Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Going green in the Sunshine State

Southwest Florida’s planned developmen­t will be nation’s first solar-powered town

- DIANE DANIEL

Along a dirt road leading into Florida’s past, I stopped to marvel at its future, or at least one vision of it. I was headed to Babcock Ranch EcoTours, where visitors pay to tour a working ranch and swampy backwoods on a state-owned preserve, when I pulled over to peer through a chain-link fence onto the edge of a spectacula­r sea of solar panels — 343,000 to be exact, stretching across some 440 acres.

While the 75-megawatt facility owned by Florida Power & Light attracts no fanfare here, a few miles down State Road 31 its primary customer, Babcock Ranch, has been making headlines for a while. The master-planned developmen­t in southwest Florida, between Punta Gorda and Fort Myers, touts itself as the nation’s first solar-powered town. It welcomed its first residents in January and hopes to reach 500 by the end of the year. Eventually, some 50,000 people are expected to live in its neighborho­ods, scattered around a Town Center and commercial district.

Babcock Ranch’s official grand opening is March 10, nearly a year after its “soft opening,” which drew upward of 20,000 visitors. The curious can stop by anytime to visit the informatio­n center, tour model homes and even hitch a ride on a self-driving shuttle, which will eventually be part of what is being hailed as the nation’s first autonomous shuttle network.

On a springlike day in late December, I checked out the ranch and the town, which felt a little like hopping from Walt Disney World’s Magic Kingdom Jungle Cruise over to Epcot’s Project Tomorrow. It might be tempting to pit the land against the town in a battle of preservati­on vs. developmen­t, but the story is not so simple. For one thing, the land isn’t pristine. Babcock Ranch was owned by Edward Babcock, a lumber baron and former Pittsburgh mayor who bought the spread in 1914. In the 1930s, Edward’s son, Fred, added vegetable farming and an earlier incarnatio­n of swamp tours.

In 2005, Fred’s heirs, who died in 1997, sold their 91,000 acres to Florida developer Syd Kitson, who then sold off 73,000 acres of the land to the state in a $350 million transactio­n heralded at the time as Florida’s biggest-ever preservati­on deal.

The result was a parcel of conservati­on land now called Babcock Ranch Preserve, where the tours are held. In 2016, the state turned over much of the land management to Tarpon Blue, a private cattle company, and announced plans to increase recreation­al offerings. For now, there is the swamp tour — a 1.5- mile walking trail and 16 miles of equestrian trails.

I started my visit at the preserve, which includes a gift shop and rustic restaurant, and hopped aboard a “swamp buggy” (a stripped-down school bus in camouflage paint) to explore some of Florida’s flora and fauna. A few dozen tourists, from kids to grandparen­ts, bounced along dirt roads and forest floors, and splashed through swamps as our guide and driver, Terry Covert, expertly spotted wildlife among the scrub palmettos, slash pines

and sabal palms and broomsedge.

We had traveled only for a couple of minutes before the first shriek-worthy sighting.

“Look at those little alligator hatchlings,” Covert said, stopping the bus so we could peer excitedly out the open windows.

A congregati­on of adorable baby gators piled atop one another in the sun along a swampy area, no doubt with an alert mother nearby.

“We remember those from last year,” said my seat neighbor Robert Montgomery of nearby North Port. Montgomery said he brings all his visitors here; on that day, he hosted friends from Michigan.

“I love it here because this is as close to the original Florida as you can get, at least from my childhood,” Montgomery, 64, said. “I used to spend all my time in the woods.”

As we drove deeper into the ranch, Covert pointed out a bevy of birds, including sandhill cranes, egrets, anhingas, various herons and a red-shouldered hawk. More screams of delight erupted as a pack of feral pigs improbably ran toward the bus.

“Good morning, babies!” Covert hollered while tossing handfuls of corn feed out the open door, which explained their interest in us. Later, some “cracker cattle,” a historic breed, occasional­ly joined the noshing. (The ranch mostly raises Brahman, a popular beef cattle breed.)

At one point, we were let out to walk a short boardwalk over a swamp dotted with cypress trees and knees leading to an enclosure holding a Florida panther. Covert told us how a wild female panther and two kittens recently had been sighted on the ranch — a positive sign for the endangered species.

Back on the bus, we passed a swampy lake teeming with gators sliding across the surface and sunning on the shores, the largest group I’d seen outside of the Everglades.

It hadn’t occurred to me that I’d also see gators at Babcock Ranch, the town, but a couple of hours later, walking around Sunset Lake near the main entrance, I spotted a few in the water. I also saw herons, egrets and sandhill cranes, though constructi­on cranes and the beep beep beep of equipment backing up are just as noticeable for now. Ultimately, half the project’s 18,000 acres will be reserved for parks, wetlands and lakes.

Babcock Ranch is very much in its infancy, and has that sparse, new-developmen­t look. The autonomous shuttle, designed by the transit company Transdev, hadn’t yet launched, so I missed out on that fun, but I did visit the Town Center, called Founder’s Square. That houses a cluster of commerce, including an outdoors outfitter, upscale general store and cafe, icecream shop and Table & Tap, a farm-to-table restaurant situated on the shore of 268-acre Lake Babcock, as well as a waterfront park with band shell. A health and wellness center is scheduled to open in March.

Visitors can stop by the Discovery Center, a hybrid showroom and solar-environmen­tal center filled with displays by developer Kitson & Partners and Florida Power & Light. Throughout the day, “town ambassador­s” give touch-screen presentati­ons hawking the developmen­t and its rollout of houses and businesses. Visitors also can check out solar and community kiosks on their own.

Houses start in the low $220,000s and go much higher. Lower-priced townhouses, condos and even apartments are in plans. I popped into a couple of luxury model homes, whose builders must meet the minimum level of Florida Green Building Coa- lition standards. Amenities in the model homes were pretty basic, but Kitson is also adding green and futuristic touches, including high-speed fiber optic cable to every house; undergroun­d power lines; native vegetation; sustainabl­e water management; a bike- share system; community garden (which the restaurant has already put into good use); and a growing network of bike paths and walking trails. The townsquare area is dotted with lime-green “solar trees” that capture and transmit energy.

The day I visited, a father and his two sons, who live in nearby Fort Myers Shores, were using the bike- share and trails. The children attend school at the Babcock Neighborho­od School, a charter school that opened last fall on the square. Even though school was out for the holidays, the three were here to cycle a 1.75-mile path around Sunset Lake. The boys, Gunnar and Magnus Johansson, ages 12 and 11 respective­ly, were used to talking to visitors, they said.

“People are always coming to see it here and they ask about the area and the school and what it’s like,” Magnus said. The school, which eventually will expand to 12th grade, offers an environmen­tal curriculum. Last year, the boys were on the winning team of a system-wide solar cook-off contest.

After spending a day at both Babcock Ranches, I was curious to know what conservati­on photograph­er Carlton Ward Jr. thought of the arrangemen­t. Ward comes from a long line of Florida ranchers and has spent countless hours at Babcock Ranch Preserve for a National Geographic project to use trap cameras to document the presence of panthers.

Ward called the arrangemen­t positive in the long run, a setup that can aid conservati­on amid the inevitable developmen­t.

“Babcock Ranch is really a tale of two Floridas,” he told me. “There’s the speculativ­e side of ‘build it and they will come’ and there’s the side still allowing for ranching and protecting the wild part of the state.”

In this case, they seem to be working together, and that’s progress.

 ?? The Washington Post/SELINA KOK ?? Outdoor seating at the Table & Tap restaurant, a farm-to-table restaurant in Babcock Ranch, offers views of the 268-acre Lake Babcock.
The Washington Post/SELINA KOK Outdoor seating at the Table & Tap restaurant, a farm-to-table restaurant in Babcock Ranch, offers views of the 268-acre Lake Babcock.
 ?? The Washington Post/SELINA KOK ?? A cyclist tours the 1.75-mile track around Sunset Lake at Babcock Ranch in southwest Florida. A growing web of bike and walking trails is spreading around the new, environmen­tally friendly community.
The Washington Post/SELINA KOK A cyclist tours the 1.75-mile track around Sunset Lake at Babcock Ranch in southwest Florida. A growing web of bike and walking trails is spreading around the new, environmen­tally friendly community.
 ?? The Washington Post/SELINA KOK ?? An alligator suns itself near the water. Gators and other Florida wildlife are frequently spotted at Babcock Ranch in southwest Florida.
The Washington Post/SELINA KOK An alligator suns itself near the water. Gators and other Florida wildlife are frequently spotted at Babcock Ranch in southwest Florida.
 ?? The Washington Post/SELINA KOK ?? Model homes line the streets in Babcock Ranch. Located in southwest Florida, the town touts itself as the nation’s first solar-powered town.
The Washington Post/SELINA KOK Model homes line the streets in Babcock Ranch. Located in southwest Florida, the town touts itself as the nation’s first solar-powered town.
 ?? The Washington Post/SELINA KOK ?? The Babcock Ranch Eco-Tours swamp buggy drives past cypress trees, in search of plants and animals including scrub palmettos and feral pigs.
The Washington Post/SELINA KOK The Babcock Ranch Eco-Tours swamp buggy drives past cypress trees, in search of plants and animals including scrub palmettos and feral pigs.

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