Miami Herald

These beloved Miami-area stores closed in 2020. Sad as it was, it could’ve been worse

- BY REBECCA SAN JUAN rsanjuan@miamiheral­d.com Rebecca San Juan: 305.376.2160, @rebecca_sanjuan

In our ever-changing city, retailers often come and go. But 2020 was an unusually cruel year, as COVID-19 slowed in-person shopping. With rents already high, some of the city’s best-loved shops shuttered their doors forever.

The carnage could have been far worse. Many shops that feared they would be gone by summer credited a combinatio­n of government aid and landlord assistance for their survival in this strange and awful year.

Among those that succumbed:

Casa de las Guayaberas ● opened in 1971 next to Versailles in Little Havana and later moved to 5840 SW Eighth St. The store was closed in July due to COVID-19. Ramón Puig first launched his guayabera business in 1943 in Cuba and moved to the United States after fleeing Fidel Castro’s Cuba in 1968 with his wife and son on a Freedom Flight. Puig, locally known as the “King of Guayaberas,” died in 2011.

Culinary school Aragon ●

101 opened in 2012 in Coral Gables but couldn’t make it through last summer. The culinary school offered several intimate cooking classes every month, each themed on a different type of cuisine, such as Colombian and Lebanese. The venue also served as a retail store, selling a range of accessorie­s, home goods and kitchen items, including clutches with gold lettering spelling “Girly Goddess” and “One in a Million,” award-winning Castillo de Canena Extra Olive Oil and baby Alpaca throws in pumpkin orange and olive green.

Opened in 2018 in Bay Harbor Islands, BON Chocolatie­r offered allvegan and kosher chocolate bars, chocolate pretzels, and pastel-colored truffles in flavors such as marshmallo­w vanilla and French lavender. The sweetness ended last spring.

Always a pioneer,

Books and Books opened its Lincoln Road outpost in 1989. Novels, biographie­s, newspapers and magazines filled its shelves, along with journals, incense and handcrafte­d bookmarks. Books and Books founder Mitchell Kaplan — also the founder of the Miami Book Fair Internatio­nal — blamed high rent rather than COVID-19 for its demise. Books and Books’ Coral Gables flagship and six other locations remain.

Since 2018, Hattie’s House had been a North Miami mainstay for incense, spiritual fragrance oils, ritual waters and crystals. Today, you can still buy frankincen­se from owner Hattie Mae Williams but only online. Williams follows in the footsteps of her mother, Flossie Williams, who opened Flossie’s Funky Fragrances in 1976 in North Miami and moved to downtown Miami in the 1990s. Loyal clients included members of the Marley family. Her mother closed shop in

2016 after a fire.

 ?? TIM CHAPMAN Miami Herald file ?? Ramón Puig opened his Miami shop in 1971, three years after he arrived on one of the Freedom Flights from Cuba. Puig dressed celebritie­s and presidents.
TIM CHAPMAN Miami Herald file Ramón Puig opened his Miami shop in 1971, three years after he arrived on one of the Freedom Flights from Cuba. Puig dressed celebritie­s and presidents.

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