ADMSP Magazine Cover

On August 10th, 2010 the City of Miami Beach’s Historic Preservation Board (“HPB”) Unanimously Approved ADMSP’s Preliminary and Landscape Plans Submitted by ADMSP on July 12th, 2010.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JS3RvE-zU1E]

ADMSP’s board of directors, management, donors and volunteer board are pleased and thankful for the unanimous approval of the preliminary and landscape plans. The preliminary and landscape plans were developed by Les Beilinson from BeilinsonGomez Architects in conjunction with the landscape architect Orlando Comas based upon ArquitectonicaGEO’s landscape design concept.

The City of Miami Beach has informed ADMSP that it has until May 13, 2011 to obtain the building permit and then 30 days following, on June 13, 2011, to provide proof of funding. The Chairman of the Board of Directors of ADMSP, Peter Saile states that he is “confident that ADMSP will meet all required conditions on or before the required dates and thanks the Manager of the City of Miami Beach, Jorge M. Gonzalez and his staff for the good cooperation between him, his staff and ADMSP”.

Saile states that the HPB’s first unanimous decision in favor of ADMSP’s development of a sculpture park happened in December 13th, 2005, which makes this HPB decision, one of the high points in the development process.

He further states that the Altos Del Mar Park property that began with the Tatum Brothers has now shifted again and has become an important focal point in debates over preservation for the State of Florida and the City of Miami Beach. As the last remaining undeveloped land, ADMSP intends to keep the conservation legacy by adding an aesthetic experience with minimal environmental interventions, beautiful landscaping and much needed free community programming.

“By approving ADMSP’s preliminary and landscape plans, the HPB has allowed ADMSP to fulfill yet another step in furtherance of its mission”, Marlene Saile, Esq. said.

The next step for ADMSP is the application for the building permit with the City of Miami Beach’s Building Department by October 30, 2010. The permit must be obtained by April 15, 2011 in order for ADMSP to meet its goal for a grand opening in November of 2011.

About ADMSP:
Mission

ADMSP is devoted to developing a sculpture park with community programming that will transform North Beach into a community, cultural, tourism and travel destination elevating the quality of life and economy for all. We will do this by: (i) utilizing subtle interventions and ecologically harmonious materials, trees and plants thereby conserving the land; (ii) providing exhibitions of sculpture from established artists from the 19th, 20th and 21st centuries; (iii) providing community programming to include art, fitness, and entertainment.

Design
ADMSP will create a unique park that meets the needs of the present without compromising the needs of the future by utilizing subtle interventions and ecologically harmonious materials. The design takes
into account that Miami Beach is a barrier island formed by an accumulation of sediment on limestone shoals; that the property is ocean front property within the urban framework of the North Beach community, all of which inform the aesthetics and layout of the space: An allée, dunes, a maritime planting palette and butterflies provide a landscape design appropriate to the site making ADMSP as unique worldwide as is the site. ArquitectonicaGEO’s design concept is an abstract interpretation of forms found in south Florida limestone geology, parkland and urban life!

Location
ADMSP is located at the Historic Altos del Mar district east of Collins Avenue (A1A Northbound) between 76th Street and 77th Streets.

Audience
ADMSP is for everyone!

Social Community Network
ADMSP has created www.admsp.org, a social network for anyone interested in community, the arts,
sculpture, Miami Beach, North Beach ADMSP, nature, philanthropic work and all things ADMSP. It is a place to join groups and upload art, writings, projects, presentations, videos, music and much more. Join us!

Hours
ADMSP will be open daily from 10 a.m. to sundown 365 days.

Admission
Admission is free to all.

 

ADMSP- Magazine Cover

Miami Beach’s City Manager, Jorge M. Gonzalez, approved the preliminary plans on May 13, 2010 after review with all of the pertinent city staff. See:

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=opF4zQozSgA&hl=en_US&fs=1]

“With the submittal to the HPB of the Landscape and Preliminary Plans, we are now at our next step in our journey to make this dream come true”, said Marlene Saile, Esq, President and CEO of ADMSP.

With this submittal, ADMSP has included full landscape design plans that were created by Orlando Comas A.S.L.A., Landscape Architect. See:

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WZSxdGhHigs&hl=en_US&fs=1]

The next steps are:

1. A neighborhoods meeting for the North Beach Community to give us their input on the landscape plans on August 5th, 2010; and 2. A HPB meeting to obtain the approval from the HPB of the landscape plans on August 10th, 2010.

“ADMSP would like to thank Jorge M. Gonzalez, the City Staff, the members of the HPB, Les Beilinson, Orlando Comas and everyone else involved for all of your priceless contributions to the collective effort to achieve yet another milestone in ADMSP’s development towards achieving its mission”, said Peter Saile chairman of ADMSP.

Continue reading »

 

ADMSP- Magazine Cover

The City of Miami Beach has officially signed and approved the preliminary plans submitted on January 15th, 2010 by ADMSP. The preliminary plans included full-color renderings and highly detailed drawings of the site plan by Les Beilinson from Beilinson Gomez Architects.

Here are more renderings to look at…

Miami Beach’s City Manager, Jorge M. Gonzalez, approved the preliminary plans on May 13, 2010 after review with all of the pertinent city staff. These plans now reflect the city’s input such as the sleek logo sculpture on Collins and a modern curved pergola.

Within the plans, the city manager got a very early peek of what the park lay-out will look like. Beautiful, high detail, full color renderings were included illustrating the Butterfly Vivarium, the Entrance Pavilion, the Tree Allées, the Lawn and the Pergola among others. The city’s observations also mentioned providing more room for the Tree Allées to grow and a re-oriented Pavilion and parking lot to better accommodate pedestrians. Gonzalez has been the city manager since August 2000 and has now etched his name in history by approving the plans.

ADMSP is now allowed to move on to the next phase of the project! The next step will be submittal to the Historic Preservation Board. In this submittal, ADMSP must include full landscape design plans that will be created by Orlando Comas A.S.L.A., Landscape Architect.

Comas, a brilliant and highly creative visionary, will design the landscape plans that will go the Historic Preservation Board pro bono. Currently he is one of South Florida’s best kept secrets in creating lush, tropical oasis in private residences, resorts, and parks. He has graciously joined the ADMSP team to prepare these plans that have a 60-day deadline from the time the Preliminary Plans were approved or July 12, 2010.

Comas is a natural creating these enchanting and soothing outdoor areas and who will put into effect ArquitectonicaGEO’s landscape design concept into the current preliminary plans that Miami Beach is a barrier island formed by an accumulation of sediment on limestone shoals and that the property is ocean front property within the urban context of the North Beach community.

ADMSP is naturally divided into natural rooms: the Dunefield, the Maritime Garden, the Tree Allées and the Lawn. The sculpture rooms have different colored meandering paths where the sculptures are exhibited which the user can navigate. At the center is the lawn where the community programs will take place. At the entrance the park will feature admsp’s logo as a “jungle gym”. A living, touchable, playful sculpture for all that will be commissioned by ADMSP.

Comas will now choose the trees for the Tree Allées, the maritime planting palette for the Maritime Garden, the grass for the Lawn, the dunes and their coastal plantings for the Dunefield.

In addition he will choose the recycled materials that will become the pathways using recyclable sustainable landscaping materials creating a variety of display areas for the sculptures. These surfaces protect high traffic areas from foot traffic, and reduce irrigation demands. The plans will also include the design of state of the art public amenities.

The Preliminary Plans are the new vision of the ADMSP team and the city. Many talented and well-established professionals, entrepreneurs, community leaders and activists have joined together in the hopes to bring ADMSP to fruition in the very near future. In their common objective, a positive and prosperous synergy has been very fortunate to occur and the park’s design and structure has been in very caring hands.

The plans are actually the†closest visual to the actual lay out of the space anyone has seen thus far. For anyone who has driven by 75th through 77th Streets on Collins Avenue, will clearly see what a make over ADMSP will be to the area by looking at the preliminary plans.

ADMSP would like to thank Jorge M. Gonzalez, the City Staff, Les Beilinson, and everyone else involved (you know who you are!) in the collective effort to achieve yet another milestone in its development towards achieving its mission: THANK YOU!

ADMSP will build the first sculpture park of its kind in the world, as it will feature:

1) FREE changing exhibitions of sculpture from established artists from the 19th, 20th, and 21st centuries.

2) FREE community art classes, fitness and entertainment.

3) 365 days per year in the North Beach section of Miami Beach.

ADMSP will transform North Beach into a community, cultural, tourism and travel destination elevating the quality of life and economy for all.

Since its inception in 2004, ADMSP has been creating the environmental conditions that will lead to better social and economic circumstances in North Beach with its mission to build a place that although at first glance is a landscaped gallery space, upon further inspection it reveals itself as an important community installation with cultural, social and economic implications that extend well beyond the sculptures and the traditional museum audiences- for EVERYONE!

In the book The Tipping Point, Malcolm Gladwell postulates the “Power of Context” in that “Epidemics are sensitive to the conditions and circumstances of the times and places in which they occur” and how they lead to social, cultural, community transformations that are positive in nature.

The ADMSP project is the perfect opportunity to observe the transformation of an impoverished and crime-ridden community, by changing the social landscape of North Beach in Miami Beach, into a thriving community rich with community and social programs.

While ADMSP waited for the city’s decision, it embarked on its second social media campaign aimed at creating awareness about ADMSP and its mission. ADMSP’s newest campaign set to begin on June 1st, 2010 will be happily called: “This is Focus Focus (not Hocus Pocus)!” The new campaign will concentrate on filtering and fine-tuning all the applications and tools available through all the social media platforms to deliver a clear, concise message. ADMSP is set to open on November 15, 2011.

See the Preliminary Plans video here.

 

ADMSP- Magazine Cover

Dear Friends,

I’ve spent a week reading about blogs, specifically BLOG BOUNCE RATE.

In my quest to understand and learn how to maneuver this rating in the direction we’d like, I discovered how almost any subject you can think of has a viable audience that actively searches it. Case in point: Me.

I needed to know more about this enigma known as Blog Bounce. Up to now the only thing I bounce is a basketball and in recent days I’m learning how this measuring tool applies to Social Media on the World Wide Web.

In my brief 26 years in this existence I can confidently say that I am sure of one thing, and one thing only: Nothing is as it seems. The more you research any specific topic, the more you discover its intricacies and realize its multiple dimensions. Bounce Rate is no exception.

In order to tackle this successfully I have to break down a broad topic into smaller, more tangible pieces and start with the basics: Welcome to Blog Bounce 101!

What exactly is BLOG BOUNCE RATE?

A BOUNCE is when a visitor does not visit another page on your site. A BOUNCE can also be considered being on the same page for a long time. Essentially, a visitor “bounces” to another site as opposed to staying and clicking further on yours.

What is a good Bounce Rate?

Believe it or not someone came up with a mathematical formula to determine the rate of Blog Bounce. The rate is in a percentage. The lower the number, the more successful the site is and the more clicks it generates. It’s hard to find a site with a Blog Bounce Rate lower that 20 percent. Anything over 35 percent is cause for concern, 50 percent and above is worrying.

Depending on your site, you may not even have to worry about Blog Bounce, but for new sites such as ADMSP, it’s important to keep this number as low as possible.

Finally,

How to improve Blog Bounce Rate?

And here is where the work begins…

Many sites offered “cheats” to improve Blog Bounce such as, creating an Entry Page that requires a click in order to access the actual site. However, we at ADMSP do not cut corners, and cheating just isn’t an option.

According to a really cool on line article: “Your blog must be informative, authoritative, subject-rich and above all, convincing. All these together can be achieved, if you optimize your blog. Optimization can be accomplished through two fronts: search engine optimization, which is generally referred to as SEO Optimization and design and usability optimization.”

Where do I go from here?

The researching came easily. There are millions of blogs out there right now and many of them are just as concerned with their Bounce Rate as we are. Typing “Blog Bounce Rate” on Google will generate more hits that you can read in ten lifetimes!

The real challenge is implementing the tips effectively. From now on, I have to write great content that is relevant to what my audience is searching for.

But I’m getting ahead of myself. Before that happens I need to make my list of Keywords and Tags to utilize effectively. After that’s done, I incorporate them in our page titles, post titles, post-slugs, and content. By implementing this method, when our audience searches for a sculpture park with one of our keywords, they find us.

This week I’ve learned how extensive site analytics actually is. I have a new-found appreciation for my colleague, Yaritza, who does this on a monthly basis for ADSMP. Additionally, I also learned that everything, no matter how common, has a method.

Last week I was under the impression that a blog was a public diary on whatever subject you chose. Today, I understand it can be an in-depth process that requires a plan. For ADMSP, our blogs are a window into our project.

Slowly but surely, together as a team, bounce rate will decrease as our audience stops by and peeks into the world of ADMSP.

 

ADMSP Design- Ecologically Harmonious Butterflies

Did you know color lives? Now you do. They’re called butterflies, gentle, colorful little creatures floating on a breeze and living among the flowers. At ADMSP, we think of them as little living sculptures, which are why they have a room all to themselves: The Butterfly Vivarium. You can come in too, and see these little art pieces in action as they interact with each other and with you!

What is a Butterfly Vivarium? It is the simulation of the butterflies’ normal habitat where they naturally live or grow. At ADMSP we call it the Butterfly Condo. Although small and gentle, butterflies are a tough insect that can flourish in several different types of habitats, such as wetlands, meadows, wood’s edge, rainforests, and even an urban garden. Unfortunately, many natural butterfly habitats are being destroyed by the elimination of weeds and native grasses from yards, chemical pesticides, parks and roadways, as well as the deforestation of tropical rainforests.

In South Florida, many butterfly feeding and breeding grounds have been destroyed also because of urbanization, and as a result the Schaus Swallowtail and the Miami Blue native to South Florida are in the U.S. Federal List of Endangered Species. At ADMSP, we are committed to art and its service to nature and the community; therefore, we will have the Butterfly Vivarium where these rare species can live and thrive.

What will you see? At the Butterfly Vivarium, you will see these creatures in action in a reconstructed environment designed to fit their own unique needs according to the species.You will also have the opportunity to interact with the butterflies are they fly around you caring on with their daily pollinating duties.

MEET THE RESIDENTS

The Schaus Swallowtail Butterfly

This magnificent species was listed as threatened in 1976 due to the decline of its tropical hardwood hammock habitat, mosquito control practices, urbanization and over collecting. Hurricanes Andrew in 1992 and Georges in 1998 severely damaged the Schaus habitats, and their numbers have plummeted.

Description

The Schaus swallowtail butterfly is a member of the family Papilionidae. It is a large, dark brown butterfly that looks like the giant swallowtail but has solid dark brown tails with a yellow border and a narrower yellow wing band.

ADMSP Design- Schauss Swallowtail

Life History

The butterfly occurs exclusively in subtropical dry forests (hardwood hammocks) including areas that were formerly cleared and farmed. Adults feed on the nectar from blossoms of guava, wild tamarind, and cheese shrub. The larvae feed on the tender new growth of the pioneering shrubs torchwood and wild lime.

Distribution

The Schaus swallowtail butterfly’s distribution is limited to tropical hardwood hammocks. Once ranging from the south Miami area down to Lower Matecumbe Key, its range has shrunk to the upper Florida Keys, where it is now found from Key Biscayne Park to northern Key Largo and Upper Matecumbe Key.

The Miami Blue (Hemiargus thomasi bethunebakeri)

Another equally impressive butterfly, it was also listed as endangered in 2000. It is a small, brightly colored butterfly endemic to Florida. Ever-expanding urbanization and the associated loss of coastal habitat have all but eliminated the Miami Blue from the South Florida mainland. In recent years, this alarming trend of decline has continued in the Florida Keys. Once abundant and widespread, the butterfly has become considerably rarer and now only occurs in a single small, isolated colony site within the boundaries of Bahia Honda State Park on Bahia Honda Key in the Lower Florida Keys.

ADMSP Design- Miami Blue

Description

Males are bright metallic blue dorsally. Females are primarily dark gray with blue scaling toward the wing bases and orange-capped black submarginal eyespots on each hind wing. Both sexes are gray below with a distinct wide white postmedian hindwing band and four black basal spots. Mature larvae are highly variable and range in color from light green to maroon. Pupae are black or green. The larvae are tended by ants in the genus Camponotus. The relationship is facultative.

Life History

Primarily a coastal species, the Miami blue inhabits tropical coastal hammocks, scrub and pine rocklands where it utilizes balloon vine (Cardiospermum corrindum, also possibly C. halicacabum) and yellow nickerbean (Caesalpinia bonduc) as the primary larval hosts.

Distribution

Historically, little detailed and definitive information is available on the extent of the species’ range within the state. However, most experts agree that it once commonly occurred from the southern mainland, approximately Hillsborough to Monroe counties, south to Key West. Over the last few decades, the species’ overall distribution and numerical abundance has been significantly reduced. The butterfly now only occurs in a single small, isolated colony site within the boundaries of Bahia Honda State Park on Bahia Honda Key in the Lower Florida Keys.

ADMSP with the help of conservancy experts will join efforts to grow both the Schaus Swallowtail and the Miami Blue species in the Butterfly Vivarium as captive colonies to be released. These newly released members of each species will hopefully establish new self-sustaining colonies, in an effort to educate the public about conservation in a model ecosystem.

The Schaus and the Miami Blue are two little, beautiful reasons why conservancy is so crucial. For years we have lost species such as rare and glorious as these and it is up to us to turn the trend around.

What is equally important is that these species are needed in the wild. At ADMSP, we strive to deliver the message that all living things are part of a very fragile balance. This balance has already been disrupted due to the mistreatment and misuse of our planet. Altos Del Mar Sculpture Park is a physical manifestation of conservation, as all the materials and methods used to construct and maintain it will all be eco-friendly.

We aim to conserve and urge others to conserve. As you visit ADMSP and get to know the butterflies, let their beauty inspire you to protect the areas where they naturally live. After all, almost all art is inspired by nature, nature sustains all communities, and all communities rely on nature to live and grow.

We learned that from the butterflies…

 

ADMSP Design- Ecologically Harmonious Landscaping

Look outside your window. Ask yourself what you see. Depending on where you live that list can differ, but one thing that almost all will have in common is grass. Stretching from coast to coast, continent to continent, everyplace has grass and everyone knows what grass is.

The question is: What type of grass?

Yes, there’s more than one.

No, “green” is not a name for a type.

Yes, it matters which.

Why? Because of the delicacy and respect that should be demonstrated towards nature, it is important to pick grass and plants that will not only enhance aesthetic appeal, but also be ecologically harmonious to Florida’s natural surroundings.

“KEEP OFF THE GRASS”

Ever wondered the point of those signs? Oftentimes, the type of grass that mean sign is keeping you off of was not designed to withstand traffic. If everyone who walked by decided to wiggle their toes through it, that particular organization/location will face a large landscape fee regularly.

What kind of use the grass area will endure is crucial in choosing what type. Making the right choice will prevent the need for spending money on rude signs keeping you from wiggling your little piggies through that cool grass ‘til your heart’s content.

The grass should also be resistant to drought and tolerant of heavy rains and salt water. ADMSP will have all of the above due to rain seasons, the oceanfront view and occasional droughts that have been recorded in South Florida. Finally, maintenance is important. For anyone who has a lawn, whether public or private, high maintenance grass is like a high maintenance lady: expensive.

Picking the right plants that can safely co-exist with South Florida climate is important as well. First of all, a plant that is not native to Florida, often times may do more harm than good. The introduction of a foreign species into a habitat that it’s not its own can disrupt the balance that exists within that area causing a significant increase/decrease in populations that may be harmful in the long run.

Secondly, non-native plants are costly. Maintenance, care, and often, replacement, of these species defeat the purpose of even carrying them. A cactus cannot survive in humidity, a palm tree cannot survive in the snow, and a rose bud cannot survive in the desert.

Nature’s great and divine wisdom has created a place and purpose for everything natural that exists. At Altos Del Mar Sculpture Park, we are embracing nature’s wisdom and teaching others not to go against it.

All of the plants, grass and trees for ADMSP have been chosen according to their ecologically harmonious qualities according to the State of Florida’s Department of Environmental Protection. For ADMSP, dune restoration is important, and the plants chosen need to have a proper level of salt tolerance due to the park’s ocean-front location.

Because of Florida being a peninsula and the yearly hurricane season, the soils in the state are high in moisture. Therefore, all plants, trees and grass chosen for the park must have a proper moisture tolerance level.

Landscape design can often become complicated and overwhelming. It far exceeds the simple task of just picking a tree, a bush and deciding where to plant them. There are many factors to consider when choosing how to properly landscape an area.

ADSMP will have planted dunes will have native species that are both tolerant to salt and soil moisture. Some of the dune plants you will see will be salt grass, seashore paspalum and coastal bluestream. Planted dunes in The Dunefield will distinguish sculptures from one another visually and physically!

ADMSP Design- Ecologically Harmonious Dunes

The Maritime Garden will be the equivalent of walking through the most lush, tropical garden you can envision! Dense planting areas providing backdrops for the sculptures and shady seating areas for relaxation and contemplation will be found here. Some of the plants and trees you might see in this room will be sand live oak, saw palmetto, coontie, earleaf catbrier, Adam’s needle and Hercules’ club.

ADMSP Design- Ecologically Harmonious Plants

Fitting into its tropical theme, the Maritime Garden will also have the following palms: silver palm, cabbage palm, saw palmetto and Florida thatch palm.

The Tree Allees will be a safe haven for trees, breeze and shade. The planted tree rows open up views into the sculpture park and the Lawn announcing the park to the community! Here you can stroll under white acacia, gumbo limbo, pigeon plum, dahoon holly, southern red dedar, southern magnolia and white mangrove.

ADMSP Design- Ecologically Harmonious Trees

ADMSP Design- Ecologically Harmonious Grass

The planted green lawn at the center of the park will be ideal in allowing for a variety of community activities, events, and performances! This grass’ no sissy!

ADMSP is the physical manifestation of art meeting nature in service of the community. To respect and protect nature is also serving and protecting the community and its residents. At ADMSP, you will enter into a lush tropical oasis where sculptures bloom among the flowers and stretch high above the ground like trees.It is a place that just like nature, everything within has a purpose and where not even the grass is coincidence.

 

ADMSP- Magazine Cover

Green is the new craze. More and more companies are adopting eco-friendlier principals into their production. Additionally, there is an increasing awareness to promote “green” living into every household. The efforts stem from trying to reduce our overall carbon footprint on the earth, and attempt to reverse the effects of years of planet mistreatment.

In the past 20 years we have seen a growing realization that the current model of development is unsustainable. For too long we have lived beyond our means and have made the planet compensate for it. From the loss of biodiversity, with the felling of rainforests, or over fishing, to the negative effect our consumption patterns are having on the environment and the climate, our way of life is placing an increasing burden on the planet.

The supplies provided to us by the earth and the great wisdom of Mother Nature, were not meant to be taken advantage of. We were given a limited supply and handed the responsibility of using those limited resources wisely. As the world’s population continues to grow, we are straining our essentials more and more. Less clean air, water and green acreage puts a great strain on the many ecosystems needed to keep our species alive.

The goal of sustainable development is to enable all people throughout the world to satisfy their basic needs and enjoy a better quality of life, without compromising the quality of life of future generations. Unless we start to make real progress toward reconciling these contradictions, we face a future that is less certain and less secure.

Small changes can make big differences and when creating ADMSP, all steps were taken to ensure the park  will be self-sustainable and not another burden on the natural surroundings. The materials used in the design and landscaping of ADMSP were a difficult choice among many when picking materials that would serve the land and the people using the land.

The materials for the paths at ADMSP were carefully chosen not only because they are “sustainable” but because surfaces protect high traffic areas from foot traffic, and reduce irrigation demands. By protecting the very foundation the park rests on, we are protecting the site itself and creating a natural balance that can peacefully coexists with guests.

What is tumbled recycled glass? Because recycling has become more and more apparent in our daily lives, measures are being taken to ensure we have the least amount of waste possible. One material that can be re-used after it has served its initial purpose is glass.

Tumbled is basically any and all glass that is recycled into glass pieces that are “tumbled” to achieve an “ocean-worn” appearance, similar to beach glass or sea glass. Its unique properties are excellent for a wide variety of applications such as:

  • Ground cover in raised beds, planters and dry or rock gardens
  • Pathway accents and drainage areas
  • Use as ballast gravel in green roof and other green building applications
  • Feature in reflecting pools, ponds, waterfalls and fountains
  • Excellent for any project seeking to maximize green building practices and USGBC LEED criteria
  • Incorporate into tiled surfacing of floors, walls and countertops
  • Set within the design of architectural glass, custom-designed windows, or doors
  • Display in glass vases, panels, lighting, aquariums, fountains and water features
  • Incorporate into concrete paving stones, containers and outdoor furniture
  • Broadcast and expose in poured-in-place concrete pavement

The beautiful recycled tumbled glass ADMSP will use for the paths in the Dunefield will make a gorgeous reflective surface where guests can live an illusion of walking on water. Through the glass path in the Dunefield, the contemporary sculptures are a part of the experience as they weave through the sand dunes creating movable footprints.

ADMSP Design- Recycled Tumbled Glass

Wood when left exposed to the elements, eventually deteriotes and can no longer be used. Humans have cut down trees and obliterated rainforests faster than they can regenerate. Without trees the very air we breathe is affected and are left without a shield to the hazards of our vehicles, factories and engines.

What are recycled wooden planks?

Recycled wooden planks are made from salvaged boards or trees that have been remilled into a sustainable product. Recycling wood is more resource efficient than making new wood flooring. Recyclers glean reusable hardwoods such as chestnut, hickory, cherry, and oak from old houses, buildings, and barns that are slated for demolition.

Salvaged logs, beams, and planks are sent to a lumber mill where they are remilled into individual planks. The surface can be selectively finished to have a final appearance anywhere between rough-hewn to finely sanded and weather proofed. Recycled wood flooring is typically very durable due to its tight grain. Creating wood planks from old lumber diverts the used wood and reduces the need new wood and felling of trees.

What is recycled crushed sea-shell?

Our impact has even affected the many tiny little inhabitants that call sea-shells home. The leftover sea shells that wash on the beach or are waste from the U.S. Shellfish Industry can also serve as excellent building material. It has many uses in the landscape design industry as well, like paths, due mainly to their decorative effect. They are also used as filter media in bio filtration.

Cockle, scallop Shells, and Oyster Shells are the ideal shells to use for paths in parks. They have excellent water retention properties and therefore act as natural drainage. They are geared for high foot traffic and can be used to top dress plant pots, containers and raised beds, for mulching and water features and act as a natural insect repellents.

ADMSP Design- Recycled Seashell and Wooden Planks

ADMSP will use recycled wooden planks for the paths in the Maritime Garden where figurative sculptures are a part of the experience. The recycled wooden planks and crushed sea shell create meandering paths through dense planting areas providing backdrops for the sculptures and shady seating areas for relaxation and contemplation.

What is recycled stone?                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                Stone installed decades ago is removed and recycled. Often old stone has been produced from quarries that are no longer operating, or using techniques no longer cost-effective. Making recycled stone is less costly and diverts the used stone to a new use and reduces the need for new stone quarries. Available in a variety of shapes and sizes, they can also be used to separate different types of plants and work for soil retention in wet climates.

ADMSP will use stone that has been recycled into “coral stone bands” in the Tree Allees. Paths here are made of stepping stones and coral stone bands set in grass that come up onto the “Lawn” at the center of the park.

ADMSP Design- Recycled Stepping Stones and Coral Stone

What do the terms sustainable and sustainability mean?

The terms sustainable and sustainability are used to describe many different approaches toward improving our way of life. We have described many ways to adopt sustainable sources into the park, but the very definition changes periodically.

Here are some views of what Sustainability might encompass…

  • Sustainability is an attempt to merge ecology and economy into one system.
  • Sustainability means living a life of dignity in harmony with nature
  • Sustainability means renewing resources at a rate equal to or greater than the rate at which they are consumed.
  • Sustainability means living within the resources of the planet without damaging the environment now or in the future.
  • Sustainability means creating an economic system that provides for quality of life while renewing the environment and its resources.
  • A sustainable community is one that resembles a living system where all of the resources (human, natural and economic) are renewed and in balance for perpetuity.
  • Sustainability is creating a world where everyone can have fulfilling lives and enjoy a rich level of well-being within the limits of what nature can provide.
  • Sustainability means taking the long-term view of how our actions effect future generations and making sure we don’t deplete resources or cause pollution at rates faster than the earth is able to renew them.
  • Some of the many uses of the word sustainable include: Sustainable Business / Sustainable Development / Sustainable Agriculture / Sustainable Living / Sustainable Community.

Altos Del Mar Sculpture Park will intertwine art and nature and put it in the service of the community. Before all other endeavors are reached, Mother Nature’s needs must be met. We no longer have the luxury of being wasteful or careless with our lives.

Respect for self has now branched on to mean respect for self and where you live. Your home rests on a planet that is pleading for our cooperation and urges change. At ADMSP, visitors will be one with the precious landscaping that we have sworn to preserve, as well as be immersed in ways on how they can do their part.

What does sustainability mean to you?

 

ADMSP Magazine Cover

Miami Beach’s history is as long and transitional as its shoreline, and the grounds of Altos Del Mar Sculpture Park are thick with stories that date back to the classic decade of the ‘20s.

Grand scale projects oftentimes become overwhelming and if extra care is not placed in funneling our focus, the aim can be easily lost. Our aim was to conceive a sustainable and adaptable design as a whole bringing into harmony all of the interests that exist between tourism, recreation, conservation, travel, habitation and ecology.

How can ADMSP with the architects, designers, landscapers and artists make a real difference to people’s quality of life in North Beach? To answer a question that is projected into the future, we must take a trip to the past…

The Altos del Mar Park site is an area of significance for both the City of Miami Beach and the State of Florida as it demonstrates historical, aesthetic and cultural significance on various levels, which arise from its unique combination of significant landscape and topography, associations with important historical phases and people.

In 1919, the first two of the eventual six Altos Del Mar subdivisions were filed by the Tatum Brothers. Altos Del Mar 1 and 2 reached from present-day 75 Street to 87 Terrace, from the ocean to half a block west of Collins Avenue.

Altos Del Mar 3 followed in 1923, adjoining 1 on the west and extending to Dickens Avenue between 75 and 81 Streets. Altos Del Mar 4, 5, and 6, platted in between 1923 through 1925, were located in what is now the Town of Surfside, between 90 and 96 Streets, Ocean to Creek.

ADMSP History- The Tatum Brothers Create Altos Del Mar

Altos Del Mar, or “Highlands of the Sea,” was the first residential subdivision on Miami Beach, and is particularly important for the role it played in opening up the City’s North Shore and its environs to development. The main focus of the neighborhood, however, was the newly created Airoso Way, running between Collins Avenue and the beach, creating 250′ deep oceanfront lots, and 125′ lots between Airoso Way and Collins Avenue to the west. The aptly named Airoso Way, Spanish term for breezy, was changed to Atlantic Way in 1929.

Similarly, the east-west cross streets lost their romantic floral names to the more uniform numbered streets. Bouganvillea Street became 76 Street, Clematis Street became 77 Street, Dahlia Street became 78 Street and Eulalia Street became 79 Street.

The initial success of the Altos Del Mar subdivision was limited to land sales, as the neighborhood did not see construction of its first home until 1925. The lag in construction can probably best be explained by the subdivisions isolated location at the far northern reaches of the City limits. Land sales, however experienced no such lag, as Altos Del Mar and each ensuing development of the Tatums Ocean Park Company was an immediate and unqualified success, and properties exchanged hands at a rapid pace.

The Miami News- February 16, 1923

Miami News-Metropolis- February 15, 1924

Altos Del Mar today runs from 76 to 79 Street east of Collins and taking up the east and west sides of Atlantic Way. In 1983 the State of Florida, as part of it’s “Save our Coast” Initiative, began purchasing lots in Altos Del Mar. A total of 22 lots were acquired. Eleven of those lots were contiguous, while the other half non-contiguous. The State’s project eventually stalled due to some homeowners’ unwillingness to sell, and the lots were put up for sale in 2002.

The 11 non-contiguous properties were sold for single-family use: One private buyer purchased one lot, and General Real Estate Corporation bought the other ten. The General Real Estate Corporation has redeveloped the sites with new homes reminiscent of the styles built then in the 20′s.

In 2003 the City of Miami Beach asked the State for title to the remaining 11 contiguous lots under the leadership of then Miami Beach Commissioner Jose Smith, who was long involved in the city’s campaign to retrieve the land.

The site, to be known as Altos Del Mar Park, is composed of 11 contiguous house lots of about 50 by 50 feet each stretching from Collins Avenue to the dunes, The land will need to be maintained as a park or returned to the state. “Not only have we furthered conservation and quality-of-life efforts through this venture, but we have created a legacy of fulfillment for generations of our residents to enjoy,” said City Manager Jorge M. Gonzalez.

The land was the site of some of the area’s oldest homes and is, according to Mr. Smith, “potentially of greater historical significance than South Beach.” One such structure was a turn of the century house built in the “Med-Deco” style, a synthesis of Mediterranean Revival form and Art Deco decorative detail.

Some of the most celebrated architects in Miami Beach designed structures in this brief-lived style, including V. H. Nellenbogen, Henry Hohauser and T. Hunter Henderson in Altos del Mar. It was then the City of Miami Beach’s intent to save this remaining example of “Med-Deco” and hired structural engineers to see if they can be saved.

In July 2000, the city commission voted to hire architectural firm Falcon & Bueno to draw plans for a park with the preserved structure on the site. However, it was then determined that the structure could not be saved and the City of Miami Beach decided to leave the property as a park.

Gradually, the site’s reputation was affected and the park became heavily used by the local homeless community, drug addicts and prostitutes.

In 2004, a gentleman by the name of Peter Saile moved to the area. Upon looking at the decaying site, he envisioned a sculpture park property with community programming that not only serves the community of North Beach but also the under-served community.

The property that began with the Tatum Brothers has now shifted again and has become an important focal point in debates over preservation for the State of Florida and the City of Miami Beach. As the last remaining site, ADMSP intends to keep that legacy by adding to the aesthetic experience of the park with the minimal environmental interventions, placement of sculptures from established artists, beautiful landscaping and much needed free community programming.

So once again the tedious persistence of time and the casual re-shifting of the coastline by the gently gliding waves reshaped the story of Miami Beach and taken it into a new chapter that incorporates art, nature, community service, and recreation. The evolution of the park came from the history of the land and the goals of the political members of the community paralleling those of one man who looked upon an empty lot and saw Giacometti.

Our aim has been honed and fine tuned based on the journey the land has made as well as the different purposes it has served.  For the first time in its entire existence, the land will have a greater purpose than just a park, it will strive to serve the residents of the community as well as those who are seen but ignored and call the open site their home as they rest under the cover of stars.

 

ADMSP- Magazine Cover

To be, or not to be?

That is the question the ADMSP team asked themselves back when Altos Del Mar Sculpture Park was a day dream, more than a goal. What is the meaning of this piece of land? It is a park? What is a park? Will it not be as fun by any other name? Will it just be a green space by the ocean? A place to go and relax? To run? Play? Read?

First and foremost, ADMSP had to put down the Shakespeare plays and ask the most important question:  “How is ADMSP going to conserve this green space by the ocean, incorporate all of these uses, and use the area as a public. cultural and travel destination all at the same time?”

To ADMSP, conservation is the careful management of change. It is about revealing and sharing the significance of a place and ensuring that its special qualities are protected, enhanced, enjoyed and understood by present and future generations. Through the building and expansion of the project, we will not destroy the very idea and values it was set out to protect, and to allow art to meet nature, not bulldoze through it.

ADMSP asks:  “Have you ever thought about ways in which human activities affect our parks, beaches, countryside and wildlife?” These are just a few of the problems:

Farming Methods

Old McDonald had a farm, but he didn’t have pesticides. Farming and agriculture are important to our survival, but in our quest for uber-success and profit, we have developed methods that have proven to do more harm than good.

I. Use of chemicals on the land

According to www.globalhealingcenter.com: Seven of the most toxic chemical compounds known to man are approved for use as pesticides in the production of foods. Approved by a multinational organization called The Codex Alimentarius Commission (CAC). It was formed in 1963 from a cooperative effort between the World Health Organization (WHO) and the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO).

So, ADMSP asks: “What do you prefer? A little bug or a useless colon?”

II. The effects of felling trees and uprooting hedges

Oftentimes, as rural areas expand, and more roads and houses need to be built, the contractors might encounter in the way a tree or two. What to do? Pull it out and keep the project going. What we fail to realize, despite the lessons science and history have taught us, is that tree exists for a reason and it has a job to do: Clean our precious air. Removing it further exposes us to a world of suit and carbon dioxide. Hedges are an entire ecosystem in and of themselves, serving as home to millions of micro-organisms needed to sustain a population of insects, that in turn feed thousands of birds and small animal species, that fertilize the grounds, that grow the food, THAT WE EAT…we can’t live without ‘em, folks. We just can’t.

Recreation

I. Killing animals and plants

Little Susie hiking through a beautiful forest admiring all the precious, wild flowers decides to pick one of each. ADMSP asks: “How long do you think that species of flower will take to grow back if we all did the same thing?”  Geeky-Timmy is obsessed with insects. Instead of going out and making friends, he decides to collect, kill them, and put them on display. ADMSP asks: “How long before all the butterflies and dragonflies are gone if we each behaved like Geeky-Timmy?” You need a girlfriend, kid.  Leave the study of plants and animals to the professionals, and immerse yourselves in books, the internet and other professionals to obtain the knowledge you crave. If you want to collect a sample, why not in the form of a photograph?

Blood sports such as fox hunting, badger baiting, hare coursing, wildfowling, and game bird shooting are cruel and inhumane.  Luckily for us, the 17th Century is far gone, and we don’t need to trap and kill our own dinner anymore, there’s a Publix for that.

II. Accidental killing of plants and animals

Don’t drive quickly through country sides, be responsible for properly extinguishing camp fires after an evening of roasting marshmallows, don’t litter, and don’t be like Little Susie and Geeky-Timmy, leave the flowers and animals alone!

Industrialization

We humans have come a long way since the days we had to rub two sticks together to boil water. We have developed many innovative ideas that make living easier and much more comfortable. Additionally, we’ve found ways to use what naturally exists around us to work to our advantage. Too bad we haven’t discovered another earth; otherwise we’d have a back up plan…

I. Building houses, factories, towns, cities and roads eliminate forests, trees and animals, our planet’s backbone.

II. Disposing of the by-products of industry such as slag heaps, waste heaps, dangerous chemicals and nuclear wastes intoxicates our surroundings, narrowing down the areas we can inhabit and further threatening precious resources: Food, water and clean air.

III. Using renewable materials faster than they can renew themselves defeats the purpose.

IV. Using non-renewable resources such as minerals, coal and oil should urge us to find alternatives to live healthier and cleaner and less dependent on Mother Earth, who’s already had enough.

Many people have noticed what ADMSP has noticed and taken initiative to turn this negative trend around by implementing

Methods of Conservation

I. By LawGiving protection to animals and plant species, or special areas of land or water. “TAKE THAT, TIMMY!”

II. Restoration - To restore unsightly country sides such as waste tips, slag heaps, and so forth.

III. Alternative EnergyA need to find alternative resources to replace coal and oil. “You know what never runs out? Wind.”

IV. Nature Reserves and ZoosOf special value in preserving rare animal species.

V. RecyclingReprocessing of unwanted products, such as newspapers, scrap metals, glass and sewage, as well as going paperless as often as possible. “The Wall Street Journal has a web site now?! Where have been?!”

VI. EducationMaking more people aware of the need to protect and preserve the environment, and with the presence of ADMSP, soon every one will know what we know.

For ADMSP, the answer was simple:

Create a unique park that meets the needs of the present without compromising those of the future by utilizing subtle interventions and ecologically harmonious materials, trees and plants; thereby conserving the land while using it as a park with sculptures.  The question of “How?” will be answered in the next blogs to come…stay tuned!

"What does CONSERVATION mean to ADMSP?"

ADMSP Design- Conservation

ADMSP asks: “What does the word CONSERVATION mean to you?”