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City | Windermere
Homes For Sale
Among the Lakes
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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.
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