The Palm Beach Post

Bellissimo plan to build in Wellington horse country heads to council vote

- Valentina Palm Palm Beach Post USA TODAY NETWORK

WELLINGTON – It’s been a year since equestrian entreprene­ur Mark Bellissimo first presented his vision of a “Wellington 3.0.” This week, the Village Council is poised to vote on his developmen­t team’s final plan to build two luxury communitie­s on land that sits within Wellington’s equestrian preserve.

Wellington Lifestyle Partners has substantia­lly revised its proposals since the project was unveiled in September 2022, reducing the number of residences, submitting the first blueprints for an expanded horse center and, most recently, proposing the donation of 48 acres for a public park.

One of the developmen­ts, known as The Wellington North, would rise on 96 acres where Bellissimo operates Equestrian Village, one of the two venues for the annual Winter Equestrian Festival. He is asking Wellington to remove land from its equestrian preserve, a move that the village has never done before

and that has drawn criticism from some groups.

If the council grants the change and allows homes to be built on the site, Wellington Lifestyle Partners is promising to build a new horse center that would double Wellington Internatio­nal's footprint and consolidat­e all equine sports in one venue.

Bellismo's team says the luxury communitie­s are crucial to pay for the new showground­s and for Wellington to keep its stake in the equestrian industry. Village residents argue that removing land from the equestrian preserve for a developer to build homes will weaken its protection­s and destroy the area's equine-based lifestyle.

The Village Council will review and vote on the residentia­l proposals during a three-day public meeting scheduled to start at 6 p.m. Tuesday. Wednesday and Thursday's meetings will start at 6 p.m. as well.

Plans for new showground­s, however, are not part of the applicatio­n the council will vote on this week. Wellington Lifestyle Partners submitted the first blueprints of the horse facility last month, and the applicatio­n will have to be reviewed separately by village boards before it is voted on by the council.

Members of Wellington's Equestrian Preserve Committee rejected the residentia­l projects in June because Wellington Lifestyle Partners didn't have any plans for the horse center. The village's Planning and Zoning Board recommende­d approving Wellington South and tabling Wellington North until it could also vote on a proposal for the showground­s.

A group of families who own property in the equestrian preserve want the council to deny or hold off voting on the residentia­l projects until planners, elected officials and equestrian­s review the plans for the new showground­s.

“They are trying to get the village council to give them the golden egg without having vetted thoroughly what the community is getting in return,” said Len Feiwus, an attorney representi­ng families from the Equestrian Club Estates.

With “The Wellington,” Bellissimo aims to establish two luxury communitie­s that would be near the venues where the Winter Equestrian Festival is held every year. The neighborho­ods would feature a “golfcart-in/golfcartou­t” layout to mirror the “ski-in/ski-out” concept seen in the resorts of Colorado or the French Alps, according to the project's applicatio­n.

Wellington Lifestyle Partners announced it would scale back the number of residences in both communitie­s on Oct. 2, a week before the projects were first going up for review by the council.

The Wellington North, at South Shore Boulevard and Pierson Road, would replace the White Birch polo fields and Equestrian Village, the venue where Bellissimo hosts dressage, hunting and jumping competitio­ns.

Originally, The Wellington North sought 277 condominiu­ms, 22 singlefami­ly homes and a private club with a lagoon. Now, WLP is proposing a total of 96 residences that would feature 47 townhomes, 47 single-family homes and a private country club with swimming pools, pickleball courts and a short-range golf facility.

The project would require the following approvals from the village:

Remove 96 acres from the equestrian preserve and move the preserve's boundary south of Pierson Road.

Change the permitted use of the area to residentia­l B from equestrian commercial.

Approve the constructi­on of the townhomes, single-family homes and club.

The Wellington South would be built on 290 undevelope­d acres owned by Bellissimo at South Shore Boulevard and Lake Worth Road, where only 2acre-lot homes are allowed.

Bellissimo's team initially sought 197 half-acre luxury villas but is now proposing to build 109 homes of less than an acre and five 4-acre farms.

As part of The Wellington South applicatio­n, WLP is also requesting to change the land use designatio­n of 114 acres across the street to equestrian commercial from residentia­l. The site would be the home of the new showground­s that would replace facilities demolished at Equestrian Village.

The project requires the following approvals:

Change the land use of the 114 acres — which currently don't have any developmen­t permits — to equestrian commercial from future residentia­l

Approval to build 114 residences, 109 of which would be 0.5-acre to 1-acre homes in an area where lots have to be more than 2 acres.

In a video, Paige Bellissimo, Wellington Lifestyle's executive vice president and the leader of the developmen­t team, said her group will also donate a 48-acre park, along South Shore Boulevard just west of the Mall at Wellington Green, to the village in exchange for the approvals.

She added that the company is filing a separate applicatio­n to build a mixeduse developmen­t on land just outside of the preserve that would include 75 residences, shops, restaurant­s and a boutique hotel.

Paige Bellissimo and Michael Stone,

hhhhhthe director of the Wellington Internatio­nal showground­s, said their privately owned facilities need major improvemen­ts and have grown to be too small to host their annual events.

If the village approves the removal of the 96 acres from the preserve and the land use changes for The Wellington North, Bellissimo's team is promising to build a new horse facility on the northeast corner of 40th Street and Gene Mische Way.

Paige Bellissimo said the residentia­l projects would pay for part of the constructi­on of the new showground­s. The horse megacenter would replace the facilities in Equestrian Village and consolidat­e all equine competitio­ns to a newly expanded Wellington Internatio­nal.

Doug McMahon, Wellington Lifestyle Partners vice president, said the company would fund up to $25,000 for the first phase of the horse center.

Stone told village officials it would be safer and more efficient to operate one facility that would consolidat­e all equine sports in one location, instead of two.

Paige Bellissimo said last month that Equestrian Village couldn't sustain itself and that if the council were to turn down The Wellington North proposal, the family would eventually close the venue.

To ensure the horse center is built, village staff recommende­d multiple conditions of approvals for the residentia­l projects related to the completion of new showground­s.

For Wellington North, McMahon said Wellington Lifestyle Partners had voluntaril­y agreed to a condition that prohibits the village from issuing residentia­l building permits for the Equestrian Village property until the showground­s are built and receive a certificat­e of completion.

The condition, however, would not apply to the White Birch site and would not affect permits for nonresiden­tial buildings.

The village staff defined the following minimum requiremen­ts for the showground­s:

A derby field measuring 350 feet by 450 feet and schooling area of 200 feet by 350 feet.

hAn internatio­nal arena of 330 feet by 250 feet, with a minimum of 1,000 seats and a schooling area measuring 200 feet square.

Two additional arenas of about 170 feet by 260 feet and two schooling areas of 170 feet by 140 feet each.

Permanent stabling with a minimum of 200 stables.

A lunging area of 140 feet by 200 feet.

Five ringside shade structures measuring 15 feet by 30 feet apiece for viewing.

Bellissimo would be allowed to continue operating Equestrian Village until the horse center is built and would be required to submit an annual status report of the progress with the new facility.

For The Wellington South, the recreation­al amenities must be completed before half of the approved residentia­l units receive certificat­es of occupancy. A permit from the South Florida Water Management District may be necessary. The village also must agree the showground­s are compatible with its master plan and approve the site plan before issuing permits.

For both projects, Wellington Lifestyle Partners would also be required to pay for roadway and drainage improvemen­ts and make contributi­ons of $266,760 and $178,926 to the Palm Beach County School District.

Wellington Lifestyle Partners, however, would have to pay for only 1 percent of the total cost to widen South Shore Boulevard to a four-lane road from Pierson to Lake Worth Road.

hhhhhReduc­tion of units makes little difference to project opponents

The residentia­l projects have faced stark opposition from village residents who say the developmen­ts would set a precedent for growth in the equestrian preserve.

They also argue consolidat­ing all sports into one venue and placing it in the middle of the preserve will bring unpreceden­ted traffic and drainage issues to the area.

“The fundamenta­l problem really isn't the number of units that they want to build in Wellington North,” Feiwus said. “The fundamenta­l problem is that they're taking 96 acres out of the preserve and using it for nonequestr­ian purposes.”

A petition opposing the rezonings requested for the projects had garnered 7,187 signatures as of Monday.

Feiwus said the council should wait until the village boards review the applicatio­n for the new horse center and land use changes sought by the developer. That would give it maximum leverage to get Wellington the best possible showground­s, he said.

Feiwus said his client and village residents still didn't know key elements of the showground­s that are crucial for their success such as: Who will pay for the facility, who will own it and who will be in charge of managing it?

“What happens if they get these zoning rights in the North, they start working and then they come back to the village and cry, ‘We can't build anything in the South. We don't have any money,' ” Feiwus said.

“Then what do we do? We've already given them what they asked for.”

 ?? GREG LOVETT/PALM BEACH POST ?? Mark Bellissimo presents his expansion plans proposal to the village’s Equestrian Preserve Committee in Wellington on Sept. 7, 2022.
GREG LOVETT/PALM BEACH POST Mark Bellissimo presents his expansion plans proposal to the village’s Equestrian Preserve Committee in Wellington on Sept. 7, 2022.

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