Trina is officially part of the map now.
The Miami rap legend was honored over the weekend with her own co-designated street in Liberty City, where NW 69th Street now carries the name “Still Da Baddest Street.” The tribute took place on March 28 during Miami-Dade Commissioner Keon Hardemon’s “18th Ave Coming to the Jam” block party, a community event built to celebrate the artists, DJs, producers, and cultural figures who helped shape the city’s sound.
Still Da Baddest” is a direct nod to Trina’s catalog and the persona she has carried for decades.

The honor comes out of a broader Miami-Dade effort that was approved last year, when commissioners voted to rename several streets after records and artists tied to the city’s musical history. “Still Da Baddest Street” was among the approved names, alongside others linked to DJ Khaled, Trick Daddy, Uncle Luke, City Girls, and more. The project drew attention for turning Liberty City streets into a public tribute to Miami’s homegrown rap and hip-hop culture.


And Trina’s place in that story is hard to argue with. The Miami rapper broke through in the late ’90s and has long been treated as one of the city’s defining rap voices. Billboard has described her as one of the most consistent rappers of the 2000s and 2010s, while BET honored her with its I Am Hip Hop Award in 2022, recognizing her as a trailblazing figure in the culture.
Her résumé backs that up. Trina’s debut album Da Baddest Bitch was certified Gold by the RIAA, and her 2008 album Still da Baddest debuted at No. 1 on Billboard’s Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums and Top Rap Albums charts.
For Miami, the tribute is another reminder that the city’s rap history did not just happen there. It was built there. And for Trina, “Still Da Baddest Street” feels like the kind of hometown recognition that lands differently when the title has already been yours for years.


