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Virginia Key

Virginia Key
Neighborhood of Miami
Virginia Key Beach
Virginia Key Beach
Virginia Key in Miami
Virginia Key in Miami
Country United States
State Florida
County Miami-Dade County
City Miami
Government
 • City of Miami Commissioner Marc Sarnoff
 • Miami-Dade Commissioners Carlos A. Giménez
 • House of Representatives Carlos Lopez-Cantera (R) and Luis García, Jr. (R)
 • State Senate Gwen Margolis (D)
 • U.S. House Ileana Ros-Lehtinen (R)
Area
 • Total 1.35 sq mi (3.5 km2)
Time zone EST (UTC-05)
ZIP Code 33149
Area code(s) 305, 786
Virginia Key
Miami FL Virginia Key Beach Park RR01.jpg
Virginia Key railroad at the park
Type Municipal
Location Virginia Key, Miami, Florida, United States
Area 863 acres (3.49 km2)
Created 1945 (1945)
Operated by City of Miami
Website Virginia Key Beach Park
Virginia Key Beach Park
Virginia Key is located in Miami
Virginia Key
Virginia Key is located in Florida
Virginia Key
Virginia Key is located in the US
Virginia Key
Location Virginia Key, Miami
Coordinates 25°44′11″N 80°9′20″W / 25.73639°N 80.15556°W / 25.73639; -80.15556Coordinates: 25°44′11″N 80°9′20″W / 25.73639°N 80.15556°W / 25.73639; -80.15556
Built 1945
Architectural style Masonry
NRHP Reference # 02000681
Added to NRHP June 28, 2002

Virginia Key is a 863-acre (3.49 km2) barrier island in Miami, Florida, United States in Biscayne Bay, south of Brickell and north of Key Biscayne. It accessible from the mainland via the Rickenbacker Causeway.

The island is mainly occupied by the Virginia Key Beach Park, Miami Seaquarium, Miami-Dade's Central District Wastewater Treatment Plant, and the University of Miami Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Science. Other facilities include the former Miami Marine Stadium, the National Marine Fisheries Service Southeast Fisheries Science Center, and an office of the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

What is now Virginia Key was the southern end of a barrier island that extended from the New River inlet in Fort Lauderdale to just north of Key Biscayne. Early accounts by Spanish explorers indicated the existence of one or more inlets somewhere on the long spit of land enclosing the northern end of Biscayne Bay, but such inlets open and close over time. At the beginning of the 19th century, there was no inlet through the barrier island between the New River Inlet and Bear Cut, at the northern end of Key Biscayne. Hurricanes in 1835 and 1838 opened a new inlet, Narrows Cut (now known as Norris Cut), separating Virginia Key from what is now Fisher Island at the south end of Miami Beach.


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