Where Bougainvillea Meets Neon: A Cultural Road Trip Through Florida’s Riviera
There are road trips you take just to get somewhere. Then there are road trips you take to understand a place. This is the latter — a languid, unapologetic glide down Florida’s Atlantic coast where champagne flows by noon, tequila shows up by sundown, and culture lives between the two like a well-placed silk scarf.
This is not simply Florida. This is a week-long cultural moodboard where Palm Beach’s old-world restraint gives way to Miami’s maximalist pulse. It’s vintage elegance, contemporary spectacle, and just the right amount of beautiful contradiction. The sort of trip where the only certainty is that you’ll leave with more stories than you arrived with.
Courtesy of The Colony Hotel Palm Beach
Palm Beach: The Art of Restraint (with a Side of Lobster Salad)
In Palm Beach, everything is soft-edged and sun-washed. It feels frozen in a Slim Aarons photograph where everyone still lunches and whispers softly in manicured courtyards.
The Colony Hotel delivers the kind of intimate, self-aware Palm Beach fantasy that pairs well with morning coffee in oversized sunglasses. But when you’re ready for something unapologetically grand, The Breakers still commands its shoreline with the kind of timeless confidence that only a true original can. Its sweeping oceanfront, signature pink facade, and newly energized dining scene — like Henry’s Palm Beach tucked into Via Flagler — feel as relevant as ever.
Days here unfold the way they should. A poolside spritz slides into an afternoon wander through Royal Poinciana Plaza, where lunch at Sant Ambroeus feels less like a meal and more like a perfectly rehearsed scene. Eventually you find yourself drifting down Worth Avenue, losing track of time while imagining which villa you’d buy if your grandfather had invented toothpaste. The light starts to fade, your skin glows softly from the sun, and suddenly the only decision left is Negroni or champagne before dinner.
Lunch, then lounging — Palm Beach style
FARM RIO
LOEWE
AMANU
FARM RIO
LISA MARIE FERNANDEZ
Boca Raton: Transitional Glamour, Lightly Salted
Further south, Boca Raton offers its own glossy, beachside narrative. This is transitional glamour with its own peculiar rhythm — a little bit country club, a little bit barefoot elegance.
The Boca Beach Club gives you contemporary calm with its direct access to sand and sea, where the horizon serves as your living artwork. But if you’re craving something steeped in history with a generous dose of updated grandeur, The Boca Raton delivers, with its Mediterranean revival architecture, sprawling grounds, and a culinary scene that feels like a well-executed reinvention rather than a desperate update.
As the sun dips into the Gulf Stream, Boca’s scene becomes quietly magnetic. If you’re looking for somewhere effortlessly “in the know,” try TwentyTwenty Grille in Royal Palm Place. A locals’ and insiders’ favorite, this cozy, farm-to-table venue serves seasonal New American dishes like brined lamb rack and lump crab cake — the kind of plates that earn little gasps over the table.
Prefer a more casual, lively ambiance? Kapow Noodle Bar at Mizner Park delivers. It’s perfect for inventive Asian-fusion, artful cocktails, and that sense of unforced cool — just enough energy to make the evening feel spirited, without being staged.
Courtesy of The Boca Raton
Boca. Bikini. Bellini.
ISABEL MARANT
JADE SWIM
JADE SWIM
AQUAZURRA
Miami: Neon, Noise, and Perfect Contradictions
By Miami, all the softness gets replaced with sharp edges and louder colors. Here, everything vibrates. Art deco facades sit beside modernist sculptures; vintage convertibles glide past neon-lit rooftops.
One Hotel South Beach remains the insider’s choice — where the aesthetic is equal parts sustainable and social. The lobby hums with a rotating cast of people who know where to find both green juice and very good tequila by 11 a.m. But if you’re ready to embrace Miami’s full sense of theater, Faena Hotel delivers in a way only Faena can. It feels cinematic: Damien Hirst’s golden mammoth guards the pool, bold reds meet leopard prints, and the entire property pulses with its own hypnotic, unapologetic rhythm.
Of course, for those craving a slightly quieter, deeply polished version of Miami, the St. Regis Bal Harbour remains an impeccable counterpoint. Overlooking one of the most exclusive stretches of beach, it offers calm, precision, and an elevated hush — without sacrificing its strong sense of occasion.
Afternoons belong to the Miami Design District where fashion, art, and architecture intersect effortlessly. The public art installations feel almost casual in their brilliance, while galleries shift weekly, always keeping one eye toward Basel season.
As evening drapes across the city, Wynwood calls. Skip the obvious and head straight to Gramps — equal parts elevated dive, cocktail haunt, and low-lit cool. With its open courtyard, steady live music schedule, and strong drinks, it’s where locals go to avoid the curated scene and still somehow find it.
Where to Eat (and Be Seen) in Miami
Miami’s dining scene is bold, eclectic, and always camera-ready. Here, sophistication meets mood in every bite.
Begin your evening in the Design District at Mandolin Aegean Bistro, a restored 1940s house shaded by bougainvillea. Grilled octopus, warm pita, and crisp Assyrtiko pair beautifully with soft Miami light and conversation that always feels like a scene.
When it’s time for something truly iconic, head to Joe’s Stone Crab. Since 1913, this Miami institution has perfected the ritual: seasonal stone crab claws, creamy coleslaw, Key lime pie, and a martini at the marble bar. It’s effortlessly old-school—in all the right ways—and exactly the kind of Miami memory worth dressing for.
For a modern counterpoint, Stubborn Seed delivers a Michelin-starred experience that never feels stiff. Chef Jeremy Ford’s tasting menu is bold, beautifully plated, and every bit as fun as the city outside.
Art First, Then Fashionably Late
THE FRANKIE SHOP
PERFECTWHITETEE
LILI CLASPE
LA DOUBLEJ
STAUD
Miami’s Art Scene: A Few Stops Worth Knowing
For a deeper immersion, the Institute of Contemporary Art Miami anchors the Design District with cutting-edge exhibitions that evolve constantly. Just a few blocks away, the de la Cruz Collection offers a private collection that’s anything but private in scale.
In Allapattah, the Rubell Museum delivers a beautifully curated look at some of contemporary art’s most important voices inside a repurposed industrial space. And finally, over in Wynwood Norte, the Bakehouse Art Complex offers a glimpse inside Miami’s creative engine, with open studios and live working spaces where art is quite literally being made as you wander.
Miami doesn’t ask for your attention — it simply takes it. And somewhere between bougainvillea-laced Palm Beach and glittering Miami lies Boca, quietly perfecting its hybrid identity.
This isn’t a road trip that ends neatly with your suitcase packed and your inbox full again. It’s the kind that lingers — on your skin, in your camera roll, and somewhere under your collarbone.