Showing posts with label Miami Beach hotels. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Miami Beach hotels. Show all posts

Monday, June 3, 2024

Americana Hotel Bal Harbour promises tropical fun on Miami Beach 1950s

Americana Hotel and pool circa 1956,
Florida State Archives

 By Jane Feehan

Laurence and Bob Tisch, operators of hotels in Atlantic City and in New York announced construction of their new Bal Harbour hotel, the Americana, in 1955. Property included 600 feet of ocean front and 10 acres of “playground” for the entire project. Designer Morris Lapidus was tapped as architect.

The Americana, once queen of Bal Harbour hotels, operated at 9701 Collins Avenue. It was the third major hotel designed by Morris Lapidus (1902-2001). He had worked on the San Souci Hotel on the beach in 1949, but only to complete work already begun by another architect. The first and second achievements of his architectural trifecta were the Fontainebleau at 4441 Collins, opened in 1954, and the Eden Roc next door at 4525 Collins in 1955. The Americana, as well as the other two hotels, received praise, criticism and plenty of publicity.

The Americana design represented a departure from the European-influenced style of the previous two hotels. The Bal Harbour resort featured mostly South American elements, a “modern tropical,” idea said
  Laurence Tisch. Taylor Construction began work on the Americana in September 1955.

To accent his design concept, Lapidus included tiles imported from Mexico, Panama, Japan, and Italy. He was criticized by other architects for use of less luxurious—“cheap”— materials for guest rooms. Some complained about hearing noise such as ringing phones from adjacent rooms. Lapidus claimed guests came to Miami hotels for fun rather than privacy. The Tisch brothers defended their architect.
 

The $17 million Americana Hotel, with 850 employees, 475 rooms, the 500-seat Carnival Supper club and Bal Masque Room night club opened for guests in November 1956. Rooms, which sold for $35-$75 (expensive at that time) featured black-white and color television sets as well as closed circuit TV.
Bal Masque entrance 1957 
Florida State Archives

Television and radio broadcasting company NBC arrived for its 30th anniversary bash in December that year with a lineup of shows normally aired from New York studios: The Today Show with host Dave Garroway, the Perry Como Show and the Steve Allen Show with Allen's wife Jayne Meadows. Newspapers reported entertainer Abbe Lane and husband Xavier Cugat performed at the Bal Masque Room for the NBC party.

No doubt the NBC bash raised the profile of the new Americana. The hotel sailed smoothly through the years with different owners, including the Sheraton, which was the last owner to take the helm. The hotel was demolished in 2007 to make way for the St. Regis condo hotel where a recent listing for a two-bedroom condo advertised a price of nearly $4 million.
Hotel lobby greenhouse,
circa 1956
Florida State Archives

More on Morris Lapidus
Born in Russia, Lapidus studied drama at New York University. His specialty was scene design. He also attended Columbia University where he studied general architecture. Lapidus settled on retail design before working in Miami, where his career soared. He designed Lincoln Road Mall as well. 

Copyright © 2024. All rights reserved. Jane Feehan.

Recommendation
For an excellent compilation of the history of Miami Beach hotels and a useful chronology, see Woggles and Cheese Holes by Howard Kleinberg, published in 2005 by The Greater Miami & The Beaches Hotel Association, Miami Beach, FL 33139.

Other sources:

The Miami News, July 17, 1955

The Miami Herald, Aug. 28, 1955

The Miami News, July 1, 1956

The Miami Herald, Nov. 11, 1956

The Miami News, Nov. 25, 1956

The Miami News, Nov. 24, 1956

The Miami Herald, Nov. 30, 1956

The Miami News, Dec. 14, 1956

The Miami Herald, Dec. 16, 1956

Tags: Americana Hotel, Sheraton Bal Harbour, Miami Beach hotels, Miami Beach in the 1950s, Morris Lapidus, Bal Harbour, Bal Harbor hotels



Sunday, July 21, 2013

Florida and Flamingos – not so much


For more Florida history visit my other blog, Janesbits.blogspot.com 

 By Jane Feehan

For years flamingos* have been associated with Florida but according to the Audubon Society, Florida is not a breeding ground for them today. Europeans probably saw them when they visited the peninsula 500 years ago. A few are spotted in Everglades National Park but they are most likely from a flock indigenous to the Yucatan.  Some may really be the state’s Roseate Spoonbill. So why is the flamingo an unofficial but iconic symbol of the Sunshine State?

It could be …

On Dec. 31, 1920, developer Carl Fisher (also of Indiana Speedway fame see: http://tinyurl.com/ll6bptv) opened the doors to the first grand hotel on Miami Beach, the Flamingo. The $2 million, 200-room, 11-story hotel was named the Flamingo by Fisher before plans were off the drawing board. During a fishing trip to Andros Island, he had become captivated by flamingos after seeing a large “pink cloud” lifting into the sky that turned out to be thousands of the long-legged wading birds.

In addition to naming the hotel for the bird and an unsuccessful attempt to import live flamingos from Andros to the hotel grounds, Fisher commissioned artists Louis Fuertes and N.C. Wyeth (father of Andrew Wyeth) to paint murals in the hotel’s lobby featuring flamingos. Soon-to-be hotel manager Charles Krom objected to the flamingo theme, deeming it inappropriate. Fisher prevailed.

With the opening of the glamorous Flamingo Hotel (famous for its dome of colored lights shining at night) Miami Beach’s stature as a luxurious resort area was firmly rooted. Fisher, as good a promoter as he was a developer, had no trouble snagging President-elect Warren G. Harding as a guest in January, 1921. Harding stayed in one of the hotel’s cottages (and he returned in 1923). Photos of the visit reached across the nation.

Fisher’s fortunes went the way of the real estate bust after the great hurricane of 1926 and the stock market crash of 1929 but the Miami area continued to be a popular vacation destination. Hialeah Track was built in 1936 and for decades pink flamingos lived there. They were an integral part of the race track’s marketing. Later, television ads for Hialeah Park featuring the graceful birds reinforced the pairing of Florida and flamingos.

Today, the flamingo is the national bird of The Bahamas but the pink bird remains emblematic of Florida living: bright tropical colors and warm water living. Copyright © 2014. All rights reserved. Jane Feehan.


* The plastic pink flamingo was designed in 1957 by Don Featherstone while working for Union Products.  It became a  pop culture symbol; many Floridians appropriated them as lawn ornaments.  In 2010, Cado Products (cadocompany.com) purchased the copyrights and plastic molds for the Pink Flamingos and continues to manufacture them.

Sources:
Kleinberg, Howard. Woggles and Cheese Holes. Miami Beach: The Greater Miami & Beaches Hotel Association (2005).
Kleinberg, Howard. Miami Beach, a History. Miami: Centennial Press (1996).
Armbruster, Ann. The Life and Ties of Miami Beach. New York:  Alfred A. Knopf (1995).
Wikipedia
Audubon Society



Tags: Florida and flamingos, Miami Beach history, Miami history, Flamingo Hotel, Florida film researcher, Florida historical researcher