Best Place to Feel Like You’re Not in Miami
The Kampong, National Tropical Botanical Garden
One minute, you’re dodging traffic in Coconut Grove. Next, you’re wandering through The Kampong, wondering if you accidentally slipped through a portal into Southeast Asia, exploring banyan trees and bamboo groves. Hidden above Biscayne Bay on a lush nine-acre estate, this historic botanical oasis feels delightfully untethered from the version of Miami most people know. There are mango trees everywhere (65 varieties) alongside rare tropical fruits, twisting pathways, giant palms and the sort of humid stillness that makes you instinctively start whispering. Originally the home of legendary plant explorer David Fairchild, the property feels equal parts secret garden, science experiment and fever dream for people who own linen clothing. The Fairchild-Sweeney House, with its blend of Mediterranean Revival and Southeast Asian influences, overlooks the bay like a dreamy colonial mirage and once hosted visitors Thomas Edison and Henry Ford. Because The Kampong is still an active botanical research center, visits require reservations — which somehow only adds to the mystique. Miami may be just outside the gates, but inside, time slows, the air thickens with jasmine and salt, and suddenly your nervous system remembers how to exhale.