Brickell Miami in the 1920s

The History of Brickell Miami

September 19, 2025 by: Lucas Lechuga

A 1920's Point View of Millionaire Row

Brickell is one of Miami’s most dynamic neighborhoods — its Financial District, high-rise residential core, and evolving cultural and economic center. Its evolution from indigenous settlement through family homesteading into the dense urban neighborhood it is today is a story of land, development, and transformation.

Early Inhabitants: The Tequesta

William Barnwell Brickell and Mary Brickell

William Barnwell Brickell and Mary Brickell

The Arrival of the Brickell Family & Early Development

Millionaire’s Row & Early 20th Century

Mid-Century Changes

The Modern Era: Financial District & High-Rise Boom

Preservation & Archaeology

Brickell Miami skyscrapers

Brickell Today: Density, Identity, and Urban Growth

Key Dates & Timeline

Period Key Events in Brickell History
~2500+ years ago Tequesta inhabit the area; Miami Circle site established.
1870 William Brickell purchases large land parcels in area.
1871 Brickell family establishes trading post at south bank of Miami River.
1896 Florida East Coast Railway extension to Miami; greater growth begins.
1910-1920 Development of Millionaire’s Row; early apartment buildings like Brickell Apartments.
Mid-20th century Mansions give way to more dense residential and commercial uses.
1970s–1980s High-rise boom; Brickell emerges as financial district.
2000s-2010s Mixed-use developments; retail, restaurants, and large residential towers. Mary Brickell opens in May 2006; Brickell City Centre opens in November 2016.
2020-Present  Completion of Class-A office tower 830 Brickell brings relocating major financial, legal, and tech firms. Branded luxury condos launch sales (St. Regis, Baccarat, Mercedes-Benz).

Why Brickell Matters

  1. Brickell’s evolution illustrates the transformation of Miami from a frontier settlement to a modern global city.
  2. Its geography—on Biscayne Bay, immediately south of the downtown core—made it ideal for early estates, then for financial and commercial investment.
  3. It also encapsulates tensions common in cities: preservation vs. development; ancient heritage (Tequesta, Miami Circle) vs modern vertical growth.

It will be exciting to see what the next 20 years have in store for the Brickell neighborhood!

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