News, Politics, Village Life

Life After City Hall: Imagining Dinner Key’s Next Chapter


An undated photo of the Pan American Airways seaplane terminal in its earliest years. The building was placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1975 (Photo courtesy of the Museum of Miami)
The terminal of the newly-opened Pan American Airways at Dinner Key on April 22, 1934. (Photo courtesy of the Museum of Miami)
This 6,500-pound, hand-painted globe was once the centerpiece of the Pan American Airways terminal at Dinner Key. Today, the restored globe is displayed at Downtown Miami’s Miami Worldcenter. (Photo courtesy of the Pan Am Historical Foundation.)
Where the Pan American Airways globe once stood, residents now face Miami city commissioners during public meetings. Overlooking the commission chamber, however, the terminal’s signature winged clock remains a reminder of the building’s aviation past. (Patrick Farrell for the Spotlight.)

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