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Biscayne Community Center & Village Green Park
A fantastic spot for the kids, there's a swimming pool, a park full of jungle gyms, an activity room with a playset out of a child's happiest fantasies and an African Balboa tree that's over a century old and teeming with tropical birdlife. Did we mention it's free? The unmissable park and community center are on the right side of Crandon Blvd as you drive south.
Read more about Biscayne Community Center & Village Green Park
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Calle Ocho
As SW 8th St heads away from downtown, it becomes Calle Ocho. That's when you know you've arrived in Little Havana, the most prominent community of Cuba-Americans in the US. But this is no Cuban theme park; it's a real neighborhood where real people live and work, and it's a great place to shop for Cuban music and clothes.
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Design District
Proving that SoBe doesn't hold the lease on hip, this trendy area north of downtown - all but deserted twenty years ago - isn't just rebounding, it's ensconcing itself as a bastion of art and design. The Design District (www.miamidesigndistrict.net) is mecca for interior designers, home to dozens of galleries and contemporary furniture, fixture and design showrooms. Nearby Wynwood also boasts a lively arts scene.
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Normandy Isle
A few years ago Normandy Isle was dubbed Little Argentina, and it's still one of the best places outside Mendoza to people-watch with a cortada before digging into the sort of pasta and steak dishes the gauchos love so well.
But today the Argentines compete with their neighbors, the Uruguayans, their rivals, the Brazilians, and even a big crop of Colombians for first place in the Normandy Isle ethnic enclave stakes.
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