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City of Lake Mary
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AAA Building in
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Heathrow |
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Lake Mary is one of Central
Florida’s hottest growth areas,
thanks in part to the dogged persistence
of Jeno Paulucci, a blustery self-made
millionaire who made his first fortune
selling frozen Chinese food and a second
one selling frozen pizza.
The city today sits at
the epicenter of Florida’s High-Tech
Corridor, which follows I-4 from Tampa
through Seminole County and northeast
to Daytona Beach and Melbourne. Along
the route, government and industry have
joined forces to attract leading-edge
companies in such fields as telecommunications,
medical technology and microelectronics.
In Lake Mary, population
14,000, dozens of such companies have
set up shop in several sprawling business
centers that have combined to create a
Central Florida version of Silicon Valley.
But it all started as
an isolated railroad station known as
Bents, the surname of a local grove owner.
In 1900, industry arrived in Bents when
Planters Manufacturing Company built a
factory to produce starches, dextrins,
farina and tapioca.
The facility closed in
1910, however, and Bents – later
renamed Lake Mary, for the wife of a local
pastor – seemed destined to remain
and out-of-the-way country town.
That was the case for
another half-century, until the construction
of I-4 and a successful campaign by community
boosters to get a Lake Mary interchange
tacked onto the project.
The resulting tracts
of easily accessible land caught the eye
of Paulucci, founder of Chun King. In
the late 1970s he announced plans to build
a luxurious residential development and
business hub called Heathrow.
Few thought the audacious
Paulucci would be successful, and the
project floundered at first. But then
the plainspoken old salesman quieted naysayers
by persuading the American Automobile
Association to relocate from suburban
Washington D.C., to his Heathrow Business
Center.
The AAA coup, at the
time Central Florida’s most important
corporate relocation in decades, jump-started
Heathrow and opened the door for all the
business and residential development that
followed.
Lake Mary officials are
using a $100,000 federal grant to advance
plans to redevelop the old downtown area
to better reflect the city’s prosperous
image. And there are an array of new projects,
such as Colonial Town Park, a 175-acre
mixed-use development featuring shops,
restaurants, movie theaters and apartments
in a village setting.
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