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Mandarin Oriental, Miami

2000 establishments in FloridaHotel buildings completed in 2000Hotels established in 2000Hotels in MiamiMandarin Oriental Hotel Group
RTKL Associates buildings
Mandarin Oriental Miami exterior day
Mandarin Oriental Miami exterior day

Mandarin Oriental, Miami is a hotel on Brickell Key in Miami, Florida, overlooking Biscayne Bay, opened in November 2000 and managed by Mandarin Oriental Hotel Group. It is on the southern tip of Brickell Key, a 44 acres (18 ha), a man-made island built in 1943. The hotel contains 295 guestrooms and 31 suites with balconies and terraces, restaurants and bars, 15,000 sq ft (1,400 m2) of events facilities, and the only Forbes Travel Guide Five-Star spa in Florida.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Mandarin Oriental, Miami (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Mandarin Oriental, Miami
Brickell Key Drive, Miami

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Wikipedia: Mandarin Oriental, MiamiContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 25.765 ° E -80.18536 °
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Address

Mandarin Oriental

Brickell Key Drive 500
33131 Miami
Florida, United States
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Mandarin Oriental Miami exterior day
Mandarin Oriental Miami exterior day
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Nearby Places

Brickell Avenue Bridge
Brickell Avenue Bridge

The Brickell Avenue Bridge is a bascule bridge in Downtown Miami, Florida, that carries U.S. Route 1 (US 1; Brickell Avenue) over the Miami River. The original Brickell Avenue Bridge was built in 1929, and replaced in 1995.Brickell Avenue Bridge was widened by one additional northbound lane in 2006 to reduce the traffic bottleneck through downtown. Before this there were three southbound but only two northbound lanes. Currently there are three lanes in each direction as well as a pedestrian walkway on both sides. Still, the bridge causes frequent traffic delays on the busy Brickell Avenue when it opens. According to the Florida Department of Transportation (FDOT), the bridge opened 4,990 times in 2010.The statue is a 53-foot bronze monument commissioned by the Florida Department of Transportation and created by Cuban dculptor Manuel Carbonell in 1995. The Pillar of History is a 36-foot high carved bas-relief column that graphically narrates the lives of the Tequesta Indians, Miami's first inhabitants, and features 158 figures. At the top stands a 17-foot bronze sculpture, "Tequesta Family" portraying a Tequesta Indian warrior aiming an arrow to the sky, looking for space in eternity, with his wife and child by his side, while the son covers his face in expectation of their extinction. top.Carbonell also created four bas reliefs, measuring 4-feet by 8-feet, which were installed in niches on the bridge's supporting piers. Each relief honors Miami's early founders and pioneers - William and Mary Brickell, Henry Flagler, Marjory Stoneman Douglas, and Julia Tuttle.