The park began construction in 1924 under the design plans of Warren Henry Manning and officially opened in March 1925. Beginning in 1980, it underwent a major redesign by Japanese-American modernist artist and landscape architect,
Isamu Noguchi. Today, Bayfront Park is maintained by the Bayfront Park Management Trust, a limited agency of the city of
Miami, Florida. Bayfront Park is bordered on the north by
Bayside Marketplace and the
Kaseya Center, on the south by Chopin Plaza, on the west by
Biscayne Boulevard and on the east by
Biscayne Bay. Bayfront Park is host to many large events such as the New Year's ball drop at the
InterContinental Miami, Christmas celebrations, concerts, the Bayfront Park Amphitheater, and the Tina Hills Pavilion, as well as boat tours around Biscayne Bay. Seven blocks north is Bayfront Park's partner park, the
Museum Park, location of the
Pérez Art Museum Miami and
Phillip and Patricia Frost Museum of Science. In June 2020, the park's Ponce de Leon and Christopher Columbus statues were vandalized, though it was announced that they would not be removed.
Site of assassination of Anton Cermak On February 15, 1933,
Chicago mayor
Anton Cermak was shot three times in the chest and mortally wounded while shaking hands with President-elect
Franklin D. Roosevelt in front of Bayfront Park by assassin
Giuseppe Zangara. Along with Cermak, who died of his wounds 19 days later on March 6, 1933 (two days after the inauguration of FDR), four other people were hit by the gunman. Colbertaldo doubled as the Musketeers' sculptor, producing statues which commemorated the organization. On June 10, 2020 the Columbus statue at Bayfront Park was vandalized with red paint, attempting to symbolize spilt blood. The action was carried out by individuals protesting the
murder of George Floyd and
police brutality. and removed in June, 2020.
Challenger Memorial The Challenger Memorial is a monument located on the southwest corner of Bayfront Park dedicated to the crew of the
Space Shuttle Challenger, which exploded shortly after takeoff on January 28, 1986. The memorial was created by the Japanese-American artist
Isamu Noguchi, and was dedicated on the second anniversary of the disaster, January 28, 1988. The 100-foot-tall spiraling steel sculpture is shaped as a towering double-helix. The triangle-shaped plaque at the base, made of granite, has an engraved poem by
Michael McClure inscribed, as well as the last names of the crew who died.
The torch of Friendship The
Torch of Friendship is a monument located on
Biscayne Boulevard in
Downtown Miami,
Florida,
United States, at the northwest corner of
Bayfront Park. Built in 1960, the Torch of Friendship was built to signify the passageway for immigrants coming from
Latin America and the
Caribbean. The gas fed flame was meant to act as a welcoming beacon for all new and old immigrants to the nation. In 1964 it was re-dedicated to the memory of President
John F. Kennedy. ==Events==