It may sound like a US coastal holiday destination but Miami Beach is the UK's very own once-thriving holiday hot spot - and it is just a two-hour or so drive from Nottingham.
Pop Miami Beach into Google Maps and at least the top three results are in Florida, but scroll down and you'll find Miami Beach Lincolnshire.
Described as "once a holiday resort for the 'well-to-do'", by Lincolnshire Live, just how did this East Coast holiday spot get its name and what is it like there now?
With road names such as Broadway, the Prairie and Sunset Strip there is certainly an American ring to this Lincolnshire location, so reporter Adam Laver headed there to find out more.
As I pulled off the A52 onto Sutton Road, a blue sign with the words Miami Beach faced us - and behind it were rows of small static homes which didn't quite replicate the sunny streets of Florida.
After asking around, I was put in the direction of site manager Mark Moy, 60, who was eager to tell me about how it got its name and how the site had changed over the years.
The land was bought by a businesswoman from Nottinghamshire called Lucy Lord, according to Mr Moy, who turned it into a holiday resort with a cocktail bar.
She was so fascinated with Florida and America that she named much of the place after American roads, such as 5th Avenue and the Prairie.
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"There would be Rolls-Royces and Jaguars parked up. It was a cocktail bar for well-to-do people," Mr Moy said. "It was very exclusive. Then in the 1980s a family called the Richardsons from Hull bought it.
"It's still in the Richardson name now. It has since become less of a holiday site and more of a residential home.
"But there are still places people can get for a holiday. There's a chalet called the Board Walks which is listed on Airbnb."
In 2022 it is some way off from how Mr Moy described its halcyon days.
Some residents at Miami Beach did not know about the history of the place, including James Peck, 34, who said: "I've only lived here for two years.
"Most of the people who live here are old and don't stay around very long for obvious reasons.
"I moved here because I needed somewhere quick and it was cheap."
Others, however, were attracted to Miami Beach because it enabled them to enjoy a simple way of living in an area that was off the beaten track.
Rodney and Barbara Wilmot, a married couple who have lived at Miami Beach for 12 years, are happy with their simple life.
"Put it this way, if you're retired, why do you need a big house?" Barbara, 67, said. "It's just the two of us. It's economic and it's cheap.
"We had an early retirement and we wanted a quieter life to get away from the rat race."
What Mr and Mrs Wilmot also enjoy is the Jungle Club. It captures the exotic inspiration that Lucy Lord was so clearly captivated by.
There's bamboo on the bar and plastic palm trees with coconuts within a building that now resembles an old working men's club from years gone by.
"When you come here it's like going back in time," said Mrs Wilmot, which was a comment that Mr Moy expressed particular delight at.
To some it may seem like an insulting take, but for people like Mr and Mrs Wilmot, Miami Beach is everything they miss about how things used to be.
They described it as a community. "We are people who help each other," she said. "Don't get me wrong, we don't live in people's pockets, but we do help out if someone needs something."
The couple seemed frustrated that this attitude towards neighbours seems to have disappeared since the early days of their courtship.
When I told them I was from Lincoln, the reaction was almost as if I had come from "the big city" where people keep their heads down and don't look at or talk to one another.
Skegness also seemed to be a world away from the life people lead here - and they admitted that the lack of big shops in Mablethorpe can make things tricky, particularly for older residents who can't drive.
The stories behind Miami Beach offer snippets into the past lives of Sutton-on-Sea, and the way that people used to live is something that some at the resort are still clinging to.
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