Citrus Tower |
Montverde Adademy |
Clermont Chain-of-Lakes |
Downtown Mount Dora |
Bella Collina Home |
The Citrus Tower,
built in 1956, once drew awestruck tourists to its
observation deck for panoramic views of Lake County’s
sprawling citrus groves. For as far as the eye could
see, there were dark, leafy rows over which a seemingly
infinite number of oranges were sprinkled. When
the season was right and the wind was gently blowing,
the fragrance of orange blossoms could be even more
intoxicating than the view.
The tower-now considered a kitschy relic of a bygone
era-is still there, but the landscape has changed.
Now you’ll see thousands of new homes on the
rolling hills that have always distinguished burgeoning
Lake County from its topographically-challenged
neighbors.
Which isn’t to say that sprawl
has destroyed Lake County’s charm - at least
not yet. There are still groves, woods, barns and
more than 1,400 lakes scattered across 221 square
miles. The county’s unpretentious municipalities
still boast quaint business districts with mom-and-pop
shops.
But like other previously rural
areas in Central Florida, Lake County is struggling
to accommodate growth without compromising its country
credentials. That’s a particular challenge
in south Lake County, which has increasingly become
an attractive suburban alternative for people who
work in more populous Orange and Seminole counties.
The city of Clermont, with a population that recently
topped 12,000, is ground zero for the county’s
housing boom. The stage was set with construction
of the turnpike system’s Western Beltway,
which made a once-daunting Orlando commute quite
manageable.
Clermont is truly at the crossroads
of Florida, located at the intersection of S.R.
50, which runs east and west, and U.S. 27, which
runs north and south. Bordered by Lake Minnehaha
on the south and Lake Minneola on the north, Clermont
is on a chain of 16 lakes connected by the Palatlakaha
River in the Ocklawaha Basin of tributaries of the
St. Johns River.
“The Gem of the Hills,”
as Clermont is sometimes called, is also popular
among triathlon enthusiasts. South Lake Hospital’s
15-acre, all-in-one campus is home to the USA Triathlon
National Training Center, which is designed to meet
the needs of all ages and fitness levels.
Wine enthusiasts may also be familiar
with Clermont through the Lakeridge Winery &
Vineyards, one of only three wineries in Florida.
Located on 35 acres and surrounded by land abundant
with grapevines, the winery offers free tours, tastings,
and retail sales. At capacity, it produces more
than 1,250 cases of wine per day.
Also in south Lake County, small
cities such as Montverde and Minneola have personalities
all their own and are attracting new residents by
offering a balance of seclusion and convenience.
In fact, Montverde, a tiny community
that grew up around a century-old boarding school,
is home to one of the most posh developments in
the region, Bella Collina. As Bella Collina and
other projects are completed, Montverde is projected
to grow 25 percent by 2015.
Although most of its growth has
come in the past decade, south Lake County’s
heritage goes back thousands of years, when Timucuan
Indians called the area home. Reminders of their
presence can be found at more than 1,000 archaeological
sites scattered throughout the county.
Settlers of European descent started
moving into Clermont immediately following the Civil
War. But there was little activity until 1884, when
a landowner named T.J. Hooks sold 100 acres to New
Jersey investors, who in turn formed the Clermont
Improvement Company and began selling lots to other
Northerners. Lake County, carved from Orange and
Sumter counties, was chartered in 1887.
To the north, Mount Dora (population
10,658) is the center of attention and the focus
of development, although Eustis and Umatilla are
also attracting attention.
Mount Dora, the aptly named “New
England of the South,” was founded in 1874,
when homesteaders first discovered the gently sloping
lakeside hills that rise to 184 feet—hardly
a mountain, but a formidable height by Central Florida
standards. The city hugs the shores of 3,600-acre
Lake Dora, named for Dora Ann Drawdy, who homesteaded
two miles south with her husband in 1846.
In 1884 the Lakeside Inn, still
in operation today, was opened for business. The
inn was a catalyst for growth, attracting tourists
from all over the United States, including such
luminaries as President Calvin Coolidge and inventor
Thomas Edison.
Today, downtown Mount Dora contains
dozens of historic buildings housing antique shops,
art galleries, boutiques and restaurants. Tree-shaded
Donnelly Park occupies a full block in the center
of town, inviting picnickers and tennis players
to enjoy its lush surroundings. Within walking distance
is Palm Island Park, adjacent to Gilbert Park, which
boasts one of the most beautiful nature trails in
the state.
Downtown also hosts an annual art
festival as well as numerous antique and craft fairs,
specialty auto shows and historic home tours. The
city has a respected community theater, an art center
and an historical museum.
In Umatilla, population 2,500,
Wood Song and Twin Lakes Reserve will bring 2,150
new homes to the rural expanses surrounding the
sleepy city, which may be the last bastion of old
Lake County.
And at The Villages, a huge retirement
community that also reaches into Sumter and Marion
counties, the population is expected to double to
100,000 people by 2010. Also along the Lake-Sumter
border, developers of Secret Promise and Renaissance
Trails hope to build 14,000 homes over the next
decade.
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