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Apopka:
City of Apopka
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Apopka City Hall |
Zellwood Corn Festival |
Apopka's Foliage Industry |
Wekiva River |
Apopka’s roots, literally
and figuratively, are in agriculture. However,
this booming city of 35,000, located in the
northwest corner of Orange County, now encompasses
some of the region’s most exclusive addresses.
Since 1990, Apopka has more
than doubled its area by annexing some 11,000
acres, much of it previously rural land. This
land grab has often out the city at odds with
Orange County, especially when it comes to protecting
and preserving the fragile Wekiva River basin.
In fact, the city has purchased another 48 acres
to expand its downtown, although a developer
has not yet been selected.
Apopka was settled in the 1840s
and named after the Timucuan Indian word meaning
“big potato” or “potato eating
place.” Ironically, the farms that still
surround the city grow just about everything
but potatoes.
Noted as “The Indoor
Foliage Capital of the World,” Apopka’s
foliage industry is a multimillion-dollar business.
Consequently, downtown boasts a stainless steel
sculpture of a Boston fern instead of the expected
war hero or early pioneer. Cut flowers, blooming
plants, roses and bulbs are also grown in abundance.
But agriculture is rapidly
vanishing as dozens of muck farms, created when
Lake Apopka was diked during World War II, are
purchased and shut down in an effort to restore
the polluted body of water to a pristine state.
And Apopka is going high-tech,
installing a citywide wireless Internet system.
The $2.5 million project is expected to be completed
within a year.
Just west of Apopka is the
agricultural town of Zellwood, home of the annual
Zellwood Corn Festival. The event, held each
May for more than 30 years, draws thousands
to hear country music and enjoy what is widely
regarded as the sweetest corn grown anywhere.
College Park:
College Park |
Princeton Elementary |
College Park Publix |
The Wellesley |
Edgewater Drive
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Retirees so dominated Orlando’s
College Park in the early 1970s that there was
a talk of closing Princeton Elementary, a well-regarded
school that had stood since the neighborhood
was platted in the 1920s.
Today, although the demographics
may be changing, much about this beloved Orlando
neighborhood remains the same. The 80-year-old
commercial district along Edgewater Drive has
always been home to an array of delightful mom-and-pop
shops and eclectic eateries. The streets have
always been quiet and the homes are well kept
and charming.
So protective are College Park
residents of their neighborhood that they banded
together to protest the removal of circa-1950s
sign adorning the local Publix supermarket.
The grocery chain quickly dropped its plans
and restored the sign to its original Eisenhower-age
splendor.
Much of the talk in College
Park these days is over mixed-use condominium,
office and retail developments such as the Wellesley,
a five-story, $48 million project on the corner
of Edgewater and Princeton Avenue, in the heart
of the community’s Mayberryesque main
drag.
Maitland:
Maitland Business Center
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Art Center |
NorthBridge Centre |
Ravinia |
Enzian Theater |
Since the 1960s, Maitland has
been a quintessential bedroom community. Some
of the area’s first suburbs were built
there to attract young families looking for
large lawns and good schools.
In the late 1970s a sprawling
office park called Maitland Center was built
near the I-4 interchange, giving the city a
distinctive business identity as well. The 190-acre
development contains a hotel, 45 office buildings,
and 400 businesses. More than 12,000 people
are employed there.
Another big project that promises
to give Maitland’s somewhat nebulous downtown
district a more cohesive look is Broad Street
Partners’ Ravinia, a seven-story retail
and condominium development.
Also underway is Uptown Maitland
East, a retail and condominium project, and
North Bridge, a commercial office project that
will sit across from Ravinia. Both are being
developed by Naples-based Red Robin Realty.
Meanwhile, Maitland Town Square
has been given new life as well. The original
developer backed out, but The Brossier Company
has stepped in to negotiate with the city on
taking over the project, which would include
a city hall and a public safety complex in addition
to condominiums and retail space. Tentative
plans call for more than 200,000 square feet
of office space, 250,000 square feet of retail
space, 600 residential units, a 150-room hotel,
a movie theater and parks.
And on the south side of downtown,
The Morgan Group plans to build The Village
at Lake Lily, a nine-acre, mixed-use project
encompassing condominiums, apartments and 45,000
square feet of retail space.
Clearly, Maitland can only
be described as a thoroughly modern place. Yet
it has actually been in existence longer than
most Central Florida communities.
I was established in 1838 as
Fort Maitland, named in honor of Capt. William
S. Maitland, a hero of the Second Seminole War.
In 1880, the railroad from Sanford arrived,
sparking a tourism boom that lasted until freezes
in the 1890s disenchanted visitors.
In 1937 sculptor Andr Smith founded the
Mayan themed Art Center in Maitland, which was
originally intended to be a compound where artists
could live and work. The center, now listed
on the National Register of Historic Place,
feature an open-air chapel that has become a
popular location for weddings.
Today Maitland is home to the
Enzian Theater, the region’s only art-house
cinema and the setting for the annual Florida
Film Festival. And two large art festivals are
held in Maitland: one in October, sponsored
by the Maitland Rotary Club, and one in April,
sponsored by the Maitland/South Seminole Chamber
of Commerce.
The Florida Audubon Society
was founded in Maitland, and its headquarters,
including the bird hospital, remain on Lake
Sybellia.
Ocoee:
The Center of Good Living |
West Oaks Mall |
Founder's Day Festival |
Starke Lake |
Ocoee High School |
Ocoee remained an isolated
citrus town isolated around Starke Lake until
the 1980s. Now, with 29,000+ residents, it has
edged ahead of Winter Park to become the third-largest
city in Orange County, behind Orlando and Apopka.
The transformation began two
decades ago, when devastating freezes destroyed
thousands of acres of citrus trees and opened
West Orange and south lake counties for development.
Today, Ocoee boasts a 1-million-square-foot
regional mall and at least two dozen new subdivisions
with home is all price ranges.
Ocoee’s beginnings were
inauspicious. In the mid-1850s a physician named
J.D. Starke led a group of slaves into the area
and established a camp along the western shores
of the lake that now bears his name. Capt. Bluford
Sims, who hailed from Ocoee, Tennessee arrived
in 1861 and bought 50 acres from Starke. He
then platted what would become downtown Ocoee.
Through the years, Ocoee developed
into a thriving citrus-producing center. Today,
however, housing is the city’s hottest
commodity. The Florida Turnpike, the East-West
Expressway and a new Western Beltway all pass
through the city, meaning once-remote downtown
Orlando is now just a 15-minute commute.
Despite its growth, Ocoee has
managed to preserve its past. The annual Fouders
Day celebration, for example, starts with a
parade ands ends with fireworks. And those who
want to soak up a little more local color may
tour the Withers-Maguire House, once a winter
refuge for a Confederate general and now a museum.
Also of interest is the is
the circa-1890 Ocoee Christian Church, with
its gothic architecture and Belgian-made stained
glass windows, as well as several vintage commercial
buildings in the original downtown are.
New residential development
is focused on the northwest side, along the
S.R. 429 corridor. A new community center and
senior center are planned for the area, while
a new high school, appropriately named Ocoee
High School, opened in 2006.
Downtown Orlando:
Lake Eola - Downtown |
Downtown Arena Concept |
Florida Citrus Bowl |
Hue in Thornton Park |
Florida Hospital Concept
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During the building frenzy
in 2005, scarcely a week passed without another
major condominium project being announced for
once-sleepy downtown Orlando. Sometimes, those
same developments would announce quick sellouts
as buyers swooped in to drop down deposits.
Now, reality has taken hold
and the pace has slowed. Yet, despite a softening
market, more than 30 projects are either planned,
under construction or recently finished. That
means roughly 7,000 condominium units are in
the pipeline, along with more than 1 million
square feet of office space.
And on the fringes of downtown,
huge expansions at Florida Hospital and Orlando
Regional Medical Center are under way, while
Florida A&M University’s law school
and a new federal courthouse were completed
in 2006.
Along Central Boulevard, at
the bustling mixed-use complex known as Thornton
Park Central, the day begins when gourmet-trendy
Central City Market opens for breakfast.
Next door, Shari Sushi Lounge
attracts a glittery lunch and evening crowd,
while the spacious Urban Think! Bookstore offers
in-the-know readers a gallery-bistro hangout.
And at the corner, trendy Hue
remains one of the hottest dining spots in town,
especially during its monthly “Disco Brunches,”
when the restaurant’s self-serve Bloody
Mary bar draws long lines and the retro sounds
of Donna Summer fill the street.
And all that barely covers
just one neighborhood in Orlando’s dynamic
downtown corridor.
Of course, there are residential
options downtown aside from new condominiums.
The charming old neighborhoods
ringing the city have been gentrifying since
the late 1980s. While Thornton Park is perhaps
the highest-profile example, property values
are also soaring in the city’s other designated
historic districts, including Lake Eola Heights,
Lake Lawsona, Lake Cherokee and Lake Copeland.
As builders build and buyers
buy, city officials are looking for ways to
boost downtown arts and entertainment options
while enhancing pedestrian-friendly transportation
systems and attracting a greater variety of
businesses.
A huge step in that direction
was taken in September 2006, when city and county
leader announced a deal that would bring downtown
a new arena for the NBA’s Orlando Magic,
a state-of-the-art performing arts center and
a facelift for the Citrus Bowl, the city’s
70-year-old football stadium. The three buildings
with a combined price tag of more than $1 billion
would be financed by a combination of tax dollars
and private donations.
Southeast Orlando:
UCF |
Orlando International |
Lake Nona |
Florida Hospital East |
Research Park |
At roughly 100 square miles,
the region generally referred to as southeast
Orlando encompasses the University of Central
Florida, Orlando International Airport and an
array of master planned communities, as well
as stretches of pastureland, piney forests and
wetlands abutting the Econlockhatchee River.
But the remaining rural areas
are rapidly vanishing as the pace of growth
accelerates. Today the southeast sector, which
includes portions of the city of Orlando as
well as unincorporated Orange County, is home
to more than 200,000 people, with more arriving
every day.
With this explosive growth,
however, have come challenges. Chief among them:
building enough roads, schools and healthcare
facilities to keep pace. And although some developers
are working with local governments to expand
roads and construct new schools, there is also
a new movement afoot to form a new municipality
in the county’s unincorporated eastern
region.
The southeast sector was the
fastest growing part of Orange County between
1990 and 2000. In fact, according to the U.S.
Census Bureau, the area’s population grew
by more than 81 percent, to 164,000, during
the decade. At more than 200,000 people and
roughly 65,000 households, southeast Orlando
today boasts a larger population than the city
proper.
Much of the growth has come
in the form of large, master-planned communities
that contain a mixture of single-family and
multifamily homes clustered around retail and
commercial development.
Nestled amid a transportation
network that includes the Beachline Expressway,
the Central Florida GreeneWay, and the East-West
Expressway, southeast Orlando’s growth
should be no surprise.
The location factor is enhanced
by the area’s environmental and recreational
offerings, beginning with the Econ River and
the Hall Scott Regional Preserve and Park. Then
there is the area’s varied employment
base, encompassing everything from higher education
and defense contractors to the simulation industry
and healthcare.
Top southeast Orlando employers
include UCF, Central Florida Research Park,
Siemens Westinghouse Power Corp., Lockheed Martin,
Florida Hospital East Orlando, Orlando International
Airport and Waterford Lakes Town Center.
Tavistock Group, the developer
of upscale Lake Nona, has been particularly
aggressive in promoting commercial and job growth
in southeast Orlando.
Those efforts were bolstered
in March 2006 when the state university system’s
board of governors approved UCF’s plans
for a new medical school. Now the university
can break ground on its Burnett College of Biomedical
Sciences, which will rise on land donated by
Tavistock.
In addition, the Burnham Institute,
a California-based medical research lab, has
announced plans to locate a satellite facility
at Lake Nona. The project is expected to generate
hundreds of high-paying jobs.
Tying much of the growth together
will be Innovation Way, a 5.5 mile stretch of
roadway that will run from Avalon Park Boulevard
and the UCF area to the Beachline and the entrance
to ICP. The long-term vision is the creation
of a high-tech corridor along which homes and
businesses would cluster.
The first leg of Innovation
Way is expected to be completed in 1-2 years,
although plans call for it to eventually be
extended further southwest, past the Beachline,
to the GreeneWay and Narcoossee Road, then straight
into Orlando International Airport.
Windermere:
Among the Lakes
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Windermere Town Hall |
Isleworth Golf Community |
Keene's Pointe |
Isleworth Estate |
Nestled among the spring-fed
Butler Chain of Lakes, the cozy Town of Windermere,
population 2,300, has emerged as the region’s
new-money address of choice.
With Lake Butler on the west,
Lake Down on the east and Lake Bessie on the
southeast, Windermere is a verdant peninsula
where 317 of 837 homes are on the water. Windermere,
or at least the area surrounding it, is also
home to some of Central Florida’s most
upscale new communities.
But although they advertise
Windermere addresses, most of these ritzy developments
aren’t technically in Windermere, much
to the chagrin of some locals who object to
the alleged misappropriation of the town’s
proud name.
In fact, Windermere itself
is just is just 689 acres and consists largely
of a laid-back retail district with a few mom-and-pop
stores with a scattering of older homes lining
sandy streets. Those streets remain unpaved
to discourage traffic and prevent runoff from
damaging the Butler Chain, which consists of
eight pristine lakes connected by a canal system.
The lakes attracted one of
Windermere’s first investors, Joseph Hill
Scott. Scott’s son, Stanley, homesteaded
the property and supposedly named it after Lake
Windermere in England.
The railroad connected Windermere
and Kissimmee in 1889, but freezes in 1894 and
1895 destroyed the town’s citrus industry.
Little changed until 1910, when a pair of Ohio
investors named D.H. Johnson and J. Calvin Palmer
bought all the land they could piece together
and formed the Windermere Improvement Company
for the purpose of developing it.
The pair promoted “Beautiful
Lakes of Pure Spring Water” and aimed
their marketing at moneyed Northerners.
Although few who live here
want to see the town change significantly, Windermere
city officials are making concessions to the
growth surrounding it. In 2006 the town completed
a $2.5 million public works project –
the largest in its history – to revamp
the downtown area, bricking three blocks of
Main and Frontage streets, expanding parking
lots, replacing stop signs with roundabouts
and generally upgrading its appearance.
And developer Kevin Azzouz,
who in 2003 purchased much of the property in
the business district, has talked about creating
a town center, much to the consternation of
those who like downtown’s unpretentious
combination of shabby and chic. In fact, at
this writing, Azzouz and city officials remain
at odds over the proposed project.
Winter Garden:
Downtown - Plant Street
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Lake Apopka |
Heritage Museum |
West Orange Trail |
Winter Garden Village
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It was 1857 when Becky Roper
Stafford’s great-great-grandfather first
glimpsed at Lake Apopka. W.C. Roper was riding
through the backwoods of west Orange County
on horseback, seeking a place to build a home
for his family waiting back in Merriwether County,
GA.
Roper bought 600 acres along
the shore, between present-day Winter Garden
and Oakland, and returned a year later with
his wife and 10 children. The ambitious settler
operated a sawmill, gristmill, sugar mill and
cotton gin. Later he built a tannery for making
shoes, and served as Orange County’s superintendent
of schools from 1873 to 1877.
Fast-forward to the 1920s,
when Roper’s son Frank planted the area’s
first orange trees, making the humble beginnings
of an industry that would sustain and define
Winter Garden, which had been incorporated in
1903, for the next six decades.
Fast-forward again to the 1980s,
when devastating freezes destroyed thousands
of acres of citrus. Roper Growers Cooperative,
Heller Brothers and Louis Dreyfus Citrus eventually
recovered. But as growers regrouped or retreated,
once-bustling downtown Winter Garden became
a virtual ghost town.
Concurrently, developers began
buying up decimated groves for new homes, creating
new subdivisions seemingly overnight. But most
of the residential growth, and the retail growth
that followed, was outside the city, which made
Winter Garden proper even more of an anachronism.
Then came a brilliant project
called Rails to Trails, through which abandoned
rail beds across the country were converted
into hiking and biking trails.
The popular West Orange Trail
passes directly through Winter Garden, thus
converting the all-but-forgotten city into an
oasis for thousands of ready-to-spend strollers.
In fact, city officials estimate that the trail
is responsible for generating about 50,000 downtown
visitors per month.
And most are charmed by what
they see. In 2001 the tired downtown district
underwent a facelift. Brick streets were restored,
old buildings were remodeled, and Centennial
Fountain, saluting the city’s citrus-growing
heritage, was constructed.
And locals proudly note that
Winter Garden has two historical museums open
seven days a week. There’s the Central
Florida Railroad Museum and the Heritage Museum,
both housed in restored depots. History buffs
may also stroll around the city and view such
landmarks as the 1860s-era Beulah Baptist Church.
And redevelopment is on a roll:
Stafford is hard at work with the Winter Garden
Heritage Foundation to renovate to historic
Garden Theater on Plant Street, which will become
a 300-sear performing arts center.
While the old downtown is re-emerging
as a force to be reckoned with, several miles
south a 1.15-million-square-foot open-air mall
called Winter Garden Village at Fowler Groves
is set to open soon. More than 40 new home communities
are currently under way within Winter Garden’s
city limits. And the city plans to annex a large
tract of mostly undeveloped land from its western
boundary south of Florida’s Turnpike to
the Lake County line. The tract contains 1,300
developable acres that could eventually contain
3,600 homes.
To the south of downtown, along
C.R. 535 and S.R. 545, communities totaling
25,000 homes are expected to be built where
citrus groves once flourished.
The biggest of the new developments
is Horizon West, a 38,000-acre master-planned
community that has been in the planning stages
for a decade. At buildout, its two villages
– Bridgewater and Lakeside – will
contain nearly 18,000 homes.
Winter Park:
Park Avenue - Downtown |
Rollins College |
Sidewalk Art Festival |
Morse Art Museum |
Scenic Boat Tour |
Once a haven for artists, writers
and some of the most influential families in
the country, Winter Park was promoted in the
late 1800s as a refuge for “the cultured
and wealthy.” Those early boosters would
almost certainly be pleased to see how it all
turned out.
Today, the city is home to
70 parks and nearly as many oak trees (20,000)
as residents (24,090). Its eight square miles
encompasses lovely old homes, an upscale shopping
district, a prestigious liberal arts college,
a plethora of galleries and museums and street
signs that admonish motorists to “drive
with extraordinary care.”
The heart of Winter Park is
Park Avenue, stretching 10 blocks and boasting
more than 100 shops, from upscale national retailers
to one-of-a-kind boutiques. The Avenue, as locals
call it, is a European-inspired thoroughfare
featuring hidden courtyards, sidewalk cafés
and a charming Central Park facing the storefronts.
In addition, the downtown shopping
district has begun to spread west on New England
Avenue as developer Dan Bellows builds posh
apartments and retail stores in previously blighted
areas.
On the south end of Park Avenue
is the Charles Hosmer Morse Museum of American
Art, showcasing the world’s largest collection
of Tiffany glass. Each Christmas a set of priceless,
holiday-themed Tiffany windows are moved to
Central Park, where they are displayed as part
of the city’s seasonal festivities.
Several blocks farther west
is Winter Park Village, a red-hot retail and
entertainment center on U.S. 17-92. New condominiums
are available in the Village, which attracts
a generally younger crowd than Park Avenue and
has emerged as one of Central Florida’s
most popular see-and-be-seen destinations.
Year-round the city is alive
with festivals and special events, from the
Sidewalk Art Festival, drawing more than 250,000
guests each spring, to the Exotic Car Show and
assorted celebrations in Central Park.
On the shores of Lake Virginia,
beautiful Rollins College, the oldest institution
of higher education in Florida and one of the
top-rated private liberal arts colleges in the
country, is home to the Cornell Fine Arts Museum
and the internationally renowned Bach Festival
Choir.
Incongruous as it may sound,
Winter Park also hosts a Saturday morning farmers’
market, where visitors can buy everything from
fresh produce to houseplants and crafts.
High-end condos account for
most new residential construction in Winter
Park. More than 500 apartments, condos and hotel
rooms are either under construction or moving
through the approval process.
To see Winter Park as it should
be seen, shell out five bucks and take a guided
tour along the Winter Park Chain of Lakes. Scenic
Boat Tours, headquartered at Dinky Dock near
Rollins College, has been cruising these canals
since 1938, offering regular folks a chance
to peek into the backyards of the rich and occasionally
famous.
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