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Holocaust Memorial Miami Beach vs The Wolfsonian - Florida International University

Both are rated highly by professionals. On balance, The Wolfsonian - Florida International University scores significantly higher than Holocaust Memorial. The Wolfsonian - Florida International University is ranked #3 in Miami with endorsements from 9 reviews including Travel + Leisure, Concierge and Fodor's.

Holocaust Memorial Miami Beach
Holocaust Memorial Miami Beach
8 / 10
1933-1945 Meridian Avenue, Miami Beach, FL 33139
From $0 /night
Fodor's Fodor's
"A bronze sculpture depicts refugees clinging to a giant bronze arm that reaches out of the ground and 42 feet into the air." Full review
Concierge Concierge
"Sculptor/architect Kenneth Treister's Memorial in Miami Beach is both evocative and upsetting."
Frommer's Frommer's
"This heart-wrenching memorial is hard to miss and would be a shame to overlook." Full review
Lonely Planet Lonely Planet
Top Choice
"Holocaust memorials tend to be somber, but this one dedicated to the six million Jews killed during the shoah is particularly grim." Full review
Condé Nast Traveler Condé Nast Traveler
"Enter this evocative outdoor memorial... through black-granite colonnades." Full review
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The Wolfsonian - Florida International University
The Wolfsonian - Florida International University
8 / 10
1001 Washington Avenue, Miami Beach, FL 33139
From $0 /night
Concierge Concierge
"This museum, run by Florida International University, is smack in the middle of the Deco splendors of South Beach, and worth a visit for the building itself."
Lonely Planet Lonely Planet
Top Choice
"Visit this excellent design museum early in your stay to put the aesthetics of Miami Beach into fascinating context." Full review
Travel + Leisure Travel + Leisure
"Part museum, library, and research facility, the Wolfsonian Museum at Florida International University houses a collection of 120,000 pieces dating 1885 through 1945." Full review
Frommer's Frommer's
"Mitchell Wolfson, Jr., heir to a family fortune built on movie theaters, was known as an eccentric, but I'd call him a pack rat." Full review
Condé Nast Traveler Condé Nast Traveler
Editor's Pick
"Furniture, glass, ceramics, and 20th-century German, Italian, and American political propaganda... are on display." Full review
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