|
City
Website | County
Website | County
Appraiser | Wikipedia
County | Wikipedia
City | Maitland Homes
For Sale
Maitland Business Center
|
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.
|