Jimmy Buffet joins fight for marine stadium

Bobcat

Founding Member
With a new ad, Jimmy Buffett, the bard of Margaritaville who played many a memorable show at the Miami Marine Stadium, joins the effort to save the deteriorated architectural landmark.

* Jimmy Buffett's public service announcement

Mary Lopez still remembers vividly the morning decades ago when she attended a Catholic church sunrise service at the now-shuttered Miami Marine Stadium with her parents. The worshipers were so quiet you could hear the waves break. Her mom and dad clutched her hands as the priest celebrated Mass.

''It was just the peace you could feel,'' said Lopez, 39, who lives in Miami. ``It's like a frozen moment.''

But that was a long time ago. The stadium on Virginia Key, thought to be the only marine amphitheater of its kind and size in the world, has sat empty for 17 years and its fate has been in limbo.


It would be a fitting new chapter in Jimmy Buffett's evolution from beach-bum singer to retailing powerhouse: buying an NFL stadium for a song.

That's apparently what happened in the recent deal to name the home field of the Miami Dolphins after LandShark Lager, Buffett's beer. His central contribution: rewriting the lyrics of one of his most popular songs into a Dolphins jingle.

The novel arrangement marks the latest marketing feat for a singer who didn't have a No. 1 album until five years ago but has attached his Margaritaville brand to blenders, tequila, chain restaurants, frozen shrimp, flip-flops, lawn furniture and casinos.


2nd Miami board rejects Virginia Key plan, calls it `utter nonsense'

The city of Miami's big plans for Virginia Key got trashed. Again.

For the second week in a row, a city board on Wednesday night gave a unanimous thumbs-down to the city's proposal for remaking the ecologically rich but much abused island into a natural and recreational playground.


An old pirate has joined the fight to rescue a favorite haunt from the pillages of neglect.

Singer-songwriter Jimmy Buffett has publicly endorsed preservationists' efforts to restore and reopen the city-owned Miami Marine Stadium on Virginia Key, the site of many a Parrothead's fondest -- if also foggy -- memories.

In a newly released public-service spot, intercut with video from a 1985 Marine Stadium show that Buffett calls one of his Coral Reefer Band's best, the singer urges fans to support restoration of the graffiti-covered architectural landmark, closed since 1992.

``It's a symbol of everything that's great about Florida -- boats, music, water and great Florida fun,'' a smiling Buffett says as a live version of Margaritaville from the stadium show plays in the background. ``The stadium deserves a future.''

The concert shots illustrate why the stadium, designed for speedboat racing, proved a memorable concert venue: A packed grandstand sways to the Coral Reefers, who play on a floating stage surrounded by anchored boats and mobs of people splashing in the water and bobbing on kayaks or inflatables.

Stadium supporters say snagging the support of the singer, a God-like figure to the multitudes of worshipers at the church of Buffett, took a year and represents a coup for their campaign.

``He is the single performer who is most identified with that stadium,'' said Don Worth, a founder of Friends of Miami Marine Stadium, which has been leading the preservation effort with Dade Heritage Trust. ``I like to think we proved ourselves to him. It's a huge credibility boost for us.''

The campaign won historic designation from the city for the stadium, which sits at the edge of a man-made water basin, and garnered worldwide attention for the grandstand and its dramatic folded-concrete roof, increasingly recognized as an architectural and engineering masterpiece.

But supporters recognize the financially strapped city is unlikely to foot the cost of restoring and operating the stadium by itself.

With the city's agreement, the World Monuments Fund has commissioned a privately-funded, $50,000 engineering study of the stadium to determine its structural condition and the extent of needed repairs, Worth said. The study is scheduled to begin this week.

The group's fondest wish: ``To have Jimmy Buffett at the Marine Stadium again,'' said Dade Heritage Trust Director Becky Roper Matkov.

Is Jimmy game? Sure sounds like it.

``We had a great time at the marine stadium,'' he says in the spot. ``Let's do it again.''
The Miami Herald
 
Sweet...


WOuld love to see a demonstration by the legends of Offshore in there.....
 
He has some kick azz music but at the end of the day theres a few no name guys with songs just as good if not better without the Jimmy Buffet agenda.....
 
Is this it?

http://www.bing.com/maps/default.as...0&phx=0&phy=0&phscl=1&scene=9524955&encType=1


That would be a cool show to see on the water but how does a performer make money? You couldn't possibly charge admission for each and every person sittting on a boat. I'm sure there is seating that is bought through ticket sales, but look at how many are seeing the show for free. Is that why it is no longer used?

You could certainly charge boat pass fees by the boat size.....
 
Yeah, you could picket the end and have an inflatable gathering cash as they enter the slot. I always thought the place was bigger, I wonder how much they will need to renovate it?
 
I think restore is a good thing look at Yankee stadium they copied old plan almost exact???Then bilked the big Apple out of billions:(
 
Yea it would be real cool pitting the speed of the step boats on the straightaways against a conventinal bottom in the turns.

Oh yea and a giant wave making machine or a couple 60 foot sportfishers doing doughnuts on the infield.
 
Yea it would be real cool pitting the speed of the step boats on the straightaways against a conventinal bottom in the turns.

Oh yea and a giant wave making machine or a couple 60 foot sportfishers doing doughnuts on the infield.

I'll volunteer to drive one of the Sportfishers.......:26:
 
So hurricane Andrew made the stadium to unstable to use anymore but what ended the racing there before the hurricane ?

I watched unlimited Hydros and Jersey Skiffs there back in the 80s and it was the coolest thing ever. The stadium alone was half the attraction for me.
 
So hurricane Andrew made the stadium to unstable to use anymore but what ended the racing there before the hurricane ?

I watched unlimited Hydros and Jersey Skiffs there back in the 80s and it was the coolest thing ever. The stadium alone was half the attraction for me.

From what I've heard, the Hurricane Andrew thing was a scam by the city to try and get the stadium torn down for something else. The family which donated the land stepped in and so it is still there. I think Charlie and HORBA are also working with the save the stdium group. But I understand the first studies done say it is stable....
 
The stadiums structure should be ok it is poured reinforced concrete a friend of mines father was a Forman on that Job and just to tell us stories about the way they built it,
A guy I was in business with raced there he had a Sponsorship from Chrysler on his GN Boat but those days are long gone, too support that monster you need huge venues that the current regime is trying hard to suppress this type of fun unless it is rowing, Solar or wind power.
 
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