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#North Miami house for rent
abelsalkrealtor · 13 days
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idsb · 10 months
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hi i know this is so unbelievably random but i'm going to be moving to asia next year, and i want to visit australia over xmas 2024 (ik it's not that close haha but it's the closest i'll ever be). i'll probably only be there for a week max, so where would you recommend visiting. i know you've been there, and i was just wondering if you had thoughts
Hi omg yes I’d be happy to help!!! Also I’m really stoked for you bc this was the exact time of year I went for the first time and you’re going to have an incredible time!!!
If you only have a week, I’d recommend picking one of 2 itineraries, depending on what you want to see.
1) fly into Melbourne. The climate for this one will be similar to going to California in the spring. Melbourne is an amazing city (I like to describe it as ‘if NYC were in a utopia’ because that’s the vibes it has lol) there is ALWAYS something really cool and typically free going on city-wide, it’s a great walk-able city with FREE public transit, so much to do, and just the best city experience Australia has to offer in my opinion. I’d recommend spending 2ish days in Melb and then doing a road trip on what’s called The Great Ocean Road. If you’ve ever heard of the Pacific Coast Highway in the US, it’s like that but like. On every steroid there is. The entire drive, you’re along these MASSIVE ocean cliffs on one side with the most turquoise water you’ve ever seen, and one of the worlds oldest rainforests on the other, culminating in these rock formations called The Twelve Apostles that are just. Look them up, it’s insane. While it will be likely too cold to swim in this water (it’s the Arctic Ocean!), there’s lots of great camping and there’s wildlife everywhere. There was one rest stop where I got out of the car and 2 birds that were every color of the rainbow landed on my head; there’s a campsite I stopped at where instead of waking up to birds chirping, you woke up to the sound of koalas. There’s a wildlife reserve where I played with dingos and just got to hang out and pet them while they sat on my lap. There’s a golf course frequented by kangaroos where you can rent golf carts just to drive around and look at them. One morning a baby kangaroo was playing 2 feet from my tent. You can zip line through the rainforest and the food at every random cafe I stopped at is some of the best food I’ve ever had. Then on your way back along the inland route there’s Grampians National Park, which just has AMAZING rock formations, great hikes, the coolest views ever. If you just drove the whole thing and didn’t stop it’d be about 8 hours; I did it in 5 days and they were hands down the best 5 days of my life.
2) For a more tropical experience, you’ll want to fly into Brisbane. While I don’t love it as much as Melbourne, it’s a VERY cool city and the best and most iconic thing about it is the MASSIVE city pool right along the river that winds through the city. The way they decorate for Christmas is also really really fun. The best thing about Brisbane is all the stuff surrounding it: Gold Coast to the south has really amazing beaches and Miami kind of vibes, and Sunshine Coast to the north is one of my favorite places in Australia (fun fact I actually almost went to college there). Sunshine Coast is where Steve Irwin’s zoo is and where everyone takes photos holding koalas, altho it’s a bit overpriced for the name recognition compared to the places WAY far north you can go if you have time - it is fun and a great experience! In the Sunny Coast also are the Glass House Mountains, which are these massive pointed towering stones that jut out of the tropical farmland from nowhere. It’s really cool and really beautiful. You’ll find TONS of fresh fruit stands in this area, and driving through it at night is just incredible. A bit north of this is Noosa National Park, which is home to really iconic subtropical beaches, super cute but like, kinda out there beach towns, such amazing warm water to swim in, and a really good amount of hiking - it’s the gateway to Great Sandy National Park, which is home to some of the most beautiful white sand I’ve ever seen, where you can feed wild dolphins every morning and kayak around them in some of the bluest water you’ve ever seen. You can drive north for as long as you have time, and it just keeps getting more tropical and more beautiful the farther up you go.
To be honest I would not bother fucking with Sydney which probably seems like a crazy thing to say but here’s my reasoning. There’s only 2 things to do there that feel extremely like you’re in Australia and not any other major US location, and that’s the Sydney Opera house and Bondi Beach, both of which imo are SUPER touristy and not extremely memorable outside of like “did the thing took a picture here, see I went to Australia”. There are touristy bits about the places I recommended too, but they lean more towards Australian tourists as opposed to world tourists who just turn it into a people zoo. Yes there is hiking and nice beaches a couple hours outside the city, but there’s more remarkable hiking and more remarkable beaches other places. It’s like yeah you COULD spend a day in NYC and spend it at time square because that’s The Thing To Do, or you could just. Go to the cool and really memorable parts and have better experiences.
I hope this all helps and Aussie mutuals please feel free to corroborate this hehe I feel like it’s accurate
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back-and-totheleft · 11 months
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Stone Raids Wall Street
Once upon a time Oliver Stone was best known for his scabrous screenplays for films such as Scarface and Year of the Dragon. Then his 1986 films, Platoon and Salvador, racked up a slew of Academy Award nominations, and Platoon collected Oscars for direction, editing, sound, and Best Picture. Stone was honored not for safe, Masterpiece Theatre-type films that make Academy members feel good about themselves, but for violent, unpleasant films on subjects considered until recently to be box-office poison—Central America and Vietnam. In one short year, he has emerged as the most interesting and important director in Hollywood. Nevertheless, as no one knows better than Stone, the winds of celebrity are fickle, and when we spoke with him in August, he was anticipating a more qualified reaction to his forthcoming film, Wall Street.
Q: How did you get the idea for Wall Street? A: The story first came to me while I was writing Scarface. Its get-rich-quick Miami mentality had certain parallels in New York, where an acquaintance of mine was making a fortune in the market. He was like some crazed coke dealer, nervously on the phone nights trading with Hong Kong and Lon- don, checking the telex, talking about enor- mous sums of money to be won or lost on a daily basis. His lifestyle was Scarface North. He had two huge Gatsby-like houses on the beach in Long Island (he couldn’t decide which one to live in), several dune buggies, cars, Jeeps, a private seaplane company, an art collection, and a townhouse in Manhattan. Then he took a giant fall; his empire came crashing down around him. He was suspended from trading; he lost millions and spent millions more in legal fees clearing his name, which he finally did. It made him a different, stronger person as a result, and it was partly this tale of seduction, corruption, loss, and redemption (as well as other stories we heard on the street, among them that of David Brown, a broker convicted for insider trading who served as an adviser on the film) that was the basis of Charlie Sheen’s character in our script.
Q: Wasn’t your father a broker?  A: Yes, he was on Wall Street for 50 years or so. My father’s world was very intimidating to me; I viewed it from an Orson Welles perspective out of The Magnificent Ambersons. | remember the staircases and mirrors. I remember looking down through banisters at Mom’s parties, at the rich people, the sophisticated people, women from Europe with accents, Belafonte or Sinatra on the phonograph singing ‘50s songs. Then they’d go out in packs like in La Dolce Vita to faraway places like El Morocco.
Dad would take me to the movies (how rare to be alone with him)—Dr. Strangelove, Paths of Glory, Seven Days in May—the ones with the ideas, and inevitably he’d come out of the movie and say, "Well, we could've done it better, Huckleberry,” and he’d tell me all the reasons why this plot was silly or illogical. It would make me think, which is one of the things a father is supposed to do. And he’d always say they never did intelligent pictures about businessmen; businessmen were always satirized or were stereotypical bad guys. 
Dad believed very strongly in capitalism. Yet the irony of it all was that he never really benefited from it. All his life money was an overriding con- cern. But he never owned a single thing; every- thing was rented, right down to the cars, the apart- ments, and if it had been possible, the furniture. There was an insecurity at the heart of our family existence. I began to resent money as the criterion by which to judge all things, and there grew to be a raging battle between my father and me about it. I found ways to throw away everything I had, which pissed my father off. | went to Yale but dropped out, and he lost the tuition. We reconciled before he died [in 1985], but by then I had moved away from it all. I didn’t want to go to an office every day from nine to five. I didn’t understand Wall Street. “Going into movies is crazy,” he would say. “You aren’t going to make a dime.”
When I was working on Wall Street, I felt my dad was sort of around in a ghostlike form, watching over me and laughing, because here is the idiot son who doesn’t know anything about the stock market, who can barely add and subtract, doing a film with the grandiose title Wall Street.
I always hated New York, which is what made it so special returning some 25 years later with a crew of professionals, a self-contained artillery unit. (I even got to cast Hal Holbrook, who is everybody’s dream of a father, as my father.) And suddenly | got a glimpse of a mysterious world I'd only scratched the surface of as a child—the adult world, New York in its power, glory, and greed.
Q: You're not dealing with war and revolution in Wall Street, as you were in Platoon and Salvador. It’s a less weighty film.
A: It appealed to me precisely because it is a lesser statement. There is only so much you can say about yuppies. I knew if I sat around for two or three years doing a Hamlet number - should I give the world another film? - I would really drive myself crazy. I would rather turn something out fast, get it over with, give the gold crown to somebody else so I can get on with doing things that I really care about, which are ideas. I’m ready to take a fall. I'm not expecting the same critical praise or the same box office that I got for Platoon.
I think I have always been identified with “‘lowercase”’ films that take people by surprise. It is strange suddenly to be in a front-runner position with Wall Street. I like being a dark horse. Celebrity can hurt the creative process if you let it go to your head. You start weighing your image of yourself instead of somehow keeping your head low down to the ground like a bulldog, telling a good story, and not letting your ego stand in your way.
Q: How did you get a producer for Wall Street?  A: Initially, I brought the script to John Daly at Hemdale. But he didn’t think the audience would go for a movie about people who were making millions of dollars. On the other hand, Ed Pressman and Twentieth Century Fox loved the idea, which was fine with me, because Wall Street was going to have to be shot in New York, and consequently it was going to be expensive. Hemdale is not really into $15 million movies; it would have been a big risk for them and more pressure for me, whereas for Fox it is a medium-budget movie.
  Q: Did you get any cooperation from Wall Street?  A: Initially, no. They felt Stanley Weiser (the co- writer) and I were going to trash the Street. Then after the success of Platoon, people started coming out of the woodwork. We hired Ken Lipper, who was formerly the deputy mayor of New York City and was managing director of Salomon Brothers, and we consulted with people such as John Gutfreund of Salomon, and Carl Icahn.
Q: How did the consultants help you? A: Ken Lipper put Charlie Sheen and Michael Douglas inside Salomon Brothers. He also got us into places like The 21 Club, Le Cirque, and, most important, the New York Stock Exchange, which was a first. No film had ever been done there. We actually shot on the floor while they were trading. A lot of the older traders were upset because they were trying to make money and we were creating a disturbance, but there were many more Vietnam veterans on the floor than I had imagined, and they had seen Platoon.
Ken was also on the set. He helped us with details: how brokers deal with sales, how they write up orders, their body language—how they hold a telephone, what is the pace of the conversation. I had no clue how these things are really done.
Q: What was it like to shoot in New York? A: Sixty-ninth Street and Madison was a fucking mess. Michael Douglas was shaking hands all day. Bill Murray came by, actors, businessmen, kings, diplomats—it was a constant stream of Hi Daryl [Hannah], Hi Michael, Hi Charlie. We'd try to shoot a scene and there would literally be a thousand people coming to look. It was impossible to work under those conditions. So | hired about 200 extras and filled the sidewalk with them so we could control the streets. If anybody walked onto that sidewalk they would see all these people standing stock still waiting for the cue for action. It was so bizarre, they would skirt the sidewalk and walk away.
And here’s an example of how unions can fuck up reality. | wanted real derelicts, but there’s a law in New York that the first 125 extras in major feature films have to be union. We made up the extras, but they never looked real. So if I need a real bum in a scene it has to be the 126th man. I just threw up my hands in disgust. My derelicts will have to go in my next picture 
Q: Why did you cast Charlie Sheen in the lead role?  A: | thought that he could do a good job of playing a bad boy, showing the negative side of Wall Street. There is a devilish side to Charlie that didn’t come out in Platoon, where he was more of an idealized figure. I think he’s been in trouble, and that shows in his personality, a strong streak of rebelliousness combined with an inner grace passed on from his father, Martin Sheen, who plays his father in the film. Charlie is only 22, which made him much younger than the brokers being busted on Wall Street, but we aged him with good suits, a haircut, and he gained a little weight from the good life in New York; his face is a little jowlier than normal. He invested his own money in the market, hung out with the young brokers at Bear Stearns and Salomon Brothers, drank with them at the South Street Seaport, kids just out of college who have to pull $100,000 in the first or second year just to occupy a space on the floor. Gone are the days of my father, when people were brought along slowly; there seems to be less mercy in the system, and as always the corruption is subtle, almost undetectable in a black and white sense. The corruption of all flesh—needing more and more, until like fat bugs we pop and bleed all over the page.
Q: I understand Charlie’s character was Jewish in the first draft of the script. Why did you change it?  A: His name was Freddie Goldsmith, but that would have necessitated a different kind of actor. I would never have believed Charlie as Jewish; he doesn’t have that kind of quickness, the mannerisms, the nerviness.  He is more of a laid-back type; at best he could play a Catholic, Protestant out of Queens. I also wanted to drop the Jewish angle because I think that too many people think that Wall Street is run by Jews and that they are all corrupt, a bunch of gangsters.  I just didn’t want to give them any more fuel. My father— who was Jewish, I’m half Jewish— always warned me that I would probably see a pogrom in the United States in my lifetime. I didn’t believe him when I was a kid. I believe it now.
Q: Did you have Daryl Hannah in mind from the beginning?  A: I've loved Daryl from way back. She’s an admirable person with a real passion for left-wing causes. And she looks beautiful on film. She’s the kind of girl a guy like Charlie would go after. She would be the type of girl who is pretty enough to be around the big money guys. Daryl had problems with her character because it wasn’t a character she particularly liked. She was scared by it. She is a natural, simple girl, and here was a character who was totally artificial. She had a major problem trying to learn that language. She went to a voice coach in New York and tried to change her flat Southern California/Chicago accent into something more nasal, more New York, upper class, and affected. I was tough with her. I beat her up, in a metaphoric sense, and in the early stages I am sure she wanted to quit. I think I made her cry a few times, but I wasn't really pleased with her wanness and passiveness, which were difficult to get through. She needs a very, very strong director. I am not sure I succeeded. 
Q: Weren't you taking a chance using someone like Michael Douglas, who’s never played a bad guy?  A: I was sort of worried about him because | had been warned by a highly placed studio executive that he would be in his trailer all day reading scripts and on the phone to Los Angeles. But he was always on time, never one minute late in the whole shoot, and very easy to work with as well. He seemed to be aware that it was a big role for him. He told me at one point that his dad had implied that he was finally about to become a real actor; that he had always played wimps, and that this was a role where he could play more toward his father, who could do a heel as well as a hero. Michael loved that idea.
I was amazed, for an actor who has done so many movies, how nervous he was in the beginning. He couldn’t believe it when on the first day I gave him three pages of monologue, like something out of Paddy Chayefsky. He'd never had speeches like that in his life. And then the second day I stuck a hand-held camera in his face about six inches from his eyeballs—he was on a plane, so I wanted to create a sense of movement. He said it was very difficult for him to act, to concentrate and remember his lines, staring at the camera. Then he hit his stride, and by the time we got to the scenes in his office, he was on top of his game.
Q: How do you prepare the actors?
A: In the rehearsal period I try to outline the context of the characters, what their inner life is about, what their backstory is. I try to help the actors suggest things and then let them run with those ideas. Then we have readings; you can see the way an actor is interpreting a role. Once we start filming, we relive what we did in rehearsal seven or eight weeks before. Often it comes out differently; nuances emerge because the material has been marinating in the actor's subconscious. I clear the set except for the actors, so that we keep it quiet. The rehearsal itself can take anywhere from 30 minutes to six hours, in the course of which it should become clear what everybody is looking for in the scene and how to play it. Whether they succeed doesn’t interest me; in fact, I'd rather that they didn’t do it and not spoil themselves emotionally before the cameras go on. Too often you have a good rehearsal and it never comes back.
Q: Do you improvise? A: I always try to encourage spontaneity. I like to be surprised. Astonish me! It is easy to play a scene predictably; a director falls into that because he has to complete the film in a limited period of time. He can clock out all the spontaneity and all the truth. That is the hardest thing a director has to face; he has to stay fresh.
Q: What do you do when a scene isn't working? A: I often deal with it by rewriting extensively on the spot. Part of that process includes listening to the actors. Some actors just can’t say certain words, or they will feel uncomfortable with a speech. They will say, “Gee, Oliver, do I have to say that line? Can’t I just do a look?”
Or I try to use the camera to respond to a mistake. You shoot the scene in such a way that you can cover the blemish. You change the angle, you move the camera. We did enormous amounts of moving camera in this film because we are making a movie about sharks, about feeding frenzies, so we wanted the camera to become a predator. There is no letup until you get to the fixed world of Charlie’s father, where the stationary camera gives you a sense of immutable values.
I generally work fast. | did Salvador in 50 days. I did Platoon in 54 days. | did Wall Street in 53 days. I came in seven days ahead of schedule and close to $2 million under budget. We never wasted an hour. If it rained, we made it a rain scene: Charlie goes to the beach in the rain. I hate waste. When I read about directors shooting a million feet, it makes me sick. They say film is cheap, but how can you sit there in the editing room and have to go through 30 or 60 or 95 takes? Ultimately, take 30 doesn’t look that much different from take 7. Usually after six or seven takes, I let it go. The most I ever did was nineteen takes.
Q: Do you relax in the editing room?
A: Hell, no. I tend to shoot three-hour movies and cut them down to two hours. My scripts are long; I blow a lot of my time shooting scenes that never get into the movie. We had 80 speaking parts in Wall Street. | will probably cut twenty of them. Editing to me is like a tremendous retreat, a march back from Moscow, a rout. When you are writing and directing, you feel like you’re on a perimeter, expanding. When you are editing you are withdrawing your perimeter as quickly as possible and trying to maintain the CP, the command position, because it is about to go under. Philosophically, it always seems to be that movies are about limitation. Every time I make a movie my original concept shrinks. It is a truth about movies that less is more, that sometimes when you try to do too much you get scrambled, you get killed.
Q: How would you describe the theme of Wall Street? A: I wanted to concentrate on the ethics of the characters and see where they lose their way, where they lose their sense of values, where net worth starts to equal self-worth. I think Wall Street is really about the urban culture of the ’80s. The pressure is enormous on these young guys to produce. | think they are perverted right off the bat. Why would someone who is making $100 million have to make another $20 million? Because he has to stay ahead of the next guy. Money is a way of keeping score. A line in the script says it all: “How many boats can you water-ski behind?’ Ultimately, not about money, it’s about power.
There is something patently unhealthy in using money just to make money rather than to create value. How can you justify threatening to take over a company, then selling it back and making $40 million, meanwhile forcing the company to spin off its assets and lay off employees?
Q: Is there a remedy for insider trading?
A: Probably not. There is no question that outsiders don’t do as well as insiders. I have invested in the stock market now off and on for 30 years, and I never made any money at it. It is a privileged club, an oligarchical institution in which the rich talk to the rich. They don’t talk to the poor. A guy goes to La Céte Basque for lunch. He sees a CEO from some other company and tells him some piece of information about a company that’s going into semiconductors or something, and he is going to buy into it. That’s the way the system works. You read about these kids who are making a million bucks, two million bucks a year—it demoralizes the person making $40,000 a year. All of a sudden everybody needs a Porsche or a VCR or a fishing boat. And this is what fuels America, more and more greed. We deal with these issues by staying inside a very small story, one fish in one Wall Street aquarium and what happens to that fish. #
-Peter Biskind, "Stone Raids Wall Street," Premiere, Dec 1987 (Vol 1 Issue 4)
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lboogie1906 · 20 days
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Dana Albert “D. A.” Dorsey (c. 1872 – April 29, 1940) was a businessman, banker, and philanthropist who became one of the first African–American millionaires in Florida and the South.
He was born in Quitman, Georgia. He was the son of a former enslaved and the first child in his family who was not born enslaved. He received only a fourth-grade formal education, teaching himself after that.
He came to the Miami area of South Florida around 1896. He worked as a carpenter for the Henry Flagler Florida East Coast Railroad. He recognized the need to provide housing for African American workers. He purchased one parcel of land in Overtown at a time, on which he designed and constructed one rental house per parcel, reinvesting the rental income to build and rent more, expanding as far north as Fort Lauderdale.
In 1917, he and his wife Rebecca sold land to the City of Miami for a park for African–Americans, Dorsey Park. In 1919, he sold Fisher Island to the automotive pioneer Carl G. Fisher, who was developing Miami Beach.
He was a trustee at Mount Zion Baptist Church in Overtown.
The first African American-owned hotel in Miami was his Dorsey Hotel, and he was the owner of the Negro Savings Bank. He was a firm believer in education and he donated a large quantity of land for African American schools.
When he died, flags were lowered to half-staff all over Miami. He was buried in Lincoln Memorial Park, Miami’s African American cemetery during segregation.
He donated to Dade County Public Schools the property at NW 71st Street and 17th Avenue on which Dorsey High School (today known as the D. A. Dorsey Educational Center) was built. The D. A. Dorsey Educational Center has a rich and positive tradition in the Liberty City area of Miami as a fully operational adult education center. #africanhistory365 #africanexcellence
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thelistingteammiami · 3 months
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What to Know When Relocating to Florida for Retirement
Florida is the leading retirement destination in the U.S., partly due to its tantalizing tax breaks. However, it’s not the only option in town. More people are choosing to spend their golden years in non-Floridian cities. If you still want to move into the Sunshine State when you hit 62, you should consider various factors to make a clear-headed decision about this significant life change.
Is Florida Losing Its Appeal to Retirees?
Make no mistake about it — the Land of Flowers continues to attract the most golden-agers crossing state lines for retirement. In 2022, it magnetized 11.8% of out-of-state pensioners in the nation and the only one to grab a share above 10%.
However, Florida doesn’t have the distinction of hosting the most number of people aged 65 and above, nor does it record the highest percentage of seniors relative to its population. Two reasons can explain these phenomena.
Competition
Floridian towns aren’t as compelling to some retiring baby boomers as other American cities. Austin takes the cake, seeing its population of adults over 65 ballooned by 90.4% from 2010 to 2020. The other big gainers were:
Boise, Idaho
Atlanta, Georgia
Raleigh-Durham, North Carolina
Houston, Texas
Charleston, South Carolina
ATX has a booming tech hub. The influx of young people relocating to the Texas capital for employment opportunities has inspired an inundation of oldsters.
In 2021, Mesa, Arizona, tallied a net migration of over 3,600 older residents — the country’s highest. Henderson, Nevada, netted over 1,600 while San Antonio had over 1,100. Rounding out the top five were North Las Vegas, Nevada, and Boise, Idaho, with over 1,000 net retirees each.
The biggest selling point of the Valley’s gateway is its climate. It's warm and low-humidity — a comforting combination for old-timers. Plus, it’s conveniently close to Phoenix while costing significantly less.
Aging in Place
With a median age of 44.7 years old, Maine is the oldest state in the country. Although its retirement-age population is small by national standards, seniors represent 21.8% of its citizenry. What’s more, most of the boomers calling it home are local-born. Mainers exemplify aging in place more strongly than any other Americans.
A 2022 survey found that 88% of U.S. adults aged 50-80 believe staying in their houses for as long as possible is important. Most of Florida’s retirees originate outside its borders. The peninsula may receive fewer retirees in the future if the positive sentiments toward aging in place remain pervasive.
3 Things to Consider Before Moving to Florida for Retirement
Other states and cities are gaining a reputation for being retirement paradises, but it doesn’t mean Florida has gotten undesirable. It remains on its throne because no other place can offer a better package for retirees.
Still, the Citrus Capital appeals only to specific seniors. Use these three factors as a litmus test for its suitability for you.
1. Cost of Living
The Orange State is the nation’s fastest-growing, but it’s bigger than census data suggests. It appeals to students, entrepreneurs, workers and snowbirds, not just retirees. Plus, it’s the most touristy state — more than 137 million people visited it in 2022. The larger the crowd, the more expensive goods and services can be.
The massive number of people wanting to live or stay in Florida has resulted in scorching local real estate markets. Home values average $383,000, but they can surpass $560,000 in Miami and other urban centers. Insurance premiums can also be pricey due to the state’s susceptibility to catastrophes.
Rent in Florida can go through the roof. Notable rental markets, such as Orlando, Palm Bay, Tampa, Cape Coral and North Port, exceed the national average, rendering many residents considerably rent-burdened.
Food and health care can also be expensive in the Everglade State. While the theme park capital of the world has plenty of entertainment options, the price of watching movies, visiting amusement parks and experiencing live sports games can be steep.
Although the state has diverse modes of public transportation in metro areas, the typical Floridian owns a private vehicle. You can go electric to avoid gas expenses, but monthly utilities, including electricity, in the state are higher than in many parts of the country.
Considering Florida’s cost of living, converting some of your assets into cash before moving may be wise. Decide which properties to leave your heirs and which ones to sell. The least burdensome assets for your loved ones to cash in are prime candidates for liquidation. Putting them on the block can expose them to more serious buyers, sell them quickly and get as much value from them as possible.
2. Wildlife
The Manatee State has world-class natural wonders, but its breathtaking landscape can harbor terrifying fauna. Depending on where you stay, you may encounter alligators, bears, panthers, herons, pelicans, snakes or dolphins.
Many of these creatures are usually no threat to humans unless they feel threatened. They can be dangerous, but they won’t bite if you get out of their way and treat them respectfully. They’re Florida natives, so learn how to coexist with them.
As a general rule, avoid intruding into their habitats to discourage them from becoming territorial. Also, limit your interactions with them. They’re wild animals, so you can’t expect them to be tame or tolerant of humans.
3. Weather
Florida goes by the nickname the Sunshine State for a reason. It gets 230-250 days of sunshine yearly. These days can be humid but pleasant news if you’re outdoorsy and love to socialize. However, the other days can be menacing.
Florida gets the most hurricanes out of all the states. About two to three make landfall in its southernmost region. Category-3 Hurricane Idalia — the only landfalling hurricane the country saw in 2023 — got close to Keaton Beach, causing up to 12 feet of storm surge inundation and flooding the southeast with heavy downpours.
Floridian cities are some of the most vulnerable to climate change, too. Rising sea levels and frequent coastal flooding will exacerbate the usual natural disasters the Hurricane State endures once the effects of global warming are in full swing.
Coastal waters surpassed the flooding thresholds of Fernandina Beach, Cedar Key, Pensacola, Mayport and St. Petersburg for more days on average from 2013 to 2022 than they did from 1950 to 1959. These figures indicate the sea had been encroaching on these communities more frequently — evidence of worsening climate change. Frequent coastal flooding threatens the Florida residents’ health and safety and the structural integrity of waterfront properties.
Regarding seasons, the Gulf State’s climate is too mild to notice changes between spring, summer, fall and winter. If you love how the environment transforms as seasons roll around, Florida may not be for you.
Should You Start Your Life’s Next Chapter in Florida?
The Retirement State doesn’t have it all, but millions of pensioners consider it the closest to perfection. If what Florida offers suits your lifestyle and budget, you’ll have the time of your life there.
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[ad_1] Shadi Shomar and his companions suggest a 278-unit workforce housing complicated close to Naranja, marking their continued guess on south Miami-Dade County's multifamily market. Shomar, Gonzalo De Ramon, brothers Ghassan and Roger Abboud, and Royal American Building need to develop a pair of eight-story buildings on 4 vacant acres at 23435 Southwest 127th Avenue in unincorporated Miami-Dade, Shomar and De Ramon stated. The companions, via their Onyx Housing Group, purchased the positioning for $6 million. Miami legal professional and actual property investor Christopher Korge offered the land, data present. The undertaking, referred to as Naranja Grove, will goal households incomes as much as 120 p.c of the realm median revenue, Shomar stated. Miami-Dade's AMI is $74,700 yearly, which means that to qualify for a unit, the revenue limits are restricted to as much as $86,760 for a one-person family; $99,120 for a two-person family; and $111,480 for a three-person family, in response to the Florida Housing Finance Company. Onyx Housing has submitted a website plan utility to the county. If the undertaking is accredited, building is predicted to start out within the second quarter of subsequent yr, and completion is scheduled someday for late 2026 or early 2027, Shomar stated. The undertaking marks not less than the fourth improvement within the pipeline for Onyx Housing. Shomar, who's co-founder and principal of Miami-based luxurious resort agency Arte Hospitality, is pursuing his funding in Onyx individually from Arte. The Abboud brothers lead Miami-based tech and client merchandise distributor Abboud Buying and selling Company. Royal American Building is a Panama Metropolis, Florida-based building agency led by Joey Chapman. Onyx's pipeline of south Miami-Dade multifamily tasks contains two different tasks. Within the Princeton neighborhood, Onyx plans the 337-unit Princeton Gardens with a nine-story constructing and a pair of three-story buildings at 24000 Southwest 127th Avenue. Building is predicted to start out this yr and completion is slated for 2026, Shomar stated. Close by homesteadOnyx needs to construct the 159-unit Regatta Level with two four-story buildings on the southwest nook of Southwest 296th Road and South Dixie Freeway. The complicated would even be set at workforce rents. Onyx has the three.5-acre Regatta Level improvement website below contract for $4.3 million, and expects to shut the acquisition by subsequent month, De Ramon stated. Building is predicted to start out mid-next yr, and completion is scheduled for the third quarter of 2026. The agency additionally goals to develop past South Florida, with plans for a roughly 846-unit condominium improvement on 47 acres in Fort Pierce, De Ramon stated. Learn extra South Miami-Dade, with an ample provide of developable land that comes at a reduction in comparison with Miami's city core, has caught multifamily builders' eyes. In Naranja, Jacksonville-based Vestcor needs to construct a 570-plus-unit condominium complicated between South Dixie Freeway and the South Miami-Dade Busway, north of Southwest 280th Road. Additionally, Coral Gables-based MG Developer, led by Alirio Torrealba, proposes an 11-story, 258-unit constructing at 13480 Southwest 248 Road in Princeton. Homebuilder Lennar has seized on south Miami-Dade with a number of proposed tasks. Most just lately, the Miami-based agency filed an utility for a fancy with 105 single-family properties between Southwest 272nd and Southwest 276th streets, east of Southwest 159th Avenue. [ad_2] Supply hyperlink
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rdgmanagment · 7 months
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RDG Management | Rental Property Listings | Find Apartments For Rent
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1. The Reserve at Cypress Waters in Orlando, Florida. The Reserve at Cypress Waters is a pet-friendly apartment complex that offers a variety of amenities for both you and your furry friend. The complex has a dog park, a pet washing station, and even a pet-friendly pool. The apartments themselves are spacious and well-appointed, with plenty of room for your pet to roam around.
2. The Vue at Flamingo Crossings in Kissimmee, Florida. The Vue at Flamingo Crossings is another great option for pet-friendly apartments in Florida. The complex has a dog park, a pet washing station, and even a pet-friendly elevator. The apartments themselves are modern and stylish, with plenty of natural light and comfortable living spaces.
3. Alexan Coconut Grove in Miami, Florida. Alexan Coconut Grove is a luxury pet-friendly apartment complex that offers a variety of amenities for both you and your furry friend. The complex has a rooftop dog park, a pet spa, and even a pet-friendly concierge. The apartments themselves are spacious and well-appointed, with stunning views of the city or the bay.
4. The Camden at River Landing in Jacksonville, Florida. The Camden at River Landing is a pet-friendly apartment complex that offers a variety of amenities for both you and your furry friend. The complex has a dog park, a pet washing station, and even a pet-friendly elevator. The apartments themselves are modern and stylish, with plenty of natural light and comfortable living spaces.
5. The District at Waterford Lakes in Orlando, Florida. The District at Waterford Lakes is a pet-friendly apartment complex that offers a variety of amenities for both you and your furry friend. The complex has a dog park, a pet washing station, and even a pet-friendly playground. The apartments themselves are spacious and well-appointed, with plenty of room for your pet to roam around.
.If you're looking for pet-friendly apartment rentals in Florida, there are several cities and regions known for being accommodating to pet owners. Here are some places and tips to help you find the perfect home for you and your furry friend:
Orlando: Orlando is known for its pet-friendly neighborhoods and apartments. Check out areas like Baldwin Park, Lake Eola Heights, or Thornton Park, which are known for their pet-friendly communities.
Tampa: Tampa also has numerous pet-friendly apartments. The Channelside and Hyde Park neighborhoods often have pet-friendly options. Additionally, the city offers many dog parks and pet-friendly amenities.
Miami: Miami has a range of pet-friendly options. Explore neighborhoods like Brickell, Coconut Grove, or Coral Gables for apartment rentals that welcome pets.
Tallahassee: The capital city of Florida is known for being pet-friendly. You can find apartments in neighborhoods such as Midtown or College Town that cater to pet owners.
Naples: Naples, located on the Gulf Coast, offers pet-friendly apartments and a relaxed lifestyle. Check out apartments near downtown Naples or in the North Naples area.
Online Resources: Use online resources like Apartments.com, Zillow, or Rent.com. These platforms often allow you to filter your search for pet-friendly apartments.
Local Pet-Friendly Directories: Some websites and directories specialize in pet-friendly housing options. These resources can help you narrow down your search.
Pet Deposits and Policies: When contacting apartment complexes, inquire about their pet policies, including pet deposits, weight limits, and breed restrictions. Make sure to fully understand the terms.
Community Amenities: Look for apartments that offer pet-friendly amenities such as dog parks, pet washing stations, and walking trails.
Visit in Person: Once you've narrowed down your options, visit the apartments in person to assess their pet-friendliness and overall suitability for you and your pet.
Remember that it's important to respect the rules and policies of your chosen apartment community when bringing a pet. Ensure your pet is well-behaved, and clean up after them in common areas. Always check local regulations and verify the specific pet policies with the apartment management to ensure a smooth transition into your new pet-friendly home in Florida.
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floridasbeaches · 7 months
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Miami FL Pet Friendly Vacation Home For Rent
Beach Vacation Rentals & Homes Florida Vacation Property For Rent By Owner, Miami Guesthouse /1 bath Price: from $198 nightly  >> BOOKHERE << Source: VRBO5/5 ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ (18 Reviews) Miami Florida Vacation House For Rent. Beautiful and lush property centrally located in North Coconut Grove, Miami’s oldest and most desirable residential neighborhood. This is a Guest House behind a main house on a…
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usbeaches · 7 months
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Miami FL Guesthouse For Rent By Owner, Dog Friendly
Florida Beach Vacation Rentals & Homes Florida Vacation Property For Rent, Miami  Guesthouse/ 1 BASleeps: 3 Price: $198 avg per night  5/5⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ (18 reviews) Source: VRBO >> Book Here << Miami FL Beach Vacation Home For Rent By Owner. Beautiful and lush property centrally located in North Coconut Grove, Miami’s oldest and most desirable residential neighborhood. This is a Guest House behind a…
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Why Stuart, FL, An Ideal Location
Stuart, FL, known as the "fishing capital of the world," is an ideal location for a semi-permanent or permanent home due to its proximity to major cities, beach access, and affordable living options. The town is a short drive from major cities like West Palm Beach, Ft. Lauderdale, Miami, Orlando, and Cocoa Beach, with the no-toll route taking about two hours. Stuart also offers a variety of beaches suitable for people in their 20s and 30s, including children, retirees, creative writers, and students. Also, social opportunities are available in Stuart, including community events like the Pub Crawl, Weekly Garage Tours, and a country dance event, as well as bars, pubs, and nightclubs for those who stay up after hours. The cost of living in Stuart is low, about one percent less expensive than the national average, with transportation, housing, and utilities being the most cost-effective options. As a whole, Stuart, FL, offers numerous advantages for those seeking a comfortable and affordable lifestyle in a small-town setting.
Family-friendly apartments in Stuart, FL
Haney Creek Crossing is a family-friendly apartment in Stuart, FL. This is a perfect place for those seeking new residential development in Stuart. It is conveniently located in Martin County's bustling hub for employment, culture, entertainment, shopping, dining, and recreation. The community is right next to Haney Creek Park Nature Preserve, providing residents with endless outdoor activities on miles of picturesque trails. Commuting to the Martin County Courthouse and Martin Memorial Hospital is a breeze because of the easy access to I-95 and Florida's Turnpike. At Haney Creek Crossing, you can enjoy the benefits of small-town living without sacrificing convenience. Then, the amenities at Haney Creek Crossing offer such comfort and convenience. For more information, call (772) 758 - 7519. 
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Bathtub Reef Beach
The Bathtub Reef Beach in Stuart, Florida, is a popular destination known for its calm waters and shallow reefs. This makes an ideal spot for swimming, sunbathing, and snorkeling. The beach offers a safe environment for children to play, with white sand and clear waters providing a comfortable environment for sunbathing. The shallow reefs are home to various marine life. Snorkeling gear can be rented from the beach concession stand. Bathtub Reef Beach is also a popular spot for fishing, with the option to fish from the shore or rent a boat from local charter companies. A walking path runs along the beach, providing a scenic view for both locals and tourists. So when visiting Bathtub Reef Beach, consider the beach opening daily from 7:00 AM to 7:00 PM, with a $5 parking fee per car. 
The car driver sustains serious injuries because of the crash
A single-vehicle rollover crash in Stuart, Florida, resulted in a driver suffering life-threatening injuries. Based on the report, the driver was ejected during the collision, and the SUV stopped off the side of the road near a housing complex. Based on the report, the crash occurred around 4:20 p.m. at Southeast Devenwood Way and Southeast Federal Highway intersect. The driver was taken to Cleveland Clinic Martin South Hospital for treatment. The Florida Highway Patrol is handling the investigation. It's very important that drivers practice defensive driving because their lives are more important than anything else. I hope the victim is going to survive this accident. Read more. 
Link to maps
Bathtub Reef Beach 1585 SE MacArthur Blvd, Stuart, FL 34996, United States Head north on SE MacArthur Blvd 6 min (2.4 mi) Continue on Florida A1A S/SE Ocean Blvd. Take N Sewalls Point Rd and NE Dixie Hwy to NW Baker Rd 12 min (5.9 mi) Haney Creek Crossing 1398 Cavendish CT, Stuart, FL 34994, United States
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abelsalkrealtor · 17 days
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Home For Rent 3bd/2ba on the Lake
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the-firebird69 · 1 year
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I don't know if this it is all around this is really awful and the show is terrible but you're saying and doing is horrible you're not hurting each other and your maniacs I don't want to have to do this anymore so maintaining romper freaking room he was right the whole time just for the birds they have real work to do and we don't have time for you idiotic kids your brother there Tommy f is formidable you're almost gone it's soon you will be out and you can thank each other for screaming the truth like complete idiots too Tommy is losing because of it. I'm going ahead and writing up some rules but tonight we have some action and it's really
-the tremendous Exodus continues out of the middle areas of all of the areas on Earth that have those. It is gigantic. The numbers are staggering we calculated last point about 210 trillion right now half are out the other half for mobilizing about a quarter of what's left no half what's left is moving and then the other half is almost ready you'll have them all out tonight and on the islands
-There's a lot going on and we need to be brief I shall
There's a lot of people who are just getting up no but they're trying to figure out how to get some rest and it's kind of tough it's a lot of crazy people out there
One way is to just get a hotel room and go to sleep and the other is to rent a room from a person for a house then the other would be to get a camper but really the best way to get some sleep is to just pull up into a parking spot and put your seat back and a lot of people these days do that they're getting on to the next part
A lot of cars trying to get here about 1 billion people and the car
So far away only admitted a few people the rest are going to stay out there and most of them losing their car and are getting grabbed. But that's a lot of people trying to get here.
There's a large number of people who have evacuated Florida it's a huge number and in this growing and there were three trillion more luck this morning and tonight we're left with about 1 trillion the rest left the evacuated there are several more people trying to evacuate now about 200 billion leaving only 800 billion here
Another news the morlock lost approximately 70 trillion today that would be 700 more areas and now leave probably 400 areas and they say around 500 more likely and I said okay.
There are more things going on this is the main thrust of it but they have been advancing up from Cape Coral and probably halfway to fort Myers right now so you're there at Bonita springs and from the north probably just at Bradenton. Then they're clearing out the whole area and the shield is going there. There's a lot of news but to be brief we have a lot of area that is now taken by the shield in Florida it is pretty good size not small and I want people to know that. And I can't explain Tallahassee and the panhandles are covered and then there is a gap to actually all the way to Tampa but Tim is outskirts are covered and all of the outskirts so it goes pretty much almost to Orlando and all the way down to Bradenton there are only a few other places you know because the shield is so huge by Tampa and Jacksonville and the whole area that's about 70 mile radius and then you go down to the next area Orlando and that whole area and Orlando is about 70 miles from diameter too. And then you would go all the way down to probably Bonita springs and it will go halfway across Florida almost and Miami is covered about 20 miles from shore all the way up to Orlando right now. The central Florida area has been basically cleared morlock there's there's none out there
Most of Florida that's the inhabited areas is covered by The shield and areas that are not don't have anything under them the area that my husband is in is one of the few it does not have full coverage but it has coverage off and on and they form the shield of this afternoon it was noticed it's very hot very dry and the sun felt like it was blazing and it's a sign
More shortly but that is pretty much the status of Florida
Hera
We're going to try and give a status of the planet in a moment
Thor Freya
Olympus
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tradedmiami · 1 year
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LEASE IMAGE: Chris Metzger DATE: 05/11/2023 ADDRESS: 1951 North Commerce Parkway MARKET: Weston ASSET TYPE: Industrial LANDLORD: EastGroup Properties TENANT: Specialized Freight Carriers LANDLORD'S REP: Synergy Industrial TENANT'S REP: Chris Metzger - Cushman & Wakefield ASKING RENT: $26/ft. ~ SF: 134,400 NOTE: Logistics company Specialized Freight Carriers has leased the entire 134,400-square-foot building at Weston Commerce Park in Weston, a suburb of Fort Lauderdale. The property's prime location offers quick access to Interstate 75, executive housing, and a large labor pool, making it a desirable industrial market in Broward County, despite a slight cooling in the market with rental rates still on the rise. #Miami #RealEstate #tradedmia #MIA #WestonCommercePark #Weston #Industrial #EastGroupProperties #SpecializedFreightCarriers #SynergyIndustrial #ChrisMetzger #CushmanandWakefield
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dorapuig · 1 year
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Palm Beach Property Management Of Delray Beach, Fl, Earns Accreditation From The Nhwa!
The company is owned and operated by Danny Schwab, who has been in the real property business for more than 20 years. Some of the agency's providers include evictions, tenant screening, property maintenance, and property inspections. It additionally provides various management plans for properties similar private home management palm beach gardens to residences, condos, and multi-family complexes. Are you in search of an expert property management company to supervise your home, apartment, house constructing, industrial property or community association?
We specialize within the leasing and management of rental properties situated in Northern & Central Palm Beach County, Florida. We service the cities of Juno Beach, Jupiter, North Palm Beach, Palm Beach Gardens, Singer Island, Tequesta & West Palm Beach. In addition to property management, we also supply Home Watch, Leasing, and Tenant Placement services. At Jilsa Management we're very happy with the management providers we offer, and we imagine that when you talk to a Jilsa property manager you home property management palm beach gardens are getting a few of the best services in the actual estate trade. Our property management services are comprehensive, masking every thing from the management of the leasing guarantee to how to create a pet guarantee. Whether it's residential, business, or high-rise, we provide full service property management to some of Florida's most prestigious communities.
Our team is made up of journey fanatics and vacation rental specialists who are passionate about serving to folks have the absolute best vacation expertise whereas in Palm Beach County, FL. We provide all our residents with online portals permitting them to pay their rent, submit upkeep requests, or view and replace their particulars from their phones. We believe this could be a great way of maintaining in touch with our residents while palm beach gardens home management enhancing the service we provide Florida landlords. Housekeeping, maintenance prices and any other charges, corresponding to licensing are shown on the monthly statements and paid for owners. If for any purpose you wish to discontinue your service with us, you'll have the ability to cancel your settlement at any time with no penalties. With its in-house maintenance employees, CPM can complete handyman objects quickly at an inexpensive value.
Prepare a management plan and utilize it as guidance and to set the right expectations with the board. Our Condominium Association and Commercial Property groups additionally provide advancement in their subject. They are constantly on the edge of innovation in phrases of generating options and ideas complete home management palm beach gardens for Condominium Associations. They stay up-to-date on the status of ever-changing laws, in addition to the procedures and requirements of those governing documents. Thank you for visiting our web site and please bookmark it and use it as your information for everything we now have to supply.
It begins with finding the right tenants for your property. We then manage your property, gather hire, and make sure it's well maintained. Displayed caregivers have had lively Care.com profiles throughout the final comprehensive home management palm beach gardens 60 months but could not have present active accounts or background checks. Results are illustrative only and should not replicate current availability. Care.com members have entry to active, background checked providers.
Whether you wish to discover a new place to stay or need a rental filled, when you are with Crane Reed, you might be home. Ms. Russo transitioned into the property management industry in 1999 when she joined Miami Management. Her energetic character has helped her turn out to be the High-Rise Division Manager. Her present property home management palm beach gardens obligations include supervising the High-Rise Division on-site management offices, overseeing one hundred fifty five staff, as well as marketing, sales, and association transition services.
His curiosity within the bigger estate management world led him to hitch Island Home & Estate Management the place he's liable for overseeing the upkeep crews and helping guarantee consumer satisfaction. In his spare time he enjoys spending time with his household outside and at the beach. Our unique, individualized method is rooted in our need to preserve the beauty and integrity of each home, whereas creating a stress-free resort expertise snowbird home management palm beach gardens for our purchasers. Thanks to our in depth network of distributors and home-care professionals, we will proudly provide comprehensive property management from owner representation to concierge services. Miami Management has a history of excellence in phrases of serving their prospects. We haven't only met the wants of our purchasers, but have additionally created services that fulfill our purchasers' preferences.
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sellmyhousefst · 1 year
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Residential Real Estate Agency
Residential Real Estate Agency Sell My House Fast Miami Inc is a full-service residential real estate agency. We buy, sell, and rent homes in the Miami area. Our team of experienced professionals will work with you to find the best home for your needs and help you through every step of the buying or selling process. We are committed to providing our clients with the highest quality service possible. Contact us today to learn more about how we can help you achieve your goals! We serve Golden Isles, Three Island, Andover, Norland, North Miami Beach, and Ojus. Sell My House Fast Miami Inc 590 Ansin Blvd, Hallandale Beach, FL 33009 For more details about our moving services, visit us at https://sell-my-house-fast-miami-inc.business.site. from https://local.google.com/place?id=9828239271237058713&use=posts&lpsid=7248622066891792545
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