Gramercy Park in West Palm Beach to Open Saturday

by Guest User

3 THINGS TO KNOW - Palm Beach County’s newest county park opens Saturday

Updated: 3:04 p.m. Friday, Aug. 7, 2015  |  Posted: 12:00 a.m. Sunday, Aug. 9, 2015

By Eliot Kleinberg - Palm Beach Post Staff Writer

WEST PALM BEACH —

WHAT’S HAPPENING?

Gramercy Park, Palm Beach County’s newest county park, opens with a ribbon-cutting at 9 a.m. Saturday, followed by music, children’s activities, and refreshments. The 1.89 acre park is along 45th Street between Haverhill Road and Florida’s Turnpike in West Palm Beach.

 

Gramercy county park

Gramercy county park

WHAT’S THERE?

The park includes three junior tennis courts and two children’s play areas featuring a slide, climbing structures, and an “Omnispin Spinner,”a variation on merry-go-rounds that’s accessible to all kids, including those with disabilities. It also has a 0.12-mile mulch path, an open grass play field, benches, and a bicycle rack.

WHAT IT MEANS TO YOU

The county says it responded to community calls for a safe place for youth to play in the Gramercy Park neighborhood. It hopes to eventually build a community center at the site as well. County Parks and Recreation Department operates more than 80 regional, district, community, beach, and neighborhood parks, spanning several thousand acres. Visit www.pbcparks.com.

Equipment for the new Gramercy Park county park, set to open Aug. 15, 2015 (Palm Beach County photos)

Equipment for the new Gramercy Park county park, set to open Aug. 15, 2015 (Palm Beach County photos)

5 best things to do at Harbourside Place

by Guest User

By: Barbara Marshall

August 5, 2015 

Take in Too Bizaare’s lagoon decor along with Asian specialities and small plates. (Courtesy Too Bizaare)

Take in Too Bizaare’s lagoon decor along with Asian specialities and small plates. (Courtesy Too Bizaare)

Eat: dinner at Too Bizaare restaurant doesn’t reflect its name and that’s a good thing.

The menu fuses modern Asian favorites with small plates, so you could order pad thai lobster and your dining partner might opt for pizza, sushi or seafood pasta in a spot whose lagoon-style decor reflects the mangrove habitat at the edge of Harbourside Place.

After a stroll on Riverwalk, indulge in a cup of iced java at Coffee Culture Cafe or a fro yo from Johnny Swirls.

Puppy paddleboarding this Friday at Harbourside Place. (Courtesy Harbourside Place.

Puppy paddleboarding this Friday at Harbourside Place. (Courtesy Harbourside Place.

Try: a healthy new activity, like paddleboarding with your pup.  Friday night (August 7,) take your dog on board an SUP from Blueline Surf & Paddle to Harbourside for the wine and cheese Sunset Puppy Social at Pucci & Catana Luxury Pet Boutique.  Friday, 6 -8 p.m., $25. Call 561-744-7474 to reserve a spot.

Take a Tai Chi class to improve flexibility and balance, held every Saturday morning from 9 – 10 a.m. at Harbourside, sponsored by Agape Healing Arts. Classes are free but donations are accepted. Call 561-290-3641 for more information.

Treat: Public school students go back to school August 17, but teachers get one last blast of summer fun withTeacher Appreciation Weekend from 5 p.m. August 14 to 7 p.m. August 16.

The Wyndham Jupiter Grande is offering a $99 per night rate for teachers with food and beverage discounts.  Several other restaurants and retailers are also offering teacher discounts before its back to the chalkboard.

Arrive in style:  Take your boat and tie up at the Harbourside Place marina.

Find island-style clothes and accessories at Tommy Bahama

Find island-style clothes and accessories at Tommy Bahama

Shop:   Chico’s, White House /Black Market and Tommy Bahama all carry clothes for South Florida and beyond.  Check out the on-trend jewelry and clothes at Francesca’s Collections.

Source: http://featured.blog.palmbeachpost.com/2015/08/05/5-things-to-see-and-do-at-harbourside-this-summer/

George Gentile Elected Chairman of Palm Beach State College State Foundation's Board of Directors

by Guest User

Palm Beach State College Foundation welcomes new officers

May 27, 2015Kristi Sorrow

 

                                       George Gentile

                                       George Gentile

The Palm Beach State College Foundation board of directors has elected new officers who will serve a two-year term.

George Gentile, senior partner at Gentile, Glas, Holloway, O’Mahoney & Associates, Inc. was chosen as chair. Ricky Wade, franchisee of B’ing the Best, Inc./McDonald’s, is vice chair. William Greenman, Jr., senior portfolio manager and team leader at BNY Mellon, is treasurer and Trish Lowry secretary. Noel Guillama, CEO of Guillama, Inc., is the immediate past chair. The officers were elected May 19.

Foundation Executive Director Suellen Mann said “Gentile understands the value and contributions a college of this scope and purpose provides. His vision and service to the community are a wonderful and valuable asset in helping guide the Foundation.”

Gentile has practiced as a landscape architect and planner in Palm Beach County for more than 35 years. He has also contributed to the community by his participation in numerous organizations and charities. He was co-founder and the first president of the Juvenile Diabetes Association of Palm Beach County and chairman of the board of the Jupiter Tequesta Juno Beach Chamber of Commerce of which he was a board member for more than 17 years.

He is also currently a member of the Palm Beach County Planning Congress, the Marine Industries Association of Palm Beach County, the Economic Council of Palm Beach County, the PGA Corridor Association and the Economic Forum of Palm Beach County.

Source: PBSC Press Release

 

10 Fun Things To Do at Harbourside Place

by Guest User

Jupiter’s new outdoor space offers everything from food to exercise to music.

By Staci Sturrock - Palm Beach Post Staff Writer

What’s going on at Harbourside Place, the newish venue of fun, food and fashion at the northwest intersection of U.S. 1 and Indiantown Road in Jupiter?

So much — and so much of it is free!

You really need a list to keep track. Here’s our top 10 guide to taking advantage of what’s happening at Harbourside:

1. Country concerts.

On Thursdays, Harbourside’s free Country Concert Series welcomes a little twang to the stage. And the acts they’ve lassoed are pretty impressive. From 6 to 9:30 p.m. on Feb. 19, for example, Kristian Bush, half of Sugarland, and “American Idol” finalist Casey James will perform.

2. Wine and cheese.

From 6 to 8 p.m. on Wine Down Wednesdays, Sunny 107.9’s Jennifer Ross and Bill Adams play host at Too Bizaare, which provides specials like a glass of wine and appetizer for $10.79.

3. Wind-down time by the water.

Friday Nights on the Waterfront are a showcase for live music from 6 to 10 p.m. This Friday, String Theory is the featured act.

4. Community yoga.

Bring your mat and a bottled water to the Amphitheater each Sunday from 10:30 to 11:30 a.m., when a complimentary yoga class is held.

5. Free Tai Chi.

Tequesta’s Agape Healing Arts makes house calls to Harbourside each Saturday from 9 to 10 a.m. Wear loose-fitting clothing and join the Tai Chi fun.

6. A green market.

Local farmers and food vendors sell their wares in the Jupiter Farmer’s Market from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. each Sunday.

7. Saturday night live.

Kevin, Virginia and Jason from the KVJ Show on 97.9 WRMF are the emcees for Saturday evening’s free concerts at the Amphitheater. Sometimes, there are top national acts, such as Echosmith recently. From 6 to 10 p.m. this Saturday, The Helmsmen will play.

8. Sunday music.

They keep the music playing almost all day on Sundays: from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., and 3 to 7 p.m. This Sunday, the performers will be Tolliver & Cash, and Acoustic Soul.

9. Window shop.

Stroll along Harbourside’s colorful storefronts, which include A Pink Princess, White House Black Market, Tommy Bahama, Chico’s and Glitzy Girl.

10. Check out Harbourside’s hotel.

The Wyndham Grand Jupiter’s public spaces are stunning. Duck into the Lobby Lounge for a hand-crafted cocktail and a cheese plate.

IF YOU GO

Harbourside Place

Where: 200 U.S. Hwy. 1, Jupiter

Information: 561-935-9533, HarboursidePlace.com 

Source: http://www.mypalmbeachpost.com/news/entertainment/10-fun-things-to-do-at-harbourside-place/nkTgz/#0b66f8d7.3787657.735673 

 

Harbourside update from the Palm Beach Post

by Dylan Roden

 

Parking garages, hotels and retail stores going up at Harbourside in Jupiter

by Bill DiPaolo

Completion for Harbourside is scheduled next summer.

Allied Capital & Development is using the EB-5 program to help finance the $150 million Harbourside project in Jupiter on nine acres on the northwest corner of Indiantown Road and U.S. 1.

North Palm Beach-based Allied won federal approval three years ago from the Department of Homeland Security to develop Harbourside through an EB-5 regional center. Created in 1990 to attract foreign investment, EB-5 allows foreigners to contribute $500,000 apiece to U.S. businesses in return for them and their families to get visas, apply for green cards and become permanent U.S. residents.

Two five-story hotels fronting Intracoastal Waterway at Harbourside will be connected by glass-enclosed overhead walkway (Photo by Bill DiPaolo)

The 360,000-square-foot development could generate about $750,000 annually in property tax revenue, according to town records.

HARBOURSIDE:

  • Two, five-story waterfront hotels, 178 rooms with outdoor pool on third floor. Enclosed overhead walkway between buildings.
  • Two, five-story parking garages with 929 total spaces. Parking will be validated/paid, the same as City Place. Retail stores on bottom floors of parking garages.
  • About 66,000 square feet of retail, about 55,000 square feet of office and about 33,000 square feet of restaurant space with a total of 360,000 square feet.
  • Restaurants with outdoor seating.
  • Public amphitheater.
  • 15-foot-wide sidewalk connection to Riverwalk, 2.5-mile pathway from Jupiter Inlet to Ocean Way.
  • Marina with 22 private slips and 271 feet for public boat docking.
  • Water taxi stand and trolley stop
  • Harbourside has no residential development.

- See more at: http://blogs.palmbeachpost.com/npbc/2013/10/18/parking-garages-hotels-and-retail-stores-going-up-at-harbourside-in-jupiter/#sthash.06zh0Cw3.dpuf

Source: http://blogs.palmbeachpost.com/npbc/2013/1...

2GHO gets approval for PGA Plaza with Trader Joe's

by Dylan Roden

Gardens approves Trader Joe’s plaza renovations

By Willie Howard

Palm Beach Post Staff Writer

PALM BEACH GARDENS —

Menin Development can proceed with a $12 million makeover of PGA Plaza that will modernize the shopping center at PGA Boulevard and Prosperity Farms Road, the city council decided Thursday

The council approved a redevelopment plan that includes enlarging the shopping center by 3,253 square feet, upgrading three entrances, adding 56 parking spaces, removing oak trees and adding a tower and a covered sitting area to the building occupied by Anthony’s Coal Fired Pizza.

The company plans to begin renovations in September and complete them in the fall of 2014. New tenants scheduled to move into the renovated plaza include the California-based grocery chain Trader Joe’s.

 

 

Source: http://www.palmbeachpost.com/news/news/loc...

Exclusive Details Of Jupiter's Harbourside Place

by Dylan Roden

JUPITER, Fla. -- It's the $144,000,000 commercial development re-shaping the waterfront in Jupiter and only CBS 12 News is given exclusive access to the construction site.  Construction is halfway done on Harbourside Place and should be completed in exactly one year.  This is all happening on the northwest corner of Indiantown Road and US 1 in Jupiter.

"We get dozens of calls everyday, people wondering what's going on," said developer Nick Mastroianni.


 

Story by Peter Schaller / CBS12 News

The developer saves a major announcement about the project for CBS 12 News.  They've just confirmed the biggest leaser here is going to be a 4 star Wyndham Grand.  The popular Jupiter wine bar and restaurant Too Bizarre will also move in here, into a much bigger space.



Mastroianni said, "This is our home, Jupiter is home to our development company just about everyone who works for this company."


There will be many more restaurants with some outdoor seating, shops, and a marina with public and private slips.  The developer says the project is creating an estimated 2,000 jobs.


There have been some critics of the project, mainly concerned that it was taking too long to complete.  But the town council approved it 4 to 1 back in 2008.  Now, 5 years later, here it is.  It's a developer's dream fueled by international financing and its meeting the right economic forecast to make it actually happen.

Source: http://www.cbs12.com/news/top-stories/stor...

Mini-golf proposal for A1A gets cheers, jeers in Jupiter

by Dylan Roden

By Bill DiPaolo

Palm Beach Post Staff Writer

JUPITER -- — 

The owner says a proposed miniature golf course east of A1A would be a family attraction featuring burgers, ice cream and alcohol, but some nearby residents fear too much noise and traffic.

“It’s going to be people golfing with soft music in t

he background. Families need something to do,” said Palm Beach Gardens resident Patty Bartoli. Her Palm Beach Gardens-based company, J.E.M. Partners, bought the 2-acre property just north of Jupiter Beach Road in June for $1.2 million, according to county records.

Some residents of The Estuary, a 150-unit condominium just east of the now-vacant property, say the golf course would bring late-night partyers to a quiet neighborhood. Some residents of Jupiter River Park, a mobile home park across A1A from the property, also have voiced opposition.

“It’s an amusement park with alcohol open late at night. It’s too close to residents. People around here are pretty emotional against it,” said Rick Meares, an Estuary resident.

Plans for Lighthouse Cove Miniature Golf call for a 20-foot-tall lighthouse, waterfalls and 36 holes designed to feature Jupiter’s history and local sea life. A 2,000-square-foot, two-story building with adjacent covered outdoor seating would serve light food, beer and wine. No indoor seating is planned.

Mini-golf would fit the “funky fishing village” feel the town is trying to create along A1A between U.S. 1 and Jupiter Beach Road, said Brenda Arnold, the town’s Community Redevelopment Agency program manager.

“We don’t need another bar-restaurant. Many residents tell me they want more family orientated activities in that area,” Arnold said.

The complex would be open seven days a week. Hours would be 10 a.m.-10 p.m., Bartoli said. Entrances and exits are planned on A1A and Dubois Road. Outdoor live music requires a special-event permit.

Plans call for an 8,000-square-foot preserve of native plants in the northeast section of the site. A 5-foot-wide sidewalk would take pedestrians and bicycle riders past the food shack between A1A and Dubois Road. The parking lot on the north side would hold 63 vehicles.

The town’s planning and zoning commission Tuesday voted 4-1 to recommend approval to the town council. A final vote by the council is scheduled for Dec. 18.

“We are not creating a bar scene. Families are getting younger in the area. We’re looking to create a laid-back, Key West atmosphere,” said Bartoli, who said the complex will create about 20 jobs.

To view the proposal, go to jupiter.fl.us.

 

Source: http://www.palmbeachpost.com/news/news/loc...

German government grants newly opened Max Planck institute $40 million

by Dylan Roden

Updated: 5:56 p.m. Wednesday, Dec. 5, 2012 | Posted: 11:43 a.m. Wednesday, Dec. 5, 2012

By Stacey Singer

Palm Beach Post Staff Writer

JUPITER — 

The German government has agreed to contribute $10 million a year for the next four years to the Max Planck Florida Institute for Neuroscience, a German official announced Wednesday at the institute’s ceremonial opening.

The unexpected grant, which will allow for the expansion of brain research, is only the fourth time in the 100-year history of Germany’s Max Planck Society that it has committed money to a venture outside of Germany.

“My wish is that this institute will be a focal point for scientific breakthroughs and a bridgehead for German and American cooperation,” said Cornelia Quennet-Thielen, state secretary of Germany’s Ministry of Education & Research.

About 400 scientists, politicians and leaders in business and education attended the ceremony to inaugurate the modern, 100,000 square-foot building where brain circuitry is being studied. The festivities featured students from the Oxbridge Academy performing classical German music, speeches about the value of international collaboration, and even video of Nobel laureate Bert Sakmann kiteboarding along the Atlantic shore.

Newly elected Palm Beach County Commissioner Hal Valeche, a one-time skeptic, said he was impressed that at a time of economic stress Germany was willing to support the Florida institute. He recalled the urging of former Scripps Research Institute President Dr. Richard Lerner to commit more tax money to bioscience here.

“Dr. Lerner said, “ ‘If we can just get one more world-class institution here, that will be the critical mass we need to get bioscience off the ground,’” Valeche said. “I think we’ve got that now.”

Florida and Palm Beach County have contributed $188 million to attract the German research giant to the region, including the $64 million building that opened Wednesday. The $40 million grant will enable scientists from Germany to visit and work, and likely will be renewed well beyond four years, Max Planck Society President Peter Gruss said.

The Florida institute is the society’s first outside of Europe. The society is supported by German taxpayers, and so the grant required approval from a committee comprised of both the federal government and all 16 German states, he said. The money is not earmarked for anything, instead the institute will be watched to see how it’s progressing.

“A scientific committee will come every two years to guide the institute and to tell me what they see about the research,” Gruss said.

Gruss said he envisions the institute being supported in the future one-third by the society, one-third by philanthropy and one-third by grants from the National Institutes of Health and other agencies.

“We have recruited young people from Cal-Tech, from Harvard, from Cold Spring Harbor. In three years, this institute already has standing in the scientific community,” Gruss said. “If you pick the right people they act as a magnet.”

The Florida institute’s CEO, David Fitzpatrick, said he opted to change the name of Max Planck Florida to the longer but more descriptive Max Planck Florida Institute for Neuroscience to “better communicate our scientific focus, our mission, and our dedication to understanding the most complex living structure in the known universe.”

Source: http://www.palmbeachpost.com/news/news/max...

Wind-farm plan OK'd by Palm Beach County zoning panel

by [Your Name Here]

By Dennis Glade

Palm Beach Post Staff Writer

WEST PALM BEACH —

Palm Beach County zoning commissioners voted Thursday to allow construction on Florida's first wind turbine farm near Belle Glade.

Commissioners voted 6-0 for wind turbines at the 12,900-acre site. The plan now will go before the county commission.

Wind Capital Group, a St. Louis company, seeks to convert the wind blowing off Lake Okeechobee into energy that could power homes and businesses.

Throughout the process to get the wind farm approved, environmentalists have objected to what they believe will be irrevocable damage to the natural habitat of birds and other animals.

Robin Saiz, director of project development for the Wind Capital Group, said the firm is collecting data to determine how to protect birds.

Roy Schneider of the Audubon Society of the Everglades cautioned the zoning board to be patient before making any commitments to ensure the Glades' natural beauty.

"I do wish you would be cautious about making plans that are so long-term and expensive," Schneider said. "We are all supportive of clean, renewable energy sources, we all want more jobs.

"The question is what kind of jobs and is doing this for the long-term for the good of our society? Going toward this as a more cautious and conservative measure might be a good idea."

George Gentile of Gentile Glas, Holloway, O'Mahoney and Associates, speaking on behalf of the Wind Capital Group, said the construction of the wind turbines will boost the economy with 200 to 300 construction jobs and 15 to 20 permanent jobs once the turbines are running.

Gentile denied that the farm would produce a disturbing amount of noise.

"A normal conversation is anywhere between 50 and 60 decibels; 100 meters from the wind turbine we are at the 50-decibel level," Gentile said.

"The sound and noise coming from the new technology is well within range of normal activities."

Zoning Commissioner Sherry Hyman said she hopes that the wind farm will spark more energy sources like it, not only around Florida but around the country.

"I'm fully supportive of this project.

"We need more wind engines throughout our country and less fossil fuels, for sure," Hyman said.


Wind farm near Belle Glade

  • $350 million to produce 200 megawatts to power 55,000 to 65,000 homes.
  • 114 to 124 wind turbines.
  • Turbine would be roughly 30 stories tall.

Source

http://www.palmbeachpost.com/news/business/wind-farm-plan-okd-by-palm-beach-county-zoning-p-1/nLhLP/

 

Riviera Beach chooses architects for marina area, Newcomb Hall

by [Your Name Here]
Architectural renderings showing possibilities for a new Newcomb Hall at Riviera Beach Marina. The three-story design by the team C3TS/Gentile, Holloway, O'Mahoney & Associates features a Caribbean theme and with an amphitheater that faces northwest into Bicentennial Park.
Architectural renderings showing possibilities for a new Newcomb Hall at Riviera Beach Marina. The three-story design by the team C3TS/Gentile, Holloway, O'Mahoney & Associates features a Caribbean theme and with an amphitheater that faces northwest into Bicentennial Park.
 
By Willie Howard

Palm Beach Post Staff Writer

Updated: 9:11 p.m. Wednesday, May 11, 2011

Posted: 9:08 p.m. Wednesday, May 11, 2011

— The architectural firm C3TS will design a new Newcomb Hall and a site plan for the marina property.

The city council, sitting as the Community Redevelopment Agency board, decided Wednesday to hire the firm, ending a design competition between C3TS and Song & Associates, which presented their visions for the Newcomb Hall community center and the surrounding marina property to an evaluation committee on May 2.

The CRA staff will negotiate a work order with C3TS and its design partner, Gentile, Holloway, O'Mahoney & Associates, and bring it back to the council for final approval.

Song & Associates was chosen Wednesday to design improvements to the Riviera Beach Heights, Blue Heron South and Broadway West neighborhoods.

C3TS has proposed a Bahamian-style, three-story Newcomb Hall located on the southeast corner of Bicentennial Park. The new Newcomb Hall would include an amphitheater facing northwest into Bicentennial Park and a third floor that could be rented for parties and weddings.

The C3TS concept, dubbed Marina Place at Riviera Beach, includes a public market building next to Newcomb Hall, a tiki-style restaurant and small vendor huts for waterfront businesses.

On April 27, the CRA board agreed to borrow $25.6 million to rebuild Newcomb Hall, build a parking garage, beautify Riviera Beach Heights, and make other improvements around the marina and along Broadway to stimulate redevelopment.

Also Wednesday, the CRA board approved a plan to issue a request for proposals for a nonprofit company to operate a community boating program that would provide boating education and boat access to youths and their families.

The board approved searching for a community boating program provider in a 3-1 vote, with Councilwoman Dawn Pardo dissenting.

Pardo said the boating program seemed premature because construction work to replace the marina bulkhead is set to begin in June. Proposals for the boating program must be submitted to the CRA by June 18.

willie_howard@pbpost.com

Source:

http://www.palmbeachpost.com/news/riviera-beach-chooses-architects-for-marina-area-newcomb-1469825.html

GHO Being Considered for Riviera's Newcomb Hall Renovation

by [Your Name Here]

Architectural firms present differing plans for Riviera's Newcomb Hall renovation

By Willie Howard  

Posted: 5:52 p.m. Monday, May 2, 2011

— RIVIERA BEACH --- Two architecture firms competing to design a new Newcomb Hall presented different visions Monday for the community center and surrounding property at the city marina.

Song & Associates focused on history in its design for a two-story Newcomb Hall with 20-foot ceilings in the rooms and dormer windows jutting out from the roof.

The Song & Associates design takes its style from the Riviera Hotel, bought in 1901 as a winter home by city pioneer Charles Newcomb . It features covered porches on the first and second floors where visitors could look out over the water and view the amphitheater, which would be in the northwest corner of Bicentennial Park.

Song & Associates' plan includes a central Newcomb Place on 13th Street, a view of the water for those looking east along 13th Street and a north-south corridor that joins Newcomb Hall with stores, restaurants and a Newcomb museum. A circular water fountain similar to the one on Clematis Street in West Palm Beach separates the marina office from restaurants and bars.

"It's like a mini downtown, like a small village," said Young Song, president of Song & Associates.

In another vision presented by the team of C3TS/Gentile, Holloway, O'Mahoney & Associates, Newcomb Hall is a crescent-shaped, three story building at the southeast corner of Bicentennial Park that includes an amphitheater facing northwest into the park.

Newcomb Hall would include covered porches for viewing the water and a banquet hall on the third floor that could be rented for special events such as weddings. The Bahamian building style would be similar to buildings found in Key West or Nassau.

The C3TS team's design for the marina property includes an open-air green market near Newcomb Hall, a tiki-style restaurant and small vendor huts for waterfront businesses. The plan calls for bright colors and lots of trees.

"We want it to be fun, invigorating and a place that people will remember," said Emily O'Mahoney of the C3TS team.

A 12-member evaluation panel will rank the firms' proposals and submit their scores to the city council, sitting as the Community Redevelopment Agency board.

A videotape of Monday's presentations will be shown during the CRA's May 11 meeting, CRA Executive Director Tony Brown said. The board is expected to choose one of the firms and authorize the CRA staff to negotiate a contract for a final design.

The CRA board last week agreed to borrow $25.6 million from BB&T Corp. to rebuild Newcomb Hall and make other public improvements around the marina and along Broadway in hopes of stimulating redevelopment of the waterfront.

 

Source:

Architectural firms present differing plans for Riviera's Newcomb Hall renovation http://www.palmbeachpost.com/news/1449416.html