If something defines Miami, it is its diversity, and Florida in general is home to more than 6.7 million Latinos in the U.S. But there is a special corner in the city that deserves all the attention: West Kendall, the neighborhood that many call "Little Colombia" and that truly lives as an extension of Medellín, Bogotá, or Cali.



The Colombian presence here is undeniable. According to local reports, about 25,000 Colombians live in Kendall, especially concentrated in the western sector and areas like Country Walk and Kendale Lakes. In neighborhoods like Royal Palms, Colombians make up more than 60% of the population. This is no coincidence. The strong wave of migration arrived in the 1990s, when many sought better economic opportunities and to escape the violence that Colombia was experiencing at the time.

Walking through the main streets, you hear cumbia, vallenato, and popular Colombian music everywhere. It’s the first thing that hits your senses. José Luis Juárez, who lives in the area, summed it up well: "It’s the most Colombian neighborhood in all of Miami, there are a lot of paisas, you don’t miss the food, it’s cool and very peaceful."

Gastronomy is the heart of the place. Businesses like "Asados El Paisa," "Tardes Caleñas," and "Medellín Restaurant" are not just names; they are doors to nostalgia. Here, you can have breakfast with coffee, buñuelos, pandebonos, and almojábanas without feeling far from home. Main dishes like bandeja paisa, sancocho, and Colombian ajiaco are staples on West Kendall tables, keeping alive the culinary tradition that defines the community.

Elizabet Camargo arrived with her family at the end of 2022 and describes the neighborhood as "comfortable and family-oriented." Her husband already knew other paisas in the area, all entrepreneurs and workers, and when they arrived with the children, they supported them from day one: advice, school recommendations, places to go. She herself says with nostalgia: "Sometimes we go to dance salsa or vallenato at a club, and it’s like being back there." West Kendall became for her that Antioquian place where culture is not diluted but strengthened every day.
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