Islandia Website Design

Website Design in Islandia

Our Islandia website design company creates sales opportunities for a wide variety of businesses.

 

Our services include Website Design, Internet Marketing, SEO, Corporate Branding, Web Video Spokespersons and Logo Design.

In the wrong hands, a website can either drive sales traffic, or turn prospects away in mere seconds. The right Islandia website design agency will turn your website into a direct window into your organization. Sales Secret’s staff have the skill, experience, and vision to develop a website that is as intuitive as it is beautiful. It’s not enough that you just have a website. You must have a professional-looking site if you want to be taken seriously. Since many consumers now search for information online prior to making a purchase at a brick-and-mortar store, your site may well be the first, or last, chance you have at making a good impression on a potential buyer.

 

[himage]Miami Website Design
Miami Website Design
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[himage]Fort Lauderdale Social MediaFt Lauderdale Social Media[/himage] [himage]Miami E-Commerce Online StoreMiami E-Commerce Online Store[/himage] [himage]Miami Email Marketing
Miami Email Marketing
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[himage]Miami Projection AdvertisingMiami Projection Advertising[/himage] [himage]Miami Public RelationsMiami Public Relations[/himage]

 

[wpspoiler name=”Islandia Website Design – 305-330-1622″ style=”wpui-blue”]We offer our website design services throughout Miami-Dade County, Florida including the cities of Aventura, Bal Harbour, Bay Harbor Islands, Biscayne Park, Coral Gables, Cutler Bay, Doral, El Portal, Fisher Island, Florida City, Golden Beach, Hialeah, Hialeah Gardens, Homestead, Indian Creek, Islandia, Kendall, Key Biscayne, Medley, Miami Beach, Miami Gardens, Miami Lakes, Miami Shores, Miami Springs, Naranja,North Bay Village, North Miami, Perrine, Pinecrest, South Miami Sunny Isles Beach, Surfside, Sweetwater, and West Miami.[/wpspoiler]

TEL: (305) 330-1622 | ADDRESS: 1111 Lincoln Road, 4th Floor, Miami Beach, Florida 33139

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[wpspoiler name=”Islandia Website Design City Data” style=”wpui-blue”]

Miami Beach is a coastal resort city in Miami-Dade County, Florida, United States, incorporated on March 26, 1915. The municipality is located on a series of natural and man-made barrier islands between the Atlantic Ocean and Biscayne Bay, the latter which separates the Beach from Miami city proper. The neighborhood of South Beach, comprising the southernmost 2.5 square miles (6.5 km2) of Miami Beach, along with Downtown Miami and the port collectively form the commercial center of South Florida. As of the 2010 census, the city had a total population of 87,779. Miami Beach has been one of America’s pre-eminent beach resorts since the early 20th century.

The first structure to be built on this uninhabited oceanfront was the Biscayne House of Refuge, constructed in 1876 by the U.S. Lifesaving Service at approximately 72nd Street. Its purpose was to provide food, water, and a return to civilization for people who were shipwrecked. The next step in the development of the future Miami Beach was the planting of a coconut plantation along the shore in the 1880s by New Jersey entrepreneurs Ezra Osborn and Elnathan Field, but this was a failed venture. One of the investors in the project was agriculturist John S. Collins, who achieved success by buying out other partners and planting different crops, notably avocados, on the land that would later become Miami Beach. Meanwhile, across Biscayne Bay, the City of Miami was established in 1896 with the arrival of the railroad, and developed further as a port when the shipping channel of Government Cut was created in 1905, cutting off Fisher Island from the south end of the Miami Beach peninsula.

Collins’ family members saw the potential in developing the beach as a resort. This effort got underway in the early years of the 20th century by the Collins/Pancoast family, the Lummus brothers (bankers from Miami), and Indianapolis entrepreneur Carl G. Fisher. Until then, the beach here was only the destination for day-trips by ferry from Miami, across the bay. There were bath houses and food stands, but no hotel until Brown’s Hotel was built in 1915 (still standing, at 112 Ocean Drive). Much of the interior land mass at that time was a tangled jungle of mangroves. Clearing it, deepening the channels and water bodies, and eliminating native growth almost everywhere in favor of land fill for development was a herculean effort. The Town of Miami Beach was chartered on March 26, 1915; it grew to become a City in 1917. Carl Fisher was the main promoter of Miami Beach’s development in the 1920s as the site for wealthy industrialists from the north and Midwest to build their winter homes here. In addition, Fisher built five hotels (none surviving). In the 1920s, Fisher and others created much of Miami Beach as landfill by dredging Biscayne Bay; this man-made territory includes Star, Palm, and Hibiscus Islands, the Sunset Islands, much of Normandy Isle, and all of the Venetian Islands except Belle Isle. The Miami Beach peninsula became an island in April 1925 when Haulover Cut was opened, connecting the ocean to the bay, north of present-day Bal Harbour. The great hurricane of Sept. 17-18, 1926, put an end to this prosperous era of the Florida Boom, but in the 1930s Miami Beach still attracted tourists, and investors constructed the mostly small-scale, stucco hotels and rooming houses, for seasonal rental, that comprise much of the present “Art Deco” historic district.[/wpspoiler]