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City | Apopka
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City of Apopka
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Apopka City Hall
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Zellwood Corn Festival
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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.
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