The Roads
Entrance to The Roads neighborhood
Entrance to The Roads neighborhood
The Roads neighborhood within the City of Miami
The Roads neighborhood within the City of Miami
Coordinates: 25°45′22″N 80°12′18″W / 25.756°N 80.205°W / 25.756; -80.205
CountryUnited States
StateFlorida
CountyMiami-Dade County
CityMiami
Government
  City of Miami CommissionerJoe Carollo (R)
  Miami-Dade CommissionerEileen Higgins (D)
  House of RepresentativesLuis R. Garcia Jr. (D)
  State SenateJosé Javier Rodríguez (Florida) (D)
  U.S. HouseMaria Elvira Salazar (R)
Elevation
13 ft (4 m)
Population
 (2010)
  Total7,327
  Density12,687/sq mi (4,898/km2)
Time zoneUTC-05 (EST)
ZIP Code
33129
Area code(s)305, 786
WebsiteThe Roads Association

The Roads is a neighborhood of Miami in Miami-Dade County, Florida. It is a triangular area located south of SW 11th Street, between SW 12th Avenue and SW 15th Road, just west of Brickell.

The Roads is known for its old homes, historic private schools, and its tree-covered streets. The Roads is very close to Downtown and Brickell, but is a historically residential neighborhood. It is also off the normal Miami street grid, and thus all the streets in The Roads are named roads, instead of streets and avenues, as is the case in the rest of Miami. Since 1986, the Miami Roads Neighborhood Civic Association has worked on a variety of projects to support the neighborhood.[1]

The Roads neighborhood is served by the Miami Metrorail at the Vizcaya station to the south and by the Brickell station to the north.

History

The Roads, originally called "Brickell Hammock" was designed, platted and developed by Mary Brickell in January 1922 days before her death. Mary Brickell had designed the Roads as a pedestrian-friendly neighborhood, with wide streets with median parkways and roundabouts with native Miami plants. Mary Brickell gave the streets, parkways, sidewalks, and electric lighting to the City of Miami in 1922. All the properties were sold in a single day on February 1, 1923.[2]

Although the homes in the Roads were originally planned to be affordable for Miamians, homes in the Roads were popular early on and quickly became one of Miami's most prestigious neighborhoods.[3]

Geography

It is located at 25°45′22″N 80°12′18″W / 25.756°N 80.205°W / 25.756; -80.205, with an elevation 13 feet (4.0 m), making it one of the higher areas in the city.[4]

The Roads is also an entire off-grid plan section of the city of Miami. The streets and avenues in Miami-Dade County are aligned to a grid, where streets run east–west and avenues run north–south. The roads that run from Broadway to SW 32nd Road are roughly 45 degrees out of alignment with the grid-plan. The avenues running perpendicular to these roads are also 45 degrees out of alignment with their respective avenues coming from the north. The avenues in this section run northeast–southwest rather than the standard north–south that the ones in the rest of the county follow. This causes an abrupt change in numerical designation as they cross SW 12th Avenue (SW 5th Avenue turns west and becomes SW 18th Street, SW 4th Avenue turns west and becomes SW 20th Street, SW 2nd Avenue turns west and becomes SW 22nd Street, etc.) The most well known example of this confusion is when historic Coral Way being SW 3rd Avenue, makes a 45 degree turn onto SW 22nd Street as it crosses over SW 12th Avenue.[5]

Transportation

The Roads is served by Metrobus throughout the area, and by the Miami Metrorail at:

  •           Brickell (SW 11th Street and SW 1st Avenue)
  •           Vizcaya (SW 32nd Road and U.S. 1)

Metrorail has stops throughout Miami with service to Greater Miami and Miami International Airport, all Miami-Dade County bus lines, Tri-Rail and Amtrak. The main bus station in Downtown is located next to the Arsht Center.

Education

Miami-Dade County Public Schools operates area public schools

Private schools

  • Beth David Religious School
  • Lincoln Marti School
  • St. Peter and Paul

Parks

See also

References

  1. "Miami Roads Neighborhood Civic Association". Retrieved 20 March 2011.
  2. Brickell, Beth. "Mary Brickell: a woman and her city". Miami Heeald. Retrieved 25 March 2011.
  3. "A Brief History of Brickell". Archived from the original on 2011-08-12. Retrieved 2011-03-21.
  4. "The Roads Populated Place Profile / Miami-Dade County, Florida Data". florida.hometownlocator.com.
  5. "Google Maps". Google Maps.

25°45′21.71″N 80°12′26.19″W / 25.7560306°N 80.2072750°W / 25.7560306; -80.2072750

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