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Miami Beach to open historic underwater sculpture park

The City of Miami Beach is marking a historic milestone with the first-ever deployment of the REEFLINE, a pioneering underwater sculpture park and hybrid reef designed to blend art, science, and environmental protection. A beachside celebration is set for Tuesday, Oct. 21.
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City of Miami Beach
The City of Miami Beach is marking a historic milestone with the first-ever deployment of the REEFLINE, a pioneering underwater sculpture park and hybrid reef designed to blend art, science, and environmental protection. A beachside celebration is set for 1 p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 21, between 4th and 5th streets.

The City of Miami Beach is marking a historic milestone with the first-ever deployment of the REEFLINE, a pioneering underwater sculpture park and hybrid reef designed to blend art, science, and environmental protection.

A beachside celebration is set for Tuesday, Oct. 21, between 4th and 5th streets, beginning at 1 p.m., to commemorate the launch of a first-of-its-kind project, which will ultimately span seven miles off the Miami Beach coast.

The inaugural installation, titled Concrete Coral by internationally recognized artist Leandro Erlich, involves submerging 22 life-sized, marine-grade concrete cars arranged as a surreal underwater traffic jam, 20 feet below the ocean鈥檚 surface, 780 feet offshore. The deployment 鈥 viewable from the beach near 5th Street 鈥 will take place on Oct. 20-21 and again on Oct. 27-28, as a 159-foot construction barge lowers the sculptural forms into the water.

The project is framed as a crucial piece of the city鈥檚 environmental defense strategy.

READ MORE: Miami Beach to honor Gloria Estefan with street naming ceremony

鈥淭he REEFLINE installation is more than a stunning fusion of art and science; it's a critical long-term economic safeguard for Miami Beach,鈥 said Miami Beach Mayor Steven Meiner, in a statement.

鈥淗ealthy reefs are our natural infrastructure, shielding our treasured beachfront and vital tourism revenue by powerfully reducing storm surge and erosion," he said. "This monumental, science-based project offers an innovative solution for protecting our marine ecosystems and cultural landscape.鈥

The installation is backed by the 2022 voter-approved Arts & Culture General Obligation Bond, money committed cultural and ecological preservation.

Once deployed, the concrete cars of Concrete Coral will be seeded with 2,200 corals cultivated in REEFLINE鈥檚 Miami Native Coral Lab.

The project will utilize Coral Lok, an innovative technology designed to enable fast, secure, and sustainable coral transplantation. It will transform the artwork 鈥 which turns 鈥渁 symbol of urban congestion into a living reef鈥 鈥 into a new habitat that enhances marine ecosystems, offering a "poetic reversal of humanity鈥檚 environmental footprint," say designers.

The REEFLINE was conceived by cultural placemaker Ximena Caminos, with a master plan by Shohei Shigematsu/OMA, as a model for coastal cities globally.

鈥淩EEFLINE shows how creativity can drive real solutions for a changing planet,鈥 said Caminos, REEFLINE's founder and artistic director.

鈥淲e鈥檙e transforming art into an engine for marine ecosystem enhancement and education. What begins in Miami Beach 鈥 once seen as ground zero for sea level rise鈥 can become a model for cities around the world."

The 11-phase project aims to raise $40 million to expand its underwater corridor across the full 7-mile length of Miami Beach, with the ultimate goal of outplanting thousands of corals.

Sergio Bustos is SA国际传谋's Vice President for News. He's been an editor at the Miami Herald and POLITICO Florida. Most recently, Bustos was Enterprise/Politics Editor for the USA Today Network-Florida鈥檚 18 newsrooms. Reach him at sbustos@wlrnnews.org
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