Orlando Sentinel (Sunday)

Some residents worry about loss of Celebratio­n’s charm

- By Trevor Fraser

CELEBRATIO­N — For a chilly Monday during a pandemic, foot traffic in Celebratio­n’s Town Center is pretty brisk. Most of the tables at the Cornerstor­e Deli & Market on Market Street are full of people eating and discussing their plans for the day.

“It’s a popular town for tourists to come,” says

Grace Pistilli, a manager since Cornerston­e opened in 2020. “The proximity to Disney is amazing. But we still get our locals, too.”

Celebratio­n, the Osceola County master-planned community built by Disney, was conceived of for scenes such as this: couples strolling the boardwalk around Lake Rianhard, workers coming to the Town Center

on their lunch breaks. It’s a vision of bygone communitie­s that many Americans wouldn’t recognize.

“I love the town,” Pistilli says, a resident since 2011. “I love the walking-distance restaurant­s at our fingertips. Shopping, I think I own every sweatshirt color that they have.”

More than 25 years after its opening, Celebratio­n has kept its crime rate low and its property values high. But residents say they are feeling encroachme­nt from curious tourists, other Osceola residents and developmen­t along the nearby tourist strip of U.S. Highway 192.

‘That was a lie’

The mythical history of Celebratio­n goes something like this: When he conceived of Disney World, Walt Disney wanted to include a utopian town, where 20,000 people would “live, work and play,” according to a film presentati­on Disney made to sell the state on the idea. Market forces put plans on hold and the Experiment­al Prototype City of Tomorrow eventually became Epcot.

The story’s happy ending is that the developmen­t plans were revived in the 1990s, and Celebratio­n became the realizatio­n of Walt’s dream.

“They didn’t want a city,” said Richard Foglesong, author of “Married to the Mouse” about the creation of Disney World. “I can say that with great confidence. That was a lie.”

Foglesong turned up a document, drawn up by a lawyer and edited by Walt himself, that rejected permanent residents. Disney’s concern was that residents would eventually gain voting control of the entire resort property.

But Disney did want the powers of a town and had to convince the Legislatur­e to grant it.

“In order to exercise planning and zoning authority, only a municipal government could do that,” Foglesong said. That meant convincing the state they were building a city. “They had to say something they never intended to do.”

A sense of place

The real origins of Celebratio­n, Foglesong said, came in the early 1980s. Oil tycoons the Bass Brothers, the largest Disney shareholde­rs, were looking to get into land developmen­t, and Disney’s holdings in Osceola were sitting fallow.

New CEO Michael Eisner saw this as an opportunit­y to showcase an emerging theory of city planning called New Urbanism. “He was a fan of cutting-edge architectu­re,” Foglesong said.

New Urbanism was created by city planners to get away from the automobile-centric subdivisio­ns of post-war America. It focuses on pedestrian-oriented developmen­t, with central commercial districts and a mix of housing types from apartments and townhomes to larger single-family homes.

Disney brought in New York architect Robert A.M. Stern for the design, and created The Celebratio­n Company to manage the building of the community.

Another principle of New Urbanism is a uniformity of design, making each building look related to those around it. To that end, Celebratio­n offered a preset selection of home styles for builders and buyers to choose from: Classical, Coastal, Colonial Revival, Craftsman, French, Mediterran­ean and Victorian.

Instead of big yards around sprawling ranch houses, homes were built close to each other and the sidewalk, with an emphasis on front porches.

“Life revolved around what was going on in this community,” said longtime resident Jim Siegel. “As people were walking around in the day … they’d see people sitting on their porches and stop and chat. The pace of life at that time was pretty slow.”

The developers also dictated the types of landscapin­g, with a focus on “Florida Friendly” plants. That and the architectu­ral uniformity engender what New Urbanists call a “sense of place,” making Celebratio­n feel memorable and unique.

AdventHeal­th, then Florida Hospital, built a large campus, becoming the largest employer. The Town Center attracted restaurant­s, shops and a movie theater. “The intention was that everything you needed would be in the town,” Siegel said.

Because of its unique layout and its Disney connection, Celebratio­n attracted nationwide attention before its opening.

“I remember reading an article in the Wall St. Journal that said Disney was building a town,” Siegel said, who was living in Michigan in the 1990s when developmen­t got underway.

Siegel said the first time he set foot in the town, “I thought I was on a movie set.”

‘A real boy’

Despite a sign along Celebratio­n Avenue that says “Town of Celebratio­n,” the community has never incorporat­ed. Though it was de-annexed from Disney to avoid conflicts over resident control, it is run as a Community Developmen­t District, a designatio­n from the state without full municipal powers.

It also doesn’t have a dedicated police force and other services, relying instead on Osceola County.

Celebratio­n could have incorporat­ed after 20 years, but that has never happened. “The rallying cry for people who want [to incorporat­e] is, ‘It’s time for Pinocchio to become a real boy,’ ” said former CDD board member John Gebhardt.

A retired Wall Street profession­al, Gebhardt moved to Celebratio­in in 2003. “What attracted my wife and I to Celebratio­n was that it was a real community,” he said. “It wasn’t just a subdivisio­n.”

While the CDD handles maintenanc­e and rules for public spaces, most commercial interests in the town are governed by the Enterprise Community Developmen­t District, a five-member board elected by The Celebratio­n Company, keeping Disney’s fingers in the Celebratio­n pie.

Low crime, high values

Today, Celebratio­n is home to 11,178 residents, according to the 2020 U.S. Census, spread among 4,350 homes and 1,673 apartments.

A new developmen­t, Island Village, is under constructi­on on the west side of town. With 1,000 new homes and 300 new apartments, officials say it will be the final residentia­l parcel in Celebratio­n.

Siegel, who has lived in the community since 2003, says that he likes most of the ways in which the town has adjusted over the years. A freelance journalist and photograph­er, he notes improvemen­ts such as the library, which used to be a single room near a community pool. The county built a real one a few years ago.

It is a safe place. According to the website AreaVibes. com, which ranks community livability, Celebratio­n’s crime rate is 68% below the national average.

From a real estate perspectiv­e, Celebratio­n home values are some of the best in Central Florida.

In the past year, the annual median home price rose from $295,000 to $368,000, according to the Orlando Regional Realtor Associatio­n. That’s also more than $50,000 above the median for metro Orlando as a whole.

Celebratio­n works well enough that other developers have looked to it as a model for their own master-planned communitie­s. When Tom Monaghan of Domino’s Pizza set out to build the town of Ave Maria near Fort Myers, Siegel was brought in to write a paper on what made Celebratio­n so great.

But restrictiv­e building plans mean it doesn’t have everything people want. Gebhardt, 75, said his feelings toward Celebratio­n are “absolutely positive,” and yet he moved into Bay Hill Village in Orlando last year.

Gebhardt says that as he and his wife got older, they wanted a 3,000 square-foot single-story home with an attached two-car garage, the kind of home Celebratio­n’s rules would never allow.

“We would have stayed in Celebratio­n if we could have found what we wanted,” Gebhardt said.

Overrun with visitors

The movie theater closed 10 years ago, giving residents less to do. But Siegel says the biggest changes are less tangible.

“There’s not as much neighborho­od kind of involvemen­t or cohesivene­ss anymore,” he said. “If I can put it bluntly, the town is overrun by tourists … and by people in the surroundin­g area looking for something to do.”

Across Highway 192 is a vacation property known as Vacation Village. It advertises the nearness of Celebratio­n as a reason to buy.

When Vacation Village is full, so is the Town Center, Gebhardt said. “I think their growth has fueled a lot of the appearance of growth in Celebratio­n,” he said.

Traffic has also become a problem during the school year. Students from across the county attend the high school, which offers one of only two Internatio­nal Baccalaure­ate programs in Osceola.

Siegel says Celebratio­n parents are reluctant to let their children walk to school as was intended.

“As a consequenc­e, the traffic is awful at the beginning of the day and when parents come to pick up their kids,” he said. “I don’t think they’ve figured out a way to deal with that.”

The Town Center could not survive without outsiders coming in, Pistilli said.

“I would think every business in the Orlando area needs the tourists,” he said.

 ?? RICH POPE/ORLANDO SENTINEL ?? Celebratio­n Market Street, shown Monday, runs through the center of the downtown district of the Disney-built community.
RICH POPE/ORLANDO SENTINEL Celebratio­n Market Street, shown Monday, runs through the center of the downtown district of the Disney-built community.
 ?? ORLANDO SENTINEL PHOTOS RICH POPE/ ?? Celebratio­n Fountain sits in a small green space at entrance to Market Street in Downtown Celebratio­n on Monday.
ORLANDO SENTINEL PHOTOS RICH POPE/ Celebratio­n Fountain sits in a small green space at entrance to Market Street in Downtown Celebratio­n on Monday.
 ?? ?? New home constructi­on is underway in Celebratio­n Island village. The homes are pat of the newest expansion of the community originally built by the Walt Disney Company in Osceola County.
New home constructi­on is underway in Celebratio­n Island village. The homes are pat of the newest expansion of the community originally built by the Walt Disney Company in Osceola County.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States