The Mad Hatter!!
January 12th, 2005, 11:01 PM
all pictures welcomed,please no more individual picture threads!
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View Full Version : Official picture thread!!!!!!!(all pictures welcomed) The Mad Hatter!! January 12th, 2005, 11:01 PM all pictures welcomed,please no more individual picture threads! MIAballinboi January 13th, 2005, 01:06 AM ok so now we put all the pics in here? but if we got the new forum shouldnt we be able to space things out and not cram them all in in a couple threads? The Mad Hatter!! January 13th, 2005, 01:18 AM i think we should be organized for once and post things like pics,articles,renderings, and others together. streetscapeer January 13th, 2005, 01:57 AM ^^i don't think so...not for pics, it'd be horrible to upload all those pics when you want to view the thread! The Mad Hatter!! January 13th, 2005, 02:26 AM ok but when this thing gets like the florida forum was or even worse and jason closes the subforum don't blame me for it. MIAballinboi January 13th, 2005, 05:39 AM street got a point bout the pics, if u wannna see some new pics and u got wait for all those other pics 2 load and it killls the bandwith also The Mad Hatter!! January 15th, 2005, 12:17 AM well this is my second to last post here,and i know many of you are happy.i hope this subforum grows,but growth is not always to good.well with this and the photothread i'm doing i say goodbye.this is a long one. also go to www.bcarchitects.com rendering of new miami river project,biscayne landing,and marina harbor new project-moon bay www.moonbaymiami.com m.i.c-http://img50.exs.cx/img50/44/mic2027pj.jpg reflections on the river- http://img9.exs.cx/img9/8575/rpreflections2509lm.jpg http://img29.exs.cx/img29/2107/11024471274205430kd.jpg http://img93.exs.cx/img93/1485/11024471274211319zl.jpg http://img93.exs.cx/img93/1203/11024471274218782ym.jpg http://img93.exs.cx/img93/4637/11024471274224483au.jpg [IMG]http://img93.exs.cx/img93/6613/11024471274235800nd.jpg http://img93.exs.cx/img93/2948/11024471274254921qb.jpg http://img9.exs.cx/img9/6360/11024471274257986jl.jpg http://img9.exs.cx/img9/8489/11024471274259361yj.jpg http://img9.exs.cx/img9/7125/11024471274259361is.jpg http://img9.exs.cx/img9/1623/11024471274263387ts.jpg http://img9.exs.cx/img9/1650/11024471274272036pc.jpg 45-story condo on Miami River opens sales center on Brickell miamiherald THE IVY, a condominium along the Miami River, has opened its sales center at 848 Brickell Ave. Construction on the 45-story tower, at the corner of Southwest Third Street and South Miami Avenue, is set to begin early next year. THE IVY will be on a 13.5-acre parcel to be known as Riverfront. It will feature more than 400 residences, ranging from 700 square feet to 2,000 square feet. One-, two-, three-bedroom and loft residences are priced from the $180,000s to $800,000s. Penthouse lofts, with 18-foot ceilings, range from $900,000 to $1.4 million. The condo is being developed by Inigo Ardid of Key International. Sales and marketing are being handled by Fortune International. More than 85 percent of the building's residences are reserved. Completion is set for 2007. Information: 305-351-1000 or www.theivymiami.com. Florida News -January 2005 Granite Awarded $147.8M U.S. 1 Project in Key Largo The Florida Department of Transportation has awarded Granite Construction Co. a $147.8 million design-build contract to reconstruct approximately 4.5 mi. of U.S. Highway 1 at the north end of the Florida Keys. The project includes construction of a new 7,500-ft.-high level bridge, reconstruction of U.S. 1 and installation of barrier wall between the north- and southbound traffic. Additionally, the northbound shoulder of the new two-lane roadway will be constructed to accommodate traffic in the event of a hurricane evacuation and eight box culverts will be installed to serve as crocodile crossings under U.S. 1. Work will also include the construction of retaining walls, all associated drainage, fencing, signing, roadway striping and removal of the existing bridges. According to the company, construction will begin in the first quarter of 2005. The project is estimated for completion in early 2009.http://southeast.construction.com/news/florida/ South Florida Faces Severe Space Crunch By STEVE BERGSMAN From Barron's magazine The seemingly indefatigable efforts of South Florida business interests to create a goods and services gateway to Latin America is about to meet an unwelcome obstacle. Soon there may be no more space to develop in a land already well marked by an excess of cement and strip malls. "We are pretty much out of land in Dade and Broward counties," observes Michael Swerdlow, chairman and chief executive of Hollywood, Fla.-based Swerdlow Real Estate Group, a private real-estate investment trust. "Broward County has been very robust and a lot of that has been due to the fact the Port of Miami has been at full capacity and traffic has gone to Port Everglades and Fort Lauderdale," he says. "In the past few months, we have seen a lot of new companies come into the market, and now there is just not that much land available" anywhere in South Florida. The South Florida market is generally construed to mean the three Gold Coast counties of Miami-Dade (Miami), Broward (Fort Lauderdale) and farther to the north Palm Beach (West Palm Beach) -- a population of about five million. Until recently, local developers fought against any restraints. But now they have come up against the region's very real environmental and geographic constraints. To the east is the Atlantic and while on the map it appears the metro areas could keep expanding west, that simply isn't possible. The environmental sensitivity of the Everglades National Park and Lake Okeechobee means that development is virtually prohibited from the counties' western borders across the middle of the state. That leaves essentially a 30-mile corridor from west to east along the coast to be developed. Think of that corridor as a pyramid, with Dade County at 148 million square feet of industrial space at the base. In the middle is Broward, with 74 million square feet; at the top, Palm Beach, with 28 million. In Dade County, the master plan prevents extensive industrial development west of the Florida Turnpike because any project there would dangerously abut the Everglades, which serves as the region's aquifer. In the past 24 months, two big industrial projects have gone right up to the turnpike. So now there are only two major sites left in Dade, each under 100 acres, and 17 even smaller locations, says Scott Sime, a vice president for broker CB Richard Ellis in its West Dade office. "We are expecting to see movement north [to Broward] and to the redevelopment" of old industrial sites and other existing properties. All the large buildable tracts in Dade County have been tied up by developers, agrees Andrew Ansin, a vice president with Miami-based Sunbeam Development. That firm has been developing the Miramar Park of Commerce, a mixed-use project just north of Dade County in Broward. "In fact," Mr. Ansin says, "some key players are trying to get large tracts rezoned [from other commercial uses to industrial so that] growth can continue to occur in Dade." Miramar now boasts 3.7 million square feet on 400 acres. Sunbeam controls 700 additional acres in the area and recently added another 140 developable acres to the business park. Says Mr. Ansin: "The small amount of land that is still available is controlled by developers, or people who are not looking to sell." A rash of deals seems to be close to locking up Broward County to development, even in its previously less-developed northwestern reaches. "Our first building was 100% leased before we even broke ground," says Chap Abele, president of Miami-based Southern Facilities, which owns a Fort Lauderdale office park, Cypress Concourse, about a half-mile north of the Dade County line, in a joint venture with the Chicago-based Alter Group. "Industrial land in Broward is clearly drying up," says Chris Metzger, a senior director for broker Cushman & Wakefield in Fort Lauderdale. "One of the last opportunities for picking up some industrial dirt was in the northern portion of the county in Coconut Creek and Coral Springs, but we just sold 45 acres to [the retailer] Rooms To Go and another 40 acres to a developer, so there is maybe 35 acres left in that particular area to develop." The big REITs haven't carved out a large share of the Broward market, leaving local firms and individuals -- some have controlled large, undeveloped tracts for years -- as the dominant players. Prologis and Liberty Property Trust have some developments. As expected, dirt is being priced like grains of gold. In the past five years, land prices in eastern Broward have doubled to $7.50 a square foot from $3.75, while in the western part of the county, prices vaulted to $5 a square foot from $2.50. That's compared with a jump over the past five years to about $12 a square foot in Dade from $5; and a rise to about $5.75 a square foot in Palm Beach, up from about $4.25 five years earlier. Although still under the national average of 8.1%, vacancies crept up in the first quarter of this year to 4.4% in Palm Beach, 6.3% in Broward and 7.1% in Dade, says Andrew Wright, a senior consultant with the New York-based Reis Report, a real-estate research firm. That increase and a large number of "spec" properties coming on the market have put downward pressure on prices, which for most of the late 1990s were at historic highs. "On a net basis, [square-foot] prices have jumped," says Harry Tangalakis, a first vice president with CB Richards Ellis in Fort Lauderdale. "However, because of the all the spec building under construction, prices have leveled off." Still, the absorption rate -- the rate at which new properties are leased or acquired -- has been excellent, with the three South Florida counties absorbing 3.3 million square feet last year and expected to absorb 3.7 million square feet this year, reports Mr. Wright. Even so, new inventory stayed just ahead of absorption, with 4.1 million square feet completed in 2000 and 4.6 million square feet to be completed this year. Adding to inventory has been a good deal of subleasable space -- mostly large distribution facilities -- coming on the market. Cushman & Wakefield's Mr. Metzger reports that Sara Lee relocated to another facility, dumping 126,000 square feet of sublease space in the market, while retailer City Furniture moved to a larger facility (178,000 square feet), Circuit City changed product mix (232,000 square feet) and auto-parts maker Federal-Mogul relocated (225,000 square feet). The telecom industry should be a source of growth. One of the the leading application-service providers, Citrix Systems, is based in Fort Lauderdale and, as a result, 20% of all ASPs can be found there. Even more important, South Florida is the leading provider of Internet content to Latin America. Despite that, Florida has until now lacked a high-speed, high-capacity central switching facility, a key piece of infrastructure that should be completed by midsummer. Terramark Worldwide reports it's close to putting the finishing touches on its Tier-1 Network Access Point, or NAP, which would make it one of only five such facilities in the country. The NAP, which will be located in Miami, can be thought of as a Grand Central Station of Internet and voice communication, providing state-of-the-art switching and routing. In expectation of the NAP and a similar project in Sunrise by BellSouth, there was a rush to build telecom hotels, buildings that house sophisticated telecom equipment, in South Florida. But the soft economy and the slumping stock market have crushed many such plans. Some of that space is coming back into the market as industrial property. The intermediate-term good news for developers is that with the completion of the NAP, the telecom industry, which already boasts over 13,000 jobs in South Florida, will take off, and eventually some of the excess telecom space will be needed. The Reis Reports expects new construction of industrial buildings in South Florida to continue at a rate of 1.4% to 2.1% a year over the next five years. Absorption will keep the same pace, according to the research firm, so vacancy rates will rise, but only slightly, to no more than 7%. All that means that, in the near term, Dade, Broward and Palm Beach will remain a Gold Coast for developers. But eventually, there may be no more room at the beach. ISG January 15th, 2005, 04:17 AM hey u-m. why you leaving? your a valued contributor. ChuckScraperMiami#1 January 16th, 2005, 10:08 PM Uptown-Midtown, :) Hey Bro, you don't have to leave, Its gonna work out okay, Its got to get better here, Look at the MORE EXTRA ROOM for more Threads of MIAMI-DADE :) , WE Need ya INPUT and PICS , Updates you do are GREAT, We'll Miss Ya if you don't come here and POST your BEST !!! :cheers: Just Hang on a BIT Longer Uptown-Midtown :) , Trust me , its GONNA WORK !!! :cheers: nimbyhater January 17th, 2005, 12:57 AM dont b so dramtic uptown, get ur ass bak here Aessotariq January 22nd, 2005, 02:45 AM Some South Beach pics featuring buildings with decorative lighting... MacLee Express -- it's a local startup that competes with Kinko's (5th St and Lenox Ave): http://img18.exs.cx/img18/7492/sobemacleered2ow.jpghttp://img18.exs.cx/img18/5522/sobemacleegreen2ij.jpghttp://img18.exs.cx/img18/3585/sobemacleemagenta3oz.jpghttp://img18.exs.cx/img18/5453/sobemacleeorange2ma.jpghttp://img18.exs.cx/img18/6360/sobemacleepurple8qg.jpghttp://img147.exs.cx/img147/9075/sobemacleered1lw.jpg Parking garage with retail stores; the garage is covered by this animated lighting scheme (5th St and Collins Ave [A1A]): http://img127.exs.cx/img127/8999/fifthncollinsblue4rs.jpg http://img19.exs.cx/img19/6852/fifthncollinsblue28pb.jpg http://img127.exs.cx/img127/7402/fifthncollinsbluepurple5os.jpg http://img19.exs.cx/img19/993/fifthncollinsbluemag20ti.jpg http://img127.exs.cx/img127/8435/fifthncollinsbluered2mw.jpg http://img127.exs.cx/img127/5295/fifthncollinsmagredblu0sk.jpg http://img127.exs.cx/img127/9586/fifthncollinsorange8tf.jpg http://img96.exs.cx/img96/5944/fifthncollinsorange24vu.jpg http://img127.exs.cx/img127/7472/fifthncollinsred0je.jpg http://img127.exs.cx/img127/2703/fifthncollinsrainbow3gt.jpg http://img127.exs.cx/img127/6651/fifthncollinsrainbow28bo.jpg Fifth Street and Washington Avenue: http://img113.exs.cx/img113/7359/fifthnwashingtonblue3lm.jpghttp://img113.exs.cx/img113/8262/fifthnwashingtoncyan3iz.jpg http://img113.exs.cx/img113/9132/fifthnwashingtonmagenta0kd.jpghttp://img113.exs.cx/img113/8959/fifthnwashingtonorange3gq.jpg MIAballinboi January 22nd, 2005, 03:23 AM woow thats a badass garage great colors Aessotariq January 26th, 2005, 11:39 AM And now for something completely different! Tucked away on a quiet block in Miami Beach is one of the most intriguing and unique buildings in the area, from an architectural and engineering perspective. Faced with the challenge of building a facility to service an urban area with limited land, Lakeland, Florida-based Publix Super Markets, Inc. used a little South Beach flair and found an urban solution. For our non-Florida and non-Southeastern forumers who may run across this thread, Publix is the largest grocery store chain in Florida and is known for its excellent service and quality products. It has a very upscale feel to it, and they tend to carry products that other stores would typically not carry. You are about to see Publix on the Bay, perhaps the most expensive supermarket that Publix has built to date ($11 million dollars worth if I recall correctly), but prices are consistent with other stores in South Florida. The building is rectangular in shape, and three stories high. Two levels of parking sit atop the grocery store on ground level. To keep it from looking like an ordinary big-box retail store, the front façade features a glass curtain wall and cantilevered roof that resembles the shape of a ship. The building is successful in embracing South Beach's Art Deco architecture and using advanced technology in reaching innovative, yet practical solutions. It has become an icon in its own right. Publix has embraced the urban market and continues to expand, with several new stores on the way to South Florida and its other major markets. South Florida has several urban Publix stores that deviate from the typical big box. I can think of at least eight off the top of my head as of this writing. Store front Due to its size and limited public-access viewpoints, it's difficult to photograph the front of the building, especially at night, where the glare ruins most photographs. Time permitting, daytime photos will be posted soon. I start from the far right and travel east, to the far left of the store: Front, far-right side (west end) of Publix store, with art deco-stylized Publix logo; on the far left you can see the second and third parking levels, as well as handicap access ramp at ground level: http://img132.exs.cx/img132/7070/p10500311ec.jpg Here's the streetfront entrance to the store, with the glass wall starting to take shape: http://img121.exs.cx/img121/6015/p10500346ds.jpg Glass wall, with ramp in background: http://img132.exs.cx/img132/4294/p10500365oo.jpg Northeast corner landing: http://img97.exs.cx/img97/7836/p10500380ld.jpg Parking garage Publix on the Bay has on-street parallel parking, as well as a two level parking garage above the store. Parking garage entrance ramp, on east side of building... This is one of the narrowest ramps ever! It ascends slightly and makes a sharp curve to the left (shown in the picture) and then climbs the perimeter the building, and then you make a sharp right U-turn to enter the 2nd level. No Excursions here, please. http://img119.exs.cx/img119/7410/p10500397es.jpg Here's that sharp turn I was telling you about (notice the scrapes...): http://img139.exs.cx/img139/4241/p10500880ib.jpg Publix parking garage, level 2; I entered the garage from the far right-hand corner. To get upstairs, I have to take the ramp in the far left-hand corner: http://img116.exs.cx/img116/5971/p10500821gw.jpg Let's go upstairs, shall we? http://img106.exs.cx/img106/6779/p10500638nv.jpg Level 3, looking southeast, with Miami Beach skyline in background http://img92.exs.cx/img92/4775/p10500681lg.jpg Another skyline view: http://img142.exs.cx/img142/9287/p10500878vx.jpg Okay, now I need a shopping cart... http://img132.exs.cx/img132/7757/p10500595uh.jpg But first, a view from the elevator "lobby": http://img71.exs.cx/img71/3558/p10500268av.jpg Shopping cart Whoa, nice rims! http://img37.exs.cx/img37/245/p10500795mu.jpg A closeup of a wheel, with special rubber grips. These are specially designed to work with the store's People Mover. More about this later. http://img107.exs.cx/img107/8505/p10500802ix.jpg Elevators http://img67.exs.cx/img67/2995/p10500272zh.jpg http://img107.exs.cx/img107/4061/p10500289em.jpg How big do you think this elevator is? http://img87.exs.cx/img87/9159/p10500763uc.jpg It's deep enough to hold at least 12 empty shopping carts (or 4 standalone), and some skinny passengers on the side! http://img87.exs.cx/img87/6982/p10500770yw.jpg Okay, back on the ground... The insides look like a regular grocery store, so let's skip that... Let's have some fun... http://img12.exs.cx/img12/1002/p10500732da.jpg Remember the shopping cart? After the customer leaves the store, he or she has two options for getting back upstairs. http://img160.exs.cx/img160/695/p10500416bd.jpg People Mover The customer can take the elevator, or use the People Mover, a special conveyor belt ramp that ascends to the second and third levels. The conveyor belt is grooved so that the wheels of the shopping cart will lock in place on the ramp. The rubber feet hold it securely in place and keep the cart from rolling backwards. http://img34.exs.cx/img34/130/p10500483eb.jpghttp://img71.exs.cx/img71/8910/p10500457xl.jpg Ascending the people mover: http://img81.exs.cx/img81/4646/p10500501kh.jpg Look, mom, no hands! http://img83.exs.cx/img83/7352/p10500498lb.jpg Reaching the top: http://img74.exs.cx/img74/4420/p10500528bl.jpg Landing, level 2: http://img100.exs.cx/img100/2200/p10500533zc.jpg Reflecting on the past: http://img106.exs.cx/img106/3893/p10500557lm.jpg Looking over the railing: http://img95.exs.cx/img95/2673/p10500579fl.jpg From level 2: http://img27.exs.cx/img27/2582/p10500693jo.jpg http://img135.exs.cx/img135/7002/p10500709xz.jpg Time to go home... http://img97.exs.cx/img97/8025/p10500563sl.jpg The end CityBoiFlorida January 26th, 2005, 04:49 PM Tivo - thanks for bringing up the Publix store in Miami Beach and posting those great pics. I've heard of it, but never seen it. It looks similar to the one just south of the river in downtown Lauderdale that I shop at, but the Publix signage in the Lauderdale one is the familiar green with the similar font style you see on most of their stores. I like the art deco look of the Miami Beach store. Oh.. .one other thing, the one in Lauderdale has the same ramp problems - too narrow! I'm hoping in their future multi-level stores they fix this. streetscapeer January 26th, 2005, 09:20 PM as I said before great pics, tivo ...here is the Moonbay Miami project that Uptown previously posted...It's on 28th st in the design/arts district! http://www.moonbaymiami.com/images/300_moon_bay-day_inter2.jpg http://www.moonbaymiami.com/images/250_moon_bay_night_inter.jpg http://www.moonbaymiami.com/images/600_moon_bay_bulding.jpg Also Uptown, where exactly is Reflections on the River gonna go...this buiding is SOo Rad!!!!:) http://img9.exs.cx/img9/8575/rpreflections2509lm.jpg dave8721 January 26th, 2005, 09:31 PM Reflections is the next block upriver from Neovertika and latitude. streetscapeer January 26th, 2005, 09:40 PM really...that means it's right next to I-95...cool, any other info??:) JEmanuel56 January 26th, 2005, 09:49 PM COOL ON REFLECTION/ TIVO NICE STROY USING PICS/ I THINK MOONBAY IS SHORT AND UGLY DONT U GUYS? IT DOENST SAY MUCH ABOUT THE DESIGN. MIAballinboi January 27th, 2005, 02:22 AM great pics tivo, thats like the disney of supermarkets lool, i gotta c that cool projcts Aessotariq January 27th, 2005, 03:18 AM Thanks for the compliments... Tivo - thanks for bringing up the Publix store in Miami Beach and posting those great pics. I've heard of it, but never seen it. It looks similar to the one just south of the river in downtown Lauderdale that I shop at, but the Publix signage in the Lauderdale one is the familiar green with the similar font style you see on most of their stores. I like the art deco look of the Miami Beach store. Oh.. .one other thing, the one in Lauderdale has the same ramp problems - too narrow! I'm hoping in their future multi-level stores they fix this. I've been to the downtown Fort Lauderdale location, and its design is fitting of the neighborhood... It's a bit close to the Broward County Jail, but that's another story... :) Ummm... if you're referring to that really narrow opening at the bottom of the ramp, that piece is crucial to getting the shopping cart's wheels (which look like pulleys) to line up precisely with the grooves of the conveyor belt of the ramp. Otherwise the front wheels don't go in straight, which keeps the rubber pads on the wheels from touching the belt, preventing them from locking and causing the cart to roll backwards. If circumstances arise where that entry is impassable, the elevator is the alternative. girasole February 13th, 2005, 02:15 PM new kid on the block here (thanks uptown-midtown for the link on that other thread!)! :) my first contribution... (one in a sequence taken by me on that fateful day) http://www.pbase.com/image/38945849.jpg BHK25 February 13th, 2005, 05:31 PM Welcome girasole. awesome picture. The Mad Hatter!! February 13th, 2005, 05:41 PM bro awesome pic,but one piece of advice if you go to www.photobucket.com and open a free account it resizes the image making it easier and faster to see. you probably didn't notice that day we had three of our forumers there watching and taking pictures of the demolition they even have a video on it,if you go to the second page you'll see the thread. and as always i'm happy to help out any new forumers,it also reminds me that i need to go take see new pics unfortunatly mine probably aren't as good as yours. p.s. if you ever want to take some pictures of miami beach you're welcomed to,i'm sure we would all appreciate it. furthermore one more piece of advice you can post that pic in the general photography section( http://www.skyscrapercity.com/forumdisplay.php?f=504 they'll tell you how you could improve and also rate your picture streetscapeer February 13th, 2005, 10:10 PM WOw...that's an awesome photo....welcom aboard girasole...you'll surely be a great photographer to add into the mix of the forum:D:D MIAballinboi February 13th, 2005, 10:16 PM welcome to the forum great pics well need ur photography skills in the mix lol VansTripp February 13th, 2005, 11:47 PM Uptown-Midtown :lock: :down: south florida dave February 13th, 2005, 11:53 PM ^huh? anyway, nice shot & welcome to the forums, girasole. EAT my SHORTS!!!!!! February 14th, 2005, 01:18 AM Uptown-Midtown :lock: :down: "south florida dave ^huh? anyway, nice shot & welcome to the forums, girasole. " its because blink was talking shit about uptown and about miami.he keeps on saying miami sucks and uptown told him to shut up and stop talking crap and blink got all pissed off . Alright, Santa Monica is just expensive than Miami Beach. The salary in Santa Monica is much higher that can afford high cost of living. Miami Beach is just expensive with crap job, like makes $6 per hrs. see blink you like to start shit,now when i insult santa monica don't try and apologize. not even the maids who work at the hotels get paid that in miami beach I cannot to setup for new poll on LA vs. Miami in city vs. city forum. That is major problem with most people from Miami make whole shit on LA, Uptown-Midtown is one of worst forumer in nation of SSC, he gave un-fair match for LA. I bet that, LA will blows Miami off. I will setup soon much as until Uptown-Midtown get banning again by Jasonhouse, he have been banned for being posting fake 150 story skyscraper in Miami thread. That is bunch of greedy, it can make people from other cities looks jealous at Miami. I'm very mad with some people from Miami, that one worse than Chicagoan and other people. Uptown-Midtown was easily to send private message to people from Miami that causing Miami being win the poll, he is totally cheated. :weird: VansTripp February 14th, 2005, 04:15 AM "south florida dave ^huh? anyway, nice shot & welcome to the forums, girasole. " its because blink was talking shit about uptown and about miami.he keeps on saying miami sucks and uptown told him to shut up and stop talking crap and blink got all pissed off . Excuse me... I'm not piss off at you. :weird: nimbyhater February 14th, 2005, 05:26 AM lets keep the soap operas outta the forums, u guys wanna piss fight, private message each other, dont make us watch it... blink always loved miami... wat happened man, dont mind uptown, he gets passionate sometimes, as do i for that matter, dont use us as a model of the rest of the miami forumers... theyre better than we are, lol, u no its tru uptown VansTripp February 14th, 2005, 07:24 AM lets keep the soap operas outta the forums, u guys wanna piss fight, private message each other, dont make us watch it... blink always loved miami... wat happened man, dont mind uptown, he gets passionate sometimes, as do i for that matter, dont use us as a model of the rest of the miami forumers... theyre better than we are, lol, u no its tru uptown True, It was Uptown-Midtown fault. :( I loved Miami so well, not 100%. :) nimbyhater February 15th, 2005, 01:07 AM so wats the deal blink? do u hate us or not? VansTripp February 15th, 2005, 01:23 AM so wats the deal blink? do u hate us or not? Nah. Uptown Midtown have talk negative about LA, it makes me got confused and piss him off. girasole February 15th, 2005, 01:56 AM thanks for the welcome, everyone! btw, i posted my first photo in the urban photo contest. representing the great architecture of miami, of course... check it out if you're interested! oh, and i should add, i'm not a bro, i'm a bro-ette :laugh: VansTripp February 15th, 2005, 02:27 AM thanks for the welcome, everyone! btw, i posted my first photo in the urban photo contest. representing the great architecture of miami, of course... check it out if you're interested! oh, and i should add, i'm not a bro, i'm a bro-ette :laugh: Welcome to SSC. :) Sorry for being rude, I will remove soon as until Uptown Midtown and some other Miami guy make positive about Los Angeles first. EAT my SHORTS!!!!!! February 15th, 2005, 03:31 AM YEA WE NEED MORE CHICKS,and blink why don't you go back to the los angles forum EAT my SHORTS!!!!!! February 15th, 2005, 03:50 AM guys you should really check out her new pic,its a dizzying picture of boa i gave it a 10 http://www.skyscrapercity.com/showthread.php?t=179666 VansTripp February 15th, 2005, 05:36 AM YEA WE NEED MORE CHICKS,and blink why don't you go back to the los angles forum No, I want see you make positive about LA first now, If do it so I will remove this last quote from signature. You insulted me whole time, what your problem? ChuckScraperMiami#1 February 15th, 2005, 06:07 AM thanks for the welcome, everyone! btw, i posted my first photo in the urban photo contest. representing the great architecture of miami, of course... check it out if you're interested! oh, and i should add, i'm not a bro, i'm a bro-ette :laugh: A WOMAN :) !!!, YES :) , WE NEED a Female PUNCH :bash: Here, LOL. WELCOME to the 95 % Male S.S.C. :cheers: , We Definately Need More Female Power HERE :) to Excite Us more about OUR Growing TOWERS Here in the FUTURE CITY of the America's :) . Please Post Many PICS and We Need your Comments and Opinions. WELCOME Again GIRASOLE !!! :cheers: smiley March 1st, 2005, 05:33 PM I was drving around Miami this weekend and tooka bunch of pics from my car - some are pretty good - others just ok, but I have no place to put them on the web so I can post them here. any volunteers? (They are pretty big) brickell March 1st, 2005, 08:38 PM I can post them if nobody else volunteers. might take me a while to get them online, i'm pretty busy these days. nimbyhater March 2nd, 2005, 01:55 AM im not busy at all... send em to me man, ill put em up for u smiley March 2nd, 2005, 09:14 PM Let me know how. Do you have a mailbox size limit - like I said, they are kind of big. . . |