This is the message that the mayor of Miami Beach, Dan Gelber, delivered this week as it moved to sell $97.6 million of new municipal debt. The proceeds are intended to help the city fund more cultural projects and move away from its "old economic model" of selling Bellinis on Ocean Drive. But it is also a case of Miami Beach flexing its rising property values.
Residential property values across Miami Beach grew by about 125% over the past decade
Between 2019 and 2022, the number of "million-dollar zip codes" more than doubled (presumably these are just zip codes with median home prices above $1 million)
And from 2012 to 2022, the number of high-net-worth individuals in the city increased by about 75% (I wonder how many moved to the city versus just got richer while already living there)
All of this has been good for property tax revenues:

And now the city is leveraging them to invest in culture.
Chart: Bloomberg
The following video was published last week showing the "secondary locations of anonymized mobile devices that were active at a single Ft. Lauderdale beach during spring break." Said differently, the company used anonymized mobile phone data to see where spring breakers went after they left the beach. This was in order to better understand how they may have contributed to the spread of COVID-19. If you can't see the video below, click here.
https://twitter.com/TectonixGEO/status/1242628347034767361?s=20
The video is astonishing for two reasons. One, it shows you the extreme reach of just one beach in South Florida. Imagine if they had analyzed all of the beaches up and down the coast. And two, a lot of you are probably freaked out that this sort of mobile phone data is available to private companies. If you'd like to learn more about how this all works, check out this opinion piece from the New York Times.
This is the message that the mayor of Miami Beach, Dan Gelber, delivered this week as it moved to sell $97.6 million of new municipal debt. The proceeds are intended to help the city fund more cultural projects and move away from its "old economic model" of selling Bellinis on Ocean Drive. But it is also a case of Miami Beach flexing its rising property values.
Residential property values across Miami Beach grew by about 125% over the past decade
Between 2019 and 2022, the number of "million-dollar zip codes" more than doubled (presumably these are just zip codes with median home prices above $1 million)
And from 2012 to 2022, the number of high-net-worth individuals in the city increased by about 75% (I wonder how many moved to the city versus just got richer while already living there)
All of this has been good for property tax revenues:

And now the city is leveraging them to invest in culture.
Chart: Bloomberg
The following video was published last week showing the "secondary locations of anonymized mobile devices that were active at a single Ft. Lauderdale beach during spring break." Said differently, the company used anonymized mobile phone data to see where spring breakers went after they left the beach. This was in order to better understand how they may have contributed to the spread of COVID-19. If you can't see the video below, click here.
https://twitter.com/TectonixGEO/status/1242628347034767361?s=20
The video is astonishing for two reasons. One, it shows you the extreme reach of just one beach in South Florida. Imagine if they had analyzed all of the beaches up and down the coast. And two, a lot of you are probably freaked out that this sort of mobile phone data is available to private companies. If you'd like to learn more about how this all works, check out this opinion piece from the New York Times.
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