fiogf49gjkf0d Driving
is the most practical way to get around Miami. Though the safety warnings handed to visitors as they pick up their rental cars can make unnerving reading, the much publicized tourist-targeted car-jackings of the early 1990s are now no more of an issue here than in any major city. Watch out for road signs marked with an orange sun on a blue background; they identify the most useful routes to the main attractions. Tourist police patrol in cars with the same logo.
With a lot of time and patience, it is possible to make your way around Miami on
public transportation
run by Metro-Dade Transit (tel 305/770-3131 or
for route information).
Metrorail
trains (5am-midnight) run, slowly, along a single line between the northern suburbs and South Miami; useful stops are Government Center (for downtown), Coconut Grove, and Douglas Road or University (for Coral Gables). Single-journey fares are $1.25. Downtown Miami is also ringed by the
Metromover
(5.30am-midnight; flat fare 25?), a monorail that doesn't cover much ground but gives a great bird's-eye view.
Metrobuses
cover the entire city, but services dwindle at night; the flat-rate single-journey fare is $1.25, with a 25? surcharge for transfers.
Route maps
and
timetables
for all Metro-Dade Transit services can be had at Government Center Station, and at the Metrorail station at NW First Avenue & First Street.
Other useful information
for tourists (each section contains more specific sub-sections):
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