Items | Little River Design Immersion | Miami's Creative Underground
Little River Design Immersion | Miami's Creative Underground
Miami
About
Time Out ranked Little River #12 on its list of the world's coolest neighborhoods. Most visitors walk through it. We take you inside it.
Not a tour where you look at things. One where you meet the people who made them.
This is not a walking tour. It's a 3.5-hour design immersion — conceived and built by an experiential designer, led by a local artist and cultural narrator who knows every wall, founder, and story in this neighborhood.
Every stop is a conversation — with the makers, founders, and artists who built Little River's creative identity from the ground up.
You'll move through biophilic design studios, street art corridors, independent galleries, and a Caribbean market t...
Highlights
From 3 hours to 4 hours
Offered in English
Free Cancellation
Mobile Ticket
From 3 hours to 4 hours
Offered in English
Free Cancellation
Mobile Ticket
What's Included
Bottled water
Visits to contemporary art galleries (e.g., Stanek Gallery)
Branded OnlyTitiKnows tote bag (one per guest)
Visits to independent boutique / design-driven spaces
Tasting: Guyanese roti (included)
Dessert tasting: Italian bakery pastries (included)
History & storytelling on Little River
Personal encounters with local designers, artists, and creative entrepreneurs. Pre-arranged. Always.
Coffee/breakfast beverages at Plant the Future (available for purchase)
Paid street/parking lot fees are not included. Rates vary by location and time (typically $2–$4/hour). Estimated up to $10 per booking.
Transportation to/from the meeting point is not included
Gratuities are not included. If you enjoyed the experience, tips for our guides are always appreciated and entirely at your discretion.
Meeting Points
Departure
Plant The Future Cafe
Meet at the entrance of Plant the Future. Please arrive 10 minutes early. Paid street parking is available on the main road and surrounding streets. You may also park at The Citadel parking lot and walk over. Your guide will be waiting outside holding an OnlyTitiKnows tote bag.
Return
Important Information
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Infants and small children can ride in a pram or stroller
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Service animals allowed
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Suitable for all physical fitness levels
Cancellation policy
For a full refund, cancel at least 24 hours before the scheduled departure time.
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For a full refund, you must cancel at least 24 hours before the experience’s start time.
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Cut-off times are based on the experience’s local time.
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If you cancel less than 24 hours before the experience’s start time, the amount you paid will not be refunded.
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This experience requires a minimum number of travelers. If it’s canceled because the minimum isn’t met, you’ll be offered a different date/experience or a full refund.
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Any changes made less than 24 hours before the experience’s start time will not be accepted.
Become our Lokal Curator
Are you ready to turn your hobbies into a business?
Plant the Future is not a plant shop. It's a globally commissioned biophilic design practice — the work of founder Paloma Teppa, who creates living environments for hotels, residences, and cultural institutions around the world. Her materials are moss, tropical plants, natural light, and water. Her subject is the relationship between humans and the natural world.
We begin here because this space carries the DNA of Little River: a woman with a vision who turned an empty corner into something the rest of the world now flies in to see.
You'll hear the neighborhood's origin story — from Lemon City 1860 to Time Out's #12 coolest neighborhood on Earth — and then step inside for a conversation about how a creative practice actually works: the commissions, the materials, the process, and what it means to build spaces that change how people feel.
1 hour
2
Little River
Caribbean Tasting Stop at B&M Market-
Before Little River was cool, it was Caribbean.
B&M Market has been feeding this neighborhood since the 1980s — a family-run institution that is half grocery, half restaurant, and entirely irreplaceable. No design, no branding, no Instagram aesthetic. Just decades of recipes, spice blends passed between generations, and a counter that has served everyone from Haitian immigrants to architecture students to James Beard-nominated chefs who come here to remember what real food tastes like.
We stop here because food tells the story of a neighborhood more honestly than any mural or gallery ever could. Over a tasting of authentic Guyanese roti, you'll understand the migration patterns, the cultural layering, and the everyday life that shaped Little River long before it became "the next cool district."
This is the stop that stays with people longest. Not because of the food — because of what the food means.
20 minutes
3
Little River
Miami Street Art (multiple murals)- This is not a street art tour. This is a reading lesson.
Every wall in this corridor is a document — of migration, identity, displacement, and reinvention. JonOne, born in Harlem, began his practice painting New York subway trains in the 1980s and now exhibits in galleries in Paris, Los Angeles, and Miami. His work here moves from blue to yellow to red — water, sun, urban heat — the visual biography of a neighborhood written in spray paint.
Beside it, Portuguese artist Add Fuel layers cultural memory like broken tiles: taking what was discarded and reassembling it into something new. His name comes from a phrase. His work is a philosophy.
We'll read these walls the way a designer reads a brief — looking for what the neighborhood is trying to say about itself, who made it, and what it's becoming. By the time we leave this corridor, you'll never look at street art the same way again.
45 minutes
4
Little River
Stanek Gallery -Most galleries let you look at art. This one lets you talk to the people who decide which art gets seen.
Stanek opened its Miami outpost here in Little River in 2024 — a deliberate choice by founder Katherine Stanek, a figurative sculptor who built her Philadelphia gallery on a model almost no one else uses: every exhibition is curated by a different independent curator, given complete creative freedom. The result is a space that never repeats itself and never plays it safe.
50% of represented artists are women. The gallery was founded by two women. It opened in the neighborhood that Time Out called the world's #12 coolest for a reason.
We'll meet Katherine and hear what it actually takes to build a gallery with a point of view — the curatorial decisions, the artist relationships, and why Little River was the only place in Miami that made sense for what she wanted to build. When possible, a quick hello with artists on site (Subject to availability.)
20 minutes
5
Little River
Hidden Concept Spaces- This is the stop we can't fully describe in advance — because that's the point.
Little River's most interesting spaces don't advertise. They don't need to. Free Reign, Admari Tea House, Archive 79 — these are places built for people who already know what they're looking for. A floral design studio that sources textiles from markets in four continents. A tea house that has been quietly redefining tea culture since 2007. An industrial gallery built on hundred-year-old warehouse foundations.
We move through whichever of these spaces is most alive on the day of your experience — because a neighborhood this dynamic doesn't follow a fixed script, and neither do we.
Exact locations confirmed after booking. Every visit is arranged in advance with the space owners — not a walk-in, never a walk-in.
30 minutes
6
Little River
Every good design has a moment of rest built into it.
Mama Leone is Little River's Italian bakery — the quiet layer underneath the murals and the galleries. It has been here longer than the art world discovered this neighborhood, and it will be here after the next wave arrives.
We stop here for a curated pastry tasting and something harder to schedule: the chance to slow down, absorb everything you've seen, and understand that a neighborhood's identity is not just what gets photographed — it's what gets eaten, quietly, by the people who actually live here.
30 minutes
7
Little River
The Citadel- We end where the neighborhood's past and future occupy the same building.
The Citadel was named Miami's Best Food Hall by Miami
New Times for 2025. It opened in 2019 inside a renovated
1950s bank building — the kind of adaptive reuse that
happens when developers actually understand the
neighborhood they're entering. Rooftop. Radio station.
Rotating art markets. Pop-up studios. A food hall that
functions as a town square.
What strikes us here: this building feels like the direct
architectural descendant of Little River's original civic
space — the 1895 Tee House, a multi-purpose community
building that housed a clinic, a communal kitchen, and
the neighborhood's first social gatherings. Same high
ceilings, same indoor-outdoor flow, same belief that
architecture should serve community first.
By the time you leave The Citadel, you won't just have
walked through a neighborhood. You'll understand how a
city builds its own identity — one space at a time.
Little River Design Immersion | Miami's Creative Underground
Miami
Select Date & Travelers
From
$139.00
Price varies by group size
About
Time Out ranked Little River #12 on its list of the world's coolest neighborhoods. Most visitors walk through it. We take you inside it.
Not a tour where you look at things. One where you meet the people who made them.
This is not a walking tour. It's a 3.5-hour design immersion — conceived and built by an experiential designer, led by a local artist and cultural narrator who knows every wall, founder, and story in this neighborhood.
Every stop is a conversation — with the makers, founders, and artists who built Little River's creative identity from the ground up.
You'll move through biophilic design studios, street art corridors, independent galleries, and a Caribbean market t...
Highlights
From 3 hours to 4 hours
Offered in English
Free Cancellation
Mobile Ticket
From 3 hours to 4 hours
Offered in English
Free Cancellation
Mobile Ticket
What's Included
Bottled water
Visits to contemporary art galleries (e.g., Stanek Gallery)
Branded OnlyTitiKnows tote bag (one per guest)
Visits to independent boutique / design-driven spaces
Tasting: Guyanese roti (included)
Dessert tasting: Italian bakery pastries (included)
History & storytelling on Little River
Personal encounters with local designers, artists, and creative entrepreneurs. Pre-arranged. Always.
Coffee/breakfast beverages at Plant the Future (available for purchase)
Paid street/parking lot fees are not included. Rates vary by location and time (typically $2–$4/hour). Estimated up to $10 per booking.
Transportation to/from the meeting point is not included
Gratuities are not included. If you enjoyed the experience, tips for our guides are always appreciated and entirely at your discretion.
Meeting Points
Departure
Plant The Future Cafe
Meet at the entrance of Plant the Future. Please arrive 10 minutes early. Paid street parking is available on the main road and surrounding streets. You may also park at The Citadel parking lot and walk over. Your guide will be waiting outside holding an OnlyTitiKnows tote bag.