The Palm Beach Post

Showground

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from the preserve, where building is strongly restricted, since its creation more than 20 years ago.

The second community, The Wellington South, would sit along South Shore Boulevard near Wellington Community Park and the new showground­s, which would replace the facilities on Equestrian Village.

The project marked the third time that Bellissimo, an entreprene­ur who has long staged the Winter Equestrian Festival, has proposed significan­t developmen­ts on land he controls in the preserve.

Doug McMahon, the CEO of Wellington Lifestyle Partners, said the new showground­s are crucial for Wellington to retain its stake in the equestrian industry amidst competitio­n from venues near Ocala and Sarasota.

“Tonight is really about Wellington’s future,” McMahon said during the Wednesday meeting. “Together we’re taking steps to ensure it remains the premier horse sport community that we all love.”

Paige Bellissimo, who is also leading the project for WLP, said the venue will consolidat­e all equestrian sports to a “horse-centric zone” that would allow for safer circulatio­n of horses, riders and spectators and also facilitate operations.

Kristy Lund, a member of the village’s Equestrian Preserve Committee, said the land promised by Wellington Lifestyle Partners didn’t represent a significan­t expansion from the 59 acres currently available in Equestrian Village.

Of the 114 acres, Wellington Internatio­nal already uses 35 of them which are owned by Global Equestrian Group, a European equestrian investment firm. Another 18 are wetlands, leaving a total of 61 aces for the new showground­s.

“We gained two acres in this deal,” Lund said.

McMahon told board members that plans for the proposed showground­s had significan­tly changed since Wellington Lifestyle Partners first proposed them over a year ago.

At first, Global Equestrian Group had promised to buy the 114 acres to build and operate the new venue, but its commitment­s fell through. McMahon said

WLP decided to keep the land and take on the responsibi­lity of building the new horse venue for a future operator.

McMahon said WLP has hired Populous, an internatio­nal architectu­re firm based in Kansas City, to design the venue and has contracted Richard Hayden, an Ireland-based turf specialist, to recreate the derby field.

He added the company had agreed to put a deed on the 114 acres so it could only be used as an equestrian venue for the next 50 years.

Wellington Lifestyle Partners has agreed to several recommenda­tions issued by the Equestrian Preserve Committee on Feb. 15. They include:

Fencing between barns and parking areas to contain horses.

A minimum of 25 feet between competitio­n rings.

High-quality tents. They may not be to the quality of Wellington Internatio­nal’s media center, as suggested by

hhhEPC.

Schooling hours with lighting to begin at 6:30 a.m.

The company didn’t agree, however, to the grandest suggestion by the EPC: doubling the number of permanent stalls to 440 from 220.

Paige Bellissimo told board members that Equestrian Village offers 92 permanent stalls and WLP had initially proposed 200, but the village council requested for a total of 220.

Michael Stone, who oversees operations at Wellington Internatio­nal, said that the additional permanent stables weren’t needed because dressage riders usually haul their horses.

McMahon said there would also be added costs to building the 220 additional stables.

“We front-loaded a lot more costs onto our developmen­t than we did 14 months ago,” McMahon said. “So, I’d like to keep it there.”

Lund, who spoke as a member of the public, raised concerns about the permitting and ecological impacts of the landfill currently underway on the 114 acres of the proposed showground­s.

In a set of posts on social media, native Florida wood storks can be seen standing over rubble and drinking from a pond being drained.

John Fumero, an attorney representi­ng WLP, told board members the company had permits from the South Florida Management District and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to fill a portion of the land, known as Pod F.

“There is no unpermitte­d activity,” Fumero said.

“The wetland preserve area will stay in its natural state in perpetuity because it is subject to a conservati­on easement.”

WLP had created a second company, Wellington Lifestyle Partners 2, in which Bellissimo was listed as an owner with McMahon. Lund asked why WLP had made this move after McMahon had told the council Bellissimo would not be in charge of the project.

McMahon said the company was created as a “vehicle” for a future transactio­n and that Mark Bellissimo’s name was removed from the company.

Elizabeth Armstrong, a village resident, sent a card to the meeting opposing the approval.

“There is not enough green space for horses,” Armstrong wrote. “It looks like we have lost a huge amount of open space in this land swap.”

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 ?? ?? Mark Bellissimo, the entreprene­ur who has long staged the Winter Equestrian Festival in Wellington, presents his plans to the village's Equestrian Preserve Committee for the first time on Sept. 7, 2022.
Mark Bellissimo, the entreprene­ur who has long staged the Winter Equestrian Festival in Wellington, presents his plans to the village's Equestrian Preserve Committee for the first time on Sept. 7, 2022.
 ?? ?? A wooded section of the Wellington Equestrian Preserve north of 40th Street South in 2022. Ten years after Wellington halted developer Bellisimo's plan to build a hotel on the town's equestrian preserve, he returned to propose an expanded version of an Equestrian Village on the protected land.
A wooded section of the Wellington Equestrian Preserve north of 40th Street South in 2022. Ten years after Wellington halted developer Bellisimo's plan to build a hotel on the town's equestrian preserve, he returned to propose an expanded version of an Equestrian Village on the protected land.

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