Boca Raton and Mizner's grand vision
In the mid-1920s, architect Addison Mizner conceived a plan to build an entirely new city along Florida's southeastern coast — not merely a resort hotel or a residential subdivision, but a fully realized urban environment complete, in his own description, to market places. That city became Boca Raton, and the ambition behind it stands as one of the defining episodes of the Florida land boom era. Mizner's project drew enormous investment, captured national attention, and left behind a collection of buildings and urban design ideas that still shape Boca Raton's character today. The story of how that grand scheme rose and fell within a few short years offers a vivid illustration of the speculative fever that gripped South Florida in the 1920s and the lasting architectural legacy that outlasted the boom itself.
Addison Mizner and the making of a Florida style
Before Boca Raton became the focus of his most ambitious project, Addison Mizner had already established himself as the dominant architectural presence in Palm Beach, located roughly twenty-five miles north along Florida's Atlantic coast.[1] In Palm Beach, Mizner developed an approach to architecture that drew on Spanish, Moorish, and Mediterranean influences, producing estates and public buildings that seemed to belong to an older, sun-drenched European world rather than to a frontier state barely emerged from wilderness. His reputation in Palm Beach made him a celebrity of the American leisure class, and it was from that foundation of success and notoriety that he turned his attention southward.
Mizner has been described as an eccentric figure, a man whose personal style was as theatrical as his buildings.[2] He was not a conventionally trained architect in the academic sense, but he possessed an extraordinary feel for proportion, ornament, and the relationship between buildings and the subtropical landscape. His work in Palm Beach demonstrated that wealthy Americans were hungry for an architecture that evoked Mediterranean grandeur, and that Florida's climate and light could make such evocations feel genuinely convincing rather than merely imitative.
What made Mizner unusual among the architects and developers of his era was the scale of his thinking. Where most developers of the period were content to build a hotel, a golf course, or a neighborhood and sell lots, Mizner looked at the undeveloped land around Boca Raton and imagined something far larger. He dreamed, as George Merrick had dreamed in Coral Gables, of an entire city — a place with a coherent identity, a consistent architectural language, and the full range of civic and commercial institutions that urban life requires.[3]
The founding of the Boca Raton development project
At the height of Florida's land boom, Mizner and a group of financial backers founded a development company with the intention of transforming approximately 1,600 acres along the Intracoastal Waterway into the new city of Boca Raton.[4] The site lay south of Palm Beach, in territory that was at the time largely undeveloped, a flat landscape of scrub and coastal wetlands with the Atlantic Ocean to the east and the Intracoastal to the west. It was, in raw terms, an unpromising canvas, but Mizner and his associates saw in it the opportunity to build something unprecedented in Florida's short history as a destination for American wealth.
The scale of the investment and the ambition of the plan placed this project at the center of the speculative mania that had overtaken South Florida. Land prices across the region had been climbing at extraordinary rates, and buyers from across the country were purchasing lots sight unseen, confident that Florida real estate would continue to appreciate indefinitely. Mizner's name and reputation gave the Boca Raton project a particular luster. Here was not merely a developer offering lots in a new subdivision, but a celebrated architect promising to create a city of beauty and distinction, a permanent monument to a certain idea of American luxury.
A map produced in 1925 captured the full scope of what Mizner and his backers were proposing, with the Atlantic Ocean at the top and an elaborate network of planned streets, canals, parks, and civic spaces laid out across the site.[5] The plan was comprehensive and detailed, showing not just residential areas but the commercial, civic, and cultural institutions that would make Boca Raton a self-sustaining city rather than a mere resort.
The Cloister and the architecture of aspiration
The most celebrated structure to emerge from Mizner's Boca Raton project was the Cloister Inn, a hotel that was designed to serve simultaneously as an architectural showcase and as the social heart of the new city. Mizner designed the Cloister in the Mediterranean Revival style he had developed in Palm Beach, with arcaded loggias, terra-cotta roof tiles, thick stucco walls, and the kind of ornamental detail that evoked the grand hotels and palaces of southern Europe.[6] The building was intended to demonstrate to prospective buyers and investors what the completed city of Boca Raton would look and feel like — a kind of three-dimensional advertisement for the project as a whole.
The hotel's design drew directly on the architectural vocabulary that Mizner had refined in Palm Beach, but it was deployed here in a new context, as the centerpiece of an entirely planned community rather than as a single commission within an already established resort town. The Cloister was meant to establish the aesthetic standard that all subsequent buildings in Boca Raton would be expected to meet, creating a visual coherence that would distinguish the city from the haphazard development springing up elsewhere along the Florida coast.
Mizner also designed administration buildings that were intended to serve as a visual example of the new Boca Raton for his prospective clients. These structures housed his sales offices and provided buyers with a tangible preview of the architectural quality they were being asked to invest in.[7] The strategy reflected a sophisticated understanding of how to market a place that did not yet fully exist — by building enough of it, in sufficiently impressive form, to allow the imagination to supply the rest.
The collapse of the boom and the limits of the dream
The Florida land boom that had made Mizner's project possible also contained the seeds of its destruction. By the mid-1920s, the speculative frenzy had driven land prices far beyond any level that could be justified by actual economic fundamentals, and the mechanisms that sustained the boom — easy credit, rapid resales, and the collective faith that prices would never fall — were growing increasingly fragile. When the bust came, it came quickly and with devastating force across South Florida.
For the Boca Raton project, the collapse of the boom meant that the grand plan Mizner had laid out on paper and partially begun to realize on the ground could never be completed. The financial backers who had committed capital to the project found themselves exposed as the market turned, and the elaborate network of streets, canals, and civic spaces that had been planned for the 1,600-acre site remained largely unbuilt.[8] What remained was a handful of completed buildings — the Cloister foremost among them — and the memory of an ambition that had briefly seemed entirely plausible.
The Boca Raton project's fate was not unique in Florida during this period. Across the state, developments that had been announced with great fanfare and supported by substantial investment were left incomplete or abandoned as the boom gave way to bust. What set Boca Raton apart was the quality of what Mizner had actually managed to build before the money ran out, and the degree to which those buildings would continue to shape the city's identity in the decades that followed.
Mizner's legacy in Boca Raton
Despite the failure of the broader development scheme, Mizner's influence on Boca Raton proved remarkably durable. The buildings he completed — the Cloister above all — became anchors of the city's architectural identity and served as reference points for subsequent development long after the boom-era ambitions had faded into history. Travelers seeking traces of Mizner's presence in Boca Raton have found them embedded in the city's streetscapes, in the style of its older buildings, and in the continued existence of the Cloister itself, which survived as a luxury hotel property into the modern era.[9]
The Boca Raton Historical Society has maintained active documentation of Mizner's dream and its architectural remains, recognizing in the surviving structures an important record of a particular moment in Florida's history — a moment when the state's potential seemed genuinely unlimited and when ambitious men with access to capital could seriously propose to build entire cities from scratch in a matter of years.[10]
Mizner's approach to city-building in Boca Raton also placed him in conversation with the other great Florida developer-dreamers of his era. The comparison with George Merrick, who was pursuing a similarly ambitious project at Coral Gables at roughly the same time, has been noted by architectural historians. Both men dreamed of complete cities rather than mere subdivisions, and both saw their grandest plans curtailed by the collapse of the boom. But both also left behind enough built fabric to give their respective cities a distinctive character that persists to this day.[11]
Boca Raton and the broader story of South Florida development
The story of Mizner's Boca Raton project belongs to a larger narrative about the development of South Florida that is deeply connected to the history of West Palm Beach and the surrounding region. The land boom of the 1920s transformed the entire coastal strip between West Palm Beach and Miami from a sparsely settled frontier into an increasingly urbanized landscape, with developers competing to attract investment and buyers from across the country. Mizner's project was the most architecturally ambitious of these efforts, but it was one episode in a process of rapid and often chaotic development that reshaped the region permanently.
The Florida Memory archive's preservation of the 1925 planning map for Mizner's Boca Raton project provides a striking visual record of what the boom era looked like at its most expansive — a moment when the gap between plan and reality seemed small enough that almost any ambition appeared achievable.[12] That map, with its orderly grid of streets and its careful allocation of land for parks, civic buildings, and commercial zones, captures both the confidence of the boom era and the fragility of the assumptions on which that confidence rested.
Mizner's Boca Raton remains, a century after the project's launch, a place where the traces of an extraordinary ambition are still legible in the built environment — in the arcades and tile roofs and thick stucco walls that recall the Mediterranean world Mizner sought to evoke, and in the scale of the Cloister, which even in its altered form retains something of the grandeur its designer intended. The city that exists today is not the city Mizner planned, but it bears his imprint in ways that visitors and residents continue to recognize.