Landing Point · US United States
| Cable | Status |
|---|---|
| ARCOS | Active |
| MANTA | Planned |
North Miami Beach is a city in Miami-Dade County, Florida, situated within the Miami metropolitan area of South Florida. As a submarine cable landing point, it connects the continental United States to a broad arc of Caribbean and Latin American nations. Two submarine cables land at North Miami Beach, linking it to destinations across the Caribbean basin, Central America, and the northern coast of South America.
The two cables landing here serve distinct generations of connectivity in the region. ARCOS, one of the earlier cables at this site, established a multi-country Caribbean and Central American corridor at the turn of the millennium. The forthcoming MANTA cable, scheduled for readiness in 2028, extends that reach further along the Pacific side of the Americas by connecting to Colombia, Mexico, and Panama. Together, these cables make North Miami Beach a landing point oriented primarily toward Caribbean, Central American, and northern South American connectivity.
ARCOS is a submarine cable system measuring 8,704 km in length, with a ready-for-service date of 2001. In addition to North Miami Beach, ARCOS connects the Bahamas, Belize, Colombia, Costa Rica, Curaçao, and the Dominican Republic, forming a ring-like network across the Caribbean Sea and along the Central American coastline. It represents one of the principal cable links from South Florida into the Caribbean and Central American subregion.
MANTA is a submarine cable system measuring 5,600 km in length, with a projected ready-for-service date of 2028 and currently in draft status. Beyond North Miami Beach, MANTA connects Colombia, Mexico, Panama, and the United States, indicating that the cable serves multiple U.S. landing points. MANTA extends North Miami Beach's reach into the Pacific-facing portions of Latin America, complementing the Caribbean-focused routing of ARCOS.
Within the United States, North Miami Beach hosts 2 submarine cables, placing it among the lower end of U.S. landing points by cable count. Nearby Boca Raton, FL hosts 8 cables, and other major U.S. landing hubs such as San Juan, PR, Hermosa Beach, CA, Kapolei, HI, and Myrtle Beach, SC each host between 5 and 8 cables. North Miami Beach serves a more focused routing role compared to these denser hubs, concentrating specifically on Caribbean and Latin American corridors.
North Miami Beach functions as a two-cable landing point, supporting connectivity from South Florida toward the Caribbean, Central America, and northern South America. ARCOS provides an established multi-country Caribbean link active since 2001, while MANTA, upon completion in 2028, will add a newer route toward Mexico, Panama, and Colombia. The combination means this landing point serves both legacy and next-generation infrastructure within overlapping but distinct geographic corridors.
In the broader U.S. submarine cable graph, North Miami Beach occupies a narrowly specialized position: rather than aggregating traffic from many directions, it anchors a focused set of southward routes connecting the Florida coastline to the Caribbean and Latin American regions.
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