Miami Herald

Don’t let Tallahasse­e hand the fate of Florida’s historic buildings to developers

- BY BRIAN EHRLICH Brian Ehrlich is the founder of Paradigm and serves on the Board of Historic Preservati­on for the City of Miami Beach as well as on the Executive Board of Trustees of the Bass Museum of Art. He can be reached at brian@brianmiami.com

Imagine Miami Beach without Casa Faena hotel’s old-world glamour or the Surf Club’s Mediterran­ean-revival facade; Key West, stripped of its conch cottages; Palm Beach a monotonous sprawl of over-built luxury condos; or the Spanish colonial architectu­re of

St. Augustine’s coastline resembling Cancun.

This isn’t science fiction; it’s the chilling prospect under the deceptivel­y titled “Resiliency and Safe Structures Act” steamrolli­ng through Tallahasse­e.

Don’t be fooled by the rhetoric. This bill isn’t about building safety; it’s about power. These bills, SB 1526 sponsored by Sen. Bryan Avila (RHialeah) and HB 1647 from Rep. Spencer Roach III (R-Lee County), would eliminate local control, handing Florida’s historic coastal communitie­s over to a handful of developers with wrecking balls poised over our heritage.

Historic preservati­on of all of Florida’s communitie­s is about more than nostalgia; it is a critical engine of economic growth that is being threatened by the fasttrack demolition that this short-sighted policy threatens to unleash.

Who will benefit? Not local communitie­s but a handful of developers and elite property owners looking to trade our shared history for their short-term financial gain.

In Miami Beach alone, $586 million flowed into historic rehabilita­tion between 2002 and 2016. Heritage tourism in Florida generates an estimated $4 billion annually, creating over 100,000 jobs. This bill jeopardize­s those livelihood­s and will negatively affect surroundin­g property values and community character.

As a board member of Miami Beach’s Historic Preservati­on Board, I’ve witnessed firsthand the benefits of our negotiatio­ns. We’ve saved priceless architectu­ral gems and frescoes, scaled down the height of architectu­ral behemoths, moved new constructi­on away from the water’s edge, and even secured valuable monetary concession­s – all by working with developers, not bypassing them.

This healthy discourse protects neighborho­ods, ensuring they retain their distinct character, scale and historic charm. This bill dismantles that dynamic by turning economical­ly vibrant communitie­s into soulless, cookie-cutter cityscapes. We mustn’t let it pass.

Practicall­y speaking, the new bills would not only end any local input over the demolition of historic buildings, but it would also eliminate the ability of local communitie­s to influence any new constructi­on built in its place. Residents could not appeal building permits or even be notified about new constructi­on in their neighborho­ods.

Preserving our heritage fuels vibrant communitie­s and attracts both tourists and future residents. These historic buildings are the hearts of our neighborho­ods. Imagine your community rendered unrecogniz­able, its soul crushed under monolithic over-developmen­t. These bills silence the voices of residents who fought for their communitie­s, erasing their hard-won sense of place.

Don’t think this threat stops at Miami’s doorstep. St Augustine, Key West, Coral Gables, Palm Beach, Sarasota - all are in the bullseye. Only a handful of buildings placed on the National Registry before 2000 are safe. If these bills pass, it’s open season on our treasured coastal gems. And Florida, wake up this won’t end at the beach. This power grab will soon silence your voice on every project.

Let’s stand united. Tell Tallahasse­e: “Hands Off Our History, Hands Off Our Coast!” Contact your local representa­tives and send a message louder than any wrecking ball.

Florida was built by dreamers, not demolition crews. Let’s honor their legacy and protect our stories.

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