Miami

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Allapattah
 
Allapattah is inhabited by 39,200 people, 69% of whom are Hispanic.  The community consists mostly of working class adults and families.2Allapattah  The area is known for its wholesale produce market, which is the largest outdoor center for distribution of food in MiamiAdditionally, the area is also well-known for its clothing outlets, serving as a trading ground for buyers and sellers from all over, especially representing Latin America and Caribbean cultures.

Allapattah has some of the most highly regarded medical institutions in the
United States such as Bascom Palmer Eye Institute, the University of Miami Jackson Memorial Medical Center, the Sylvester Cancer Center, the Ryder Trauma Center, Cedars of Lebanon Hospital and the Veterans Administration Hospital.3

 
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Downtown Miami
 
Downtown Miami is the business and commercial district of the city. With many high-rise buildings and a very elegant skyline, the area in and around downtown houses headquarters of many transnational corporations. It serves as the headquarters for the Latin American operations of multi-national companies like American Airlines, Cisco, Sony, SBC Communications, FedEx, and Microsoft. Downtown Miami has more international banks than any other city in the United States.  Therefore, it makes sense that Miami hosted the negotiations for the Free Trade Agreement of the Americas in 2003.4
 
Downtown Miami is famous for its visitor attractions and is an extremely popular tourist area. It is also very well known for the entertainment and shopping it offers. Some of the many attractions are the Metro Dade Cultural Center, the Center for Fine Arts, the South Florida Historical Museum and the Miami Arena. Downtown is also very close to the Port of Miami and the Miami International Airport  In addition, downtown Miami is home to about 13 million square feet of office space, 5 million square feet of retail space, and 104,000 employed people.5
 
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Little Haiti

Little Haiti is situated between 57th and 84th streets in Miami--just north of downtown.  With a population of 33, 908, Little Haiti is pre-dominantly inhabited by Haitians who migrated during the Haitian Diaspora.6 The area is filled with Haitian owned-and-operated businesses.  Little Haiti is only minutes away from the Design District of Miami, which is an 18 square mile block of artistic displays, showrooms, art galleries, and magnificent and lavish exhibits of furnishings and textiles.  With its characteristic and unique Caribbean culture and festivities, Miami’s Little Haiti is both economically and ethnically vibrant.  It is a colorful community which greatly enhances Miami-Dade County.7
 
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Little Havana

Cafe CubanoWith its population of about 91,465, Little Havana is located above the Coconut Grove area and is just west of downtown Miami. It has emerged as a dynamic and colorful Cuban colony, with Cuban immigrants from as early as the 1960s. It is one of the neighborhoods of Miami which has the largest concentration of Latinos. Calle Ocho, a smaller neighborhood within Little Havana, hosts a two-day festival also called ‘Calle Ocho’ which is the largest Hispanic event in the United States.9 The area is culturally vibrant and boasts of a very rich Cuban heritage. It is also inhabited by Nicaraguans, Columbians, Hondurans and Mexicans-- essentially people that migrated from Central and South America. The area also houses the Orange Bowl, home of the Miami Hurricanes--Miami's own football team.10
 
[Photo by Armando Bellmas (www.bellmas.com)]
[Copyright 2002. Used with permission]

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Miami Shores
 
Miami Shores is a suburb of Miami and is an economically well off neighborhood.  Many of this community's residents belong to the upper-middle socioeconomic category. According to the 2000 U.S Census, the total population of Miami Shores is 10,380, 21.74% of whom identify as Hispanic or Latino.11

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Hialeah
Hialeah, the city, is located in Miami-Dade County, northeast of Downtown Miami.  According to the 2000 U.S Census Bureau, it has a population of 226,419 and covers an area of 51.1 km2.13  Hialeah is pre-dominantly Hispanic with 90.3 % of its population being Hispanic or Latino, of which 62% are Cuban,  3% are Puerto Rican and 0.8% are Mexican.14

Site created by Kim Brow, Carmen Lafia, and Umang Malhotra 2004