Two days. That’s all it took for Miami Beach’s iconic rainbow crosswalk on Ocean Drive — a symbol of visibility, pride, and resilience — to disappear beneath a layer of asphalt.
After losing its appeal against a Florida state order banning street art, the city watched as workers from the Department of Transportation began tearing up the colorful terrazzo pavers that had once greeted thousands of locals and visitors alike.
For Commissioner Alex Fernandez, it wasn’t just about paint on pavement. “This represented decades of people who endured housing discrimination, expulsion from the military, workplace discrimination, the stigma of HIV and AIDS, the fight for marriage equality — all the hard-won battles that took the LGBTQ community from being marginalized to now being a visible, celebrated part of the community,” he said.

Installed in 2018 by Savino & Miller Design Studio, the Art Deco–inspired design had become a fixture of Miami Beach’s identity — as much about safety as symbolism, cutting traffic accidents by half compared to nearby intersections. But under Governor Ron DeSantis’s administration, the state deemed such expressions “out of hand,” ordering their removal under threat of withdrawing transportation funds.
Critics see this as another blow in a broader campaign against LGBTQIA+ rights in Florida, following bans on gender-affirming care and the “Don’t Say Gay” law silencing classroom discussions on sexuality and identity.
The rainbow crosswalk that once honored the 49 victims of the Pulse Nightclub massacre met the same fate — repainted overnight, then restored by community members, only to be erased again in black and white.
Yet even when erased, the message remains.
Across the Atlantic, in places like Brussels, Berlin, or Lisbon, rainbow crossings still remind us that visibility is a form of love — and defiance. These bright symbols of unity are not just decoration; they’re declarations. They tell every queer person walking home after a long night, or holding hands in daylight, that they belong here.
You may also like
-
Eurovision 2026: the queer bets we’re making for a gloriously chaotic final
Eurovision week is here, the memes are already unhinged, and the 70th edition in Vienna is shaping
-
Belgium slips on the Rainbow Map: why standing still means falling back
Belgium loves to see itself as a queer‑friendly haven. On paper, that image still holds:
-
Flood the Feed: turning your Pride scroll into a wave of queer joy
There’s a good chance your feed has become a battlefield lately. Every time a queer
-
Flash Pride: the Official Afterparty That Keeps Brussels Dancing Until Dawn
If you still have glitter on your cheeks after the march and you’re not ready
-
Served Hot: Queer Future Club Turns Pride Night into a Rave for the Future
Queer Future Club is turning Pride night into a full‑on queer rave. On Saturday 16 May,
