The Ugly — Overdevelopment, Loss of Character, and the Boca That’s Disappearing

The Worth Group

03/27/26

There is a version of downtown Boca Raton that existed not very long ago — a version of low-slung storefronts, neighborhood florists, family law offices, local dry cleaners, and sandwich shops that occupied the blocks along Federal Highway south of Camino Real. Nothing that would appear in an architectural journal. But human-scaled, rooted, and part of the texture that made this a neighborhood rather than a development project.

Look at the aerial view of the stretch between Southeast 3rd and 5th Streets along Federal Highway. The parcels highlighted in that zone represent properties that have been consolidated, acquired, or placed under active development consideration. The Boca Raton Florist by South Florals, Poliakoff Backer LLP, Fox & Fox P.A., Mahogany Services — these are the kinds of businesses that give a downtown its working-city bones, the infrastructure beneath the luxury surface. As parcel after parcel gets absorbed into mixed-use mega-projects, that texture erodes.

The architectural homogenization problem. Walk the length of Mizner Boulevard and a troubling pattern emerges: the new buildings look like each other. They are competent, they follow the Mediterranean Revival vocabulary in a superficial way — arched windows, textured stucco, articulated balconies — but they lack the idiosyncratic vitality of the original Mizner work. The city Addison Mizner built had personality born of obsession and artistry. The city being built now has personality born of market research and formula.

The displacement of everyday commercial life. As land values rise and ground-floor rents in new towers reach premium levels, the small businesses that serve the daily needs of actual residents — the nail salon, the tailor, the neighborhood diner — are being priced out of the core. What replaces them tends to be the brands that can absorb premium rents: national restaurant chains, luxury boutiques, and medical aesthetics practices. These businesses serve a market. They do not constitute a neighborhood. And there is a meaningful difference.

The loss of neighborhood texture is not reversed by building more luxury towers. It deepens with each one.

For more information on Boca Raton, consider The Worth Group a resource by contacting them at 561-639-2149 or [email protected].

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