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<br />4-story hotel in Sunny Isles Beach, the Golden Strand in 1946 and the first <br />two-story motel in the United States, the Ocean Palm that opened in 19476. <br /> <br />With the Influx of both visitors and permanent residents, particularly on <br />weekends, the attention to the spiritual needs of the people became more <br />apparent. In 1957, through a pilot project conducted by the Board of <br />American Missions of the Lutheran Church, It became clear that the <br />Lutherans in the area of "Motel Row" were underserved. That same year the <br />roughly triangular lot at the intersection of 179lh Drive: 178lh Street; Atlantic <br />Boulevard and 178lh Drive was purchased at a cost of sixty thousand dollars. <br />The congregation's name was changed from Miami Beach United Lutheran <br />Church of the Epiphany to Sunny Isles Epiphany Lutheran Church. <br /> <br />On November 1, 1962 ground was broken for the construction of the Sunny <br />Isles Epiphany Lutheran Church designed by local architect William Conrad <br />Kreidt. The structure is designed In a Mid-Century Modern style. a <br />breathtaking contemporary expression that left behind the historicist styles <br />that were immediately recognizable as places of worship. The church <br />property consists of a main sanctuary with a porticol running across the <br />front. a cultural center, and a small building functioning as a connector <br />between the two.8 The church was dedicated on February 23, 1964 costing <br />$190,000 with an additional freestanding memorial tower terminating In a <br />cross, built at a cost of $18,500.9 The first pastor of the church was the <br />Reverend J. Bender Miller, who served the church for seven years until his <br />retirement In 1971.10 <br /> <br />A Transition <br />The east side of that stretch of AlA (Collins Avenue) just north of the City of <br />Golden Beach beginning at NE 163rd Street. called "Sunny Isles" was <br />booming after World War II. Its pioneering waterfront motels helped to <br />create the "post card" image of Florida. Motels were designed with <br />theatrical abandon: a phoenix rising on the Thunderbird Motel; life-size <br />concrete camels and Bedouins in white robes at The Sahara; a fiberglass <br />Sphinx at The Suez; a leaping prospector at The Golden Nugget. and <br />flamboyant mermaids serving as supports for the porte-cochere of The Blue <br />Mist Motel.ll "Motel Row" was booming during the 19505, but eventually <br />the strip lost its glamour; the motels could not compete with the luxury high- <br />rise hotels built in other parts of Metropolitan-Dade County; the beach was <br /> <br />6 Richard C. Schulman. City Historian. . The HIstory of Sunny Isles/ Sunny Isles Beach" n,d. p.l0- <br />11 <br />7 A portico is defined as a covered walkway. often leading to the main entrance of a <br />building, consisting of a roof supported by columns or pillars consisting of a roof supported <br />by columns or pillars. <br />a The connector building and corrvnunity center are not proposed for designation. <br />9 'Sunny Isles Lutheran... Something Unique: The Miami News. 2 February1964, <br /> <br />10 Reverend Bender Miller. Ex-Lutheran Minister (obituary) The Miami Herald, 21 November <br />1987. p.3C <br />11 "For Sunny Isles' Motels. A Kitschy Sun Is Settfng" The Miami Herald, 5 August 2001. p, 1A <br />8 <br />