Audio By Carbonatix
Just one day after New Times reported that Pizza Tropical would close for good inside Gramps, something extraordinary happened in Wynwood. Fans didn’t just mourn online. They showed up in person — with actual bouquets. Real flowers. Placed gently, one by one, on the bright yellow-and-red ventanita that fed Miami’s late-night crowd for nearly a decade. If you ever needed proof that Pizza Tropical wasn’t just a slice shop but a beloved piece of Miami culture, the small memorial blooming at its window said it all.
Pizza Tropical’s final night of service is set for Wednesday, December 10, even though Gramps itself won’t close until January. The announcement landed like a gut punch, and the community’s response has been immediate and emotional. As owner Adam Gersten joked in his Instagram caption, urging fans to “bring some flowers to place on top of the pizza window,” no one expected people to actually do it — yet here we are. Wynwood now has its first-ever pizza shrine.

Pizza Tropical photo
The End of a Gouda Era
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For longtime regulars, the closure isn’t just sad. It’s disorienting. How do you say goodbye to a place that carried you through concerts, heartbreaks, karaoke disasters, first dates, birthdays, and every “I just need a slice right now” moment in between?
People have been flooding Gramp’s Instagram page with comments over the closure. Some have written, “This is really sad. In my four years living in Miami that just ended, Gramps was easily the one place for live music for which I had no notes. And the pizza was fucking gas,” while others have written, “This saddens me so deeply. Some of my best nights and memories were at Gramps.”

Screenshot via Instagram/@grampswynwood
A Decade of Late-Night Slices
When Pizza Tropical opened in 2016, it captured lightning in a ventanita. Chef Frank Pinello brought Brooklyn expertise. Gersten brought Wynwood soul. Together, they built something casual, uncomplicated, and somehow perfect — a late-night anchor surrounded by neon, noise, and Miami chaos. Whether you ordered a classic cheese slice or swore eternal loyalty to “La Hawaiiana,” everyone had their pizza, their memory, their late-night story.
And that’s why the flowers hit so hard. People don’t leave bouquets for places they merely like. They leave flowers for places that mattered, places that shaped a neighborhood, places they’re not quite ready to let go of.
Pizza Tropical wasn’t just good pizza. It was a community. And losing it feels like losing a tiny, delicious piece of Wynwood’s heart.
Pizza Tropical at Gramps Wynwood. 176 NW 24th St., Miami, at Gramps Wynwood; 855-732-8992; pizzatropical.com. Closing Wednesday, December 10.