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Community Spotlight: Breaking Barriers and Building Legacy in Miami’s Business District

This is a crosspost of Main Street America’s blog found here.

BREAKING BARRIERS TO BUSINESS | MIAMIFL

Miami is known by its residents and tourists alike as a city of diverse cultures and histories converging to create something distinctly its own. Within this broader landscape, neighborhoods like Coconut Grove, Overtown, and Allapattah carry stories of resilience that have long served as the backbone of local community life. Today, these commercial corridors remain vital ground where small business owners are seeking to preserve that legacy while shaping a more sustainable future.

In the latest feature of the Breaking Barriers to Business (B3) initiative, a collaborative partnership between Main Street America and Living Cities, supported by Truist Foundation, the voices of entrepreneurs and community leaders throughout Miami take center stage as they share how businesses are navigating pivotal challenges, preserving cultural identity, and building pathways for inclusive growth.

Coconut Grove: Holding Space for Heritage Amid Generational Change 

On Grand Avenue in Coconut Grove, Eric Knowles, President of the Miami-Dade Chamber of Commerce, recognizes both loss and possibility at the heart of the corridor. Once lined with booming small businesses, the area suffered an economic blow during the 2008 housing crisis, leaving behind many vacant lots where bustling storefronts once stood. For Knowles, rebuilding will require more than optimism. ​It’s going to take public-private partnerships to restore the business community here,’ he said. He recognizes the B3 initiative as offering something many locals hold onto: hope, and a reason to imagine a more resilient future.

The same hope and determination for a stronger future fuels small business owners like Joshua Abril, who started Fookem’s Fabulous Key Lime Pie along Central Miami almost by accident. What began as a hobby for Abril flourished into a livelihood, and he quickly discovered the barriers new business owners inevitably encounter, from funding and permitting challenges to the weight of rising costs. ​To me, breaking barriers encompasses all facets,” Abril explained. ​It’s about getting access to capital, earning the trust of neighbors — who are often your first and foremost customers — and getting past every hurdle in your way.”

Overtown: Legacy, Culture, and the Work of Place-based Preservation 

A few miles north into Miami’s urban core, Overtown’s history is woven into its storied streets. Known as the ​Harlem of the South,’ it once hosted musical legends who performed on Miami Beach and later returned there to claim it as home, shaping a community rich in jazz-infused culture and pride. Yet land ownership has shifted, creating new risks of cultural displacement. For Matris Batts, who leads the Overtown Business Association, the task now is to balance relationships with developers while protecting space for local businesses to grow. ​Our mission is to preserve, to share, and to create opportunities for economic growth,” she shares.

At Lil Green House Grill, co-owner Nicole Gates lives that mission daily through the restaurant’s welcoming atmosphere. The space has become a gathering spot for the community at large, serving political leaders, teachers, children, families, and even prominent celebrities. Gates sees the work as a continuation of cultural legacy. ​For us, breaking barriers means breaking stereotypes of how Black and Brown small businesses operate,” she said. ​And I’m proud that we are proving what’s possible.”

Allapattah: Cultural Roots and the Challenges with Staying Put 

In Allapattah, the story of resilience looks different from Coconut Grove or Overtown, but it feels familiar. Immigrant-owned shops and restaurants make the neighborhood a cultural anchor for Miami, yet many of those businesses face challenging and often unpredictable rent increases that can climb as much as 150 percent within a short period of time. ​This challenge forces owners to scramble,” explains Santander Arguelles of the Allapattah Community Development Corporation. ​They need immediate access to capital, or risk losing what they’ve built.”

With help from the B3 initiative, his team has connected entrepreneurs to loans, grants, and technical assistance to help them stabilize their businesses during times of uncertainty.

For Julio Diaz, founder of The Sixth Borough Clothing, that support reinforced lessons learned over nearly two decades of running a shop that began with little more than an empty storefront and a dream. For fashion retailers like Diaz, the challenge isn’t only financial — it’s keeping pace with fast-changing trends, staying stocked with the right merchandise, and building customer loyalty in a highly saturated industry. ​You don’t have to be rich to start a business, but you do have to be consistent,” he said. ​Many people have great ideas, but fear holds them back. Breaking barriers begins with your mindset.” Looking ahead, Diaz hopes to expand his store while building a legacy business with his son, and he sees B3 as a partner in making that future sustainable.

Charting What’s Possible in Miami

Miami’s small business corridors can each be seen as living testaments to the possibilities that emerge when culture, commerce, and community converge. These stories demonstrate the principle that progress depends on honoring heritage while creating space for the next generation to thrive.

Through the B3 initiative, business owners and community leaders across Miami are helping to shape a future where resilience is matched with equitable resources, and the people who nurtured these neighborhoods continue to define their destiny.

Three photos of business professionals speaking in conference room.
Miami’s business-supporting organization leaders © Onestop Studios

ABOUT THE BREAKING BARRIERS TO BUSINESS (B3DOCU-SERIES 

The B3 video series offers an in-depth look at the transformative work being done by the Breaking Barriers to Business collaborative initiative to empower small businesses in underserved communities. This documentary-style series explores the challenges faced by entrepreneurs from varied backgrounds and highlights the collaborative efforts between business owners, community leaders, and strategic partners to overcome ecosystem obstacles. Each episode provides a comprehensive view of how targeted support and innovative solutions are driving sustainable, inclusive economic development.

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