1 hour 30 minutes (approx.)
Daily Tour
15 people
English
Experience your Miami vacation on your own, listening to the audio content of our app on your smartphone. It will be like having at your side a tour guide who will tell you the history, points of interest and curiosities of the city. Once organized, take your first step into town as your audio guide tells you surprising facts and curiosities about its streets. Look up at monuments and increase your understanding. Benefit from an audio guide without an expiry date plus no tickets to collect or meeting place. Listen to the audio guide online, or offline. The audio content is professionally created by a group of top authors and interpreted by TV and radio professionals. The smartphone is yours and you will therefore not have contact with unsanitary devices provided by third parties
This street is the place to be in Miami Beach, the place people come to see and be seen, the city’s grand pedestrian walkway running between Alton Road and Washington Avenue.
What is now the coolest place to shop in Miami Beach was once a dirt road that ran below sea level, surrounded by mangrove swamps.
• Admission Ticket Free
Ocean Drive is the most famous and most photographed street in South Beach.
You are in the heart of the most famous neighborhood of Miami Beach, at the very center of the city’s never-ending nightlife. All around you, you can see amazing beaches and a kaleidoscope of colors created by the Art Deco hotels that line this bustling thoroughfare.
• Admission Ticket Free
Española Way is guaranteed to take you on a trip back in time along the streets of Miami Beach.
Sandwiched between Washington Avenue and Pennsylvania Avenue, this peculiar, traditionally Spanish-style area of little lanes and courtyards with arch-shaped entrances forms a sort of Iberian village in the heart of South Florida.
• Admission Ticket Free
Lummus Park winds its way between 5th Street and 15th Street, running parallel on the eastern side of the famous Ocean Drive.
This beautiful, busy promenade was inspired by the oceanfront walk along the Copacabana beach in Rio de Janeiro, designed by the Brazilian landscape architect Roberto Burle Marx.
• Admission Ticket Free
The Holocaust Memorial was officially opened in 1990, with a ceremony attended by Elie Wiesel, the writer of Jewish origin who survived the Holocaust and whose strenuous defense of human rights earned him the Nobel Peace Prize in 1986.
• Admission Ticket Free