Monday, February 1, 2010

Miami Marine Stadium: beauty amid the horror



The World Monuments Fund has just announced that a new engineering study of the Commodore Ralph Munroe Miami Marine Stadium on Virginia Key shows the concrete restoration of the shuttered stadium could cost between $5.5 - $8.5 million - less than the City of Miami’s earlier predictions of $15 million.

That doesn’t include renovations of seats, bathrooms, ticket booths and everything else vandals ripped up or damaged since the City of Miami closed the stadium after Hurricane Andrew.

But it’s still good news and a first step in restoring the public uses of the island.

On Tuesday, Feb. 2, the President of the World Monuments Fund, Bonnie Burnham, will tour the site with City of Miami Mayor Tomas Regalado. It will be her first look at the stadium. And it’s encouraging and truly amazing that a City of Miami official has taken an interest.

Regalado has in fact, gone as far as calling it “one of the Magic City’s crown jewels” and vowed to make restoration of the stadium one of his administration’s priorities.

Not too long ago - say during the City of Miami’s last go round on developing a “master plan” for Virginia Key - the iconic structure wasn’t even in the game plan, having been wiped off the map of Virginia Key by the master plan consultants. Thanks to a public outcry (how come the previous city administration didn’t see that coming?), the stadium later appeared in the proposed master plan.

Now the hard part begins. How to fund the restoration and how to restore the public’s use to all the land around it?

What will the dignitaries see on their tour Tuesday? The stadium sits abandoned and vandalized, locked behind a decrepit chain-linked fence in a sea of asphalt. The setting has reached a ‘World without Us’ stage - small cracks have turned to large fissures and weeds transformed to trees. Faded ‘No Trespassing’ signs give the area a creepy, horror movie feel.

And yet, there is beauty. The shoreline here is rich with new plant life and the view of the Miami skyline is sublime.

Across the blue basin lies the mysterious Bill Sadowski Critical Wildlife Refuge, where flocks of birds come to roost in the comforting darkness of mangrove forests and manatees spawn and are nurtured in its folds. What an amazing place. And what poor stewards we have been.

Until now. Maybe the tide has turned.
After all, the Mayor has joined the fight to save the stadium and Virginia Key.



-------------
Why restore the Marine Stadium? The World Monuments Funds answers:
“For the citizens of Miami, the stadium represents the modernity of a growing city and the international cultural influences that helped shape it. Miami Marine Stadium defined a significant shift in American architectural style from staid civic buildings to exuberant structures reflecting changing tastes and a desire to project the city as a forward-looking place.”

More info:
http://www.wmf.org/project/miami-marine-stadium

No comments:

Post a Comment