Two recreational facilities—the 36-acre Three Oaks Park and the Karl Drews Community Center—offer programs for children and adults, youth sports and playgrounds. Baseball and soccer fields at Three Oaks Park stay busy most weekday and weekend nights. Many of the vacant lots from a few years ago now have homes. Lots in San Carlos tend to lack deed restrictions and city water and sewer service (a majority of homes use wells and septic tanks). Newer areas, like neighboring Three Oaks, have central water and sewer services and deed restrictions. RURAL LEE COUNTY Lee County’s rural edge is changing as gated communities along Palm Beach Boulevard/S.R. 80, once considered too far removed from the amenities of Fort Myers, are proliferating. Verandah, located along the Orange River, and River Hall, a 2,000-acre community by new-to-Southwest-Florida developer LandMar Group, take advantage of the slower way of life this area affords. Far-off towns like Alva and Buckingham have also kindled interest from buyers who want a more rural lifestyle and larger lots that can accommodate mini-ranches and horses. Many of the homes in Fort Myers Shores, found along the south bank of the Caloosahatchee River east of S.R. 31, back into canals leading to the river. Travel farther east along S.R. 80 and signs of civilization and development relax. Development has followed with a new Publix-anchored shopping center at routes 80 and 31. Recreational outlets are just miles apart—a marina at Sweetwater Landing, Hickey Creek Mitigation Park, Franklin Lock Recreational Area and the Caloosahatchee Regional Park, a 768-acre facility on the north shore with two walking trails, mountain bike and equestrian trails, primitive campsites and breathtaking views of the namesake river. Collier County At a Glance While it still attracts its fair share of seasonal retired residents, Collier County is getting younger. In fact, those aged 25 to 49 are the fastest-growing population group, and the county’s median age has dropped to 43 in recent years. In the 1920s, Barron Gift Collier bought more than a million acres of swampland, including most of Naples. He then pledged his own money to build the 275-mile Tamiami Trail, linking Tampa to Miami, which officially opened in April 1928. The completion of I-75 and the Southwest Florida International Airport some 60 years later put Collier County officially on the map. Today it’s a study in paradoxical worlds—stretches of beaches boasting multimillion-dollar mansions and luxury high-rises and quiet fishing communities that recall another time and place. Home prices in some areas now command more than $20 million—well above the $125 of a turn-of-last-century beachfront lot.
Beaches Travel south from Naples, and beaches give way to a mangrove-tangled coastline that signifies the beginning of the Everglades. Most beachfront homes are found in named communities, gated and non-gated. Those not directly on the Gulf are within an easy walk and boast something their beachfront siblings can’t—deep water for a prized boat-in-your-backyard lifestyle. Yet living on the beach comes with a cost: higher home prices, and some lack of privacy (all beaches are public). Barefoot Beach is flanked by a county beach park and the 324-acre Barefoot Beach Preserve State Park, where visitors are updated daily on wildlife sightings—everything from bottle-nose dolphins to sea turtles and gopher tortoises. The adjoining Bonita Springs beach access offers picnic and restroom amenities and wide, shell-crushed beaches. Homes in Barefoot Beach, found in just a handful of neighborhoods, range from condominiums, villas and cottages to three- and four-story Mediterranean and Florida-style homes. "Homes have become bigger and more expensive over the years," says Barefoot Beach Realty’s Nick Fontana, who’s been selling Barefoot Beach property for nearly 20 years and has seen most of the neighborhood’s original beach cottages razed and replaced. Vanderbilt Beach, south of Barefoot Beach, offers a multitude of waterfront options: single-family homes along canals, bays and the beach, and Gulf-front high-rises with views of the Gulf and Sanibel Island. Earlier this year, Signature Communities broke ground on a new, luxury, high-rise residential building, Moraya Bay Beach Tower, in the former location of local favorite Vanderbilt Inn, which was demolished at the end of 2006. The neighborhood demonstrates Southwest Florida’s ease in the art of juxtaposition; it’s sandwiched between the natural beauty of Delnor-Wiggins Pass State Park on the north and the cosmopolitan resorts, boutiques and restaurants to the south at Gulfshore Drive and Vanderbilt Beach Road, home to the Ritz-Carlton, Naples, and Vanderbilt Beach Park. Delnor-Wiggins Pass is coveted for its amenities that give visitors the opportunity to enjoy nature’s bounty, from snorkeling, sun worshipping and swimming to fishing and kayaking along estuaries and scuba diving the hard-bottom reef of the Gulf. Gulfshore Drive ends at Vanderbilt Beach’s southern boundary and is lined by condos, resorts and the occasional single-family home. The 2,100-acre Pelican Bay community occupies the sprawling span of land between Vanderbilt Beach Road and Seagate Drive. Only a handful of luxury high-rises and The Strand, an exclusive triple-gated neighborhood of just a dozen multistory Mediterranean homes, enjoy an on-the-beach venue. Developer WCI Communities, however, brings the beach to Pelican Bay residents, who can opt for membership privileges in a private beach club. Neighboring Clam Pass Beach Park marks the northern point of Naples proper and its 10 miles of beaches that earned kudos in 2005 from the Travel Channel as America’s Best All-Around Beach. Clam Pass’ three-quarter-mile boardwalk winds through scenic mangrove forests and over coastal dunes en route to the 35-acre county park, where amenities include picnic areas, rentals and a canoe launch. Naples Cay and Park Shore, just south of the Naples Grande, are mainly high-rise condo communities, offering a mix of old and new buildings. Naples Cay is set on 33 acres of preserve and the white-sand beach of Clam Bay. Park Shore incorporates single-family homes and towers along Gulf Shore Boulevard North and the picturesque and oft-photographed Village on Venetian Bay, an upscale collection of restaurants, boutiques and galleries. The northern sweep of Gulf Shore Boulevard takes in two of Naples’ oldest communities, The Moorings and Coquina Sands. Both feature mostly single-family homes (with some mid-rise condos) on larger landscaped lots (some waterfront) and homeowner associations with beach access. The Moorings, Naples’ largest subdivision with more than 4,000 residents, 1,300 acres and 1,938 homes and apartments, offers many waterfront homes, including some with mile-long views to the Village on Venetian Bay, and frontage along Moorings Bay, which provides access to the Gulf at Doctors Pass. Homes in Coquina Sands are nestled along winding streets lined with ficus, banyan and palm trees, and sidewalks for jogging, biking and walking. Close to the Fifth Avenue South shopping district, the neighborhood is within walking distance of the resorts along Gulf Shore Boulevard. Beach outposts in Naples include Lowdermilk Beach Park, offering shade trees, picnic tables, concessions and sand volleyball; public access points at the western boundaries of Naples’ east-west avenues; and the picturesque Naples Pier, which extends 1,000 feet into the Gulf and is found at the west end of 12th Avenue South. The pier is especially popular with anglers; a bulk fishing license allows all to enjoy without an individual license. Gulf Shore Boulevard North assumes its southern coordinate at Central Avenue and rambles south passing old cottages and multimillion-dollar beachfront estates, hidden behind thick landscaping. Gulf Shore Boulevard South eventually becomes Gordon Drive, the western boundary of Port Royal and the Port Royal Club, one of the world’s most exclusive, members-only clubs.
EVERGLADES CITY
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