- Cambridge Lawns
Cambridge Lawns is a residential neighborhood of single-family homes near the
University of Miami and joined by proximity and a common front onto tree-lined Broad Canal [http://www.satelliteviews.net/cgi-bin/g.cgi?sdb=Go&fid=300265&state=FL&ftype=canal&exm=on] (aka Brewer Canal), a waterway of the City ofSouth Miami inMiami-Dade County ,Florida .The neighborhood includes the Cambridge Lawns Historic District [http://www.cityofsouthmiami.net/documents/HPBMins08-30-04.pdf] and adjacent homes in the Cambridge Lawns subdivision and is generally defined on the west by Brewer Park [http://www.topozone.com/map.asp?lon=-80.2967&lat=25.7181] and the widening of the Broad Canal, also known as Brewer Canal; on the east by SW 60th Avenue; on the north by Miller Drive; and, on the south by SW 58th Street to the west of 62nd Avenue and the Broad Canal to the east of 62nd Avenue. [http://www.mapquest.com/maps/map.adp?searchtype=address&country=US&addtohistory=&searchtab=home&formtype=address&pop
]Originally developed in the mid-1920s just 0.7 miles from the newly chartered University of Miami, the Cambridge Lawns neighborhood was given a higher-education theme from the outset by developers. With the college lawns and riverside parks at
Cambridge University in England in mind, developers projected a waterfront park and tree-lined canal with adjacent suburban lawns, while the neighborhood's first street names were dubbed in honor of well-known U.S. universities -- SW 57th Street was then called “Harvard Avenue,” for example, while SW 57th Drive was “Princeton Boulevard” and SW 58th Street was originally named “Clemson Avenue.” [http://cambridgelawns.blogspot.com/2006/09/cambridge-lawns-whats-in-name.html]By 1928, developers had completed 30 of the first homes in the neighborhood's signature Tudor Revival (or
Mock Tudor ) andMediterranean Revival Style architecture , marking what today is known as the Cambridge Lawns Historic District. These homes, which received their historic designation in 2005, are still referred to by many as "cottages," owing to their modest lot and construction size. The Tudor Revival homes are generally 1 1/2 stories, noteworthy for their gabled facades and chimneys, while the Mediterranean Revival homes have textured or smooth stucco surfaces, ornamental window and door frames and barrel-tile roofs.The
Great Miami Hurricane of 1926 brought an end to the 1920s South Florida real estate boom, while theGreat Depression andWorld War II would keep the local real estate market depressed for more than two decades. The post-war return to prosperity saw student enrollment at the University of Miami climb above 10,000 and with the area ripe for new homes for professors, administrative staff and baby-boom families, developers launched a second phase of homebuilding on larger lots in the Cambridge Lawns subdivision to the south of Broad Canal. The newer homes, built in variations on theMid-century modern style, are situated on larger properties with more square footage of construction than the homes north of the canal, and feature horizontal lines, louvered windows, airy "Florida rooms," with some having backyard swimming pools.An integral element of the Cambridge Lawns neighborhood is the Broad Canal, lined by its signature towering
Casuarina (Australian pine) trees, as well as nativeGumbo limbo (Bursera simaruba), a few native mahogany (Swietenia ), voluminous tropical almonds (Terminalia catappa ) and other tropical and native trees and vegetation. These provide habitat for a plethora of wildlife, including the wonderful birdlife that has placed Brewer Park on the Audubon Society [http://www.tropicalaudubon.org] list of prime locations for bird-watching in the Miami area. Broad Canal, which was dredged and cleaned as part of a public works improvements project in 2004-05 [http://www.cityofsouthmiami.net/broad_canal_improvements.htm] , ebbs and flows with the tides and drains south into the Snapper Creek CanalFact|date=June 2008, a major freshwater drainage conduit for the Everglades system that flows several miles further south and enters Biscayne Bay at a point just south of Matheson Hammock Parkcoord|25.675771|-80.264225|region:US-FL_type:landmark_scale:5000_source:wikimapiaAnother integral element of Cambridge Lawns' waterfront park-like atmosphere is Brewer Park, a neighborhood "pocket park" dedicated in 1956 [http://www.library.miami.edu/archives/ohp/southmiami/chronology.html] and named after longtime area resident George Brewer. The park provides multiple recreation opportunities for local residents and its trees and vegetation contribute significantly to the habitat for local wildlife and birdlife. In 2005, the City commission and then-Mayor Mary Scott Russell announced the availability of funds for the Brewer Park Improvements project, scheduled for completion in early 2007.
More information about the Cambridge Lawns neighborhood can be found at: www.CambridgeLawns.blogspot.com [http://www.CambridgeLawns.blogspot.com] .
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