Once the province of vacationers and second-home owners from Alabama,
Mississippi, Georgia and elsewhere in the Deep South, the strip of the
Florida Gulf Coast that stretches from Panama City Beach to Destin and once
known as the "Redneck Riviera" is now worthy of another, if less
familiar moniker, the Emerald Coast.
Nowadays, you're just as likely to see a Mercedes as a pickup. Cadillac
Escalades and Lexis RX330 SUVs are as prevalent as spring break jalopies.
And they carry license plates from as far away as Ohio, Michigan, and New
York along with the more readily recognized southern states. If you close
your eyes and listen carefully, you can even hear German and British
accents among the more familiar Southern Twang.
Why, the place even has its share of stars. Country music icon Alan
Jackson recently became the official endorser of La Borgata, a 14.5-acre
property in Panama Beach within walking distance of the sugar-white sandy
beach. Jackson will own one of the 189 units planned for the site by Ronnie
Gilley Properties, which has George Jones as its official spokesperson.
But again, the Florida Panhandle is now more than just country. Dallas
Cowboy' owner Jerry Jones has a place here. So do actress Patricia
Richardson, Chef Emeril Lagasse and Hall of Fame Quarterback Bart Starr. If
you look carefully, you might even see Courtney Cox when she comes to visit
her brother, Richard, who's one of the area's premier pool builders.
"It's amazing the amount of wealth that's coming here," says
one long-time realty pro in the Destin market. "I don't know where
that Redneck Riviera thing started, but that's all changing. We're right on
the edge of going national."
Make that international, interjects Ken Breland, director of sales at
Wild Heron, a nearly 800-acre property owned, in part, by golfer Greg
Norman, who designed the 600-home project's golf course. "We're
beginning to penetrate the European market like they've done down in
Naples," says Breland, who notes that foreign accents are found among
the familiar drawl at Wild Heron, too. "Our prices here are half what
they are in Southwest Florida, and we're right on the water."
The influx of both national and international visitors also is likely to
be hastened by a brand new airport on 9,600 acres that have been donated by
the St. Joe Co., perhaps Florida's largest private land owner. Significant
regulatory and funding issues must still be overcome before the Panama
City-Bay County International Airport can be built. But if it comes to
fruition, as most observers believe it will, it will sit just north of West
Bay, and will be part of a 78,000-acre preservation area that could be used
for wildlife greenways, hunting, fishing, hiking, bird-watching and nature
centers.
It is Sandestin that many observers credit with beginning the
transformation from honky-tonk red to emerald green. And it is the
Vancouver, B.C.-based resort developer, Intrawest ULC, which recently
became a privately held company, that transformed Sandestin into an
all-inclusive, 2,400-acre golf and beach resort straddling Highway 98 just
a few miles east of Destin.
Sandestin was actually started in the mid-1970s by local developer Peter
Bos, who, while blessed with great vision, had limited resources. And after
finishing much of the property's southern portion between the highway and
the Gulf, his finances gave out. Intrawest, Sandestin's third owner,
acquired the resort from a Malaysian company in 1996. And although the
local, "it-can't-be-done" nay-sayers were certain there was no
market for vacation homes on the northern, much larger, bay-side portion of
the property, Sandestin now boasts every type of ownership possibility
anyone could ever want -- on both sides of the highway.
Intrawest is perhaps more famous for its 15 mountain resorts, including
Whistler in British Columbia, Tremblant in Quebec, Mammoth and Squaw Valley
in California and Stratton in Vermont. Indeed, Sandestin was the company's
first-ever warm-weather property. (It now has four.)
But by applying the same "placemaking" principles that proved
so successful on the slopes, the company has proven the negative nabobs
wrong.
Just as Sandestin has raised the bar in Destin on the western, Ft.
Walton-end of the Emerald Coast, the Towne of Seahaven is destined to do
the same for Panama City Beach on the eastern end.
Located on a 53-acre, largely blank canvas with more than a quarter of a
mile fronting on a beach that is generally acknowledged as one of the
finest in the world, Seahaven will be a village-centered community with a
core of vibrant shops, restaurants and nightlife, all surrounded by an
assortment of 3,000 upscale residences.
Intrawest has a hand in Seahaven, too. Its sales and marketing arm,
Playground Destination Properties, will perform those chores for developer
Neel Bennett and his family. But hiring Playground and a host of top
planners, architects and designers wasn't the only smart move the Bennett
clan made.
Back in 1924, Bennett's grandfather bought the property for 10 cents an
acre as a throw-in as part of a much larger transaction. At the time,
"no one else wanted the land because you couldn't grow anything on
it," says Neel. So, his grandfather bought it with the thought of
putting up a saw mill.
Luckily, those plans fell through. Now the site is one of the largest
undeveloped parcels on the Emerald Coast. And Neel, whose says his family
has "had a long love affair with the land" here, is getting the
"opportunity to do the job my grandfather started to do in the
1920s."
The Towne of Seahaven, with its four distinct villages, all geared
around the central village, is being billed as the first true destination
resort in the popular Panama City Beach coastal area. A mini-city, if you
will, with 60 entertainment hot spots, villas, townhouses, hotels, a
conference center and its own in -village transportation system.
"When my grandfather bought this land, people told him he was
crazy. Needless to say, we're very grateful he didn't listen to them,"
says Neel. "Now we're going to do something with it that he would be
proud of."
The Bennett family also is working with Playground on another Panama
City Beach property called Sanctuary Beach, which just might be the last
piece of pristine real estate on the Gulf Coast. And the project proves
that at least one local isn't a yokel when it comes to developing the land
in these parts.
Now 45, Neel Bennett, born, raised and still living in Panama City, has
been coming to the 43-acre property that fronts St. Andrews Bay since he
was 10. He learned to swim there. So when he was presented with an
opportunity to buy it three years ago, he jumped at the chance. Especially
since the seller was thinking of "clear-cutting" the entire site.
"It's a one-of-a-kind property," Neel says of Sanctuary Beach,
which is graced with 100-year-old, moss-draped live oaks.
"A parcel like this is usually a state park or a preserve. It's old
Florida, the Florida that was a true, untouched paradise. I bought it from
another developer who was going to take everything down. But I was
convinced this could be something special, that we could build value by
doing things differently."
Different, indeed. Besides eight spectacular waterfront lots, the
community will feature 275 condominiums and 125 single-family houses. A
total of 400 units will be built. That's about nine to the acre when the
county would have allowed twice that, and a density most other developers
would have grabbed at and run.
Not Bennett, a fourth-generation local who has what Playground's Breland
says is "a sense of pride that merchant builders don't have." The
national developers build excellent, quality projects, according to Breland,
who heads sales at Sanctuary as well as Wild Heron. "But they have no
sense of ownership because they don't live here. Neel is a real steward of
his land."
And so goes the Emerald Coast. Not only is it no longer the Redneck
Riviera, it's fast becoming one of North America's ultimate places to play.
"A lot of people see what was here," says Panama City Beach
Mayor Lee Sullivan. "But only a few see what could be here. And now we
are witnessing the creation of something special."