Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

How boat show has evolved

Early organizers wouldn’t recognize today’s massive citywide event.

- By Ron Hurtibise South Florida Sun Sentinel

After watching Miami and New York City stage their own boat shows in the first half of the 20th century, Fort Lauderdale’s Downtown Kiwanis Club decided to have one too, with an added emphasis on fishing.

And so, the first Boat and Sports Show was held from Feb. 5 to 7, 1954, at the National Guard Armory, with proceeds benefiting the Downtown Kiwanis Club’s underprivi­leged children’s fund, according to an account in the Fort Lauderdale News, the predecesso­r to the South Florida Sun Sentinel.

From those humble beginnings evolved the Fort Lauderdale Internatio­nal Boat Show, a massive citywide celebratio­n of all things boating — and some things not — that opened Wednesday throughout seven locations in the city.

Repeat attendees may not notice much difference compared with last year. The scene is centered around big, mostly bright white boats, from the priciest yachts to the smallest inflatable skiffs, jammed hull-to-hull at the Greater Fort Lauderdale/Broward County Convention Center and six marinas lining the Intracoast­al Waterway.

Stand just about anywhere amid the exhibit tents, pop-up restaurant­s and bars, watercraft lineups, and parts and accessorie­s displays, and you can easily forget where you are. The show is huge: 3 million square feet of exhibit space, 6 miles of floating docks, 1,200 exhibitors and 1,500 boats, according to estimates from the show’s owner, Marine Industries Associatio­n of South Florida, and its promoter, Informa U.S. Boat Shows.

While this year’s event is expected to attract more than 110,000 visitors from at least 52 countries — generating $857 million in economic activity — that first show in 1954 attracted just 5,000 to 10,000 visitors. Still, that must have been enough to convince organizers they were on to a good idea.

The first show exhibited “cabin cruisers, sport fishing craft, outboard motors, fishing gear and a variety of other marine equipment,” according to a 1954 story in the Fort Lauderdale News.

The show moved to the War Memorial Auditorium the following year and became known as the Kiwanis Boat Show.

The Marine Industries Associatio­n of Broward County took over ownership of the show in 1960. The organizati­on, now called The Marine Industries Associatio­n of South Florida, still owns the show.

In 1968, the largest boat on display was 53 feet, according to a timeline created by the boat show’s promoters.

In 1972, the boat show

moved inside the Port Everglades Passenger Terminal complex, which would be logistical­ly difficult if not impossible today amid the post-Sept. 11 security requiremen­ts at the port.

The Bahia Mar Yachting Center hosted its first show in 1976 — and that was also the first year that the name “Fort Lauderdale Internatio­nal Boat Show” appears in the archives of the Fort Lauderdale News.

By 1988, Bahia Mar began accommodat­ing larger vessels. Expansion to the then newly built convention center took place in 1991, and 200-foot yachts were docking by 1996.

Hector Medina’s associatio­n with the show goes back almost that far. Medina, a senior account executive for The Loomis Co., a Fort Lauderdale-based property and casualty insurance agency, said he’s been coming to the show with the company for 23 years.

The company doesn’t sell many policies during the show, but the contacts it makes lead to 20 to 30 new policies a year, making attendance well worthwhile, he said.

Medina said the most notable changes through the years has been a broadening of exhibits beyond strictly marine-related goods and services.

“Today, you’ve got Tshirts and magazines, food, music, things for families to do. And it’s a lot bigger,” he said.

In the exhibit tents, vendors promote sunglasses and knife sets, and business owner Clara Syphrit sells sheer lacy cover-up dresses meant for women to wear over their swimwear.

Syphrit said she began designing and manufactur­ing the dresses three years ago specifical­ly to sell at the boat show because her husband was already selling boating hats at the show.

A few feet away, marine artist and conservati­onist Guy Harvey stood at his booth, greeting customers and promoting his iconic line of marine-themed apparel. “We started with fish art on T-shirts at the show in 1986,” and he has exhibited for 33 straight years since, he said. “I’m here all five days. I like to meet the people.”

This year marks his return as the show’s featured artist — he created the program cover and official promotiona­l poster — after a 10-year absence from the gig. Prior to the absence, he was the official artist for 17 years.

The boat show has been critical to his success, he said, in boosting the visibility of his apparel line through the years, not only to retail customers but to distributo­rs, licensees and manufactur­ers.

In the past several years, the show has also become a meeting hub for marine researcher­s from South Florida’s major universiti­es — Nova Southeaste­rn, University of South Florida, Florida Atlantic and University of Miami — which Harvey cares deeply about.

He said he’s enjoyed watching the show grow in number and range of vessels and exhibits, “whether you’re a boat manufactur­er or accessorie­s guy — I’m definitely an accessorie­s guy.”

The boat show is a perfect fit for the Guy Harvey line, he said: “Our brand’s home is Fort Lauderdale. And this is like our home show. I wouldn’t miss this for the world.”

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 ?? MIKE STOCKER/SUN SENTINEL ?? Crowds showed up early for the first day of the 59th Fort Lauderdale Internatio­nal Boat Show.
MIKE STOCKER/SUN SENTINEL Crowds showed up early for the first day of the 59th Fort Lauderdale Internatio­nal Boat Show.
 ?? MIKE STOCKER/FORT LAUDERDALE SUN SENTINEL ??
MIKE STOCKER/FORT LAUDERDALE SUN SENTINEL

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