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South Florida Real Estate > Condos > Coral Gables Island, FL > Coral Gables Island Condos
| Condo Names |
Year Built |
Minimum Price |
Views |
| 55 Merrick |
2008 |
$360,000 - $639,000 |
No |
| Gables on the Green |
2008 |
$360,000 - $639,000 |
No |
| Waters Edge |
2008 |
$240,000 - $1,599,000 |
River |
| Cloisters at the Gables |
2008 |
$240,000 - $390,000 |
City |
| Ponce Tower |
2008 |
$300,000 - $1,500,000 |
City |
| Puerta de Palmas |
2006 |
$258,000 - $649,000 |
City |
| Minorca |
2005 |
$299,000 - $1,200,000 |
No |
| 100 Andalusia |
2005 |
$415,000 - $899,000 |
City |
| Villa Florini |
2005 |
$460,000 - $550,000 |
City |
| Ten Aragon |
2004 |
$270,000 - $831,000 |
Bay |
| Milano at Deering Bay |
2003 |
$1,495,000 - $4,250,000 |
Bayfront |
| Douglas Grand |
2002 |
$174,000 - $335,000 |
City |
| Davinci |
2002 |
$219,900 - $650,000 |
City |
| Avignon in the Gables |
2002 |
$925,000 - $1,590,000 |
City |
| Deering Bay |
2001 |
$1,219,000 - $1,300,000 |
Bay |
| Siena at Deering Bay |
2001 |
$1,219,000 - $1,300,000 |
Bay |
| Biltmore Village |
2001 |
$349,000 - $535,000 |
City |
| La Hacienda in the Gables |
2000 |
$325,000 - $795,000 |
City |
| Verona at Deering Bay |
2000 |
$1,200,000 - $1,500,000 |
Bayfront |
| Gables Club Tower I |
1999 |
$995,000 - $3,200,000 |
Ocean |
| Gables Club Tower II |
1999 |
$995,000 - $3,200,000 |
Ocean |
| Segovia Tower |
1998 |
$1,995,000 - $2,995,000 |
City |
| Gables Terrace |
1995 |
$243,000 - $345,000 |
City |
| Gables Park Tower |
1993 |
$518,000 - $1,625,000 |
No |
| Dakota Condo |
1992 |
$600,000 - $950,000 |
City |
| One Village Place |
1974 |
$399,000 - $890,000 |
Ocean |
| Gables Waterway Towers |
1969 |
$232,000 - $549,000 |
Bayfront |
| David William Hotel |
1963 |
$129,000 - $549,000 |
City |
| 1300 Ponce |
0 |
$399,000 to $699,000 |
No |
| Gables Harbour |
0 |
$444,000 to $1,514,000 |
Ocean |
Coral Gables (sometimes referred to as The Gables) is a city in Miami-Dade County, Florida, southwest of Miami, in the United States. The city is best known as the home of the University of Miami, and as an example of City Beautiful urban planning. The population was 42,249 at the 2000 census. According to U.S Census estimates in 2005, the city had a population of 42,871. Coral Gables schools are part of the Miami-Dade School District, which serves almost all of metropolitan Miami. The district has one high school in Coral Gables, Coral Gables High School, which educates students in grades nine through 12. The city also has a sizable business district. Coral Gables residents include middle to upper class people. The city is well known for its restaurants, art galleries, unique shops and boutiques and live theater performances. Coral Gables was one of the first planned communities, and prefigured the development of the gated community and the homeowners association. It is notorious for its aesthetic regulations. The city was developed by George Edgar Merrick during the Florida land boom of the 1920s. The city's architecture is almost entirely Mediterranean Revival Style. By 1926, the city covered 10,000 acres (40 square km), had netted $150 million in sales with over $100 million spent on development. Merrick designed the downtown commercial district to be only four blocks wide and more than two miles (3 km) long. The main artery bisected the business district. Merrick could boast that every business in Coral Gables was less than a two-block walk. The old electric trolley system was replaced by the popularity of modern automobiles; today a new free circulator trolley system, initiated in November, 2003, that runs down Ponce de Leon Boulevard is in operation. Coral Gables is known as a pedestrian-friendly destination. Located only four miles from Miami International Airport, the "City Beautiful" boasts more than 140 dining establishments and gourmet shops, plus many notable international retailers. Among the beautiful and distinctive landmarks in Coral Gables are the Venetian Pool, Douglas Entrance, the Biltmore Hotel, and many fine residences. |
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