jones, Quincy Jones, Mary Walkley, and Martin Scorsese. The number of winners since Lehr took the helm has grown from 150 to 800. Over the program’s life, it has awarded $6 million to students and has facilitated more than $150 million in college scholarships. The nationally renowned program has also over the past three years spun off regional successions in New York and Los Angeles. “The goal is to change these kids’ lives,” says Lehr. “To give the validation and confidence by helping them to take the next step and giving them continued on page 128
PHOTOGRAPHY BY PEDRO PORTAL
BY BRETT GRAFF
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SPIRIT OF GENEROSITY YoungArts alumna Yara Travieso.
“It’s a national program saying, ‘You’re one of the best in the country.’”
Rosie Perez giving a theater master class at YoungArts Miami.
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FUTURE STARS YoungArts alumni—Vanessa Williams, Josh Groban, Adrian Grenier, Kerry Washington, Viola Davis—make it big. Remember these two recent grads and get ready to see their names in lights. Name: Yara Travieso, dancer and choreographer Challenge: “Everyone was pushing me to apply to The Juilliard School and I said, ‘No way, I’m not good enough.’” YoungArts door-opening: Being seen by Juilliard’s dance director and getting the audition that eventually led to a full scholarship. Today’s credits: Multimedia opera, pas de deux installation, and a short film for a French design house. Name: Tarell McCraney, actor and playwright Challenge: “The year I applied to YoungArts I got an honorable mention, so I couldn’t go to YoungArts week. But I skipped school to see the concert. It was an amazing, eye-opening experience. One that demanded I either work my hardest and truest or not at all.” YoungArts door-opening: “YoungArts sent me information on incredible opportunities after graduation: auditions for a Sundance apprenticeship, scholarships, studyabroad programs, etc. It was really generous.” Today: With a master’s degree in fine Tarell McCraney arts from Yale School of Drama, he’s an associate artist at the Royal Shakespeare Company, a Hodder Fellow at the Lewis Center for the Arts at Princeton University, and an ensemble member at the Steppenwolf Theatre Company.
PHOTOGRAPHY BY PEDRO PORTAL (PEREZ, MCCRANEY)
continued from page 126 exposure, create opportunities not just with prize money but with access to scholarships.” That’s exactly what happened to Yara Travieso, a 2005 New World School of the Arts student who attended the national summit. Her college plans were all but solidified until she performed in YoungArts before an audience that included Lawrence Rhodes, artistic dance director at The Juilliard School. Though she hadn’t applied to the prestigious New York school, that particular show secured her an audition that eventually led to a full scholarship. “It was a nervous moment,” says Travieso. “Dancing a solo in front of your heroes. But YoungArts gives you the validation you need to take risks. For me, it was the stone in the lake that created so many wonderful ripples for years.” YoungArts was founded in 1981 by the late founder of Carnival Cruise Lines, Ted Arison, and his wife, Lin, after organizers of the US Presidential Scholars Program—which recognizes the country’s highest-achieving high school seniors at White House-sponsored receptions and award ceremonies—came calling for help. The organizers wanted funding to build out the program so it could acknowledge and include the nation’s most gifted artists. The Arisons denied the funding request but —PAUL T. LEHR more than fulfilled those intentions by creating the National Foundation for Advancement in the Arts. While the name was recently shortened to YoungArts, it remains the country’s most prestigious arts competition and is the exclusive nominating organization for the US Presidential Scholars in the Arts. Three years ago, the organization made real estate headlines when it bought the former Bacardi Tower and museum buildings and began to transform the city blocks into a multidisciplinary arts complex and campus designed by Frank Gehry. Last month, YoungArts held its annual gala—where it raises the bulk of its funding—and this February, the Miami regional winners will for one week both showcase and fine-tune their talents. “It’s one thing if your acting coach says you’re good,” Lehr notes. “It’s another thing when Kathleen Turner says, ‘This is what you were meant to do.’ It’s a national program saying, ‘You’re one of the best in the country.’” In addition to receiving attention from movie stars and US presidents, YoungArts alumni get noticed by the country’s most competitive arts colleges. continued on page 130
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SPIRIT OF GENEROSITY
Charity Regist er OPPORTUNITIES TO GIVE.
NEW WORLD SYMPHONY
Cause: Launching the careers of gifted young classical musicians. Gala host and artistic director: Michael Tilson Thomas Event: The New World Symphony’s 26th annual gala, Saturday, February 8, at 6 PM, New World Center; nws.edu/gala
MIAMI BRIDGE YOUTH & FAMILY SERVICES A visual arts master class with Miami-raised artist Daniel Arsham (RIGHT); Debbie Allen, YoungArts President and CEO Paul T. Lehr, and alumn Adrian Grenier at the 2013 YoungArts Performance and Gala.
continued from page 128 New England Conservatory, Manhattan School of Music, the Art Institute of Chicago, and The Juilliard School take a serious look at these kids when it comes to admissions or scholarship money. “The Juilliard School and YoungArts have the same goal of identifying the best artists of the next generation, and every year some YoungArts winners are part of Juilliard’s new incoming class,” says Lee Cioppa, Juilliard School’s associate dean for admissions. The outstanding artistic experience these gifted students receive through YoungArts programs, in addition to financial support in the form of scholarships, is extraordinary in furthering their desire to pursue their dreams in the arts.” It also offers opportunities that most kids would consider unimaginable. In the evenings, they perform at distinguished venues such as the New World Center and the Pérez Art Museum Miami, while during the day, they fine-tune their talents with world-renowned masters. “These really are the most talented kids in the country,” says Walkley, who has taught voice technique to Broadway stars, American Idol contestants, and at least four private students who later became Presidential Scholars. “I recommend everyone go to the concert because it showcases a level of excellence that makes this event not just an opportunity for the performers, but for everyone in Miami who appreciates a rich cultural experience.” youngarts.org OD
YOUNGARTS BY THE NUMBERS YoungArts was founded in 1981 and has since helped out more than 17,000 students, with over $6 million in awarded money. The annual gala raises upwards of $500,000, helping to facilitate over $150 million in scholarships so far. This month, from February 12 to 17, Miami regional winners will show off and work on their talents during a week-long workshop. For more information, visit youngarts.org/young-arts-miami.
Cause: Supporting abused, neglected, and homeless children through Miami-Dade’s only 24-hour emergency shelter for at-risk youth. President: Adrian Delancy Event: Bridge to the Stars, Notte di Carnevale, Saturday, February 8, at 7:30 PM, J.W. Marriott Marquis; miamibridge.org
SYLVESTER COMPREHENSIVE CANCER CENTER Cause: Providing cutting-edge cancer treatment for the University of Miami and UHealth System, and changing the paradigm of discovery, innovation, and care for specific types of cancers. Honoree: Jennifer Stearns Buttrick Event: Designed for a Cure, Thursday, February 13, at 7 PM, the Ice Palace; sylvester.org
DIABETES RESEARCH INSTITUTE Cause: Finding a biological cure for diabetes.
Ball international chairmen: Linda and Barry Gibb Event: 40th annual Love and Hope Ball, featuring a concert by Barry Gibb, Saturday, February 15, at 6 PM, Westin Diplomat Resort & Spa; diabetesresearch.org
AMERICAN RED CROSS SOUTH FLORIDA REGION
Cause: Alleviating human suffering in the face of emergency. Ball chairmen: Barbara and Jose Hevia Event: 32nd annual American Red Cross Ball, Saturday, February 22, at 7 PM, Ritz-Carlton Key Biscayne; redcross.org/fl/miami
BIG BROTHERS BIG SISTERS OF GREATER MIAMI & MENTORING RESOURCE CENTER
Cause: Serving children from single-parent homes by pairing them with caring adult volunteers. President and CEO: Lydia Muniz
Event: The Big Event Gala, Saturday, March 1, at 7 PM, 2100 Biscayne Blvd., Miami; wementor.org
PHOTOGRAPHY BY PEDRO PORTAL (ARSHAM); MANNY HERNANDEZ (ALLEN)
FROM TOP:
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THE LEGEND OF
CASA HERRADURA The legend of Tequila Herradura begins when its founder, Aurelio Lopez, was out inspecting the agave fields and saw a glint of gold on the dusty ground in the distance. When he picked up the gleaming object, it was a horseshoe which had caught the sunlight at the perfect angle. It may not have been a treasure, but a horseshoe means good fortune. He built his distillery on that very spot and named his tequila Herradura.
WE HEART ART THE HERRADURA 2013 BARREL ART FINALE
SEVENTY-SEVEN ARTISTS. EIGHT CITIES. ONE GRAND PRIZE WINNER. Herradura would like to
Photography by Kat Goduco
LEFT: The winning barrel art piece, “Look Inside” TOP RIGHT: Contest finalists, from left to right, Adam Feibelman (San Francisco), Max Lehman (Santa Fe), Jocelyn Duke (Los Angeles), Kiki Valdes (Miami), Adam Toht (Chicago), Micah and Whitney Stansell (Atlanta), Kim Holleman (New York), Raul De Lara (Austin) BOTTOM RIGHT: Contest winners Micah and Whitney Stansell
Herradura means horseshoe in Spanish, and everyone knows that a horseshoe is a hand crafted ancient symbol of good fortune. At Casa Herradura our horseshoe is upside down which allows us to pour and share our good fortune with you.
congratulate Micah & Whitney Stansell who with Look Inside have been awarded $100,000 in the 2013 Herradura Barrel Art competition at the Miami finale event at LMNT. While most would approach the barrel as an aesthetic object, these artists explored it as a utilitarian one, with a particular historical purpose. Doing so led the two to leave the exterior completely unchanged, while the inside — the important part — became art. The interior was made into a zoetrope, paying homage to early cinema devices. The early zoetrope was once considered a magical object in its day, much as alchemists believed the distilling of spirits was magical as well. We’d like to thank all the artists who committed their time and talent to making this program such a success. Let’s raise a glass and toast to craft, inspiration and genius of everyone involved. Salud!
T EQU I LA
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For more information, please visit herradurabarrelart.com, visit our Facebook page at facebook.com/HerraduraTequila, or visit our Twitter feed at @HerraduraTeq.
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GREAT ST YLE BEGINS WITH GREAT TASTE
MAKE A CLEAR STATEMENT. DRINK RESPONSIBLY.
Alc. 40% by Vol. (80 proof). Tequila imported by Brown-Forman, Louisville, KY ©2013
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The sporty, sleek shape of the coveted Riva 86 Domino is inspired by the Italian boatmaker’s smaller, more athletic vessels.
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Culture Yachts and powerboats on display at the Sea Isle Marina in downtown Miami.
HOTTEST TICKET
See Worthy THE MIAMI INTERNATIONAL BOAT SHOW BRINGS NEW AND LAVISH VESSELS TO OUR WATERS. BY DAVE HYDE
PHOTOGRAPHY BY NATIONAL MARINE MANUFACTURERS ASSOCIATION (MARINA); OPPOSITE: FERRETI GROUP (RIVA 86 DOMINO)
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here’s something paradoxical about the idea of the world’s newest and most innovative boats beached in convention halls or moored in marinas when the best place to fall in love with them is out in the wet beyond, surrounded by miles of water. “Only there can you see how they fit, how they really operate,” says Peter Johnstone, the founder of Gunboat, one of the premier yacht companies at the show. But there’s convenience in conventions, and that’s why an expected 2,000 companies, 3,000 vessels, and over 100,000 visitors will attend the Miami International Boat Show February 13 to 17. What is on display at the annual show is the latest in refined indulgence. Nothing says that better or more loudly than a few of the newest yachts that will be tethered across the street from the Fontainebleau Miami Beach. The new megayacht-caliber catamarans might just be the belles of the ball. They move faster than most race boats and are five-star homes right down to their gourmet galleys. High speeds with high-end food—who isn’t in? Or, as Johnstone says, “Previously, the catamaran was regarded as floating condominiums for the charter market. This blows away that old idea.” The Gunboat 60, for instance, is built with carbon fiber, the lightest, strongest, most impact-resistant material. So this new brand of performance catamaran isn’t just stronger; it’s lighter and, therefore, faster. It’s also more chic, with custom windows providing natural light to the traditional caveman feel of monohulls. Four staterooms offer queen-size beds (an additional crew quarter has two twin beds). The master stateroom has stairs up to an elevated bed for added elegance. Plus, the traditional teak on panels and woodwork is supplemented with cherry, makore, and sapele. One subtle touch: a barbecue built into the aft beams in case a seafaring trip demands a cookout. Another high-end cat on display is the Lagoon 52, on its debut tour. It is the result from a decade’s work. For instance, the continual moving of masts
farther aft on the Lagoon race boats was done to center the weight better, improve the sail plan and, ultimately, increase speed. That designed idea for the masts has been transplanted into the Lagoon 52, along with options for first-class interiors. Want a gray Alpi oak or Milano oak floor? Black or white leather or fabric Arredo crème as upholstery? The four custom suites all come with double beds and organic lighting thanks to fixed hull windows positioned to provide healthy views out over the water. If the catamaran isn’t your mode, the S2 Yachts’ Tiara 50 Coupe brings Garmin and Volvo together for the first time in a North American yacht to have all engine, navigation, and mechanical information together on a touchtone screen in the cockpit. And the twin Volvo diesel engines, of your choice of 625 horsepower or 725 horsepower, mean speeds on the plus side of 30 knots. It also features a relatively open design for such a large boat, with nouveau use of windows, sliding-glass doors, and European expanse to allow guests to see all the way through the salon area into the cockpit. Also on the hot list is revered Italian boatmaker Riva’s 86 Domino in the company’s new metallic ice color. The shape, based on Riva’s smaller, more athletic models, makes it more of an oversize sporty yacht as opposed to a small-ish megayacht. The look is sleek without gilding the lily, and interiors are clean, as if pulled from a contemporary Italian manse, with plenty of room for entertaining— there’s a table for six on the massive bow sundeck, and another in the cockpit. Line all the toys up at the Miami boat show, and you have miles of yachts, powerboats, sailboats, and various engines, electronics, and marine gear to inspect. That’s the convenient part of the event. The fantasy remains imagining yourself on the boat, surrounded only by water. February 13–17 at the Miami Beach Convention Center, Sea Isle Marina, and Miamarina at Bayside. For more information, visit miamiboatshow.com. OD
Nothing says refined indulgence better or more loudly than a few of the newest yachts.
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THE MAGIC CITY Jane Holzer became part of pop-culture history in Andy Warhol’s infamous screen tests and short films. Screen Test: Jane Holzer (1964)(TOP TWO FRAMES, BOTTOM); Kiss (1963–’64).
What Became of Baby Jane I
t’s tough to pin down the exact moment a new cultural era begins. But if you’re looking to make sense of the uptown crowd’s embrace of the downtown whirl in the ’60s, focus on one afternoon in the fall of 1963. Then zero in on the Manhattan corner of Lexington Avenue and 59th Street. Fashion model and Palm Beach native Jane Holzer, already that season’s premier It girl, was accompanying Show magazine Art Director Nick Haslam to yet another cover shoot. The pair bumped into a pal of Haslam’s— Andy Warhol, then a commercial illustrator in the process of re-creating himself as an avant-garde artist. Dispensing with the pleasantries, Warhol was quick to spot a golden PR opportunity. “Andy said to me, ‘Do you want to be in the movies?’” Holzer recalls, raising her voice into a spot-on Warhol imitation. Her response? “It beats the shit out of shopping at Bloomingdale’s every day.” Of course, Holzer imagined she’d be starring in something akin to Whatever Happened to Baby Jane?, the recently released camp thriller that a Women’s Wear Daily writer invoked for her media nickname. However, Warhol’s films were anything but Hollywood-bound. “There never was a script. Some of them were quite weird,” Holzer explains. Indeed, weird is a good starting point in describing these black-and-white shorts: Narrative structure is tossed aside, with Holzer alternately mugging for the camera alongside a revolving crew of Warhol’s Factory regulars or pouting sexily in a close-up to hypnotizing effect. Five decades on, these films retain their otherworldly intensity—in full evidence throughout “To Jane, Love Andy: Warhol’s First Superstar,” an exhibition at West Palm Beach’s Norton Museum of Art. The show chronicles the duo’s collaboration on and off the continued on page 138
PHOTOGRAPHY BY © 2013 THE ANDY WARHOL MUSEUM, PITTSBURGH, PA, A MUSEUM OF CARNEGIE INSTITUTE. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. KISS FILM STILL COURTESY OF THE ANDY WARHOL MUSEUM. SCREEN TEST: JANE HOLZER [ST 145, 146, 142]. ALL IMAGES 16MM FILM, BLACK AND WHITE, SILENT, AT 16 FRAMES PER SECOND. ANDY WARHOL (AMERICAN, 1928–1987)
THE NORTON MUSEUM OF ART SPOTLIGHTS ANDY WARHOL’S CINEMATIC MUSE AND FIRST SUPERSTAR, PALM BEACH’S OWN JANE HOLZER. BY BRETT SOKOL
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THE MAGIC CITY
“All I was doing was having fun.... I didn’t realize what a genius Andy was.”—JANE HOLZER continued from page 136 screen, not only capturing Holzer’s role as Warhol’s muse but also the larger world unfolding around—and in turn being influenced by—that seminal moment in art history. It’s not hard to imagine what riveted Warhol on that Manhattan street corner in late 1963—or what drew him to bask in Holzer’s public afterglow during the following year. “Her style of life has created her fame,” observed Tom Wolfe in his celebrated 1964 New York Herald Tribune profile of Holzer, “The Girl of the Year,” raising an appreciative eyebrow as she evoked “rock and roll, underground movies, decaying lofts, models, photographers, Living Pop Art, the twist, the frug, the mashed potatoes, stretch pants, pre-Raphaelite hair, Le Style Camp.” Holzer herself seemed nonplussed by the media attention: “Some people look at my pictures and say I look very mature and sophisticated,” she told Wolfe. “Some people say I look like a child, you know, Baby Jane. And, I mean, I don’t know what I look like, I guess it’s just 1964 Jewish.” Yet by 1965, both Warhol and Holzer had moved on. Edie Sedgwick was the new queen of the scene, replacing Holzer as both screen star and party-hopping sidekick. Which suited Holzer just fine. Though she remained good
friends with Warhol, she says she had little interest in the dark, druggy atmosphere that had overtaken the Factory: “I just wanted to get the hell out of there. It gave me a bad feeling, so I left. It wasn’t Andy, it was just everybody around him.” Warhol’s own posthumously published diaries detail Holzer’s second act: a move behind the camera producing the 1985 Academy Award-winning Kiss of the Spider Woman (recent projects include the 2012 headline-grabbing Spring Breakers) and her emergence as a savvy real estate developer, managing her family’s impressive chunk of Palm Beach’s Worth Avenue as well as flipping seven-figure townhouses in New York. Yet Holzer is as conflicted as ever in trying to analyze her larger-than-life persona. “I’m thrilled the Norton is doing it,” she says of the museum’s exhibition, “but I’m frozen inside when I think about the idea of being so publicly intimate…. it’s terrifying! It’s one thing to be in a movie or to produce a movie. If I’m in it, I’m just a pawn. Or if I produce it, I’m just a check. It’s not about me.” And then there’s the odd sight of seeing her image up on the museum’s walls. “It’s like an epitaph,” she quips. Such a sense of abashment seems odd coming from a figure whose initial fame was so firmly tied to living her life in the public eye. So what does Holzer see when she looks back at her 23-year-old self in one of Warhol’s iconic screen tests? “All I was doing was having fun. I was in the moment,” Holzer chuckles. “I didn’t realize what a genius Andy was. Now, in retrospect, you say, ‘Oh my god!’” The Norton Museum of Art features “To Jane, Love Andy” through May 25. For more information, call 561-832-5196 or visit norton.org. E-mail: brett@oceandrive.com OD
PHOTOGRAPHY BY RON GALELLA/WIREIMAGE.COM (WARHOL); PRIVATE COLLECTION (BROCHURE, MAGAZINE COVER)
CLOCKWISE FROM LEFT: Holzer on the November 1964 cover of Show: The Magazine of the Arts, shot by David Bailey; with Andy Warhol at an AIDS benefit in Beverly Hills in 1986; cover of The Ford Modeling Agency Brochure, circa 1964, photographed by Irving Penn.
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ART FULL The Flying Blue Cat, Larry Poons, 2011.
Riot of Nature
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he setting for heavyweight New York Abstract Expressionist Larry Poons’s new show is anything but traditional. Step outside the exhibiting gallery’s white walls and you’ll be amid the lush grounds of Key Biscayne’s Marjory Stoneman Douglas Biscayne Nature Center—Manhattan’s crowded gray sidewalks and taxicab-choked avenues have been traded in for mangroves and a sun-dappled shoreline, all teeming with wildlife. That explosion of color is reflected in this latest batch of oversize canvases by Poons, each covered in eye-popping rivulets of paint flowing around and atop each other to an engrossing effect. Consider it the latest evolution in Poons’s approach, one that has morphed from a geometric minimalism in the 1960s to a thicker Pollock-ian pour in the 1970s, and on to today’s open-thefloodgates aesthetic, as busy as nature itself. But while Poons is a longtime
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friend of Nature Center Director Theodora Long, as well as a supporter of the center’s mission of environmental education (which will be aided by proceeds from these artworks’ sale), he insists the setting itself is irrelevant to viewing. “It shouldn’t matter whether you’re looking at a painting in the Vatican or not. A great painting is a great painting,” Poons explains. As for the surrounding greenery of the Nature Center, “It’s a little bit like we’re going to watch a movie—but not in a movie theater. If the movie’s any good, you’re not thinking about whether you’re in the jungle. If the movie’s no good, then you start worrying about the lions coming to eat you.” Larry Poons’s “One and Only Just for Nature” is on exhibit at the Marjory Stoneman Douglas Biscayne Nature Center through May 3. For more information, call 305361-6767, ext. 114, or visit biscaynenaturecenter.org. OD
PHOTOGRAPHY COURTESY OF LARRY POONS
A NEW EXHIBITION BY LEGENDARY NEW YORK PAINTER LARRY POONS FINDS AN UNLIKELY ROOST IN KEY BISCAYNE. BY BRETT SOKOL
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It’s a Celebration!
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NO CITY KNOWS HOW TO THROW A PARTY BETTER THAN MIAMI, AND COME YEAR’S END, CELEBRITIES, DJS, AND JOYOUS JET-SETTERS RETURNED TO PARADISE TO SQUEEZE IN THEIR FINAL SOIRÉES OF 2013 IN STYLE. BY JULIA FORD-CARTHER
A FAREWELL WITH PHARRELL One of the biggest headliners this New Year’s season was Pharrell Williams, who was welcomed by a packed poolside of picture-snapping fans at the Fontainebleau Miami Beach. The New Year’s Eve partygoers were treated to a sweet surprise when rapper T.I. joined the stylish producer onstage for a quick duet.
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Popular sound machine Kaskade pumped out his pace-quickening mixes at South Beach’s Story nightclub, setting the “Atmosphere” for an off-the-charts pre-New Year’s night that could only be had in Miami.
Two legends came together for a memorable evening when disco’s reigning royalty Gloria Gaynor took the stage at the iconic Fontainebleau Miami Beach with The Spinners for a BleauLive Legends Night performance. Bedecked in festive red glam, Gaynor got the entire room to join in as she belted out hits like her double-platinum “I Will Survive.”
LIKE A BOSS Rap’s biggest fans cheered as Rick Ross performed for an at-capacity, shoulder-to-shoulder crowd at SL Miami’s New Year’s Eve bash. Bottles of Dom Pérignon flowed at the VIP tables lining the intimate lounge while the hip-hop star partied like it was 2014.
WILY MILEY America’s infamous pop-star-of-the-moment, Miley Cyrus, dropped into Miami and enjoyed a night out at LIV at the Fontainebleau Miami Beach, where she resumed her hard-partying, fun-loving ways alongside musical friends Flo Rida and Cedric Gervais.
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TALENT POOL Things got wet and wild for New Year’s Eve at the W South Beach’s poolside party, where Dirty South ( LEFT), who has produced Grammynominated collaborations with music’s biggest acts, shared the sound stage with Miami’s own up-and-coming DJ-to-know Michael Brun.
Jazz trumpet legend Wynton Marsalis blew through Miami for an exclusive, intimate performance at the Adrienne Arsht Center for the Performing Arts in honor of the HBO Family documentary Wynton Marsalis: A YoungArts Masterclass. After his set, Marsalis, who has said that the arts are integral in student development, took questions from his awed audience.
MYNTY FRESH Mynt Lounge owner and happy husband Romain Zago shared a cute couple’s New Year’s Eve kiss with wife Joanna Krupa at Mynt’s glittering blowout. The pair counted down to 2014 amid a shower of gold confetti and a club full of sparkling VIP guests.
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TUNE UP
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FEEL SO CLOSE It’s always a treat when Miami hosts Calvin Harris , one of electronic music’s most notable names. Leading up to New Year’s Eve, the heavy hitter headlined a lineup at LIV at the Fontainebleau Miami Beach. Frequent LIV A-lister Sean “Diddy” Combs joined Harris in the booth as eager EDM lovers clamored toward the stage to get a shot of the action.
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GUET GOING
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It felt like New Year’s Eve came a few days early when one of the world’s most famous DJs took over the soundwaves at LIV. With an endless supply of his megahits, David Guetta kept the entire club bumping well past last call.
While DJs packed most of Miami’s clubs for New Year’s, the Delano hosted popular R&B artist The Weeknd for a sexy croon session at its famous pool. He set the mood for a midnight smooch under the stars with smooth sounds and beats.
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Gilt City brought screaming fans in close contact with one of Latin music’s best-selling artists, Enrique Iglesias, at a Q&A with Billboard Executive Director of Content and Programming for Latin Music Leila Cobo. The charming singer posed for pics with swooning singles as his latest track, “Heart Attack,” pumped out over the speakers at SL Miami.
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TOPPING OUT How does one of the world’s top clubs throw a New Year’s party? By bringing in the world’s top DJ. International superstar Tiësto ( LEFT)—who met up with industry friend Afrojack—took over the turntables at LIV at the Fontainebleau Miami Beach, where he and thousands of revelers rang in 2014 with hit after hit from his world-famous repertoire.
SILVER FOX The Most Interesting Man in the World found himself in Miami for a supremely extravagant Dos Equis Ultimate Masquerade ball. Surrounded by glittering masked partygoers in floor-length gowns and dapper suits, The Most Interesting Man rubbed elbows with the evening’s entertainer, Q-Tip, and undoubtedly drank his preferred beer.
A ROARING PARTY
STAR POWER LIV at the Fontainebleau Miami Beach packed its New Year’s Eve week with star DJs and Hollywood’s biggest names. Among a Sunday-night crowd, Entourage star Jeremy Piven visited the Miami megaclub with pal Jamie Foxx, who got on the mic and gave the crowd a little extra fun.
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Over at the SLS Hotel South Beach, Robin Thicke cleaned up well in a black-on-black printed tuxedo, the perfect ensemble for the Great Gatsby-themed soirée the hotel was throwing for New Year’s Eve. Decked-out guests withstood raindrops and balmy gusts as the R&B sensation “blurred the lines.”
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THE AESTHETES
Dropping Anchor TATTOO ARTIST AND INK MASTER CHRIS NÚÑEZ IS FINDING THE SWEET SPOT IN WYNWOOD WITH HANDCRAFTED MIAMI. BY DEBORAH L. MARTIN
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PHOTOGRAPHY BY NICK GARCIA
W
hen you walk into tattoo parlor/art gallery Handcrafted Miami, one of the first things you notice is the real World War II anchor embedded in resin in the concrete floor of the entrance. Owner and Miami native Chris Núñez explains. “This is my place to drop anchor. It keeps me grounded here, where I’m from.” Currently starring on Spike TV’s Ink Master, now finishing up its fourth season, and previously a partner in the South Beach shop Miami Ink and star and cocreator of the TLC reality show of the same name, the artist is passionate about this new venture. “I’ve been bouncing around since I first started tattooing. This is a place where I have roots.” And roots are a big part of the theme at Handcrafted Miami. Tattoo parlors have always had a bit of art gallery in their DNA. Most tattoo artists hang their drawings, and the walls of many shops are covered with inspiration and the work of other artists. But Handcrafted Miami is something entirely different. Says Núñez, “I wanted it to be a social club as well as a tattoo shop and art gallery, a place where local artists and like-minded creative thinkers from all over the world can come in, have some coffee or a drink, and hang out together and trade ideas and collaborate.” Wynwood’s burgeoning art scene proved a perfect fit. “Choosing Wynwood as a location was important. It’s a real neighborhood where we can have an impact and where we can establish deep roots.” Núñez knows a thing or three about Miami neighborhoods. The 43-year-old former graffiti artist grew up on the streets of the city, quite literally. “I hung around with all these graffiti guys, and they were all tattooed,” he says. “And my art started to look more like tattoo art than graffiti. Tattooing was a natural progression for me.” In Handcrafted Miami, Núñez is now in a position to promote and encourage the work of other artists, both established and up and coming. “A lot of mainstream corporations use tattoo and graffiti imagery, but they are just photoshopping designs and creating something digitally that mimics what real artists are doing,” he says. “I want people to understand and see the artistry of tattooing, and I want the artists to get credit, and hopefully financial reward, for their work.” The 3,000-square-foot gallery will, at least initially, feature “street” artists and tattooers who are working in all kinds of mediums, not just skin and spray paint. And while visitors are browsing the artworks, they just might be inspired to take some of it home for their walls as well as on their bodies. “Tattoo is an art form that lives with the person until he or she dies. It’s living art and that, to me, is what makes it really exciting.” 3438 N. Miami Ave., Miami, 305-571-8194; handcraftedmiami.com OD
Chris Núñez at Handcrafted Miami, his new gallery and tattoo studio in Wynwood.
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DUDES
Against the Grain TATANKA GUERRERO AND BURTON WILKINS BRING THEIR SURF/SKATE VIBE TO SWEETWATER BEER GARDEN ON THE BEACH. BY STEPHANIE DUNN
Q
uestion: What kind of bar do two veterans of Miami’s nightlife industry create when given the chance? Answer: Sweetwater Beer Garden. Started as a pop-up bar hidden in a leafy courtyard between the Ansonia and Plymouth Hotels, next month Sweetwater is getting a permanent home of its own in the courtyard of the South Beach Hotel. With the scent of barbecue wafting in the breeze and piped-in rock music, Sweetwater is decidedly more backyard than Black Card. And that, says owner Tatanka Guerrero, is the point. He and partner Burton Wilkins are used to taking the pulse of Miami nightlife, having cut their teeth on some of the Beach’s most iconic parties (Guerrero is also part owner of Radio Bar). But Sweetwater’s
refreshingly offbeat vibe is informed by the partners’ travels and passions: Guerrero discovered skateboarding at age 10 when he arrived in the States from Chile, and Wilkins has traveled the Caribbean and Central America surfing competitively. “Sweetwater reflects how we live our lives day to day,” says Wilkins. “You don’t see surfers in the club.” Guerrero adds, “We’re not a transient city anymore, where people come to rage. That’s the old South Beach. People are actually living here, creating families, and opening businesses. The locals have grown, and they’ve developed a voice.” “At Sweetwater, everyone is someone. That’s the beauty of it.” 235 21st St., Miami Beach, 305-531-3464 OD
“Sweetwater reflects how we live our lives day to day.” —BURTON WILKINS Guerrero’s fedora, critical for outdoor life, was given to him by Miami native and hat designer Tony Merenda, creative director at Christy’s London.
Of his shoes, Wilkins says, “They’re Vans, but lace up, more like a boat shoe. I wore them because the floral pattern really fits the motif of Sweetwater. It works with the vibe.”
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The table Guerrero sits on is a salvaged Mexican flower cart that he and Wilkins bought from an antique dealer. The rustic stools were custom-made to fit the cart, repurposing it into a table.
PHOTOGRAPHY BY GARY JAMES (WILKINS)
Wilkins bought his jeans down the street from Sweetwater, at Atrium. “I’m tall and lanky and J Brand jeans fit well. You’ve got to stick with what works,” he says.
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Lee Brian Schrager Invites you to experience:
Miami Dade College’s
Miami International Film Festival Culinary Cinema presented by Plymouth Gin Every Flavor Under The Sun For six memorable evenings, we’ll be pairing a film and a restaurant for an unbeatable cinematic/culinary experience.
Tickets & Info miamifilmfestival.com/culinarycinema 305.405.MIFF February 23rd & March 7–16 2014
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Private Club and Residences
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“Eventually we will find a total cure,” says Oscar de la Renta, himself a cancer survivor, surrounded by some of his elegant, sophisticated designs.
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STYLE SETTER
And the Oscar Goes to CELEBRATING HALF A CENTURY IN FASHION, COUTURIER OSCAR DE LA RENTA FOCUSES ON THE FIGHT AGAINST CANCER AT THE ANNUAL DESIGNED FOR A CURE BENEFIT IN MIAMI. BY RAY ROGERS
A
t age 81, Oscar de la Renta is still leading the charge of his $500 million fashion empire. What drives him? “Greed!” he bellows. What a relief—a direct, honest word from a pillar of an industry known for hyperbole. Alas, he’s just kidding. The real response is far more romantic, anyway. “No. It’s just being able to design clothes that the human falls in love with.” For a half-century now, the world’s luxe-loving women have fallen for de la Renta’s trademark elegant sophistication, a sensibility first honed under the mentorship of famed couturier Cristóbal Balenciaga. It’s a two-sided love affair. “I’m celebrating 50 years in this business, and I am so honored that I have been able to witness the evolution of women in the last 50 years,” says the Dominican Republic-born designer. Helping women look their best has defined his career. This month, his glamorous, feminine designs will empower fellow cancer survivors at the Designed for a Cure benefit for the Sylvester Comprehensive Cancer Center in Miami. The February 13 event will feature a runway show with patients (donning current Oscar de la Renta that is now available in stores) among the professional models dressed in the designer’s Spring 2014 collection.
“The idea behind this show is great because it gives hope to other people,” says de la Renta, who was diagnosed with cancer in 2006. “The aspect of surviving cancer is something that is very dear to anyone who is afflicted with this horrible disease. Every day, there is extraordinary progress being made, and the fact that, after I don’t know how many years of coping with it, I would be there with my long-time doctor and great friend Dr. Stephen D. Nimer [the director of Sylvester] is a great testimony to the advances and help from everyone. Eventually we will find a total cure.” De la Renta has a soft spot for Miami in general. “I love Miami. Even if I am there for work, I feel that I am there on a holiday. It’s the closest place to my home country in the United States.” When news of his cancer scare surfaced, the natural reaction was that perhaps de la Renta was finally gearing up for retirement. But now, a few years later, the last thing he wants to talk about is retirement. “That is the one word that I literally loathe,” he says. “It’s a word that doesn’t ever enter my mind.” Bal Harbour Shops, 9700 Collins Ave., 305-868-7986; oscardela renta.com. For more information on the February 13 event, visit sylvester.org/ designedforacure. OD A dazzling display of daywear at Oscar de la Renta’s Bal Harbour Shops boutique; BELOW: Indigo embroidered Crown Goa clutch ($2,250).
PHOTOGRAPHY BY WORLDREDEYE.COM (STORE); OPPOSITE: JASON BELL (DE LA RENTA)
LEFT:
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MIAMI STYLE LIST
TO-DO
List
Stock up on suiting essentials and gowns when Escada goes e-comm this month for the first time in the US. escada.com Continue the Harry Winston tradition of supporting local communities by purchasing a charm from the Harry Winston Hope collection. Twenty percent from the sales will help fund Voices for Children. Bal Harbour Shops, 9700 Collins Ave., 786-2066657; harrywinston.com Brighten up your beach look with Giejo’s newest swim collection, where retro shapes and modern prints collide. Intermix, 634 Collins Ave., Miami Beach, 305-5315950; intermixonline.com Carry your heart on your bag with the limited-edition Porsche Design x Thierry Noir TwinBag, featuring the artist’s signature handpainted “heart faces.” Aventura Mall, 19501 Biscayne Blvd., 305-7920091; porsche-design.com
Porsche Design x Thierry Noir TwinBag.
The Gem Guru JEWELRY DESIGNER RONI BLANSHAY BRINGS HER UNIQUE SENSE OF DRAMA AND GLAMOUR TO BLOOMINGDALE’S AVENTURA. BY LAUREN FINNEY
“T
he expression of it is pure glamour,” says designer Roni Blanshay of her eponymous jewelry line, sought after by Oprah, Sophia Vergara, and more. This spring, she perfects the concept of layering to create a new look in her wildly popular designs, now sold at Bloomingdale’s at Aventura Mall. Settings are subtly layered on top of each other to give a 3-D effect, all in the name of stand-out statement jewelry. Using classic shapes such as teardrops, evil eyes, moons, knots, and serpents, Blanshay has been able to fine-tune her place in the market with her signature contrast between natural elements such as bone with instantly recognizable and sophisticated touches like Swarovski crystals and semiprecious stones, with even more color injected into the designs this season. “The language of my jewelry is the decorative and the dramatic,” says Blanshay, who personally adheres to her mantra of “not being confined by age but Roni Blanshay only by attitude.” Erica Russo, Bloomingdale’s operating vice president of fashion direction for women’s fashion accessories, fine jewelry, and cosmetics, says, “[Her] jewelry designs have been a customer favorite since we brought in the collection a few years ago.” “Her pieces are what I like to call ‘game changers’—they can transform the white tee and jeans from simple to sophisticated, or elevate the little black dress from a basic to a red-carpet hit.” —ERICA RUSSO “I want women to feel good in their skin,” says Blanshay, “and in Florida, where there is a climate that brings out the playful side, you have more fun decorating yourself. Plus, bling shows up well on a suntan!” OD
“Blanshay’s pieces transform the white tee and jeans from simple to sophisticated.”
Tassel necklace, Roni Blanshay ($869). Bloomingdale’s, Aventura Mall, 19555 Biscayne Blvd., 305792-1000; bloomingdales.com.
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SHOP MIAMI
Eye On Miami GLASSES FOR BOTH SUN AND SHADE GET SERIOUS UPGRADES THIS SEASON WITH NEW TECHNOLOGY AND NEW LAUNCHES. BY LAUREN FINNEY
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PHOTOGRAPHY BY REDINGER LIBOLT PHOTO (BEINER)
FROM TOP: 18k red-gold Bentley Mulsanne sunglasses, Oberlé ($15,000); cat-eye black acetate sunglasses, wide-frame acetate sunglasses in tawny bronze brown, and square-frame black acetate sunglasses, all from Sportmax ($455 each).
PHOTOGRAPHY BY TK; ILLUSTRATION BY TK
T
he evolution of eyewear continues this spring with several launches, including trademarked technology that will change the way we shop for sunglasses and optical glasses. Local optical powerhouse Edward Beiner Purveyor of Fine Eyewear (multiple South Florida locations; edwardbeiner .com) introduces Ottica Su Misura this season, which offers the first customizable sunglasses of their kind, allowing customers to select color and material. “We are thrilled with the design possibilities,” says Beiner, who has begun the program in his Worth Avenue outpost in Palm Beach and will continue to roll it out to his other eight South Florida stores with the final goal to have Ottica Su Misura stores across the country. The glasses, which start at $800, take six weeks to fully customize. “We work with a small artisan lab in Italy, and they can create the lamination for one frame only—one frame at a time,” adds Beiner. Clients have over 30 shape molds to choose from, in addition to an endless array of colors and the ability to add a personalized mesEdward Beiner sage to the frame. Retro shapes such as round and cat eye are returning as well. Heritage eyewear brand Cutler and Gross has teamed up with Sportmax (Max Mara, 216 Worth Ave., Palm Beach, 561-832-0069; sportmax.com) to create retro-inspired sunglasses that honor 1969, the year both brands were conceived. The collection, composed of six different styles, is available in four colors per style and, just like the brand’s clothing, features Sportmax’s signature single Swarovski crystal. According to Oberlé Opticians (9552 Harding Ave., Surfside, 305-861-1010; oberleopticians.com) owner Bernie Oberlender, color is having a resurgence in eyewear. “Color is used subtly as a background or as a statement on its own, from bold hues of blue, including aqua, to shades of pink,” he says. “Lenses are even more vibrant as well, with mirrored purples, golds, and blues.” Brands new to Oberlé this year include Sospiri, Bentley, and French designer Thierry Lasry. OD
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© 2014 CHLOE WINES, LIVERMORE, CA
MEET
C A P TU R E YOU R B E AUTI FU L M O M E NT 2013 PINOT GRIGIO VA L DA D I G E D.O.C . I TA LY
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N O R T H C OA S T C A L I F O R N I A
2 0 1 2 C H A R D O N N AY
SONOMA COUNT Y CALIFORNIA
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STYLE OF GENEROSITY
The Neiman Marcus fashion show is one of the highlights at Wine, Women & Shoes; attendees show off their fancy footwear; Virgule Pivoine sandal with satin floral embroidery, Roger Vivier ($1,975). Bal Harbour Shops, 9700 Collins Ave., 305-8684344; rogervivier.com.
If the Shoe Fits THE THIRD ANNUAL WINE, WOMEN & SHOES BRINGS A TOUCH OF FASHION WITH A HEAVY DOSE OF PHILANTHROPY TO BENEFIT THE MIAMI CHILDREN’S HOSPITAL FOUNDATION. BY BRETT GRAFF
T
hink you’re being judged by the shoes you wear? Then you must be at the Wine, Women & Shoes event benefiting the Miami Children’s Hospital Foundation. No one gets snubbed, and everyone is in attendance to support the mission of offering world-class pediatric medical care in Miami. But at this particular lunch, there are undercover judges peering around and scouting the stilettos in order to, at the afternoon’s end, publicly recognize the pair du jour. “It’s so much fun, but it’s also an amazing cause,” says Tina Carlo, a committee member and mother of twins who were both treated at the hospital. “This fundraising is essential because it allows the hospital to accomplish amazing things.”
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Design house Roger Vivier will be the presenting sponsor for the event chaired by a litany of Miami’s biggest philanthropists. They’ll shop, sip, and strut around the Coral Gables Country Club on Thursday, February 6, starting at 10:30 AM. A Champagne reception and designer-soaked shopping extravaganza—where sought-after wines are among the offerings—will be followed by lunch and a highly anticipated Neiman Marcus fashion show. It’s all to pour proceeds into the foundation so that Miami Children’s Hospital can both build upon its distinctive international standing—it has the largest children’s cancer center in Florida, a Brain Institute treating 45,000 kids each year, and a Congenital Heart Institute with
a 98 percent survival rate—and fund treatment of low-income patients, who in turn have access to the same medical care as the Carlo twins. “We’re fortunate we can pay for medical attention, but we have to think outside ourselves,” says Dan Carlo, managing director of real estate giant Avison Young, who, with wife Tina, experienced firsthand the hospital’s medical and emotional expertise. The specialists there, the Carlos say, not only skillfully treated the boys physically but also put everyone at ease. “I am struck by the sheer number of patients the hospital treats each year,” says Dan, pointing to the 91,000 emergency room patients, the 419,239 outpatient visits, and 14,360 surgeries performed just last year—and that’s not counting the primary services provided to children in highrisk communities. “We try to add value and add to the momentum because collectively we can make a difference. We’ve built something pretty special, but it requires continuing effort.” For more information, visit mchf.org/events. OD
PHOTOGRAPHY BY WORLDREDEYE.COM (FASHION SHOW, ATTENDEES); ROGER VIVIER (VIRGULE)
FROM LEFT:
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THEY’RE BACK SELLING MIAMI
fontainebleau hotel MIAMI 1961
Appearing live...
MATT CRANE
917. 847.8522 matt@MattCraneMiami.com MattCraneMiami.com
JULIAN JOHNSTON 305.502.3985 julian@miawaterfront.com MIAwaterfront.com
BRETT HARRIS 315.764.9401 brett@calibrerealty.com BrettHarrisHomes.com
DARIN TANSEY 305.924.4100 darin@darintansey.com DarinTansey.com
CALIBRE INTERNATIONAL REALTY PRESENTS A JULIAN JOHNSTON PRODUCTION introducing calibre international realty starring: mINA TASKIRAN YAN PAOLI SANCHEZ MARCIA BELL DIRECTED BY DARIN TANSEY PRODUCED BY BRETT HARRIS EXECUTIVE PRODUCER MATT CRANE Photography by MArk delong
set design
Melissa delong
CalibreRealty.com
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YOU, EVEN BETTER Exotic flower extracts improve skin tone and minimize wrinkles in Dior’s agedefying Dreamskin formulation, a must in Miami’s sun-saturated climate.
PERFECT FOR MIAMI, DIOR’S NEW SKINCARE PRODUCT, MADE FROM EXOTIC BLOOMS AND TROMPE L’OEIL MINERAL POWDERS, TAKES ANTIAGING SOLUTIONS IN A NEW DIRECTION. BY CATHERINE SABINO
“A
fter women, flowers are the most divine creation,” said Christian Dior, who used them to inspire his fabrics and collections. The legacy of Dior’s flower passion may be the reason his couture house is likely the only one with its own gardens—eight flower plots scattered around the world, whose locations were chosen, as if by a discriminating vintner, for the quality of the terroir. Today, the rare and exotic varieties grown there provide the active ingredients for the company’s line of skincare products, and can also be found in its fragrances and cosmetics. The extracts from two recently discovered plants, longoza and opilia, harvested in Madagascar and Burkina Faso, respectively, form the basis of Dior’s new skincare product Dreamskin, the natural extracts from one (longoza) added for antiaging benefits, the other (opilia) to help correct skin’s color imperfections. It’s unusual for a skin product to be both corrector and wrinkle treatment. But antiaging skincare, a white-hot product category, especially in youth-obsessed Miami, had to evolve from just treating wrinkles. (Numerous varieties of injectable fillers allow for many ways to get good, quick results.) These days, consumers want products that mitigate aging’s other effects—uneven texture and pigmentation—as much as over-the-counter wrinkle solutions. Brigid Noé, director of product development and
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innovation for Dior, says creating a product that improves tone and minimizes wrinkles was no easy task: “Usually formulas must contain a significant amount of powders and pigments for immediate, visible color imperfection results. But those don’t always allow for deep absorption.” The epidermal cell structure is unique in how light interacts with it, according to Edouard Mauvais-Jarvis, scientific communications director for Dior. Epidermal cells provide a natural optical filter, their diffusive properties helping to even out color and texture. “But aging impacts cells that act as filters,” he adds. For its new product, Dior scientists sought to mimic how healthy cells filter by adding special mineral powders found in Japan—one with mica platelets, another with silica particles—to the flower extracts. The powders tested well for their light-diffusion properties, minimizing redness and other age-related textural imperfections. As importantly, they didn’t prevent the longoza essences from deep absorption. What’s interesting about Dreamskin is how it appears creamy pink (from the color-correcting mineral powders) but applies transparently. It’s designed to be worn during the day or under makeup. So there’s a clever bit of trompe l’oeil at work in this latest magic from Dior. Dreamskin Perfect Skin Creator, Dior ($110). Saks Fifth Avenue, Bal Harbour Shops, 9700 Collins Ave., 305-865-1100; saks.com OD
SUNNY SOLUTION With Dior’s ongoing studies concerning how aging affects skin tone, Dr. Julio F. Gallo of The Miami Institute for Age Management and Intervention explains what happens to skin texture as we grow older and how our local climate impacts it. While Miami’s bright days, balmy evenings, and yearround warm temperatures make for a paradisiacal landscape, they also pose a specific set of skin concerns. “The most common challenge for skin in Miami is excessive sun exposure,” Dr. Gallo says. “We have greater exposure to the photo-damaging effects of the sun. As time lapses, the effects of photo-aging become more prominent, seen as spots, stains, freckles, and roughness.”
PHOTOGRAPHY BY SHUTTERSTOCK.COM (MIAMI BEACH)
Optical Effects
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TIME HONORED
Chronomaster D
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uring high season, Miami men need the versatility of a watch that keeps the gentleman jock on schedule and on trend. Chronographs are versatile pieces that offer the precision of a stopwatch housed within the casing of a display timepiece, with today’s most sophisticated
models featuring multi-timing options. The dexterousness of chronographs makes them highly desirable for those of us who need function, and their good looks speak to our fascination with form. For more watch features and expanded coverage, go to oceandrive.com/watches. OD
FROM LEFT : This mechanical Raymond Weil Freelancer watch ($2,995) is a racing-inspired chronograph crafted in stainless steel. It houses an automatic movement and is water-resistant to 100 meters. Morays Jewelers, 50 NE Second Ave., Miami, 305-374-0739; raymond-weil.com From Tudor Watch, the Tudor Fastrider Chronograph ($3,675) is a bold yet classic steel chronograph with a fabric strap. Mayors, Dadeland Mall, 7535 N. Kendall Dr., South Miami, 305-667-7517; tudorwatch.com The Ritmo Mundo Quantum III ($895) in a black/red combination is a 50mm Swiss chronograph with one half of the dial and case ring in carbon fiber and
the other half in black steel with white markers. Pushers are accentuated in red aluminum. Bloomingdale’s, Aventura Mall, 19501 Biscayne Blvd., 305-792-1000; ritmomundo.com From Movado, this 44mm Museum chronograph ($995) is crafted in stainless steel with a black PVD bezel. It houses a Swiss quartz movement and features a silver-toned signature concave dot at 12 o’clock. Montica Jewelry, 75 Miracle Mile, Coral Gables, 305-446-2957; movado.com Duffle, Hermès ($4,175). 175 NE 40th St., Miami, 305-868-0118; hermes.com
STYLING BY TERRY LEWIS
WATCHMAKERS RESPOND TO MIAMI’S SPORTY AND SOPHISTICATED STYLE WITH THIS SEASON’S COOLEST CHRONOMETERS. BY ROBERTA NAAS PHOTOGRAPHY BY JEFF CRAWFORD
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THE NEWLY RE-LAUNCHED COURTYARD CADILLAC MIAMI BEACH OCEANFRONT HOTEL
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O N E S O T H E B Y ’ S I N T E R N AT I O N A L R E A LT Y | D E V E L O P M E N T D I V I S I O N REDEFINING THE SALES AND POSITIONING O F S O U T H F L O R I D A’ S L U X U R Y D E V E L O P M E N T S
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ON E T HO U S A ND MU S E U M M I A M I
BELLINI WILL IAMS ISL AND AVEN TURA
RECEN TLY COMPLETED
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PHOTOGRAPHY BY GARY JAMES (RESTAURANT); GENUINE HOSPITALITY GROUP (SCHWARTZ)
THIS ISSUE: ROMANTIC
Beach Delight WITH ITS ROMANTIC SETTING, ART DECO DÉCOR, AND OCEAN BREEZE, RESTAURANT MICHAEL SCHWARTZ BRINGS LOCAL LOVE, AND FLAVOR, TO THE BEACH. BY JORDAN MELNICK
S
LEFT:
James Beard-awarded chef Michael Schwartz expands his game-changing formula to South Beach with Restaurant Michael Schwartz, at the iconic Raleigh hotel; TOP: Shaded, candle-lit tables set the scene for a romantic evening.
itting in the courtyard of the Design District’s culinary anchor, Michael’s Genuine Food & Drink, with a simply delightful dish of burrata cheese and heirloom tomatoes at the center of your undressed table and a pleasant lack of untz-untz issuing from the speakers, you might appreciate that the restaurant is everything a high-profile South Beach eatery is not. This is all by design. So why, then, did MGFD’s namesake owner open his latest restaurant in South Beach, the very area whose glitz and glam his other concepts seem to spurn? And not in tucked-away Sunset Harbour, a South Beach sanctuary for good eats, but poolside at a beachfront hotel? continued on page 174
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TASTE
RIGHT:
The restaurant’s simple green salad.
GREEN PERFECTION
An intimate dining room boasts a charming atmosphere rarely found in hotel restaurants; the menu encourages sharing with plates for all appetites.
continued from page 173 “I always said the only way I would ever do something in South Beach would be to do something there,” Michael Schwartz explains, “there” being The Raleigh, an “iconic property” that Schwartz feels engenders an uncommon sentiment in tourist-centric South Beach: local love. “I don’t know what it is about the place,” he says. “But I think someone figured out that if the locals are rooting for it, maybe we should put in someone local who will give it the attention that it deserves.” Schwartz, himself a longtime South Beach resident, is doing just that with Restaurant Michael Schwartz, which is not as surprising as it may seem to people familiar with Michael’s Genuine and restaurants Harry’s Pizzeria and The Cypress Room. While Schwartz may have made his name on the mainland, he cut his teeth as a restaurateur in South Beach back in the ’90s as part owner of the now-closed Nemo. “I didn’t like what was happening on the Beach. It went from glam to corporate,” he says. “People like me who lived on the Beach didn’t really want to get gouged for valet parking and overpay for cocktails. So that’s when I decided it was time to do something in a different area. And I felt that the Design District was an extension of the Beach.” More than a decade later, Schwartz is completing the circle, building a bridge from his Design District mini empire to his South Beach home with the pared-down approach to food that earned him a James Beard Award for Best Chef South in 2010. The timing, he says, is right. “The Beach has changed,” Schwartz says. “There’s more legitimacy in terms of restaurant operators. And I also think that I’ve evolved and changed. So it was a chance for me to go back there and do what I wanted to do on my own terms.” Schwartz’s bold approach finds expression in straightforward flavors. The snack portion of charred shishito peppers, served whole with a continued on page 176
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BAR NONE Tucked into a subway-car-size room off of The Raleigh’s lobby, Martini Bar is a perfect pit stop on your way to dinner at Restaurant Michael Schwartz. With its terrazzo floors, nostalgic photographs, vintage décor and, of course, expertly made martinis, it’ll loosen you up for your poolside feast.
PHOTOGRAPHY BY GARY JAMES
FROM TOP:
Executive Chef Danny Ganem says the simple green salad, of all dishes, exemplifies what Restaurant Michael Schwartz is all about. “Imagine the beautiful and crisp lettuce being harvested in the morning, driven from the farms to our restaurant the same day, washed and cut by the cooks, then seasoned, lightly dressed, and simply presented to our guests,” he says. “That whole process epitomizes who we are and what we do.”
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tickets & information
305.442.3367
sonyopentennis.com
Miami // March 17-30, 2014
miami is about to get intense
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TASTE
Piece of Cake
S The poolside bar at The Raleigh draws visitors and locals alike.
continued from page 174 wedge of lime; the heirloom tomato with local stracciatella, strips of basil, cracked pepper, and a drizzle of olive oil; the grilled octopus with crushed hazelnuts; the grilled rib-eye cap steak with an unlikely yet complementary side of chickpeas—all show a restraint, ingenuity, and attention to seasonality that are hardly staples of South Beach dining. The setting is also at odds with the typical South Beach dining experience, though very much in harmony with the Restaurant Michael Schwartz menu. The Raleigh wears its historic Art Deco charm casually, and the restaurant’s palm-shaded, candlelit tables offer a relaxing view of the hotel’s iconic feature, a boldly outlined pool that, from the balconies overhead, resembles a watery coat of arms. As much as RMS jibes with MGFD—the restaurants’ menus share certain snack dishes and a format that encourages sharing—Schwartz says he didn’t “just bring the greatest hits of Michael’s Genuine to the Beach.” For one thing, there’s “less pork, more fish” on the new restaurant’s menu, not surprising considering its beachside location. (Ninety percent of the fish is local, adds Schwartz.) Another distinguishing factor is that Restaurant Michael Schwartz handles food and beverage needs throughout The Raleigh, which necessarily changes the character of the restaurant. But overall, as its name implies, the restaurant is distinctly Michael Schwartz, even if an untz-untz does occasionally pulse through the seating area from a nearby beach party. 1775 Collins Ave., Miami Beach, 305-612-1163; raleighhotel.com OD
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ylvia Weinstock has long been the grande doyenne of bespoke wedding cakes. And while her Manhattan boutique will spirit confections across the globe, Weinstock has found a permanent home at the suitably luxurious St. Regis Bal Harbour Resort.
How did you get started in this business? I liked to bake and cook more than my three daughters would like to eat, so I sold the cakes to local restaurants in upstate New York. I realized that nobody was making a highly decorated cake that was also delicious. What sets your cakes apart? We like to think we’re the Hermès of cakes. Our product is probably the best and the finest: We use buttercream, fresh fruit, and imported chocolates. And we’re known for our sugar flowers. They’re fabulous—it’s hard to tell the difference between our flower and the real flower; they’re botanically correct. And we talk to our clients; we try to do what they want. We interpret their dreams. Are you doing any special flavors for your Miami clients? For the first time, we’re talking about dulce de leche. Every country, area, and culture has different taste [preferences]. Tell us about your partnership with the St. Regis. When you get married here, you’re offered a Sylvia Weinstock cake. I think the St. Regis is one of the classiest, finest hotels in terms of physical beauty, service, and food. Everything about it and its staff is oriented toward pleasing the client. What about Miami inspires you? There are people here who appreciate what we do: the Americans from the Northeast, and people from Brazil, South America, Russia, and China. Miami is fun, and we want to create that ultimate fun cake that’s memorable but so delicious that they go back home and say, “I can’t believe it!” Why do you love doing what you do? How could one not like the adventure of life? This is what it is: You open a book and you say, “I’m about to embark on something fantastic. All the fantasies you could ever dream of—going places, creating something no one has ever done before.” Doesn’t that excite your spirit? 9703 Collins Ave., Bal Harbour, 305993-3300; stregisbalharbour.com
PHOTOGRAPHY COURTESY OF SYLVIA WEINSTOCK (CAKE); CAROL CHAN (WEINSTOCK)
IN TIME FOR THE SEASON OF ROMANCE, FAMED CAKE MAKER SYLVIA WEINSTOCK TAKES UP RESIDENCE AT THE ST. REGIS BAL HARBOUR RESORT. BY JULIET IZON
One of 300 hand-painted, fully edible mini cakes from Weinstock, in the style of Fabergé eggs, ordered for an event at the Russian Embassy in Washington, DC.
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WE SHAPE NEIGHBORHOODS™
INVESTMENT OPPORTUNITY IN BOOMING BRICKELL SUBMARKET
8911 N BAYSHORE DR
JUST SOLD $2.7M
Purchase a fully leased 4,500 SF restaurant space with 4.5 years left on the lease.Currently leased at market rate with 5% annual increases. This space is located within a condo-hotel lobby atmosphere with local and tourist pedestrian traffic. Restaurant capacity is approximately 210 seats. Asking price is 1.9 M approximately yielding a 6% Cap return.
Get in-depth Shorecrest. to date with
OPPORTUNITY IN BOOMING BRICKELL SUBMARKET ANDRES LEMOS | 305 INVESTMENT 409 3737 | alemos@metro1cre.com
ANDRES N
FOR SALE | $1.9 M
Exquisite Mediterranean architectural design combined with endless Biscayne Bay views from this one of a kind luxury home. Located next to Miami Shores in hidden Davis Harbor, this home features a gourmet style kitchen with a wine cellar, marble flooring, media room, a private office with wood flooring and expansive terraces overlooking a bayfront pool with private dockage.
Purchase a fully leased 4,500 SF restaurant space. Currently leased at market rate with 5% annual increases. This space is located within a condo-hotel lobby atmosphere with local and tourist pedestrian traffic. Restaurant capacity is approximately 210 seats. Asking price is $1.9 M approximately yielding a 6.75% CAP return.
Cesar Delaflor | 305-571-9991 | info@metro1properties.com Joseph Risolia | 305-571-9991 | info@metro1properties.com
ANDRES LEMOS | 305 409 3737 | alemos@metro1cre.com
HISTORIC BUENA VISTA EAST : 78 NE 47 ST FOR SALE | $679,000 Hidden gem in the heart of the Design District! This exquisitely remodeled home features a complete renovation from new electrical, pluming, A/C and sprinkler system, to designer carport with electrical gate. Great for entertaining - featuring a stunning pool and expansive private backyard. 3 bedrooms plus den and 2 baths in main house plus an A/C cottage with a full bathroom. CESAR DELAFLOR | 305 571 9991 cdelaflor@metro1properties.com
ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT : 1657NE N MIAMI AVE CT | FILLING STATION HISTORIC BUENA DISTRICT VISTA: 4700 MIAMI FOR SALELOFTS | $479,000 PRIME RETAIL FOR LEASE | $25 PSF NNN
Rare opportunity to lease a creative retail loft space. This two-story, 5,635 SF space is currently configured as a creative loft and includes four bathrooms, a kitchen, break room, spacious conference room, open patio, balcony and reception area. Also available for Sale. TONY CHO | 305 571 9991 info@metro1cre.com
TONY CHO,
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HISTORIC BUENA VISTA EAST: 78 NE 47 ST FOR
5 ground floor retail spaces from 1,631 SF with a max contiguous 7,339 SF. • Gorgeous Views of the Miami Skyline Beautiful Historic Design District Home. 3 BD / 2 BA corner lot home Hidden gem in the heart of the Design District! This exqu Conveniently located in the bottom of the mixed use Filling Station Lofts • 18 Foot Ceilings offersnew a newly renovated kitchen, original wood flooring, enclosed home features a complete renovation from new electri 81 brand residential lofts with on-site parking. • Open garage Format • Diamond-Plate and a private yard. Ready for a new owner’s personal touch. This home is aStairs and sprinkler system, to designer carport with electric • Exposed Concrete and Limestone
diamond in the rough with the right location at the best time in the market.
TONY ARELLANO | 305 571 9991 Come in and make it yours! info@metro1cre.com
DESIGN DISTRICT: 3801 N MIAMI AVE
entertaining - featuring a stunning pool and expansive p den and 2 baths in main house plus an a full bathroom. CESAR DELAFLOR | 305 571 9991 cdelaflor@metro1properties.com
Exclusive Leasing by METRO 1 Properties bedrooms plus
CESAR DELAFLOR | 305 571 9991 cdelaflor@metro1properties.com
DESIGN DISTRICT: 3819 N MIAMI AVE FOR LEASE: $75 NNN FIRST FLOOR | $35 NNN SECOND FLOOR FOR SALE | $5 M
WATERFRO
FOR SALE | $1.9 M
FOR SALE | $4.6 M
WYNWOOD: 2049 N MIAMI AVE
FOR SALE | $2.5 M
Corner building with the highest traffic visibility in the Design District! This property will fit a variety of uses including retail, restaurant, or an array of mixed uses. Property allows up to +/-77,427 SF of gross development and buildings up to 12 stories high. Bonuses are available allowing for additional development.
6,163 SF unique trophy creative warehouse property. The building recently underwent an expansive high-end renovation and features upgraded modern industrial finishes, an upgraded exterior, an efficient open floor plan that is easily divisible, 14 ft. ceilings, great natural light, full A/C, and more.
TONY CHO | 305 571 9991 info@metro1cre.com
TONY CHO | 305 571 9991 info@metro1cre.com
DESIGN DISTRICT: 3819 N MIAMI AVE DESIGN DISTRICT: 3801 N MIAMI AVE FOR SALE FOR LEASE: $75 NNN FIRST FLOOR | $35 NNN SECOND FLOOR president/ceo | 305.571.9991 | info@metro1.com | metro1.com FOR SALE | $5 M Corner building with the highest traffic visibility in the De This property will fit a variety of uses including retail, rest Rare opportunity to lease a creative retail loft space. This two-story, 5,635 of mixed uses. Property allows up to +/-77,427 SF of gr SF space is currently configured as a creative loft and includes four and buildings up to 12 stories high. Bonuses are avai bathrooms, a kitchen, break room, spacious conference room, open patio, additional development. balcony and reception area. Also available for Sale. TONY CHO | 305 571 9991
TONY CHO | 305 571 9991
1/10/14 12:33 PM
TASTE FROM TOP:
Open-air dining at Cecconi’s; Radio Bar’s Rosé Kiss; scallops at Casa Tua.
Love Is in the Air IN A TOWN FUELED BY HIGH-PROFILE MOMENTS, LOVE OFTEN TAKES A BACK SEAT. NOW, FIVE LOCAL ROMANCERS SERVE UP THEIR FAVORITE DISHES TO SHARE, AND REVEAL OUR CITY’S MORE AMOROUS SIDE. BY JULIA FORD-CARTHER
Romancer reviewer: India Hicks, jewelry designer and founding member of Casa Tua Why Casa Tua: “The feeling of being removed from the hustle and bustle of South Beach, a hidden oasis behind a wall of green, a garden filled with candles and lanterns, fresh flowers, and starched white linen—what could be more romantic? The food and taste and flavor are completely European, which is often a challenge to achieve authentically in Miami. [My ideal romantic evening is] to be with my other half, David, at a small table in the upstairs bar having a cozy dinner with Miky and Leticia [Grendene], the owners and dear friends. At the end of the evening, there’s always a dessert, a plate of mini assorted Italian pastries and biscuits to be dipped into a sweet wine, or the cold zabaglione, with mascarpone cheese, rum flavor, and mixed berries. On a special night, I get a Bellini—fresh peach juice and Champagne.” 1700 James Ave., Miami Beach, 305-673-1010; casatualifestyle.com
SINGLES SCENE: Radio Bar Romancer reviewer: Teddy Collins, the “very happily with a girlfriend” bartender at Radio Bar Why Radio Bar: “Everybody leaves their egos at the door when they come in. Patrons make eye contact across the bar; I’ll feel the energy and flip a couple of shots. Guys are pretty polite about it and will be like, ‘Whatever that girl wants or needs or is drinking, fill it up, tell her it’s on me.’ Our drink menu is progressive. For February, I love avocado margaritas —avocado is an aphrodisiac. I like to use reposado tequila. It’s aged, so it has a nice barrelflavored, spicy taste. I muddle a half of an avocado, and I put in Chartreuse, which is an Italian liquor dating back to the monks. It’s a little bit creamy because the avocado has a nice silky texture. I also do a sugar, salt, and cayenne-pepper rim to get a sweet and spicy taste.” 814 First St., Miami Beach, 305-397-8382; radiosouthbeach.com continued on page 180
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PHOTOGRAPHY BY GESI SCHILLING (CECCONI’S); CHARLIE GARCIA (RADIO BAR); CAROLINA DEL RIVERO (SCALLOPS)
TIMELESS TREASURE: Casa Tua
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rich is always a good thing
ÂŽ
layer cake wines...just that and more.
handmade in:
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For sales and distribution information visit vintagepoint.com Š2013 One True Vine, LLC. Facebook: LayerCakeWine LayerCakeWines.com Twitter: LayerCakeWine
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FLAVOR OF THE MONTH
The tiramisu at Casa Tua; Smith & Wollensky at sunset; close encounters at the Whole Foods hot bar.
continued from page 178
FEELS LIKE THE FIRST TIME: The Setai Bar and Cecconi’s at Soho Beach House Romancer reviewer: William Garcia, concierge at the Delano Why The Setai and Cecconi’s: “For a first date, I would start at The Setai, having drinks at the bar. That courtyard in the back is one of the most romantic places here. They have a jalapeño-infused passion drink [the Chili Passion martini] that I like a lot. It’s busy but it’s not crazy, so you can actually have a conversation. And then, I would go to Cecconi’s. The setting is spectacular. It has an open-air courtyard, the lights in the trees, the mason jars hanging from the pergola on the roof. On a first date, keep it light. They have an amazing octopus. Oysters, especially because they’re an aphrodisiac, are a great choice. For the main courses, they have a branzino with cherry tomatoes and olives, which is excellent. A couple of glasses of rosé would be great with the appetizers. They have a really good Albariño wine that goes well with the seafood. It’s a very crisp white wine that I love. It’s such an elegant, laid-back, and relaxed place, you feel very at ease when you’re there.” The Setai Bar, 2001 Collins Ave., Miami Beach, 305-520-6400; thesetai hotel.com; Cecconi’s, 4385 Collins Ave., Miami Beach, 786-507-7902; cecconismiamibeach.com
a bottle of Champagne, outside. Everyone is super friendly. It’s not fussy, it’s not pretentious, which is what I like about it—it’s not so much ‘scene.’ If you’re going to connect with someone, you want an environment that’s conducive to just it being about you guys. Being outside on the water, great seafood, a great bottle of Champagne, and then maybe the beach afterward, it’s truly romantic. The location is just NATHALIE CADET-JAMES as important as the actual food. I recommend it to clients and friends.” 1 Washington Ave., at South Pointe Park, Miami Beach, 305-673-2800; smithandwollensky.com
“The location is just as important as the actual food.” —
FIRE RESTARTER: Smith & Wollensky Romancer reviewer: Nathalie Cadet-James, CEO and president of wedding/party-planning company Luxe Fête Event Planning and Design Studio Why Smith & Wollensky: “To rekindle romance, Smith & Wollensky on a Sunday at sunset is really a great place. I recommend the Charlie Smith [platter] with its seafood items like lobster, big shrimp, oysters, and clams. That and
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CRUISING CORNER: Whole Foods Market in South Beach Romancer reviewer: Zac Courtney, partner at digital creative agency DeepSleep Studio and cofounder of Teal Blue Management Why Whole Foods: “At Whole Foods, you’re going to find the health-conscientious girl who’s taking care of herself. My friends and I have posted up at the standing bar in front of the registers. We’ve spent a Sunday afternoon there pulling prosecco bottles from the refrigerated area and picking up sushi or the hot bites that are ready-made. My favorite snack is the Miami Beach/Lido Beach club sandwich, one of the ready-made hot sandwiches: turkey, Brie, and tomato pesto. We put an iPhone in a cup and play music, and eat and drink at the Whole Foods and just people-watch—check everybody out as they’re checking out.” 1020 Alton Road, Miami Beach, 305-938-2800; wholefoodsmarket.com OD
PHOTOGRAPHY BY CAROLINA DEL RIVERO (TIRAMISU); WHOLE FOODS MARKET-SOUTH BEACH (WHOLE FOODS)
CLOCKWISE FROM TOP LEFT:
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DISCOVER THE LUXURY OF BEING YOURSELF. A uniquely modern, oceanfront residence that honors who you are while connecting you with Fort Lauderdale’s vibrant local culture. From surf to service, Conrad Fort Lauderdale Beach Residences are the resort-style living experience you’ve been expecting, with a lifestyle concept as dynamic as you are. Studio, One, Two and Three-Bedrooms From $500,000
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ORAL REPRESENTATIONS CANNOT BE RELIED UPON AS CORRECTLY STATING REPRESENTATION OF THE DEVELOPER. FOR CORRECT REPRESENTATIONS, MAKE REFERENCE TO THIS BROCHURE AND TO THE DOCUMENTS REQUIRED BY SECTION 718.503, FLORIDA STATUTES, TO BE FURNISHED BY DEVELOPER TO A BUYER OR LESSEE. THE PROPERTIES OR INTEREST DESCRIBED HEREIN ARE NOT REGISTERED WITH THE GOVERNMENTS OF ANY STATE OUTSIDE OF THE STATE OF FLORIDA. THIS ADVERTISEMENT DOES NOT CONSTITUTE AN OFFER TO ANY RESIDENTS OF NJ, CT. HI, ID, IL, OR ANY OTHER JURISDICTION WHERE PROHIBITED, UNLESS THE PROPERTY HAS BEEN REGISTERED OR EXEMPTIONS ARE AVAILABLE.
For Reservations: 954.302.7468 ConradFortLauderdaleBeachResidences.com 551 North Fort Lauderdale Beach Boulevard Fort Lauderdale, Florida USA
CONRAD® IS A REGISTERED TRADEMARK OF HLT CONRAD IP, LLC, AN AFFILIATE OF HILTON WORLDWIDE INC. (“HILTON”). THE RESIDENCES ARE NOT OWNED, DEVELOPED, OR SOLD BY HILTON AND HILTON DOES NOT MAKE ANY REPRESENTATIONS, WARRANTIES OR GUARANTIES WHATSOEVER WITH RESPECT TO THE RESIDENCES. THE DEVELOPER USES THE CONRAD® BRAND NAME AND CERTAIN CONRAD TRADEMARKS (THE “TRADEMARKS”) UNDER A LIMITED, NON-EXCLUSIVE, NON-TRANSFERABLE LICENSE FROM HILTON. THE LICENSE MAY BE TERMINATED OR MAY EXPIRE WITHOUT RENEWAL, IN WHICH CASE THE RESIDENCES WILL NOT BE IDENTIFIED AS A CONRAD BRANDED PROJECT OR HAVE ANY RIGHTS TO USE THE TRADEMARKS.
WHICH CASE THE RESIDENCES WILL NOT BE IDENTIFIED AS A CONRAD BRANDED PROJECT OR HAVE ANY RIGHTS TO USE THE TRADEMARKS. A LIMITED, NON-EXCLUSIVE, NON-TRANSFERABLE LICENSE FROM HILTON. THE LICENSE MAY BE TERMINATED OR MAY EXPIRE WITHOUT RENEWAL, IN UNDER OWNED, DEVELOPED, OR SOLD BY HILTON AND HILTON DOES NOT MAKE ANY REPRESENTATIONS, WARRANTIES OR GUARANTIES WHATSOEVER WITH
CONR 2178 Ocean Drive 10x12 2.14
TO THE RESIDENCES. THE DEVELOPER USES THE CONRAD® BRAND NAME AND CERTAIN CONRAD TRADEMARKS (THE “TRADEMARKS”) 49733.indd RESPECT 1
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FLAVOR OF THE MONTH A glass of bubbly is no longer reserved just for special occasions.
Bubbling Up THE CONNOTATION OF CHAMPAGNE IS CHANGING, PARTICULARLY IN MIAMI, WHERE EUROPEANS KNOW HOW TO MAKE EVERY DAY A CELEBRATION. BY BIANA DEMARCO
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PHOTOGRAPHY BY JEFF CRAWFORD
T
he adage “when in Rome” usually applies to travel, but since Miami is such a melting pot, with cultural norms blending from all over the globe, you get to pick and choose your traditions. Maybe that’s the subtext for our love of Champagne—we follow the lead of the French, who, amazingly, consumed a whopping 175 million bottles in 2012, as compared to the US’s 18 million, according to the Comité Interprofessionnel du Vin de Champagne (CIVC). Even as US consumption has been on the rise for the past four years, the gap lies in a difference of mentality, says Enguerrand Baijot, managing director at Lanson International Americas. “Americans reserve Champagne for special occasions, whereas the French don’t need a special reason to celebrate life. It can be every day.” Of course, we all know Miami may be the most eclectic of our nation’s cities, and with our ethnic mix, an array of international cuisines, and a backdrop that appeals to all senses, life is one big celebration with or without the bride, championship trophy, or diploma. Here, the Champagne tide is definitely starting to turn. More restaurants are serving better bubbly in wine glasses than ever before, allowing it room to open up and offer bouquet. Mixologists use it to add life and effervescence to cocktails, and companies like Moët & Chandon with its Moët & Chandon Imperial encourage us to drink it poolside over ice. “Americans are discovering that Champagne has a place at the table yearround, and can be enjoyed throughout the entire meal,” says Donae Burston, regional marketing director at Moët & Chandon. According to Jennifer Wagoner, the head sommelier at Zuma (270 Biscayne Blvd. Way, Miami, 305-577-0277), this is precisely why Champagne is being enjoyed so much more here. “It is all about the climate and the atmosphere.” At any given time, this waterfront restaurant with its light, delicate food and sun-kissed terrace can be transformed into the perfect getaway for a cool glass of bubbly and a savory bite. Another Champagne-intensive locale is the SLS Hotel South Beach (1701 Collins Ave., Miami Beach, 305-674-1701), where venues such as Bar Centro, Hyde Beach, Katsuya, and The Bazaar by José Andrés offer a landscape whose “high energy plays right into Champagne consumption,” says Lucas Paya, wine director at The Bazaar. Katsuya’s sushi pairs with a glass of Lanson Black Label Brut NV, while at The Bazaar, the French 75.2 cocktail blends sparking wine with Le Grand Saint sparkling vodka. Turn in any direction at the SLS, and you’ll find a lot going on. The frivolity and lightness of Champagne make perfect sense. OD
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SOUTH MIAMI - U.S. 1 & 73RD STREET - 305.341.0092 | PEMBROKE PINES - THE SHOPS AT PEMBROKE GARDENS - 954.342.5454 PALM BEACH GARDENS - DOWNTOWN AT THE GARDENS - 561.340.2112 | RASUSHI.COM
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THE DISH
Nouveau Shabu Shabu AT THE FONTAINEBLEAU’S NEW MINA 74, MICHAEL MINA CLEVERLY BREAKS THE RULES, ADDING SHAPE AND LUXE FLAVOR TO SHABU SHABU. BY BILL KEARNEY
I
At the new Mina 74 at the Fontainebleau Miami Beach, shabu shabu is transformed into refined comfort food.
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PHOTOGRAPHY BY GESI SCHILLING
f you’ve previously experienced shabu shabu (translated from Japanese as “swish swish”), you know it’s fun: dipping thinly sliced raw beef into a tasty heated broth at the table, then slurping the barely cooked beef down with whatever vegetables you’ve tossed in. Michael Mina, the creative force behind a 19-restaurant empire, which now includes Mina 74 at the Fontainebleau Miami Beach, describes his new spot, in the former Arkadia space, as a “modern-day supper club bistro” continued on page 186
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THE DISH
CLOCKWISE FROM LEFT: Michael Mina carefully wraps the beef around daikon radish sprouts and enoki mushrooms; a seasoned roll; aromatic elements add sweetness and spice.
“Wagyu rib eye has that nice, strong flavor, so it holds up well.” —MICHAEL MINA
Next-Level Elements Traditionally, the dish is served with a light dashi broth made with kombu seaweed and dried fish flakes, but Mina, who frequently sojourns to Japan, says, “We pushed up the flavor. We add a little bit of aromatics to it—mirin for sweetness and ginger for spice—and it offsets the wagyu beef really well.” He opts for rib eye from Japanese wagyu for its richness. “It’s super marbleized, really tender, but rib eye has that nice, strong flavor, so it holds up well [to the other elements].” Mina chills the beef until it’s really cold to keep it firm while slicing, and takes care to not let the slicer blade get warm and melt the fat.
A Novel Step Unlike traditional shabu shabu, which usually has a pile of sliced meat on the plate, Mina wraps the beef around delicate daikon radish sprouts and slender enoki mushrooms, making neat two-inch rolls to drop into the broth. He plates the rolls with watermelon radish slivers and shishito peppers (which you are also to drop in the broth), sprinkles everything with bonito flakes and sea salt, and puts the flaming pot of dashi broth in the middle.
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At the Table As for the swish, Mina recommends letting the roll sit in the broth for 30 to 60 seconds. “You could eat this raw, but I prefer Japanese beef closer to medium. It breaks down the fats a little bit when you cook it a little further. You’ll start to get a lot more flavor out of the meat.” But it is when you pluck the roll out of the steaming broth, dab it in a white miso dipping sauce, and take a bite that you realize the smarts of Mina’s roll architecture. The mushrooms and sprouts retain broth in their strands, adding savory layers and buoyant texture under the tender meat. As the structure breaks down and everything mingles, you get different intensities of savory, subtle spice, and umami flavor, while the sweet tang of the white miso draws out the buttery nature of the beef.
Finishing Touch “When you’re done, you have this broth that’s flavored by the wagyu, and you drink the broth,” says Mina. Chase it down with a malty sweet Rogue Dead Guy ale, the restaurant’s pairing of choice, and you’ll be glad Mina has a habit of coloring outside the lines. Fontainebleau Miami Beach, 4441 Collins Ave., Miami Beach, 305-674-4636; michaelmina.net OD
PHOTOGRAPHY BY GESI SCHILLING
continued from page 184 with a playfully global menu, giving him permission to color outside the lines. He fittingly does some rather delicious tinkering with his version of shabu shabu.
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ON THE TOWN
Scott Conant puts the finishing touches on his famous spaghetti.
Trials by Fire
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WORLD-RENOWNED CHEF SCOTT CONANT VISITS FRIENDS FROM THE CULINARY TRENCHES AND TUNES UP THE TEAM AT SCARPETTA FOR A BIG NIGHT. WE JOINED HIM FOR THE RIDE. BY BILL KEARNEY
Scott Conant, the culinary mind and TV star chef behind a six-restaurant empire, including five Scarpettas, and author of the recent The Scarpetta Cookbook, dodges the Alton Road construction and saunters into the calm of Macchialina. He’s decked out in a tailored Zegna sport coat, a dress shirt whose rather large collar stays magically upright, and a smile. Though the restaurant’s closed, he’s here for lunch with the owners, chef Mike Pirolo and his wife, Jen Chaefsky, along with Top Chef contestant and chef de cuisine at Scarpetta Nina Compton, and Director of Operations Chris Cuomo. Last night this crew reveled late at The Bazaar by José Andrés, and while none are quite bushy-tailed yet, the razzing begins, just like old times; Pirolo was Conant’s chef de cuisine at Scarpetta New York and here in Miami for four years before he stepped out on his own to launch Macchialina. “When you work in a kitchen, you need to have a thick skin,” says Conant. “Someone is always the butt of someone’s jokes, so normally it’s Mike.” The crew laughs. “There’s no crying in cooking,” says Pirolo. continued on page 190
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PHOTOGRAPHY BY KARYN R. MILLET
1 PM—Macchialina Taverna Rustica
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has some coaching to do in the kitchen. He peruses the line in cowboy boots, jeans, and chef whites. Young line cooks gather around as he delicately drizzles chili oil and shaves almonds on top of the snapper crudo dish. He tastes the citrus dressing, has chef Compton taste it; it needs more lemon. As he tours the kitchen, he speaks softly to each station cook: The pumpkin pot de crème has a smidge 4 PM—Scarpetta kitchen, too much sweetness via the amount of cinnamon Fontainebleau Miami Beach In honor of the release of The Scarpetta Cookbook, froth; the water for boiling pasta is too salty and the restaurant is holding a book signing and private might alter the flavor of the mushroom sauce. He dinner for 200, consisting of recipes from the book. moves with a careful, quiet grace when crafting Most of the dishes are from other Scarpetta restau- food—a contrast to his big, jovial front-of-the-house rants and not normally served in Miami, so Conant self. The staff hover around again as a sous chef preps the scallop dish. Conant watches initially, then Conant listens to feedback jumps in, gently pinching the on Scarpetta’s cuisine from appreciative customers at scallops first so they stand up the book signing. straight and sear on a flat surface. After searing, a crucial detail: Always work the scallop juice from the pan back into the sunchoke sauce. Don’t let it get too thick, and pour it between the cheeks of the two scallops. The staff chuckles at what might or
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FROM TOP: Conant (RIGHT) shares a toast
with Chris Cuomo, Jen Chaefsky, Mike Pirolo, and Nina Compton before digging into bowls of cacciucco at Macchialina Taverna Rustica; drizzling chili oil on his snapper crudo dish as the kitchen staff study his presentation.
might not be innuendo. He chides them for having dirty minds. They indeed like this guy. Therapy’s working.
7 PM—Scarpetta dining room He’s signed 50 or so books, then works the room, shaking hands, nodding thanks to patrons as they swoon over his food. Then there’s the meet-and-greet with a table of Fontainebleau execs, photos with patrons. He’s gesticulating to a two-top, he’s dragged away by a server for a birthday photo with another table, there’s a giddy fan at the bar. Conant is, after all, a brand. “I realized a long time ago that the marketing aspect of all this stuff is really important, and I also learned that you may never trust anyone to tell your story. This is an extension of myself. No one is going to be able to nurture this story or talk about this as passionately as I can.” There’s a pause in hellos and smiles. Food runners hustle through the kitchen doors, carrying his dishes. “You know the kitchen is like a sanctuary when the floor gets to be too much,” he says, and with that, walks through the double doors, shares a smile with Compton, and adds garnishes to a crudo plate that had a little too much negative space. OD
PHOTOGRAPHY BY BILL KEARNEY
continued from page 188 We sit down at a long, rustic table, and Macchialina’s sous chef delivers two massive bowls of cacciucco, a resplendent Italian seafood stew with bay scallops, baby calamari, seared hog snapper, grouper, mussels, clams, big prawns, and a crusty bread for dipping. It’s utterly delicious. “This is beautiful, brother,” yells Conant to the sous chef. Pirolo smiles with pride. What’s it like for Conant when someone leaves his kitchen, as Pirolo did, to create his own restaurant? “What I say to everybody is, ‘There comes a time,’” says Conant. “You can be miserable that this person is leaving you, or you can embrace it, support them, and hope that you can fit someone into this role that’s even better.” He nods to Compton for effect, and the table busts out laughing again. This kitchen fraternity, earned through the frenetic maelstrom of restaurant rushes, long hours, and a beer at the end of a shift, is enviable in a world where lots of professions involve mostly gazing at a computer monitor. Conant fell for the food game at age 15. “I walked into a kitchen for the first time—I was a dishwasher—and I absolutely loved what I found. I played a lot of baseball as a kid, and that camaraderie, that sense of team, really excited me.” And what about the love of actually cooking? “When I realized I liked making people happy with this stuff, it was after years of therapy. It was such a deep insecurity trying to please people all the time—you want them to like you. I started to embrace that and direct it into a hospitality company in general. You’ve got to let go. I want to be enjoyable to be around.” “He’s still working on that one,” adds Pirolo.
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© 2014 Douglas Elliman Real Estate. All material presented herein is intended for information purposes only. While, this information is believed to be correct, it is represented subject to errors, omissions, changes or withdrawal without notice. All property information, including, but not limited to square footage, room count, number of bedrooms and the school district in property listings are deemed reliable, but should be verified by your own attorney, architect or zoning expert. Equal Housing Opportunity.
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MAJESTIC OCEANFRONT PENTHOUSE 3200 N Ocean Boulevard, PH-2 | Ft. Lauderdale | $6,500,000 | The largest penthouse at L’Hermitage! This magnificent residence has 6 terraces offering superb ocean, city & Intracoastal views. The residence also features floor-to-ceiling impact glass doors and windows, 5 beds, 5.5 baths, family room, den and a completely private master suite with his & her baths, 3 walk-in closets and office. Five-star condo. 7,167 Int. SF / 8,516 Tot. SF
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2110 N Ocean Boulevard, PH-30A | Ft. Lauderdale $4,950,000 | Private 30th floor residence. 8 terraces offer stunning 360° views, many upgrades, 4 beds + den & 3.5 baths. Five-star condo. 4,738 Int. SF / 5,742 Tot. SF
146 Nurmi Drive | Ft. Lauderdale | $4,450,000 | Elegant single-family home w/ 115 feet of deep water frontage. Two-story, 4 beds & 4.5 baths, pool, spa, gazebo, 3 car garage. 6,021 SF on 0.32 Acre Lot
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5152 Fisher Island Drive | Fisher Island | $2,950,000 Fantastic condo, minutes from South Beach. Large terrace with stunning bay and downtown Miami views. 3 beds & 3.5 baths. 2,750 Tot. SF
2110 N Ocean Boulevard, PH-27D | Ft. Lauderdale $2,495,000 | Fully furnished penthouse w/ many custom additions. Ocean, city & Intracoastal views. 3 beds & 5.5 baths. Five-star condo. 4,112 Int. SF / 4,504 Tot. SF
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PRESENTING OUR WATERFRONT LISTINGS Š 2014 Douglas Elliman Real Estate. All material presented herein is intended for information purposes only. While, this information is believed to be correct, it is represented subject to errors, omissions, changes or withdrawal without notice. All property information, including, but not limited to square footage, room count, number of bedrooms and the school district in property listings are deemed reliable, but should be verified by your own attorney, architect or zoning expert. Equal Housing Opportunity.
FISHER ISLAND OCEANSIDE PENTHOUSE
7972 Fisher Island Drive, Apt. 7972 | Miami Beach | $8,900,000 | 5 bedrooms, 4 baths, 2 half baths. 6,170 sf. Web# A1759870
PINETREE ESTATE 5415 Pinetree Drive | Miami Beach | $5,995,000 6 bedrooms, 6.5 baths. 6,800 sf. Web# A1878503
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300 South Pointe Drive, LP4004 | Miami Beach | $5,400,000 4 bedrooms, 4.5 baths. 4,100 sf. Web# A1728132
5255 Collins Avenue, PHA | Miami Beach | $2,749,000 3 bedrooms, 4.5 baths. 3,800 sf. Web# A1827990
ICON SOUTH BEACH TWO BEDROOM RESIDENCE LA RIVE RESIDENCE FT. LAUDERDALE 450 Alton Road, Apt. 1507 | Miami Beach | $2,295,000 2 bedrooms, 2.5 baths. 1,815 sf. Web# A1877423
715 Bayshore Drive, 701 | Ft. Lauderdale | $1,395,000 2 bedrooms, 3.5 baths. 3,083 sf. Web# A1884786
OCEAN PLACE OCEANFRONT RESIDENCE 226 Ocean Drive, Apt. 5-D | Miami Beach | $849,000 2 bedrooms, 2 baths. 1,000 sf. Web# A1862057
Pietro Belmonte has launched, marketed and sold the most prominent residential developments and properties for over twenty years. As a long-time Miami resident, Pietro knows Miami. He knows the market. Pietro and his Team are ready to help you maximize your next real estate transaction. Contact us to learn more about our full-service real estate team.
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MIAMI’S FINEST RESIDENCE
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2535 Shelter Avenue | Miami Beach | $2,390,000 5,022 sf; 6 bedroom, 6 bathroom with guest house; Two-story; 12,000 sf lot.
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ASKELLIMAN.COM © 2014 Douglas Elliman Real Estate. All material presented herein is intended for information purposes only. While, this information is believed to be correct, it is represented subject to errors, omissions, changes or withdrawal without notice. All property information, including, but not limited to square footage, room count, number of bedrooms and the school district in property listings are deemed reliable, but should be verified by your own attorney, architect or zoning expert. Equal Housing Opportunity.
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SUPERMODEL ANNE V SHOWCASES HIGH-OCTANE SPRING FASHION WHILE REFLECTING ON MODELING, CHARITY, AND THOSE PESKY PAPARAZZI CAMERAS.
DREAM come true
PHOTOGRAPHY BY TK; ILLUSTRATION BY TK
BY JARED SHAPIRO | PHOTOGPRAHY BY RANDALL SLAVIN
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Navy bustier top, Jason Wu ($2,195). Saks Fifth Avenue, Bal Harbour Shops, 9700 Collins Ave., 305-8651100; saks.com. Onyx paper leather micro shorts, Kaufmanfranco ($695). Saks Fifth Avenue, Bal Harbour Shops, SEE ABOVE. Lobo earrings, Ca & Lou ($390). Saks Fifth Avenue, 5800 Glades Road, Boca Raton, 561-393-9100; saks.com. Necklace, Lele Sadoughi ($298). Beach Boutique, 1701 Sunset Harbour Dr., Miami Beach, 305-5318908; lelesadoughi.com. Pave platinum cuff, Fallon ($175). Barneys New York, 832 Collins Ave., Miami Beach, 305-421-2010; barneys.com. Booties, Blumarine (price on request). blumarine.com White Star trunk in Spitfire, Timothy Oulton ($900). ABC Home & Carpet
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Born in Russia, in the city of Nizhny Novgorod, the tall and lanky Anne Vyalitsyna never dreamed of being a supermodel. Well, that’s not true. She dreamed of it, but certainly never thought it would actually happen. But within six months of being discovered at 15, “Anne V” appeared in campaigns from Chloé to Chanel; a nine-year consecutive run in the coveted Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Issue followed. Now as a new host and mentor on Oxygen’s The Face (season two premieres in March) alongside Naomi Campbell, she’ll search for the newest face of Frédéric Fekkai. What was it like growing up in Russia? I come from a very normal family—both of my parents are doctors. But in Russia, doctors and teachers are the lowest-paid professions. So we never traveled; we didn’t have much money. But I always wanted to be a model. How did the modeling dream start? It was one of those dreams I never thought would come true. Every kid has an unrealistic goal like, “I’m going to be an astronaut,” but no one becomes one. I know it sounds so clichéd, but I never thought I was pretty. I was the tallest in my class and very skinny, and no boys liked me. But you persisted. I was at a casting at IMG, and they asked me to do a modeling contest. I had never done anything. And the only way my mom would let me do it was if she came with me. It was my first time on a plane, and I didn’t speak any English. It was also my first time in a five-star hotel, so I was just psyched I was somewhere else. My mom met all the models; Gisele was part of the show, Heidi Klum…. She was like, “This is actually not so bad!” Did you want to leave Russia at this point? Russia is amazing during the summer. It’s warm and green, with so many fields and rivers. It’s stunning. But Russia during the winter is the most depressing place ever. Now I’m living an American dream. I just became an American citizen, and I feel like America is my home now. What are some of the downsides to modeling? For the young girls, it’s an industry that makes you not very confident. You’ll hear things like, “Not pretty enough.” “Too fat.” “Too skinny.” “Your nose is too big.” I learned how to deal with it, but I’m 27 years old and I know how hard it was when I was 18 years old to deal with those things. I was a child. But today, do you recognize that you are pretty? I’ve been modeling for 12 years and I can do it with my eyes closed. I know I’m pretty. But
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Jacket, Fausto Puglisi (price on request). Similar styles at Coltorti, 1113 Lincoln Road, Miami Beach, 786-517-1330; coltortimiami.com
there are a lot of things that I don’t like about myself. I wish I wasn’t this white. I never get tan. I wish I could eat everything and not put on weight. Sometimes I wish I didn’t have freckles. What about dating in the spotlight [Vyalitsyna is currently dating baseball star Matt Harvey and previously had a high-profile romance with rocker Adam Levine]? Honestly, it sucks, but it is what it is. People don’t really realize that at the end of the day we all want to be loved. We all want to have normal families and relationships and kids. No one wants to get divorced and have someone create stupid dramas and articles about your relationship. Did you ever struggle with modeling? Body issues, eating disorders? When I was 18, I put on a lot of weight because I was eating pizza and pasta, and I didn’t know how to handle it. I never ate salads in Russia; we didn’t have salads. The only salads we had were with tons of mayo in them. It was really hard, and I’ve battled with it for many years. Let’s talk about The Face. What makes the perfect supermodel? You have to see beyond the beauty and beyond the height. If everyone knew how to become Gisele and Kate Moss, then everyone would be taking that path. There is no manual for the making of a supermodel. But no mean girls last a long time. Speaking of… models… what was it like working with Naomi Campbell? She’s awesome. It was quite an experience, because she is one of my idols. We would fight a lot, but we were all one big, happy family. I was mentoring girls, but in a way I was getting mentored by Naomi, too. In the end, what is important to you? I work with the charity called Red, which deals with mothers transferring HIV to their babies, and we went to Zambia in June—and really for the first time in my life, I realized that even though I’m not technically saving lives or donating millions of dollars and I’m not a doctor or a teacher, I have this opportunity that people see my face and know who I am. I have this opportunity to help, in this case my charity. When you come to this realization that you can use your success and fame to do something in the world, I think that’s a really fantastic thing. OD
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“I KNOW IT SOUNDS SO CLICHÉD, BUT I NEVER THOUGHT I WAS PRETTY.”
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Top ($1,895) and silk pants ($1,300), Blumarine. blumarine.com. Choker necklace in jet, Atelier Swarovski by Juan Carlos Obando ($405). atelierswarovski.com. Crystal necklace, Atelier Swarovski ($995). 734 Lincoln Road, Miami Beach, 305-538-4877; atelierswarovski.com. Delano rhodium large three-stone deco hinge bracelet, Alexis Bittar ($495). alexisbittar.com
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Beco Jade embroidered shrunken biker jacket, Erdem ($9,990). Neiman Marcus, Village of Merrick Park, 390 San Lorenzo Ave., Coral Gables, 786-999-1100; neiman marcus.com. Bilevel paillette dress, Ralph Rucci ($8,450). Neiman Marcus, Bal Harbour Shops, 9700 Collins Ave., 305-865-6161; neimanmarcus .com. Visco booties, Walter Steiger ($995). By special order, 212-826-7171
PHOTOGRAPHY BY TK; ILLUSTRATION BY TK
Silver Origin log table ($695). ABC Carpet & Home
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Embroidered mosaic high-neck cocktail minidress, Tom Ford (price on request). By special order, 212-359-0300
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Top, Sally LaPointe ($1,195). By special order, Bergdorf Goodman, 212-753-7300; bergdorfgoodman .com. Metallic lattice embroidered pencil skirt, Wes Gordon ($6,990). shopbop.com. Brief, American Apparel ($27). 720 Lincoln Road, Miami Beach, 305-672-1799; americanapparel.net. Pavo nova large dangling earrings in moonlight, Alexis Bittar ($475). alexisbittar.com. Skinny curved bar ring in rose-gold vermeil, Bijules ($290). bijulesnyc .com. Open-toe booties, Giuseppe Zanotti Design ($1,250). Bal Harbour Shops, 9700 Collins Ave., 305-8680133; giuseppezanottidesign.com
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Styling by Taryn Shumway Hair by Bryce Scarlett at De Facto using Bumble and bumble Makeup by Quinn Murphy for Chanel at Art Department Manicure by Julie Kandalec using Dior Vernis
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How Did We Get So Damn
DELICIO The food scene in Miami is skyrocketing as globally famed chefs line up to launch eateries here. But that wasn’t always the case. OD explores the backstory that brought us to this point, and sits down with the big names who will be coming to dinner this year. By Lee Klein | Chef profiles by Lee Brian Schrager
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CHEF: MASAHARU MORIMOTO RESTAURANT: MORIMOTO SOUTH BEACH nown simply as Morimoto, this Iron Chef has been at the forefront of Asian-fusion cuisine ever since he burst onto the culinary scene in 1994 as the original executive chef at Nobu. His restaurants, which include Morimoto outposts in Philadelphia, New York, Napa, Honolulu, and Mexico City, have garnered critical acclaim and accolades from the James Beard Foundation. Morimoto South Beach, set inside the revamped Shelborne Hotel, proffers an ingenious mix of Western and Japanese ingredients coupled with a playful use of colors, aromas, and textures. What is the most challenging dish you’ve ever made? The one I made for Ferran Adrià when he came to my restaurant in New York City. I knew he wouldn’t be impressed with any fancy food. I came up with an idea: It was a fall season, so I ran to a nearby park, picked gingko nuts, roasted them in a small pan, and served them with a little salt. I explained to him that I picked those gingko nuts in a park for him. He smiled and ate the dish happily. I realized that the greatest ingredient was a sense of hospitality. What other culinary scenes excite you? I am really interested in Vietnamese food and culture. A typical Vietnamese meal is a bit similar to Japanese: rice, a soup, and a main dish. The Vietnamese also use soy sauce, miso paste, and tofu. What is the ingredient used most often in your kitchen? Rice. Rice is the core ingredient for all Japanese dishes. In my restaurants, we buy two different kinds of brown rice and polish them with a rice-milling machine on-site. This way we can retain moisture and serve tasty rice. For sushi in particular, it is extremely important—bad rice ruins sushi.
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f you ask Susan Brustman, Miami’s dominant culinary publicist, what her favorite Miami restaurant was when she first moved here in 1978, she’ll laugh and say, “I used to fly back to New York to eat.” Eight years later, as Brustman tells it, “A friend of mine said, ‘Susan, South Beach is the hippest place Miami has ever had. All it takes is one hip restaurateur to turn it around.’ I said, ‘Send him to me,’ and he sent me Gary Farmer.” Farmer, now cultural affairs program manager of the City of Miami Beach, debuted The Strand restaurant in 1987 on a forlorn stretch of Washington Avenue. The likes of Mickey Rourke, Lauren Hutton, and Julian Schnabel showed up, and national publications such as Vogue took notice. “The opening was hosted by Interview magazine,” recalls Brustman. “Edward Albee was there, and celebrities were coming every weekend. It created a buzz that accelerated everything.” And so began a series of dramatic leaps that have brought us to the brink of being a world-class food city. Like a soufflé, our rise has been slow and exquisite. Today, global culinary deities migrate here, and
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“Miami’s restaurant scene is focusing more on great food experiences, and that’s what we’re here to do: offer the city a great option for modern Italian cuisine.” —TONY MANTUANO
homegrown talents redefine where and what to eat. But there were certainly some twists and turns along the way. Back in the ’80s, tourists flocked to signature institutions such as The Forge and Joe’s Stone Crab, but something else was afoot, as South Florida’s abundant seafood and fruits began to inform a new generation of chefs. Allen Susser at Chef Allen’s, Dewey LoSasso at The Foundlings Club, Mark Militello at Mark’s Place, Norman Van Aken at a Mano, and Douglas Rodriguez at groundbreaking Yuca in Coral Gables were all making names for themselves. Brustman swears that “the ceviches and some of the seafood crudos that Doug [Rodriguez] was doing were ahead of Nobu.” Each of these young toques put his own spin on South Florida cuisine—New World, Floribbean, Nuevo Latino, and so forth. And with their penchant for tropical fruits, they were dubbed “the mango gang.”
A CHEF: TONY MANTUANO RESTAURANT: LORENZO ames Beard Award winner and Bravo’s Top Chef Masters season-two champion chef Tony Mantuano has Michelin-starred training, is a Food & Wine Best New Chef, and partner of Spiaggia, the only four-star Italian restaurant in Chicago. Now he mixes a dash of casual with a pinch of elegance on Collins Avenue with Lorenzo, the new Italian hot spot inside The Redbury South Beach. Does this particular menu put a Miami twist on your signature cuisine? If so, how? We get to have a lot of fun with the ingredients and products available to us in Florida. Our gnocchi with wild boar ragu is one of our most popular dishes at Cafe Spiaggia (in Chicago), and here we’ve been able to use Florida wild boar. The fresh fish, like wholeroasted pompano, swordfish, etc., is really exciting stuff. We also find little touches to speak to the area, such as in our cannoli filling—we’re using dried papaya—or in our gelatos and sorbet with some more fun tropical fruits. What is your favorite Miami restaurant/hot spot and why? Right before we opened Lorenzo, we dined at The Cypress Room, and that was awesome. The cooking was solid; the service was great. Everything about it, I liked. Did you have any particular mentors or inspirations when first starting out? Are there any local chefs whom you admire? When I first started Spiaggia, I went to Italy to train at some fantastic Michelin-starred kitchens. One was Dal Pescatore under the three-Michelin-starred Nadia Santini. I’ve learned a lot from her and try to send all of my chefs to stage with her.
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merican media latched on, and by 1991, a Food Arts magazine cover story tagged South Beach as “the country’s hottest restaurant row.” In reality, South Beach’s social scene was spicier than its cuisine, complete with giant frozen margaritas with a dozen straws. A roster of New York eateries briefly opened, then folded. “They thought you could open a restaurant with the same name as New York and people would just come,” says China Grill’s Jeffrey Chodorow. “They didn’t realize you had to deliver on the product.” Local chefs fared better and began to lay the groundwork for the scene today. Kerry Simon dazzled at Blue Star Café in the remodeled Raleigh Hotel, then Max’s South Beach in tandem with trending restaurateur Dennis Max. Jonathan Eismann’s Pacific Time on then-sleepy Lincoln Road was attracting attention for Pacific Rim dishes such as steamed halibut with coriander and lemongrass. David Tornek and chef Sean Brasel advanced the restaurant/lounge scene with Touch, then Kiss (they would eventually find their groove years later at Meat Market). And a couple of unknowns, Myles Chefetz and Michael Schwartz, became trailblazers in the funky South of Fifth neighborhood with their urbane and urban Nemo. 1995 was a watershed year: Johnny Vinczencz, “the Caribbean Cowboy,” inspired diners at the oh-so-trendy Hotel Astor, and Norman Van Aken’s eponymous restaurant in Coral Gables wowed with decadent dishes such as “Down Island” French toast with foie gras. But perhaps more pivotal was the arrival of two venues that created
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scenes: Jeffrey Chodorow’s China Grill and Ian Schrager’s Delano Hotel. Chodorow knew the lay of the land: The Miami Beach native had his bar mitzvah at The Famous. His grand vision for China Grill translated to a massive space serving massive plates to opulent parties of South Beach insiders. Audaciously presented comestibles like crispy calamari salad with miso-lime dressing spiked with chili oil might as well have come from the moon. Everyone noticed, and talked. “When you bring something big and bold to a city and it works, it’s much easier to draw other restaurants,” Chodorow reflects. “Everything builds upon everything else.” Schrager’s sublimely refurbished Delano was equally daring and eclipsed all that had come before it. Geoffrey Zakarian orchestrated its Blue Door restaurant, with Madonna as an investor. Two years later, China Grill Management took over the hotel’s food and beverage operations. Esquire named the establishment “Best New Restaurant of the Year.”
CHEF: GASTÓN ACURIO RESTAURANT: LA MAR ften referred to as the face of the Peruvian food revolution, blending the authentic flavors of his country in gorgeously inventive ways, Gastón Acurio has the ability to turn Peru’s cultural diversity into edible artwork. His roster of 35 restaurants in 12 countries includes Astrid&Gastón in Lima, which in 2013 was ranked number 14 on The World’s 50 Best Restaurants list. La Mar by Gastón Acurio opens this winter at the chic Mandarin Oriental Miami, where his vibrant ceviches and tapas will be set against the backdrop of Biscayne Bay. Why Miami? La Mar in Miami is located on the water, and with [this city’s] huge Latin community it’s going to be like a cevicheria in Lima. We love to celebrate, and for us it is a party of freshness. We really hope that our La Mar restaurant will be part of this spirit of sharing our Peruvian food culture. Does this particular menu put a Miami twist on your signature cuisine? We are working very hard to introduce all the local fish we can. We have to support local fishermen and the sustainability of the ocean. The magical thing is that when we succeed, we have the freshest and most delicious ingredients and dishes. Local fishermen and farmers will be honored at La Mar. What is your favorite Miami restaurant/hot spot and why? I like very much all the small Peruvian restaurants in Miami. Hundreds of them have opened in the last 10 years. Behind them, there are the Peruvian families working very hard to give happiness to people with our culture. What is the most challenging dish you’ve ever made? Every dish is the most challenging one, but I am still looking for the perfect fried eggs.
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“Everybody loves Miami. From all over the world people visit Miami for the joy of life.” —GASTÓN ACURIO
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ut apparently there were limits to how cutting edge one could go. As Blue Door soared, Tony Goldman decided to do an upscale meatless menu at his Wish restaurant in The Hotel. “He thought it would turn heads,” recollects Brustman. “The menu was great for the models, but it didn’t attract locals the way it needed to.” More Miami’s speed was Nobu Matsuhisa bringing his beloved Tribeca hot spot to the Shore Club in 2001. The next year was paramount: Lee Brian Schrager, then director of special events and media relations at Southern Wine & Spirits, took the reins of a minor one-day food fest, rebranding it as the South Beach Wine & Food Festival. Even before The Food Network placed its clout and stars behind it, the SBWFF had stamped South Florida on America’s culinary consciousness like no event before or since. In the early 2000s, there was lots of flash, and lots of big dinner parties, too, but Miami wasn’t necessarily a mecca for sophisticated American gastronomy. Early in 2003, La Broche, an avantgarde two-star Michelin restaurant in Madrid, debuted a Miami branch with renowned chef Angel Palacios at the molecular helm. It failed. So did Afterglo, which proffered the sort of farmto-table fare that was enthralling diners across the country. Local chefs were migrating off the Beach and scaling down with more personal restaurants of their own. The trend took root in 2000, when Pascal Oudin left Grand Bay Café to open Pascal’s on Ponce. By 2004, he had been joined by Tim
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CHEF: FRANCIS MALLMANN RESTAURANT: FAENA his cookbook author (he wrote Seven Fires: Grilling the Argentine Way, among others) and father has hosted his own television show for the last 30 years and is ready to set Miami’s dining scene on fire with his distinguished talent. Although trained in haute cuisine under three-star Michelin chefs in France, celebrated Argentine chef Francis Mallmann uses a more primal approach, focusing on wood fire and cast iron at his four existing South American restaurants. His “seven fires” grilling techniques will be used here in Miami as well, at the muchanticipated Faena Miami Beach when it opens this spring. Describe the aesthetic and design influences of your restaurant. How do you want guests to feel during their dining experience? The most important detail is that you have the beach in front of your eyes; you can feel the warm breeze married with the beautiful presence of our fires and cooking techniques. The fantasy is completed with the inherent elegance of using the best materials and design while respecting the historic heritage of the building. What is your favorite Miami restaurant/hot spot and why? I really like Casa Tua for what it means to the gourmet scene of Miami after many years of operation. Mandolin Aegean Bistro, the Greek restaurant in the Design District, serves impeccable, simple food, too. Did you have any particular mentors or inspirations when first starting out? Are there any local chefs whom you admire? My cooking is rooted in many of the teachings of the great chefs of France and Italy of the late ’70s and ’80s. They truly inspired me when I started developing my own particular style. In Miami, I believe Michelle Bernstein is the one to watch. What is the most challenging dish you’ve ever made? Every night I’m faced with the odd challenge when I cook at home of convincing my toddler that I really am a chef. What other cities’ culinary scenes excite you? New York, Sao Paolo, San Francisco, London, Paris, and Piemonte. Any words of advice for aspiring chefs/restaurateurs? Learn the basics before you go modern and out of bounds. What are the ingredients used most often in your kitchen? Olive oil and sea salt. Describe the one meal you had that you will never forget. A roasted fish beach picnic we made under the olive trees on the island of Rhodes in Greece.
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“Miami is a cosmopolitan city, related to happiness, dreams, and leisure; this makes it the perfect setting for our signature style of cooking.” —FRANCIS MALLMANN
Andriola (Timo), Jeffrey Brana (River Seafood & Oyster Bar), and Dewey LoSasso (North One 10). This movement blossomed, somewhat by accident, in 2005. Michelle Bernstein had secured a big waterfront location just east of Biscayne. When problems ensued with the site, the partners scaled down and decided to open, as Bernstein now puts it, “a temporary restaurant in an existing space that was small, simple, and very approachable.” On a forgotten block of Biscayne Boulevard, the restaurant was Michy’s, and with “no publicist and no marketing,” it was quickly dubbed one of the best by Gourmet and Food & Wine. “Still, I don’t think we had as much of an impact as Michael had in the Design District,” says Bernstein.
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hat would be Michael Schwartz, who was likewise lionized when the 2007 inception of Michael’s Genuine Food & Drink finally kickstarted the hitherto perennially “up-and-coming” Design District. As Schwartz led the way in the Design District, his former partner Myles Chefetz did the same south of Fifth Street in 2004 with swank steakhouse/celeb magnet Prime 112, teeing up the neighborhood for Estiatorio Milos and La Gloutonnerie. Big properties continued to draw big names: The Fontainebleau reopened in 2009 with Alfred Portale’s Gotham Steak, Scott Conant’s Scarpetta, and Alan Yau’s Hakkasan, and the W boasts Andrew Carmellini’s The Dutch Miami. Yet, if you had to name the biggest upsurge in the Miami food scene, it might be the little guys, the homegrown talent, many of whom ventured into sketchy neighborhoods that today are the belles of the ball. Kris Wessel entered MiMo with Red Light, followed by Daniel Serfer’s Blue Collar. Jessica Goldman Srebnic and partner/father Tony Goldman pioneered the idea of Wynwood as a viable restaurant market via Joey’s. Buena Vista gained Buena Vista Bistro and Mandolin Aegean Bistro. And don’t forget the Pubbelly boys in Sunset Harbour. So here we are. Rainer Becker (Zuma) and Daniel Boulud (db Bistro Moderne) have moved in, as have Jean-Georges Vongerichten ( J & G Grill), José Andrés (The Bazaar), and Tony Mantuano (Lorenzo). Also on deck: Francis Mallmann (Faena), Masaharu Morimoto (Shelborne), and Gastón Acurio (Mandarin Oriental). We no longer need to fly anywhere to eat. The world’s chefs are coming to us. OD
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Elle Macpherson in front of Roni Horn’s Such 4 (2012), from Xavier Hufkens Gallery, at the Art Basel Miami Beach collectors preview at the Miami Beach Convention Center, December 4, 2013.
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Another ABMB came and went, with more art than ever, leaving an indelible impression on Miami and the world as a whole.
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L E S A Ramp By Hunter Braithwaite | Photography by Seth Browarnik
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Tracey Emin’s I Followed You to the Sun, which made its Basel debut at the Fontainebleau Miami Beach on December 5. Works by Ai Weiwei at PAMM,
ach Art Basel Miami Beach is touted as the biggest yet, and 2013 in which the artist dipped Han was no exception; we saw flocks of private jets, sand dunes of Dom Dynasty vases in corks, $3 billion of art, and at last count we’re up to 20 satellite industrial paint (Colored Vases, fairs. But instead of thinking quantity—or quality, even—I suggest 2007–2010, considering longevity. Of course, the art has been bubble-wrapped FRONT) and documented and shipped and the fair is technically over. But with Miami’s their destruction breakneck cultural growth, crowned with the opening of the new (Dropping a Han Dynasty Urn, Pérez Art Museum Miami, the week now threatens to last all year 1995/2009). long. Perhaps Basel is still going on? Though the main fair didn’t open till Thursday, the crowds and party planners descended on our city the previous weekend, deciding that, from Sunday to Sunday, nobody would get any sleep. Parties kicked off on Monday with the Untitled preview gala, your one chance in history to see Marina Abramovic chatting up Val Kilmer. Then there was Tuesday’s masochistic rush-hour drive to North Miami to join the likes of Kevin Spacey at the MOCA + Vanity Fair/Vanity Fair International party. This year, for “Tracey Emin: Angel Without You,” which was almost entirely composed of the YBA’s neons, MOCA carpeted the main galleries and painted the walls black. After that, I honked my way to Wynwood for the opening of “28 Chinese” at the Rubell Family Collection/Contemporary Arts Foundation. This was a very auspicious year for artists from the Middle Kingdom. “Ai Weiwei: According to What?” opened at PAMM, and The Margulies Collection at the Warehouse featured a large installation by Song Dong. Add to this the fact that only six of the Rubells’ “28” have Western gallery representation, and you have a deep portrait of contemporary Chinese art, right here in Dade County. It was business as usual at the Miami Beach Convention Center, and what a strange business this Marc Anthony closed the is, if usual means Jeff Koons’s Elephant (2003), stainPérez Art Museum Miami less steel polished to resemble a balloon animal, on premiere gala with a performance, December 7. sale for $20 million at David Zwirner. That piece didn’t go, but Zwirner did sell another Koons for the bargainbasement price of eight mill. The gallery also had pared-down minimalist works by Donald Judd, Dan Flavin, and John McCracken, and some playful paintings by Francis Alÿs, along with a psychedelic pumpkin by Yayoi Kusama for $650,000. Around the corner, one of LA’s most exciting galleries, Overduin and Kite, presented a crisp and purposeful booth featuring Nick Relph and Math Bass. Owner Lisa Overduin remarked on the calmness of the fair: “The [VIP] opening was not a crazy frenzy, but it was amazing. Great curators came through, great writers, great collectors. It was a blend of people, which is what you want. It
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“Great curators came th was a blend of people,
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Martha Stewart and Marty Taplin during the Sagamore Art Basel brunch, December 7.
ame through, great writers, great collectors. It eople, which is what you want.” –Lisa Overduin Helen Lasichanh and Pharrell Williams at the Design Miami/ preview and vernissage, December 3.
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Marina Abramovic and Val Kilmer at the Elton John AIDS Foundation preview of the Untitled art fair presented by Grey Goose.
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Aby Rosen at the Art Basel Miami Beach collectors preview looking at Jean-Michel Basquiat’s Loin (1982), with Highway Trust (1977) by James Rosenquist in the background (both from Aquavella Galleries).
Jeffrey Deitch and Sean “Diddy” Combs at the ABMB collectors preview at the Convention Center. 222
Matt Cohler, Adrian Grenier, and Nicolas Ullman at the Chez Andrés pop-up karaoke party at Rec Room, December 6.
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“When I first put a mural up in 2004, Wynwood was a ghost town.... Now it’s like, every nook and cranny.” –Shepard Fairey
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was steady and had really good energy.” And it wouldn’t be ABMB without Fred Snitzer, who lorded over a booth packed with local art, including paintings by Hernan Bas and Enrique Martinez Celaya, both of which sold. I ran into street-art daemon Shepard Fairey on Friday. Fresh off the plane, the artist felt that, sure, it was a good year—“busy, with more buying: [big-ticket items like] Warhols, Robert Indianas… Chuck Close”—but then conversation shifted to the far side of Biscayne Bay. “When I first put a mural up in 2004,” Fairey says, “Wynwood was a ghost town with a couple of tags and tumbleweeds. Now it’s like, every nook and cranny. It’s inevitable that it’s got to expand. It’s a great model for how art can take over a city.” Like Fairey’s murals from almost a decade ago, art now lingers after the fair’s end.
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his takeover has taken time. Anthony Spinello, whose gallery, Spinello Projects, was in the fair for the second time, is one of the exemplars of this coup d’état. “For the past 10 years, we’ve been building a foundation. People forget that this has been a grassroots effort,” Spinello says. “It’s not a race; it’s a marathon.” How did he do? He nods to a graphite-coated orb by Sinisa Kucek. Gone to Jorge Pérez, $30,000. As fantastic as this year’s Art Basel was, I propose a paraphrase of Yeats: “the convention center cannot hold.” The best was everywhere, but specifically at the Pérez Art Museum Miami. This Herzog & de Meuron-designed wonder, with 80,000 of its 200,000 square feet of programmable space outside, was made for parties in December. No—parties in December were made for this museum. Thursday’s soirée, led by LA-based Los Jaichackers, was held at the same time as the private Maserati function, which, according to collector Jack Benmeleh, was upstaged only by the chic international attendees of the W magazine party the night before. And lest ye forget, this is an art museum; come for the canapés, stay for the Ai Weiweis. Ai’s exhibition “According to What?” comes down in March, but museum-owned installations like Hew Locke’s
armada of toy-size ships, For Those in Peril on the Sea, and Monika Sosnowska’s metallic stalactite Market will be around much longer. Satellite fairs are upping their game as well. On Saturday, I caught up with Omar LopezChahoud, artistic director of Untitled. Now in its second year, the fair has already outpaced many of the others. “It’s a big step up,” he says. “The tent was reworked by architects K/R; it’s 70 percent larger. Galleries came from 19 countries, with a stronger Latin American connection. We have five Whitney Biennial artists.” That list includes Victoria Fu of Miami’s Emerson Dorsch. Oh, and Untitled had the loot flowing as well. At the Hionas Gallery booth, a minimalist painting of white circles on a white background by the 93-year-old Siri Berg was purchased by New York collector Beth Rudin DeWoody. Although gallerist Peter Hionas insisted that the price was “undisclosed,” he later let slip that the painting was probably the most expensive in the fair. Miami elements at the art fair included the Michael Jon Gallery, whose booth dominated the entrance with a rack of sculptures by J. Patrick Walsh III and works by Sayre Gomez. By the end of the week, owner Michael Radziewicz had a near-empty booth, and a waiting list for Gomez’s work. “Miami is developing at an unprecedented pace,” he says, “and the global attention that the city is receiving provides a unique and coveted opportunity.”
magazine, Art in America, and the Portland Institute for Contemporary Art, deep chilling on the dock as Luis Pons’s paper boat floated in the bay. Still up, you could have sung karaoke with Adrian Grenier at Rec Room or listened to Boy George spill his acoustic guts at Mana Wynwood. But no matter how high spirits run, all good fairs must end. The week’s denouement came Saturday evening at the Vizcaya Museum & Gardens’ annual party, as guests wondered if they could brave the traffic back to the Beach, the mood having been dampened by December rains and Miami-based performance artist Antonia Wright nearly getting herself killed by purposefully being thrown upward through two giant panes of glass in a critique of the glass ceiling. Publicity stunt or somber work of cultural commentary, that piece will be difficult to top next year. But if Basel holds to its growth, it surely will be. OD
David Zwirner sold this psychedelic pumpkin by Yayoi Kusama for $650,000 at the Convention Center.
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pportunities to view art came in unexpected places. Adam Lindemann’s “Piston Head” exhibition in the 1111 Lincoln Road parking garage, for instance, was a selection of artist-made cars featuring Richard Prince, Keith Haring, and Damien Hirst. The show started on all cylinders Tuesday night with appearances by Leonardo DiCaprio, Glenn O’Brian, and Cynthia Rowley. Hopefully you checked into the Mondrian on Thursday for the sunset performance by FriendsWithYou—a swimming pool filled with giant balloons. Friday should have been spent at the Standard for a party hosted by DIS
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WOMEN of wine
In the male-dominated wine industry, these five female sommeliers are breaking down barriers and redefining the wine world in South Florida, a top sales market with a local consumer who is becoming more educated by the second. By Jon Warech | Photography by Lyall Aston
The Educator
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s a wine scholar, Master Sommelier Virginia Philip loves the taste of wine, but she loves the history behind it just as much. She would have to, since as wine director of The Breakers in Palm Beach, she sometimes never even gets to see her bottles opened. “We’re buying for today, but we’re [also] buying for future generations,” she says of the aged wines in the extensive Breakers wine program. “In 20 years, the chances of any of us being here are slim, so we’re buying for what we think is the best possible situation for potential buyers in 20 years—the next generation.” Philip graduated magna cum laude in 1989 with a bachelor’s degree in hotel and restaurant management from Johnson & Wales University, but her first experience in the wine business came working as a wine clerk in Aspen before eventually landing at The Breakers in 2000, where she oversees 14 wine lists (including a “massive Bordeaux and Burgundy and California Cab list”) in nine bars and restaurants on the property. And to Philip, each list reads like a history book. “Generally when you’re talking about some of the top-end wines, whether
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they’re super Tuscan or French, you invariably go back to what was happening during when the monks were involved,” says Philip, whose wine book recommendations start with Kevin Zraly’s Windows on the World Complete Wine Course and move to the Culinary Institute of America’s Exploring Wine, then Wine Lover’s Companion and the works of Jancis Robinson. On a quest to educate the rest of South Florida on wine as well, Philip opened the Virginia Philip Wine Shop & Academy in 2011, and has since run double duty overseeing The Breakers and creating programming at her own shop. “For me it was really the ability to have winemakers and wine educators come teach classes to consumers,” says Philip, who in 2002 was named Best Sommelier of the United States by the American Sommelier Association. The one piece of advice she gives all her students? Speak up. “When you have a winemaker in front of you, do not hesitate to ask them everything you possibly can,” she says. “Because they’re living in that area, they know the area inside and out, and they know what’s happening in that area.” 1 S. County Road, Palm Beach, 561-655-6611; thebreakers.com
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Virginia Philip takes a cerebral approach to wine to please the palates of guests at The Breakers and locals at her West Palm shop.
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The Pairing Ace
With a new menu every day at Michael’s Genuine Food & Drink, sommelier Tahiirah Habibi Allen is a pairing machine.
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he first thing that most people notice about Tahiirah Habibi Allen is her sense of style. Chef Michael Schwartz did. That’s why when he was dining at J&G Grill at The St. Regis Bal Harbour Resort where Allen was his sommelier, he decided he had to have her. “He was impressed by persona and my style,” says Allen, who grew up in Philadelphia, moved to Miami in 2011, and started at Michael’s Genuine in December. “I put time into what I wear and how I do my hair and makeup. My appearance is important to me. It’s the first thing people see.” Once a rapport is established, Allen will tickle the taste buds with some of the best pairings in town. She often fields questions along the lines of, “I really like red wine but I’m going to eat fish, is this okay?” Her answer is always, “Of course, drink what you like.” (But don’t go crazy and order “an oily fish like cod with a super tannic wine, because the tannins will make the fish taste metallic.”) “To me, the sauce is more important than the actual meat on the plate. You may get a chicken dish that is going to go well with a Burgundy as opposed to a Chardonnay, and it really does depend on the sauce,” she explains. Once she started as a sommelier working under Wine Director Eric Larkee at Michael’s Genuine, Allen was faced with the ultimate pairing challenge. “The menu changes literally every day, so you have to always be on your toes and be able to pair on the spot,” says Allen, who has certificates from the Wine School of Philadelphia and the Court of Master Sommeliers. “You’re challenging yourself consistently, the guests are challenging you, and you really have to know your stuff.” On a Champagne kick, Allen loves pairing Pierre Peters Blanc de Blancs Champagne with black grouper ceviche at Michael’s. “It’s one of the best lunches I’ve had,” she says. That pair goes right into the memory bank with the rest of her mental catalog that she uses on a nightly basis. “If I taste a sauce or a dish, all the wines that I’ve had before start registering and I start to think what will go well with it.” 130 NE 40th St., Miami, 305-573-5550; michaelsgenuine.com
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The Rising Star
A new talent in town, Meat Market’s Orli Vadai is converting young South Beach into wine drinkers.
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sommelier has a thirst for the grape as well. Vadai can sell you on Bond Estate Melbury, Hundred Acre, or the plethora of high-end Bordeaux on Meat Market’s wine list, but she can do her share of imbibing, too. Ask her what wine she’s drinking these days and her answer, without missing a beat, is “Breakfast, lunch, or dinner?” It’s why she’s also the kind of sommelier you can ask for her hangover cure. “There are these patches called No Hangover,” says Vadai. “I used them in Napa, and not once did I have a hangover. You wear them before you start drinking. I don’t know what it is, but it’s like magic.” Armed with all the information about South Beach life to win over the party crowd and an expertise in wine to earn the respect of even regular wine connoisseurs, Vadai is reshaping the Beach drinker. And as it turns out, you can do Patrón and wine in the same night. “Of course,” she says, “just make sure you have your patch.” 915 Lincoln Road, Miami Beach, 305-532-0088; meatmarketmiami.com
PHOTOGRAPHY BY TK; ILLUSTRATION BY TK
aving lived her whole life in New York, Orli Vadai moved to Miami in August not knowing how she would fit in. After all, she was a wine-loving sommelier about to start a job on South Beach, where Patrón shots often take precedence. But as it turned out, part of her success as sommelier at Meat Market on Lincoln Road has come from just being herself. “I’m not the stuffy sommelier,” says Vadai, who fell in love with wine on a trip to Tuscany (and her husband on a trip to Miami). “Wine is meant to be enjoyed. People drink wine to enjoy their night, not to sit and dissect it. A good bottle of wine is an empty bottle of wine.” And those young consumers who usually order vodka tonics but are looking for something different? “They’re usually my favorite customer because they’re open to trying new things,” says Vadai, who went to culinary school and worked at Daniel in New York. It helps that, when molding the palates of Lincoln Road locals, the
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The Trailblazer
Laura DePasquale continues to break down walls for female sommeliers while building a true romance with wine.
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here is a ’96 Riesling from Alsace that Master Sommelier Laura DePasquale and her husband drank when they first started dating. She can recall that bottle and many others from important occasions in her life without missing a beat. “I have these love affairs with certain regions,” says DePasquale, vice president and general manager of the Stacole Fine Wine Division of The Country Vintner, and who, with her husband, has 2,200 bottles in their personal wine cellar in their Miami Shores home. “Right now I’m having a complete and total love affair with really freaky white wines from the Jura. It’s a pretty obscure area in France, and I just love them because they’re white wines that act like reds.” A trailblazer in every sense of the word, DePasquale is the first female GM at a major distributor in the US and the first woman elected to vice chair of the Court of Master Sommeliers. Not bad for someone whose career began at McDonald’s. She went from flipping fries to the graveyard shift at a New Jersey diner to a restaurant in New York City where during staff training she first fell in love with wine. “We tasted Sonoma-Cutrer Chardonnay and Saintsbury Pinot Noir,” says DePasquale, whose Italian background had her sipping wine with dinner as a child. “I remember tasting those two wines going, Wait a minute, this is wine? Where did this come from? What’s the grape? Why did it taste so good?” The newfound appreciation was the force driving DePasquale to greater success. After opening the Royalton hotel in New York City as the beverage director, she moved to Miami in 1992 and worked under chef Norman Van Aken at Mano and Norman’s. Her thirst for knowledge pushed her to become a master sommelier in 2004—the 13th woman to achieve that title. “Wine tells a story,” says DePasquale, who has just one bottle left from the original case of ’96 Riesling. “More often than not, it’s a story of romance.” countryvintner.com
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The New Traditionalist As managing partner of Market 17, Kirsta Grauberger is helping to make the Fort Lauderdale wine community a family.
PHOTOGRAPHY BY TK; ILLUSTRATION BY TK
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n Fort Lauderdale, the wine enthusiast community is a bit like family, which works out well for Kirsta Grauberger, managing partner of Market 17, because her business is all about family. She and her brother Aaron opened Market 17 together in 2010 with encouragement and financial help from an uncle who passed away a few years back. “He was just the person who believed you should always follow your passion and dreams,” says Grauberger, who learned the business working at Sundy House in Delray Beach and as wine director and general manager at Johnny V in Fort Lauderdale. “He inspired us to go for it.” Her passion is wine and her dreams are coming true at Market 17, where the clients often feel like family. With a large collector base in the area, Market 17 has become the stomping ground for groups like the Hollywood Wine Society—a collection of professionals with decades of wine collecting under their belt—who always include Grauberger in the fun. “It’s just really fascinating to see the wines they bring out,” she says. “I’ve never tried more firstgrowth Bordeaux in my entire life. They have them from these really amazing vintages: 1961, 1982. Those are two of the top vintages of all time.” Certified by the Court of Masters as a sommelier in 2007, Grauberger grew up in Breckenridge, Colorado, and her down-to-earth, customer-first attitude derives from her upbringing. “It’s okay to speak up and say that you don’t like [the wine],” she says. “There used to be the old rule of that’s what you ordered [so] you have to drink it, but we don’t follow that. We want you to be happy, and we can get you another bottle.” Her attention to customer service has won over a younger crowd of wine drinkers as well. She’ll recommend a fruit-forward wine for a first-timer, and follow the trends like ditching the Champagne flute for the tulip glass (everybody’s doing it). “It’s easier to order a cocktail or beer. To me, there are a lot of elements in a glass of wine that can transport you to another place, but if you don’t drink wine, you just want it to taste good. So that would be my pitch: It can taste just as good.” 1850 SE 17th St., Fort Lauderdale, 954-835-5507; market17.net OD
Sommelier styling by Ana Brillembourg Sommelier hair and makeup by Taryll Atkins using MUFE and Kenra
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“I’m very much a person of privilege. Performing for the people, for the audience, then they get inside of my life and I get inside of their lives.”
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TO ALL THE
WORLD-TRAVELING LEGEND JULIO IGLESIAS COMES “HOME” TO MIAMI THIS MONTH, WHERE HE PERFORMS HIS GREATEST HITS, REMINDING US WHY HE IS THE BIGGEST-SELLING LATIN ARTIST OF ALL TIME. By Jared Shapiro
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he numbers are astonishing: More than 300 million copies of his 80 albums sold worldwide. Over 60 million spectators in a 45-year career have heard his voice at more than 5,000 concerts in 600 cities around the world. And yet it’s his voice, not his statistics, that have fans from Russia to Qatar, Australia, Israel, China, and practically every continent (in just 2013 alone) swooning. To kick off the US leg of his 2014 tour on February 22, Julio Iglesias has chosen to bring his talents to South Beach with a one-night-only romantic concert. It’s your best chance to see him anywhere in Miami, as the self-professed homebody prefers his house on Indian Creek for dinner, and his wine cellar for a refresher. Here, he reminisces on his career, love, family, and of course, Miami. You’ve sold over 300 million albums worldwide. To what do you attribute that success? If I were to have a logical answer to that, then I would sell 600 million. Whatever happens to me is because I never lost the passion for anything, and if you don’t lose the passion, you can survive for generations. What’s your favorite song to perform? I never have a favorite. I was in Tel Aviv recently and was playing some big concerts. And someone asked me, “Julio, how do you play live so many times?” And I said, “You know, they just keep inviting me.” Why do they invite me? Because I have a communion of the passion with the countries, and if you don’t go to the countries with passion, you are forgotten. They forget you very fast.
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Iglesias performing at the Roman Theatre in Merida, Spain, in June 2013.
PHOTOGRAPHY COURTESY OF JULIO IGLESIAS’ OFFICE
“MIAMI IS AN AMAZING PLACE. I DISCOVERED MIAMI 43 YEARS AGO, AND IT WAS LOVE AT FIRST SIGHT.”
In 1970 you gave 41 concerts in 41 cities, in Spain, over the span of 30 days. And I was making love every day. Imagine 41 concerts and 41 girlfriends. That was a great time. It was my rock and roll time. Tell me about your life in Miami. Whenever I am in Miami, I’m living in Indian Creek, on a private island. So I have probably my new generations of kids, I swim, I do exercises. I think how bored I am not to be singing the next day. I get bored when I don’t sing. But I take time with my kids; I travel with my kids, with my wife, with my family. I try to be really close to them. Miami is an amazing place. I discovered Miami in 1971. It was 43 years ago, and it was love at first sight. You chose Miami as the first date in America for your tour. Describe performing for the Miami audience. When you play in a place that you know so well and they know you, you have so many friends who come to see you—and they are very critical, so you always have a little bit of nerves. What is going to happen? It will be great, we’ll be playing the AmericanAirlines Arena, and I will play in the same place the Miami Heat play and make people dream. I want the people to go out of the concert thinking, I was right, 40 years ago I said this guy was going to make it! You have eight kids! And Guillermo is 6 years old. What’s that like in your household? I’ve been a very privileged person in my life. I
don’t take anything for granted. So to have another, even bigger privilege, which is to be a father at my age (70) with a kid of 6 years old is amazing. Speaking of kids, your son Enrique has an album coming out in the spring. What advice did you give him coming up? The guy is a champion; you cannot advise a champion. But he knows which is his good side— the left side—he knows the music he has to sing, he knows the video he has to do, he respects the people, he respects everybody in the audience, he’s a professional, as you know since he has been on your cover. He’s a very charming guy, and if you met him, you’d know that he has that kind of attitude and can convince you of it in five seconds. And I do it in two seconds, okay? In five seconds, my son can convince you of that. I will take only two seconds. [Laughs] What’s the most amazing concert that you’ve ever performed? The first public concert I did in my life, my legs were trembling. I was thinking, What happened to my life? So I say the first one. And the next one after that would be the most recent concert I perform. If you ask me next year, I will tell you the last concert I performed. You know, an artist’s life stops the day the people stop. Is there anything about you that people don’t know? There’s a big secret: I sleep naked all of the time! But naked means nothing physical; it’s naked in my heart, and in my brain. So for me to be naked
in front of an interviewer, in front of my audience, in a very spiritual naked situation, not physical, with my soul open, with my brain open, with my passion open, that’s what I do in my life. But also when I swim physically in the pool, I swim naked, because no one is there, no one is paying attention to me! What will you be doing in Miami before and after the concert? Is there a favorite restaurant you go to? You know which is the best restaurant in Miami? My house. I’ll tell you why. I’ve been buying wines since the 1970s. I bought the ’52s, the ’55s, the ’47s, after the second war, the ’61s, the ’82s, the ’90s, the ’95s. So I have an incredible collection of wines. That is a need for me when I’m eating. What charities are you involved with? I’ve been working for 20 years with the United Nations and Unicef. I’ve been a representative of the arts. I just try to open my conscience in a very discreet way. So I take care of the volunteers, and I do the best I can. But I can do much more, maybe, I’m not a saint. But my conscience is clean. When you look back on your career… Oh, I am happy. I’m grateful—happy doesn’t mean anything. Happy is something that passes and goes. No, I’m grateful. OD Julio Iglesias performs on Saturday, February 22, at 8 PM at AmericanAirlines Arena; aaarena.com/events/ detail/julio-iglesias.
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PICS FROM THE OPEN HOUSE
Nancy Batchelor and Pier Paolo Visconti
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E minent Domain
NEWS, STARS, AND TRENDS IN REAL ESTATE AND ARCHITECTURE
Brick-andMortar Beauty IN GLITZY MIAMI, EVEN RETAIL HAS TO WOW. OCEAN DRIVE TAKES A LOOK AT THE ARCHITECTURAL PACKAGING OF OUR TOWN’S HIGH-END SHOPPING BOOM. BY SEAN MCCAUGHAN
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t’s a Saturday afternoon at Bal Harbour Shops, and the mall is humming with activity. In fact, it’s the most lucrative mall in the world with an impressive $2,555 in sales per square foot. However, in a few years this citadel of luxury shopping, which recently announced an expansion plan to increase its size by about half, will soon be joined by a new crop of retail palaces and urban districts. More than just bland boxes for buying things, Miami’s retail Xanadus will express a sophisticated sense of architectural intent, and moreover contribute to South Florida’s urban growth. In other words, a store can’t just sell beautiful things; its exterior has to be beautiful and purposeful as well. Miami’s emerging retail destinations reflect the city’s growing awareness of good design, and the new retail models are primarily urban in nature, as well—a step forward for Miami. Gone are the days of the mall as a vast refrigerated concrete box or even a “festival marketplace” creating its own kind of urbanism isolated from the city directly around it. Most distinctively, however, they show an impressive variety of forms, from the urbanity of the continued on page 238
Brickell CityCentre, from the creators of Bal Harbour Shops, represents the next phase in Miami luxury retail.
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GOLD COAST REPORT A streetview rendering of Brickell CityCentre’s multilevel elevated mall.
“One of the factors in the success of the Design District is our desire to advocate for important architecture.” —CRAIG ROBINS continued from page 237 Design District and Lincoln Road to Brickell CityCentre’s towering, elevated network of sky bridges and high-tech “climate ribbons.” The most-talked-about element of Miami’s luxe retail race is the Design District, which developer Craig Robins is practically rebuilding—or substantially overhauling, depending on your point of view—with serious consideration to the design of said retail. “One of the big factors contributing to the success of the Miami Design District is our desire to advocate for important art, architecture, and design in the neighborhood,” says Robins. The district’s new backbone will be a pedestrian road called Paseo Ponti, spanning four city blocks from 38th to 42nd Streets. Although Paseo Ponti itself is still very much under construction, some of the district’s new luxury retailers have already opened in temporary or permanent locations. A building by the architects Keenan Riley, now the temporary home of Hermès, is decorated with glass orbs covering the second story of its façade and has a rooftop garden, the first in a network of interconnected rooftop gardens that will dot the area in green. It’s just one of many emerging small retail buildings by internationally acclaimed architects that will proliferate in the neighborhood, including a two-level edifice by Sou Fujimoto, the latest winner of the annual Serpentine Pavilion commission in London.
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Fujimoto’s building, a “structural waterfall” of glass fins, should be completed early this year, and a restored dome by the iconic modernist architect Buckminster Fuller, currently in Robins’s personal art collection, will be placed in front, serving as the entrance to the shopping district’s underground parking deck. Ambitious urbanism is afoot in Brickell, too, by way of the Whitman family, owners of Bal Harbour Shops. Brickell CityCentre, the mixeduse megaproject currently under construction and designed by the prolific Miami-based Arquitectonica, will be anchored by a multilevel elevated mall for which the Whitmans have partnered with Swire Properties in developing. The mall connects the project’s five blocks with pedestrian bridges over Brickell’s surface roads and is the unifying element of the entire project. A technologically advanced “climate ribbon” trellislike ceiling designed by Hugh Dutton Associés in Paris will shade and cool the outdoor mall, channeling wind off Biscayne Bay to a comfortable six- to nine-knot breeze. The whole
project will be anchored by an 80-story tower at CityCentre’s Brickell Avenue frontage, topped by an 80th-floor lounge. The celebrated parking garage, 1111 Lincoln Road, by architects Herzog & de Meuron, which opened in 2010 and attracted tenants like Taschen, Nespresso, and Alchemist, may just be the beginning of the outdoor mall’s efflorescence. “Both civic and commercial, 1111 is a cultural destination and a central gathering place for Miami Beach residents and visitors,” says Robert Wennett, developer of the garage and the occupant of a rooftop apartment. Since then, H&M opened a flagship store in the historically preserved Lincoln Theatre. There, architect Allan Shulman restored the exterior to its original glory, reconstructing the aluminum marquee (the original was melted down for the war effort in WWII), and restoring elements of the interior that had been lost in the theater’s earlier conversion into a concert hall for the New World Symphony. Not to be outdone by the rising design elsewhere is the U-shaped expansion of Bal Harbour Shops. Fifty years in the making, the expansion will add about 250,000 square feet of retail space, a high-end theater, and two new parking garages. Renderings show designs by Bernard Zyscovich covered in spectacularly lush foliage, including green walls and rooftop trees by landscape architect Raymond Jungles. The explosion of green by a man who is probably Miami’s best—and certainly its most prolific—landscape architect shows an awareness that the architectural packaging of retail in South Florida and the way that packaging addresses the city are as important as what goes on inside. OD The facade of the Louis Vuitton boutique in the Design District, decorated by famed street artist Retna.
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TALL STORIES
Miami Rising W
ithout much pomp and circumstance, Terra Group’s Glass, an 18-story building designed by Rene Gonzalez with just 10 large full-floor residences, has broCLOCKWISE FROM TOP: ken ground. Seven of those units Glass lives up to its are now under contract. The name with glass design elements; building, which takes its name the Glass pool; almost literally, will have extravamodel of Park Grove by Rem gant architectural elements made Koolhaas’s Office out of glass, including fritted glass for Metropolitan Architecture. balconies and an illusion that the building is dematerializing as it rises. Amenities are predictably lavish, including programmable ceiling installations in every foyer that are designed to evoke star-lit skies. Prices begin at $7.9 million. Eloy Carmenate, 119 Washington Ave., Ste. 600, Miami Beach, 305-503-0478; glass120ocean.com HIGH-BALLING: One Brickell CityCentre, the 80-story tower planned to be Brickell CityCentre’s pièce de résistance and eventually Miami’s tallest tower, will have a lounge open to the public on the 80th floor as well as a restaurant on the 79th. The tower, however, won’t be built for a few years; that massive three-block hole in the ground with cranes shooting out of it is only Phase I of the project. The tower, which will be located on the former Brickell Avenue site of Northern Trust Bank, will likely be constructed in Phase II, though its exact construction timing has yet to be announced. Swire Properties, 501 Brickell Key Dr., Ste. 600, Miami; swireproperties.us SOUND INVESTMENT Music mogul Timbaland has sold a 24th-floor condo at the South of
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Fifth Murano Grande that he purchased back in 2006. He bought the unit for $2.7 million with the intent of making it his primary residence, gut-renovated it, but never actually moved in, and finally sold it for $4.8 million. The almost 4,000-square-foot pad includes a state-of-the-art sound system, a Portuguese marble shower, and limestone countertops. The buyer was another unnamed resident in the building. Oren Alexander at Douglas Elliman, 1111 Lincoln Road, Ste. 805, Miami Beach, 305-610-4559; ellimanflorida.com KOOL ON THE WATER Park Grove, a joint project between Terra Group and The Related Group, was announced during Art Basel, with an exhibition of four proposals by four internationally renowned architects on display at Design Miami. The building will be located on the former South Bayshore Drive site of the Coconut Grove Bank. The winning architectural team, Rem Koolhaas’s BELOW: The 24th-floor Murano Grande condo Office for Metropolitan of music mogul Architecture headed by Timbaland (RIGHT) sold for $4.8 million. Shohei Shigematsu, proposed a series of slender towers with lower levels that are activated by the new bayfront park on one side and downtown Coconut Grove on the other. While the final design has not been announced, unit sizes may be between 2,500 to 3,500 square feet, with prices from $2 million to $4.5 million. Park Grove Sales Office, 2701 S. Bayshore Dr., Ste. 600, Miami, 305-5085712; park-grove.com OD
PHOTOGRAPHY BY STEPHAN GOETTLICHER (PARK GROVE); ERIK SCHNEIDER (MURANO GRANDE); PAUL ZIMMERMAN/WIREIMAGE.COM (TIMBALAND)
FROM MASSIVE UNITS IN SOUTH OF FIFTH TO HIP-HOP HOTSHOTS MAKING MOVES, MIAMI’S REAL ESTATE MARKET INTRIGUES AS IT GROWS. BY SEAN MCCAUGHAN
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WORLDWIDE
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OCE AN PL ACE AT SOUTH OF FIF TH $1,278,000: Flow-through corner PH fully furnished condo with direct ocean views in South of Fifth. Boutique 24-unit building designed by Arquitectonica. Across the street from the beach and park! 3 balconies: East, South, and West Downtown Miami views! Open kitchen with Viking range & stainless steel appliances, washer & dryer in unit. Watch the cruise ships parade by... Investor’s dream... Short te term rentals & pets ok. One assigned covered and gated parking space included, 24 hour security in lobby. Maggie Prieto : 305.926.3587
3Bed/37⁄⁄Baths 2,510 Sq.Ft. 3Bed/3.5Bath + Media Room 4,750 Sq.Ft.
Magnificent! This one-of-a-kind, corner flow-through penthouse commands breathtaking 340-degree views of Miami & Miami Beach. The new homeowner will experience unparalleled living here, thanks to a masterful $2 million restoration by renowned Thrasher Design. This glass home in the sky boasts 20-foot soaring ceilings and dramatic linear architecture that highlights the finest interior elements, incorporating a subliminal floating Thassos marble staircase, a back-lit semi-precious quartz wall, Kreon lighting, Lutron Shades, Crestron SmartHome system, dual Miele and Subzero appliances, Arclinea custom cabinetry and hood-vent, plus a climate controlled wine vault. A rare 400-pound sculpture sink and 20-foot-drop bay-view shower and co steam room will surely enhance the art of penthouse living.
OCE AN ONE PH3 $1,400,000: Bi-level Penthouse home-in-the-sky right on the ocean! Bring your vision and create a spectacular home in one of the most exclusive areas of Sunny Isles Beach just bordering Golden Beach Estates and the new Regalia Condo. Enjoy the onsite beach club, newly upgraded spa, fitness center and grand lobby. The finest in ocean front living!
6Bed/77⁄⁄Baths 7,300 Sq.Ft.
NORTH BAY ROAD
WorldwideProperties.com • 225 Collins Ave • Miami Beach, FL 33139
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CERVERA
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As the original pioneers of South Beach real estate – Cervera leads the way in resultsoriented real-estate service across all South Florida markets. With a focus on maximizing opportunity and value throughout sales, purchases, and rentals, Cervera is known for insight, training, and flawless attention to detail. Today’s success includes over 45,000 units sold, exclusive representation of 17 current pre-construction projects, 320 agents, and 21 office locations – making Cervera South Florida’s premier high-performance real estate team. Please visit cervera.com.
Tapping into Miami and Miami Beach’s multi-national appeal, J. “Eddy” Martinez and Roland Ortiz have built a track record of real estate success through their company Worldwide Properties. Worldwide’s global reach has enabled them to close on several hundred million dollars in South Florida real estate, including multi-million dollar bulk transactions and record breaking dollar-per-square-foot individual sales in luxury buildings like Icon South Beach, Apogee, and the Continuum. Worldwide also specializes in commercial property and property management. Please visit worldwideproperties.com.
Gala2014_OceanDrive_10x5.875_PrintAd.pdf 1 1/10/2014 2:09:28 PM
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be a kid again gala Chaired by A na and N eis en Kas din Executive Committee Jeffrey Berkowitz (Chairman) . Jeff Bartel . Don Browne . Marianne Devine (Secretary) . Michelle Diener . Richard Lampen (Chairman Appointee) . Randall Lee (President) . Adam Malamed (Vice President) . Melissa Netkin Wayne M. Pathman (Vice President) . Gary Reshefsky (Vice President) . Susan Rosenthal (Treasurer) . Deborah Spiegelman
Board of Directors Marcus Bach-Armas . Patricia Baloyra . Jeff Bartel . Jeffrey Berkowitz . Ana Bond . Don Browne . Linda Coll . Marianne Devine . Michelle Diener . Lucia Dougherty . Lilia Garcia . Adolfo Henriques . James Jones . Erika Koopman Rahul Kothari Richard Lampen . Randall Lee . Adam Malamed . Janet Moreira . Tracy Mourning . Melissa Netkin . Jonathan Nitkin . Adrienne Pardo . Beverly Parker . Wayne M. Pathman . Alan Potamkin . Evan Reed Gary Reshefsky . Stephen Riemer . Susan Rosenthal . David Samson . Lisa Schejola Akin . Mijanou Spurdle . Sam Terilli Jr.
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SAVOR THE MOMENT, SAVOR THE CUISINE A ROMANTIC VALENTINE’S EVENING AWAITS Delight your special someone with a decadent five-course Valentine’s prix-fixe menu at The Restaurant on February 14. Executive Chef Mathias Gervais and his culinary artists will present savory masterpieces and a sweet finale, complemented by an impressive selection of fine wines, Champagnes and Asian-inspired specialty cocktails.
Revel in romance on Valentine’s Day by contacting The Setai at 305 520 6400 or dining@thesetaihotel.com
2001 Collins Avenue Miami Beach, FL USA 33139 305 520 6000 thesetaihotel.com
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COCONUT GROVE, CORAL GABLES, KEY BISCAYNE
Monty’s Raw Bar | Scenic waterside spot offering seafood goodies. 2550 S. Bayshore Dr., Coconut Grove, 305-856-3992
Artisan | The newest hot spot in Key Biscayne perfect for sandwiches or tapas. 658 Crandon Blvd., Key Biscayne, 305-365-6003
Ortanique on the Mile | New World Caribbean cuisine, island elegance. 278 Miracle Mile, Coral Gables, 305-446-7710
Bizcaya | Mediterranean-influenced cuisine serving fresh fish and prime cuts of beef, at the Ritz-Carlton Coconut Grove. 3300 SW 27th Ave., Coconut Grove, 305-644-4680
Palme d’Or | Fabulous French fare, at the landmark Biltmore Hotel. 1200 Anastasia Ave., Coral Gables, 305-913-3201
Cantina Beach | Miami’s only oceanfront, coastal Mexican restaurant located at The Ritz-Carlton Key Biscayne. 455 Grand Bay Dr., Key Biscayne, 305-365-4286 Caffe Abbracci | Dine beneath the glow of a ruby-red starlight chandelier and the brilliance of Venetian glass on Italian-inspired foods including great carpaccio’s, the freshest fish, homemade pastas or succulent NY meats. 318 Aragon Ave., Coral Gables, 305-441-0700 Christy’s Restaurant | The steak house meets the piano bar at this Miami staple. 3101 Ponce de Leon Blvd., Coral Gables, 305-446-1400 Cioppino | Tuscan cuisine capturing the romance of Old World Italy, at the Ritz-Carlton Key Biscayne. 455 Grand Bay Dr., Key Biscayne, 305-365-4500 The Dome Restaurant | Bar & Lounge Latin American fusion dishes, with an emphasis on seasonal, fresh and locally sourced ingredients, also boasts the only caviar bar in the area. 271 Miracle Mile, Coral Gables, 305-648-4999 George’s in the Grove | Lively, casual bistro featuring French classics. 3145 Commodore Plaza, Coconut Grove, 305-444-7878
Pascal’s on Ponce | Contemporary French cuisine. 2611 Ponce De Leon Blvd., Coral Gables, 305-444-2024 Peacock Garden Cafe | The ideal setting for outside dining at anytime of day. 2889 McFarlane Rd., Coconut Grove, 305-774-3332 Red Fish Grill | Romantic, waterside seafood dining experience. 9610 Old Cutler Rd., Miami, 305-668-8788 Sushi Samba | The finest fusion of Japanese, Brazilian and Peruvian cuisine at the Westin Colonnade Hotel. 180 Aragon Ave., Coral Gables, 305-441-2600 Swine Southern Table & Bar | This joint is a place to hang with friends, sip a little whiskey, and indulge in genuine Southern cooking. 2415 Ponce De Leon Blvd., Coral Gables, 786-360-6433 Town Kitchen & Bar | Global comfort foods and an irresistible brunch special. 7301 SW 57th Ct., South Miami, 305-740-8118 Versailles | The authentic and famous Miami-Cuban classic. 3555 SW 8 St., Miami, 305-444-0240
DESIGN DISTRICT, MIDTOWN, WYNWOOD The Butcher Shop | Trendy addition to Wynwood that fuses retail, restaurant and beer garden into one gourmet hot-spot. 165 NW 23rd Street, Miami, 305-846-9120 Cafeina | Diverse hot-spot offering intriguing art, nightlife and tasty cuisine in the heart of Wynwood. 297 NW 23rd Street, Miami, 305-438-0792 Crumb on Parchment | Michelle Bernstein’s latest concept features a daily-changing menu for breakfast and lunch. 3930 NE 2nd Ave., Miami, 305-572-9444 The Cypress Room | The Genuine Hospitality Group’s latest Design District haunt gives an elegant nod to 1920’s American fine dining. 3620 NE 2nd Ave., Miami, 305-520-5197 The District Miami | Brings together local history, PanAmerican flavor and culinary craftsmanship for a true Cultural Taste of the Americas. 190 NE 46th Street, Miami, 305-573-4199 Egg & Dart | A modern tavern serving up simple dishes with the highest quality products, such as mouthwatering grilled Mediterranean sardines and octopus, and crispy almond honey drizzled cheese pies. 4029 N. Miami Ave., Miami, 786-431-1022 The Federal | Tackling comfort food classics like pot pies, biscuits and gravy, this eatery will rock your world. 5132 Biscayne Blvd., Miami, 305-758-9559 Gigi | Bustling and hip hot spot featuring Asian-inspired fare. 3470 N. Miami Ave., Miami, 305-573-1520
Restaurant Michael Schwartz Locally inspired dishes and a fantastic ambiance at the iconic Raleigh Hotel pool deck. 1775 Collins Avenue, Miami Beach, 305-612-1163
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I N P R I N T. O N L I N E . I N L I F E .
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Mandolin Aegean Bistro | Authentic countryside cuisine from Greece and Turkey. 4312 NE 2nd Ave., Miami, 305-576-6066 MC Kitchen | Modern Italian cuisine offering seasonal dishes with ingredients selected on the basis of quality, harvest maturity, and farming integrity. 4141 NE 2nd Ave., Suite 101A, Miami, 305-456-9948 Mercadito | Traditional cooking sprinkled with local ingredients inspired by chef Patricio Sandoval’s childhood in Mexico. 3252 NE 1st Ave., Miami, 786-369-0430 Michael’s Genuine Food & Drink | Michael Schwartz’s highly successful Design District eatery. 130 NE 40th St., Atlas Plaza, Miami, 305-573-5550 Morgans | Modern, home-style comfort food for brunch, lunch and dinner. 28 NE 29th St., Miami, 305-573-9678 Oak Tavern | This Design District eatery cooks up modern home-style fare including hearty dishes such as “grown-up mac and cheese.” 35 NE 40th Street, Miami, 786-391-1818 Sakaya Kitchen | This delicious offering from chef Richard Hales re-imagines Asian fast food in a decidedly gourmet way. 3401 N. Miami Ave., Miami, 305-576-8096
fish, right on the river. 398 NW North River Dr., Miami, 305-375-0765 Il Gabbiano | Decadent, exquisite Italian cuisine served inside or out, overlooking Biscayne Bay. 335 S. Biscayne Blvd., Miami, 305-373-0063 Naoe | Experience natural Japanese cuisine as Chef Kevin Cory serves a unique Chef’s Choice menu. 661 Brickell Key Dr., Miami, 305-947-6263 Novecento | Argentinean and Mediterranean cuisine. 1414 Brickell Ave., Miami, 305-403-0900 The Oceanaire | Ultra fresh seafood and American Steak house. 900 S. Miami Ave., Miami 305-372-8862 OTC | Comfort cuisine is served as the name suggests — over-the-counter. 1250 South Miami Ave., Miami, 305-374-4612 PM Buenos Aires Fish & Steak House | Born from the nostalgia felt from the “Porteño”-like cuisine, PM has the influence of not only the parrilladas but also all the different styles all over the world. 1453 S. Miami Ave., Miami, 305-200-5606
Salumeria | 104 Authentic Northern Italian salumi shop and trattoria serving traditional dishes and cured meats. 3451 NE 1st Ave., Miami, 305-424-9588
combination of the freshest Florida Stone Crab, juicy steaks and a selection of over 100 wines. 777 Brickell Ave., Miami, 305-579-0035 Tuyo | Sitting atop Miami Dade College’s new Miami Culinary Institute, Tuyo is an exquisite fusion of New World flavors. 415 N.E. 2nd Ave., Miami, 305-237-3200 Wolfgang’s Steak house | Wolfgang Zweiner’s famous steak house has finally arrived in Miami. 315 S. Biscayne Blvd., Miami, 305-487-7130 Zuma | Internationally acclaimed Japanese “pub fare” from London restaurateur Rainer Becker, at the Epic Hotel. 270 Biscayne Blvd. Way, Miami, 305-577-0277
MIAMI BEACH 1500° Seasonal | farm-to-table dining at the Eden Roc hotel. 4525 Collins Ave., Miami Beach, 305-674-5594 A Fish Called Avalon | Contemporary tropical menu featuring award-winning seafood dishes. 700 Ocean Dr., Miami Beach, 305-532-1727 AltaMare | Neighborhood gem with great seafood and pasta. 1233 Lincoln Rd., Miami Beach, 305-532-3061 Baires Grill | This casual and trendy establishment satiates your appetite with an authentic, high-quality Argentinian cuisine. 1116 Lincoln Rd. Mall, Miami Beach, 305-538-1116
Sugarcane | From the creators of Sushi Samba, a raw bar and grill with a South American spirit. 3250 NE 1st Ave., Miami, 786-369-0353
The Bazaar by José Andrés | Masterfully re-imagined Spanish cuisine, at the SLS Hotel South Beach. 1701 Collins Ave., Miami Beach, 305-455-5000
Wynwood Kitchen & Bar | Affordable global Latino cuisine meets cutting-edge art. 2550 NW 2nd Ave., Miami, 305-722-8959
Bâoli Miami | A dining experience that truly excites the senses: an elegant and vibrant ambiance with an alluring menu. 1906 Collins Ave., Miami Beach, 305-674-8822 Barceloneta Catalan | Bistro and Mercat that will transport you to Spain through taste alone. 1400 20th St., Miami Beach, 305-538-9299
DOWNTOWN Area 31 | Great seafood from the namesake region encompassing the Florida coast and Central America. 270 S. Biscayne Blvd. Way, Miami, 305-424-5234
Barton G. The Restaurant | Upscale American eatery, plus lots of dazzle. 1427 West Ave., Miami Beach, 305-672-8881
Atrio Restaurant and Wine Room | A contemporary restaurant and lounge offering guests an innovative and international menu paired with a minimalistic setting to complement the view of an incandescent Miami skyline. 1395 Brickell Ave., Miami, 305-503-6529
Bianca | Modern Italian fare at the Delano’s signature restaurant. 1685 Collins Ave., Miami Beach, 305-674-6400
Azul | New American cuisine with Asian and European influences. 500 Brickell Key Dr., Miami, 305-913-8358
BLT Steak | at The Betsy Hotel Laurent Tourondel’s interpretation of the American steak house. 1440 Ocean Dr., Miami Beach, 305-673-0044
Biscayne Tavern | Located in the B2 Miami downtown, this casual neighborhood gathering post serves up the next evolution of comfort food. 146 Biscayne Blvd., Miami, 305-358-4555 Cipriani | Exquisite Italian restaurant with impeccable service and elegant design. 465 Brickell Ave. CU1, Miami, 786-329-4090 CVI.CHE 105 | This bustling Peruvian eatery has quickly become a hip downtown landmark. 105 NE 3rd Ave., Miami, 305-577-3454 db Bistro Moderne | The New York sensation from chef Daniel Boulud, in downtown’s JW Marriott Marquis. 255 Biscayne Blvd. Way, Miami, FL 33131, 305-350-0750
Big Pink | Bright and fun diner, serving full-bodied classics. 157 Collins Ave., Miami Beach, 305-532-4700
Estiatorio Milos Costas Spiliadis celebrates the arts, culture and cuisine of Greece and is committed to providing guests a true understanding of fresh ingredients simply prepared with integrity. 730 1st St., Miami Beach, 305-604-6800
Pollos y Jarras | Authentic Peruvian cuisine with an extensive selection of BBQ, grilled meats, and tapas all ideally complimented by signature cocktails. 115 NE 3rd Ave., Miami, 786-567-4940 Soya y Pomodoro | Intimate Italian located in a quaint Neoclassical alcove. 120 NE 1st St., Miami, 305-381-9511
Edge Steak & Bar | This stylish departure from the traditional steak house is the new crown jewel of The Four Seasons Hotel Miami. 1435 Brickell Ave., Miami, 305-381-3079
Toro Toro | Merging Latin American flare and cuisine with a New York City vibe. 100 Chopin Plaza, Miami, 305-372-4710
Fratelli Milano | This tiny downtown gem serves unexpectedly divine pasta dishes. 213 SE 1st St., Miami, 305-373-2300
Toscana Divino | Brickell’s Italian trattoria features an Italian happy hour, “Aperitivo Italiano,” every Wednesday. 900 S. Miami Ave., Miami, 305-371-2767
Garcia’s Seafood Grille & Fish Market | Fabulously fresh
Truluck’s Seafood | Steak & Crab House A fantastic
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Café Prima Pasta | Authentic Italian meats, cheeses, pastas and desserts since 1993. 414 71st St., Miami Beach, 305-867-0106 Canyon Ranch Grill | Wholesome seasonal dishes with an emphasis on local farming methods. 6801 Collins Ave., Miami Beach, 305-514-7474 Casa Tua | Italian restaurant with a private upstairs lounge and la dolce vita vibe. 1700 James Ave., Miami Beach, 305-673-1010 Catch Miami | A New American seafood restaurant with a menu inspired by the flavors of Asia and the Mediterranean. 1545 Collins Ave., Miami Beach, 786-224-7200 Cavalli Restaurant & Lounge | Illustrious designer Roberto Cavalli presents his latest project: a twostory Art Deco Villa set to be the ideal space where world-class cuisine, fashion, and design will combine. 150 Ocean Dr., Miami Beach Cecconi’s | The Italian sensation from Mayfair and West Hollywood has brought its A-list vibe to the Soho Beach House. 4385 Collins Ave., Miami Beach, 786-507-7902
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MUSCATO MOMO Italy, Welcome Drink Tammy Napoli, Photography Tatiana Perevozchikova, Dessert CABERNET SAUVIGNON Julee Akselrad, Program Card Northwestern Mutual, The South Florida Group, Nail File ICE WINE Bilzin Sumberg Baena Price & Axelrod LLP, Water Bottle MOMO Italy, Anti-Bacterial MOMO Italy, Security TRANSPORTATION SPONSOR RedCap MEDIA SPONSORS Clear Channel Media + Entertainment Ocean Drive Social Miami FOUNDATION FRIENDS The Fortin Foundation of Florida Together we can make a difference in the lives of children worldwide. *We regret any omissions due to printing deadlines.
Thursday, February 6, 2014
10:30 a.m. - 3:30 p.m. at Coral Gables Country Club Event Co-Chairs: Criselda Breene, Carola Pimentel
For more information, please contact Nicole Gray at 786.624.2984
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Villa Azur A taste of South of France combining exquisite food, fine wines, friendly service and inviting atmosphere. 309 23rd St., Miami Beach, 305-763-8688 Charles St. | A modern bistro featuring internationally, high-quality, affordable fare inside the Boulan South Beach Hotel. 2000 Collins Ave., Miami Beach, 305-763-8983
Fratelli La Bufala | Sumptuous pizzas and pastas prepared with the freshest buffalo mozzarella imported from Italy. 437 Washington Ave., Miami Beach, 305-532-0700
David’s Café South Beach | Original Cuban cuisine since 1977. Open 24 hours daily. 1058 Collins Ave., Miami Beach, 305-534-8736
Gloutonnerie | Time-tested French fare with the rustic comfort of home cooking and the refinement of nouveau cuisine. 81 Washington Ave., Miami Beach, 305-503-3811
DiLido Beach Club | A casually elegant oceanfront restaurant and lounge with ocean-table cuisine and a relaxed, chic ambiance perfect for people-watching, at The Ritz-Carlton, South Beach. 155 Lincoln Rd., Miami Beach 786-276-4000
Gotham Steak Modern | American steak house fare from chef Alfred Portale. 4441 Collins Ave., Miami Beach, 305-674-4780
Dolce Italian | Contemporary take on Italian classics located at The Gale Hotel. 1690 Collins Ave., Miami Beach, 305-673-0199 The Dutch | A roots-inspired restaurant, Bar and Oyster Room at the W South Beach. 2201 Collins Ave., Miami Beach, 305-938-3111 Escopazzo | Excellent romantic Italian cuisine with an organic emphasis. 1311 Washington Ave., Miami Beach, 305-674-9450 Estiatorio Milos | Costas Spiliadis Celebrates the arts, culture and cuisine of Greece and is committed to providing guests a true understanding of fresh ingredients simply prepared with integrity. 730 1st St., Miami Beach, 305-604-6800
Hakkasan | The exquisite Chinese creations of London restaurateur Alan Yau, at the Fontainebleau. 4441 Collins Ave., Miami Beach, 786-276-1388 HaVen Gastro-Lounge | An intimate, high-tech gastrolounge featuring global small plates by Chef Todd Erickson and innovative craft cocktails. 1237 Lincoln Rd., Miami Beach, 305-987-8885 Icebox | Offering the finest deserts in Miami Beach. 1855 Purdy Ave., Miami Beach, 305-538-8448 Il Mulino | From Abruzzo to South Beach, Il Mulino New York presents unforgettable, classic Italian cuisine in a chic, modern dining experience. 840 First St., Miami Beach Joe’s Stone Crab | A must-see Miami institution since 1913. 11 Washington Ave., Miami Beach, 305-673-0365 Juvia | Artistic food presentation and an innovative take on Asian fusion, with stunning views of South Beach. 1111 Lincoln Rd., Miami Beach, 305-763-8272
Florida Cookery at The James Royal Palm | Artisticallyinspired environment with a menu that reflects the authenticity of Florida-style cooking — local, fresh, and unpretentious. 1545 Collins Ave., Miami Beach, 786-276-0333
Katsuya | Traditional Japanese cuisine with a provocative twist, at the SLS Hotel South Beach. 1701 Collins Ave., Miami Beach, 305-455-5000
Fogo de Chão | The original Brazilian steak house with continuous tableside service and 15 cuts of meat. 836 1st St., Miami Beach, 305-672-0011
Khong River House | Authentic Northern Thai cuisine served in a farmhouse-styled interior. 1661 Meridian Ave., Miami Beach, 305-763-8147
The Forge Restaurant & Lounge | Chef Dewey LoSasso has created a sublime progressive American menu to match this institution’s new décor. 432 41st St., Miami Beach, 305-538-8533
Kung Fu Sushi | Chinese favorites and a late-night sushi bar, at The Catalina Hotel & Beach Club. 1720 Collins Ave., Miami Beach, 305-534-7905
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La Locanda | Classic Italian just south of Fifth Street.
419 Washington Ave., Miami Beach, 305-538-6277 La Piaggia | A St-Tropez beach club without the jet lag. 1000 South Pointe Dr., Miami Beach, 305-674-0647 The Lido Restaurant & Bayside Grill | Stunning waterside dining featuring chef Mark Zeitouni’s cuisine, at The Standard. 40 Island Ave., Miami Beach, 305-673-1717 Lucali | Brooklyn’s most coveted pizza in the heart of South Beach. 1930 Bay Rd., Miami Beach, 305-695-4441 Macaluso’s Restaurant | Staten Island home-cooked Italian. 1747 Alton Rd., Miami Beach, 305-604-1811 Macchialina Taverna Rustica | This addition to the Pubbelly family features rustic Italian cuisine. 820 Alton Rd., Miami Beach, 305-534-2124 Maxine’s Bistro At The Catalina Hotel & Beach Club Somewhat of an institution on Collins Ave., serving American bistro fare with an international twist, 24 hours a day, seven days a week. 1732 Collins Ave., Miami Beach, 305-674-1160 Michael Mina 74 | Award-winning chef Michael Mina, brings sophisticated, American bistro-style fare to the iconic Fontainebleau Miami Beach, with a dynamic menu that features whimsical dishes and handcrafted cocktails from across the globe. 4441 Collins Ave., Miami Beach, 305-674-4636 Meat Market | Chef Sean Brasel has created an imaginative, top-flight menu with flair at this packed hot spot. 915 Lincoln Rd., Miami Beach, 305-532-0088 Monty’s Sunset | Miami’s ultimate Seafood Bistro features a raw bar and ceviche bar with breathtaking sunset views and a bay front location. 300 Alton Rd., Miami Beach, 305-672-1148 Moreno’s Cuba At the Riviera South Beach | A Cubaninspired eatery developed around an authentic Havana-style café, with a culinary ethos based around Cuban Tapas and small plates made for sharing. 2000 Liberty Ave., Miami Beach, 305-538-7444 Mr Chow | Iconic Chinese showplace at the W South Beach. 2201 Collins Ave., Miami Beach, 305-695-1695
1/15/14 10:37 AM
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Makoto Modern Japanese cuisine in the Bal Harbour Shops. 9700 Collins Ave., Bal Harbour, 305-864-8600 with a strong Asian influence. 2001 Collins Ave., Miami Beach, 305-520-6402
Master Sauce, which keeps diners coming back for more. 1080 Alton Rd., Miami Beach, 305-672-4334
Scarpetta | Ravishing Italian cuisine from chef Scott Conant, at the Fontainebleau. 4441 Collins Ave., Miami Beach, 305-538-2000
Yardbird Southern Table & Bar | Farm Fresh Southern Cooking, Bourbon and Blues. 1600 Lennox Ave., Miami Beach, 305-538-5220
Nobu | Legendary Japanese seafood delicacies, at the Shore Club. 1901 Collins Ave., Miami Beach, 305-695-3232
Serafina | A South Beach sensation that offers a Northern Italian dining experience, at the Dream Hotel. 1111 Collins Ave., Miami Beach, 305-534-8455
Vesper | American Brasserie A mix of ‘50s glamour and mysterious charm offering rustic, elite fare at the Shelborne South Beach. 1801 Collins Ave., Miami Beach, 305-341-1500
Prime Italian | Upscale American-Italian sister restaurant to Prime One Twelve. 101 Ocean Dr., Miami Beach, 305-695-8484
The Setai Grill | Prime steak house with the finest seafood selections, accompanied by The Setai’s impressive wine list. 2001 Collins Ave., Miami, 305-520-6400
Villa Azur | A taste of South of France combining exquisite food, fine wines, friendly service and inviting atmosphere. 309 23rd St., Miami Beach, 305-763-8688
Prime One Twelve | Extraordinary, modern take on the classic steak house. 112 Ocean Dr., Miami Beach, 305-532-8112
Smith & Wollensky | Classic steak dishes, outstanding seafood, and an award-winning wine selection. 1 Washington Ave., Miami Beach, 305-673-2800
Wine Depot & Bistro | 555 Wine store, wine bar and bistro where all of your senses will be aroused. 555 Jefferson Ave., Miami Beach, 305.672.6161
Pubbelly Gastropub | This innovative tavern features a menu of homemade pâtés, specialty terrines and braised dishes, and its signature Asian street food. 1418 20th St., Miami Beach, 305-532-7555
STK | The combination of sumptuous food with lively entertainment is a stylish diversion from the traditional steak house ambience, at The Perry South Beach Hotel. 2377 Collins Ave., Miami Beach, 305-604-6988
Pubbelly Steak | Barn-style meatery in the old Georgia’s Union digs serving an extensive lineup of crazy beef cuts with even crazier toppings. 1787 Purdy Ave., Miami Beach, 305-695-9550
Sushi Mikasa | Traditional sushi and signature creations such as tuna pizza at the Shelbourne South Beach. 1801 Collins Ave., Miami Beach 305-535-3500
My Ceviche | This indoor-outdoor eatery will flaunt the brand’s signature seafood selections alongside seasonal, craft, and local beer options. 235 Washington Ave., Miami Beach, 305-397-8710 News Cafe | This 24-hour spot remains the heart and soul of South Beach. 800 Ocean Dr., Miami Beach, 305-695-3232
Pubbelly Sushi | Japanese small plates with Latin, Indian and Italian influences. 1424 20th St., Miami Beach, 305-531-9282 Quattro Gastronomia | Italiana Twin chefs Nicola and Fabrizio Carro stir up traditional Northern Italian cuisine. 1014 Lincoln Rd., Miami Beach, 305-531-4833 Red The Steak house | Hot Mediterranean-influenced steak house. 119 Washington Ave., Miami Beach, 305-534-3688 Restaurant Michael Schwartz | Locally inspired dishes and a fantastic ambiance at the iconic Raleigh Hotel pool deck. 1775 Collins Avenue, Miami Beach, 305-612-1163
Sushi Samba Dromo | Japanese-Brazilian fusion fare amid a bustling ambience. 600 Lincoln Rd., Miami Beach, 305-673-5337 Terrazza at Shore Club | This casual, Italian chophouse offers the ultimate in indoor-outdoor dining with the cool vibe and energy of Shore Club. 1901 Collins Ave., Miami Beach, 305-695-3226 Texas De Brazil | A unique concept that offers diners a parade of meats and an extravagant seasonal salad area. 300 Alton Rd., Suite 200, Miami Beach, 305-695-7702 Tongue and Cheek | Upscale American cuisine with a trendy, yet relaxing ambiance. 431 Washington Ave., Miami Beach. 305-704-2900
The Restaurant at Mondrian South Beach | Modern American brasserie and sushi bar serving globally inspired cuisine that is locally sourced and designed to be shared. 1100 West Ave., Miami Beach, 305-514-1940
Umi Sushi & Sake Bar | A communal, Japanese-style dining experience in the lobby at Delano. 1685 Collins Ave., Miami Beach, 305-674-5752
The Restaurant at The Setai | Five-star, trans-ethnic cuisine
Umami Burger | No one can resist the special Umami
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NORTH DADE, BROWARD Carpaccio | Bal Harbour Shops’ most bustling spot for delicious Italian fare. 9700 Collins Ave., Bal Harbour, 305-867-7777 J&G Grill | A contemporary bar and grill featuring a curated selection of Jean-Georges’ innovative dishes, at the St. Regis Bal Harbour Resort. 9703 Collins Ave., Bal Harbour, 305-993-3333 La Goulue | Fantastic French bistro in the Bal Harbour Shops. 9700 Collins Ave., Bal Harbour, 305-865-2181 Makoto | Modern Japanese cuisine in the Bal Harbour Shops. 9700 Collins Ave., Bal Harbour, 305-864-8600 Palm Restaurant | Old New York-style steak house. 9650 E. Bay Harbor Dr., Bay Harbor Islands, 305-868-7256 S3 | An island-chic retreat with indoor-outdoor seating, lush patio with fire pits and custom-designed lounge seating with breathtaking views of the ocean serving steak, seafood and sushi. 505 N. Fort Lauderdale Beach Blvd., Fort Lauderdale, 954-523-SURF St. Regis Bar & Sushi Lounge | A modern Miami atmosphere with a Japanese twist, this Sushi Lounge is nothing short of luxury, at the St. Regis Resort. 9703 Collins Ave., Bal Harbour, 305-993-3300
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www.lippirestaurants.com
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Hyde Beach
Enjoy artful mixology and José Andrés cuisine at Hyde Beach – the first oceanfront location of sbe’s premier nightlife brand at SLS Hotel South Beach. 1701 Collins Ave., Miami Beach,305-674-1701
DESIGN DISTRICT, WYNWOOD Bardot | Intimate lounge featuring live music and an edgy scene. 3456 N. Miami Ave., Miami, 305-576-5570
The Broken Shaker | Laid-back indoor-outdoor bar featuring exotic handcrafted cocktails, at the Freehand Miami Hostel. 2727 Indian Creek Dr., Miami Beach, 305-531-2727
Gavanna | “Vibe dictates the night” at Wynwood’s hot-spot. 10 NE 40th St., Miami, 305-573-1321
Club Deuce | Everyone’s favorite timeless dive bar. 222 14th St., Miami Beach, 305-531-6200
Ricochet Bar & Lounge | Art and music-centric bar and lounge in the heart of Midtown. 3250 NE 1st Ave., #122B, Miami, 786-353-0846
FDR | Subterranean lounge at the Delano. 1685 Collins Ave., Miami Beach, 305-674-5752
Wood Tavern | Artsy and relaxed indoor-outdoor enclave where hipsters, art-walk crawlers, and collectors mingle. 2531 NW 2nd Ave., Wynwood, 305-748-2828
DOWNTOWN, BRICKELL Blackbird Ordinary | Catchy and energetic vibe with delicious cocktails hidden downtown. 729 SW First Ave., Miami, 305-671-3307 Blue Martini | Upscale atmosphere with a local-bar mentality, at Mary Brickell Village. 900 S. Miami Ave., Miami, 305-981-2583 Grand Central | Former railRd. station turned contemporary event space with weekly events for Miami’s most discerning music lovers. 697 N. Miami Ave., Miami, 305-377-2277 Hyde AmericanAirlines Arena | A posh VIP lounge on the court-level of the Arena. 601 Biscayne Blvd., Miami, 855-777-4933
The Flat | Intimate cocktail lounge that gives the feel of a New York speakeasy. 500 S Pointe Dr., Miami Beach, 305-531-3528 Foxhole | New watering hole and neighborhood bar owned by nightlife veterans. 1426A Alton Rd., Miami Beach, 305-534-3511 Hyde Beach | Enjoy artful mixology and José Andrés cuisine at Hyde Beach — the first oceanfront location of sobe’s premier nightlife brand at SLS Hotel South Beach. 1701 Collins Ave., Miami Beach, 305-674-1701 Jazid | Intimate, live jazz and blues and nightly drink specials. 1342 Washington Ave., Miami Beach, 305-673-9372 Kill Your Idol | Hipster kids plus cheap drinks plus high irony equals a perfect night. 222 Española Way, Miami Beach, 305-672-1852 LIV | The hip, high-energy megaclub, at the Fontainebleau. 4441 Collins Ave., Miami Beach, 305-674-4680 Mansion | Plush, oversized dance club with copious VIP nooks. 1235 Washington Ave., Miami Beach, 305-695-8411
Tobacco Rd. | Miami’s oldest bar, serving patrons for more than 95 years. 626 S. Miami Ave., Miami, 305-374-1198
Mokaï | A modern lounge with New York sensibility and Miami joie de vivre. 235 23rd St., Miami Beach, 305-673-1409
MIAMI BEACH
Mynt | A vibrant club that plays host to South Beach’s fabulous crowd. 1921 Collins Ave., Miami Beach, 305-532-0727
Adoré Nightclub | This fallen Cathedral Inspired Venue features a lavish lighting and video design set to host Miami’s most exclusive. 2000 Collins Ave., Miami Beach Bamboo | This renovated Paris Theatre features superior entertainment technology and sleek, modern, Gatsby-style décor. 550 Washington Ave., Miami Beach, 305-695-4771
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Nikki Beach | Mostly outdoor hot spot to see and be seen. 1 Ocean Dr., Miami Beach, 305-538-1111 Purdy Lounge | The perfect dark and laid-back local bar. 1811 Purdy Ave., Miami Beach, 305-531-4622
Radio Bar | Hip local bar, new to the SoFi area. 814 First St., Miami Beach. 305-397-8382 Rec Room | New York-influenced upscale basement lounge, at the Gale Hotel. 1690 Collins Ave., Miami Beach, 305-673-0199 The Regent Cocktail Club | Dimly lit and classically elegant cocktail bar and lounge, at the Gale Hotel. 1690 Collins Ave., Miami Beach, 305-673-0199 Score | Hot gay video dance bar with outdoor seating. 727 Lincoln Rd., Miami Beach, 305-535-1111 Set | A modern South Beach tribute to Old Hollywood glamour. 320 Lincoln Rd., Miami Beach, 305-531-2800 SkyBar | The Shore Club’s exclusive nightlife setting overlooking the ocean. 1901 Collins Ave., Miami Beach, 786-276-6772 SL Miami | Modern nightlife club with elements of its original NYC club and Miami inspired décor at the James Royal Palm. 1545 Collins Ave., Miami Beach, 305-604-5700 Story | “A new chapter in Miami Nightlife”. 136 Collins Ave., Miami Beach 305-479-4426 Sunset Lounge | Mondrian South Beach’s indoor-outdoor lounge is comprised of multiple spaces, offering the only bayside destination for watching the sunset over Miami’s downtown skyline. 1100 West Ave., Miami Beach, 305-514-1941 Sweetwater Beer Garden | A new members-only poolside oasis that is attracting some of Miami’s hippest locals. 318 21st Street, Miami Beach, 786-516-7961 Ted’s Hideaway | A laid-back local bar with a pool table and a delightfully grungy scene. 124 Second St., Miami Beach, 305-532-9869 Twist | Popular gay pit stop with late-night action and seven uniquely themed bars. 1057 Washington Ave., Miami Beach, 305-538-9478 Wall | The W South Beach’s on-site hot spot from a dream team of nightlife innovators. 2201 Collins Ave., Miami Beach, 305-938-3000
1/15/14 10:37 AM
Miami International Film Festival Produced and Presented by Miami Dade College March 7-16, 2014 miamifilmfestival.com
“Every character under the sun.�
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Meredith Okeefe, Tim Okeefe of First Service Residential and Marlo Perez
Jeff Schulman & Steve Nivet of Regions Bank Receiving Thank You Plaque from Stephanie Trump
Kim Abreu of Bank of America, Alex Abreu, Stephanie Reed and Evan Reed of Bank of America
Bob Hollander of Brown & Brown Insurance and Linda Hollander
On behalf of the Dreamers of the “I Have a Dream” Foundation Miami and The Tr ump Family...
Sean Murphy & Tom Murphy Coastal Construction
Jules Trump, Deborah Yager Fleming and Tamir Kobrin of Acqualina Resort & Spa
T HA N K YOU !
Lucy Rodriguez and Steve Cohen of Sabadell United Bank
Jeff Schulman of Regions Bank, Richard Suss, Marsha Bilzin, Brian Bilzin and Johnathan Robertson
TITLE SPONSOR Regions Bank E V E NT S P ON S OR S Acqualina Resort & Spa Coastal Construction Trump Group DESSERT SPO NSO RS Atlass Hardware Corp. Brown & Brown Insurance Continental Glass System First Service Residential Sabadell United Bank Wells Fargo Bank DECORATIO N SPO NSO RS Bradford Products, LLC Premier Stoneworks Twin Stone Designs ENTERTAINM ENT SPO NSO RS Bank of America Bilzin, Sumberg, Baena Price & Axelrod LLP Capform, Inc. Florida Engineering & Development Corp. Hypower, Inc. Nachurs Alpine Solutions South Florida Building Officials, Inc. Suntech Plumbing PROGRAM SPO NSO R Cohen, Freedman, Encinosa, and Associates Architects
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Jason Williams of Wells Fargo Bank and Beatriz Vasquez
Dreamers from the Class of 2020 and Superintendent Alberto Carvalho
The “I Have A Dream” Foundation empowers children in low-income communities to achieve higher education and fulfill their leadership potential by providing them with the skills, knowledge, and habits they need to gain entry to higher education and succeed in college and beyond. We guarantee their academic tuition at a Florida state university for a 4 year degree or at an accredited trade school. This allows them to become proud and productive citizens. For more information, please visit www.ihaveadreamfoundationmiami.com DREAMER SPONSORS Allegheny Millwork Boucher Brothers Coastal Masonry Downsview Kitchen of Dania Eastern Waste Management Genspring Family Getzel Schiff & Pesce, LLP
HJ Foundation Ibiely Uniforms Imperial Stone Corp. ION Electric J.P. Morgan Johnathan & Shannon Robertson
Miami Drywall & Stucco, Inc. Miele Inc. NV5 Otis Elevator Company Park One Phillips, Cantor & Shalek and Rubin P.A
D R EAM ER SPON SOR S Roberts Contracting, Inc. STA Architectural Group SunTrust Bank Taylor & Mathis Timothy & Cynthia Beare Titon Builders UBS Yun Maintenance SPEC IAL TH AN KS TO 595 Printing Avant DJs Carma Cynthia Camburn & Nicole Cravey of Marcum Ibiley Uniforms Luke’s Landscaping Ocean Drive Magazine Roots & Roots Tiny Delights Video by David Vargas of Penilican Pictures, LLC
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T he
Guide
East of Ordinary WITH FAMILY RECIPES AND A NEW OUTDOOR SPACE, MINA’S MEDITERRANEO TAKES DINERS OFF THE BEATEN MEDITERRANEAN PATH IN MIAMI’S UPPER EAST SIDE. BY MEGAN MCCRINK
T
en years ago, Yasmine Kotb was encouraged to open a Mediterranean restaurant in Miami—by none other than Emilio Estefan. Then a tour manager for Gloria and Emilio, Kotb had taken the Latin duo to her parents’ Mediterraneo Market & Café in Houston, Texas, when the idea was born. This winter, Emilio’s persuasion finally took hold, and Kotb opened Mina’s Mediterraneo in Miami’s Upper East Side, enlisting her mother’s help to assist Mina’s chefs in capturing the essential flavors of Kotb’s Egyptian background. Kotb creates the comforts of a neighborhood bistro through both familystyle food and a community-driven atmosphere. House-made dishes lend an old-world flavor, such as pita with besara dip, lamb pita sliders, baked beef Bourguignon, and the baked kibby (likened to a Middle Eastern meatloaf, which is based on her grandmother’s recipe). “I grew up cooking
with my grandmother and spent the day cooking with the cousins and kids,” Kotb explains. “A big part of Egyptian food is producing the meal— food is part of the culture.” Although recipes are traditional, the décor is not. Mina’s breaks away from the typical tapestry-laced, blue-and-white color-schemed Mediterranean restaurants you might expect. Instead, vintage travel prints hang on the walls beneath vast overhead windows and are reminiscent of the 1950s, when the building was constructed. Kotb wanted to eschew the tourist genre that many restaurants like hers fall into, opting for a location she feels is attractive to locals. “I see this as a corridor to be full of shops, a cool little pocket,” Kotb says. “Whether it’s artists or an owneroperated type of street, it has potential.” 749 NE 79th St., Miami, 786-391-0300; minasmiami.com OD
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SHOT ON SITE PHOTOGRAPHS BY WORLD RED EYE
Russian Standard Vodka models.
Amanda Curtis
Chris Gregorio and Bianca Rose. DJ Shaun Duval. Lauren Vidal, Netta Sarry, and Heather Saltz.
Lauren Garrote and Maggie Fernandez.
Incredible Pursuits
Ocean Drive and Russian Standard Vodka celebrated the holidays and Amanda Curtis, CEO and cofounder of 19thAmendment.co, with an intimate selection of VIP guests at Haven GastroLounge. Curtis was chosen as the winner of Russian Standard Vodka’s Incredible Pursuits program, which seeks to find innovators and entrepreneurs striving to achieve the extraordinary. Guests enjoyed delicious Russian Standard Vodka cocktails and amuse-bouches from Haven chef Todd Erickson.
Mike Boles, Ben Arndt, and Ricardo Agudelo Aguillon.
Brooke Friedman and Gemma Sole.
Caption will go here tk.
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Eddy Medina, Rasheda Cox, Henrique Viotti, Liz Burns, and Alex Pujol.
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SHOT ON SITE PHOTOGRAPHS BY SETH BROWARNIK
Randy Mims and LeBron James at FDR at the Delano.
Mike Epps and Gabrielle Union at Hyde AmericanAirlines Arena. Ronnie Moss, Charlton Washington, Jessie Robert Peck, Henry Fambrough, and Marvin Taylor of The Spinners at their Bleaulive Legends Night performance with Gloria Gaynor at the Fontainebleau Miami Beach.
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David Guetta and Michael Martin at LIV at the Fontainebleau Miami Beach.
Trey Songz and Young Jeezy at Bamboo.
Jeff Klein and Adam Lambert at Lambert’s Bleaulive performance at the Fontainebleau Miami Beach.
Charles Przybylinski and Tony Mantuano at the Lorenzo grand opening at The Redbury. Boy George at Mansion.
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SHOT ON SITE PHOTOGRAPHS BY SETH BROWARNIK
Aaron Resnick and Angela Santamaria at The Dream fundraiser to benefit the International Brain Research Foundation at The Temple House.
Tara Benmeleh, Trey Speegle, and Flavia Tallo at Speegle’s WithYou event at Benetton South Beach.
Mark Ronson and Chris and Roman Jones at Mansion.
John Richard and Mike Eidson at Itzhak Perlman’s performance at the Adrienne Arsht Center for the Performing Arts.
Busta Rhymes, Ace Hood, and DJ Khalid at LIV at the Fontainebleau Miami Beach.
Norris Cole, Matt Werner, and Mike Giron at Wall at the W South Beach. Micky Wolfson, Silvia Barisione, and Cathy Leff at The WolfsonianFIU.
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Clarice Oliveira Tavares and Eduardo Costantini at the grand opening of the Oceana Bal Harbour sales center.
Gastón Acurio and Terry Zarikian at Acurio’s meetand-greet at La Mar at Mandarin Oriental, Miami.
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SHOT ON SITE PHOTOGRAPHS BY SETH BROWARNIK
Tony Miros, Vene Giufurta, and Glen Miller at The James Royal Palm’s one-year anniversary.
Stefano and Renzo Rosso at the launch of Atelier Swarovski by Maison Martin Margiela’s Crystalactite collection.
David Grutman and Jerry Springer at LIV at the Fontainebleau Miami Beach.
Megan Murphy, Sam and Max Baum, and Morgan Murphy at Nguzunguzu at Third Thursdays at PAMM. Hunter Gellin, Roy Alpert, and Anastasia Ganias at the Ugly Sweater party at the Broken Shaker.
Rashard Lewis & Michael Beasley at FDR at the Delano.
Ellen Marchman Larkey and Edison Lozada at YoungArts Cultural Cocktails: A Jazz Happening.
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Regina Arriola, Brandon Cauff, and Tatiana Cartaya at the Spring/Summer 2014 collection cocktail at Brioni at Bal Harbour Shops.
Alicia Cervera and Alan Ojeda at the opening of The Bond sales center.
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SHOT ON SITE NEW YEAR’S EVE PHOTOGRAPHS BY SETH BROWARNIK T.I. and Tiny at the Fontainebleau Miami Beach.
Jeremy Piven and Marlon Wayans at Catch Miami’s one-year anniversary.
Nina Agdal at the Fontainebleau Miami Beach.
Afrojack and Pharrell Williams at their performance at the Fontainebleau Miami Beach.
Mark Birnbaum, Rick Ross, and Eugene Remm at Ross’s performance at SL Miami.
Jason Panton and Matisyahu at Sky bar at the Shore Club.
Dallas Austin, Zoe Kravitz, and Jona Cerwinske at Costa Hollywood’s Hollywood Meets Hollywood event and “Art of Night” exhibit at Soho Beach House.
Bethenny Frankel and Michael Cerussi at the Mondrian South Beach.
Paulina Slagter and Ryan Phillippe at Catch Miami’s one-year anniversary.
Ocean Drive magazine, Vol. 22, Issue #1 (ISSN: 1092-7530, USPS No. 016-535), is published monthly, except combined issues of May/June and Summer, for $70 annually, by Niche Media Holdings LLC, 404 Washington Avenue, Suite 650, Miami Beach, FL 33139-6651. Ocean Drive is owned and operated by Niche Media Holdings LLC, a Nevada corporation. Telephone (305) 532-2544; fax (305) 532-4366. Periodicals postage paid at Miami, FL and additional mailing offices. POSTMASTER: Send changes of address to Ocean Drive Magazine, Niche Media Holdings LLC, P.O. Box 16057, North Hollywood, CA 91615. Ocean Drive does not assume liability for products or services advertised herein. We are not responsible for the return of unsolicited manuscripts, artwork and/or photographs. The entire content of Ocean Drive is copyright Niche Media Holdings LLC. All column names are the property of Niche Media Holdings LLC, and may not be used or reproduced without the express written permission of the publisher.
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Parting Shot Going Up Z
aha herself wasn’t there, but it seemed like everyone else was, clinking glasses of Champagne and admiring the view—oh, what a view. The sales center for One Thousand Museum, world-renowned architect and part-time Miami Beach resident Zaha Hadid’s much anticipated luxury condo tower, complete with a helipad—and her first skyscraper in the Western Hemisphere, no less—was having its opening party mere yards away from the Biscayne Boulevard site in downtown Miami where it will actually break ground. The center was packed to the Jetson-esque ceiling with developers, real estate brokers and their clients, journalists, architects, tipsy cast members of the upcoming Million Dollar Listing Miami, and a who’s who of the city. Much like Southern California has the business of Hollywood, here in Miami we have the business of real estate. Instead of The Hunger Games, we have One Thousand Museum and all of the other big, new buildings. Instead of Jerry Bruckheimer, we have Jorge Pérez. In the rest of the United States, real estate talk centers on zoning for good schools, crown molding, McMansions, and granite countertops. Here, the conversation is a little different. The fame and skill of the building’s architect, the art collection in the lobby, and the size of the single-pane, impact-resistant, floor-to-ceiling glass doors are the details often scrutinized. And, yes, the pet spas. Don’t even try to get a mortgage; it’s cash only these days, up front. Our city will soon have two real estate reality shows, Hot Listings Miami and Million Dollar Listing Miami, turning our favorite and
most entertaining brokers into celebrities. And we prefer our architects to be starchitects. Each building gets more unique than the next—these aren’t your white-picket-fenced townhomes of the suburbs, but rather the most luxurious offerings on the cutting edge of American real estate, from a glass-bottomed pool hanging off a penthouse like the one at the currently under-construction Mansions at Acqualina to the personal car elevators that whisk your auto 57 stories high in the sky at the Porsche Design Tower. This is living. Sure, there are still silly condo sales animations with ethereal soundtracks and supposedly perfect couples and seductive female voice-overs extolling the building as the sheer definition of success on Planet Earth. But there just may be something else going on here. The current leading themes of the great Miami “spectacle” are now real estate, art, architecture, and the convergence of all three. Maybe we’re evolving—almost graduating—from the stereotypical (beach, models, flamingos) and the carnal (debaucherous partying) to those three “loftier” ideals. Miami seems to have raised the bar for itself. Icon Bay and Paraiso Bay are both being built with public parks and sculpture gardens. The world’s top design talent is being brought in for buildings like Grove at Grand Bay, Jade Signature, and more to push the envelope of high living and represent Miami’s ascendancy as a whole. The evidence of our evolution is rising around us in concrete and glass, one floor at a time. Until, of course, LIV opens condos and residences. OD
O nly in Miami !
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ILLUSTRATION BY PAUL DICKINSON
IN MIAMI, REAL ESTATE MARKETING IS OVER THE TOP, IF NOT ENTERTAINING, BUT THERE JUST MIGHT BE A CULTURAL EVOLUTION AMID ALL THE HYPE. BY SEAN MCCAUGHAN
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