El Cid West Palm Beach Guide: Difference between revisions
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El Cid | El Cid sits in central [[West Palm Beach]], a historic residential neighborhood that's hard to miss. Wedged between the [[Lake Worth Lagoon]] to the east and [[Interstate 95]] to the west, it's known for mid-century modern and Mediterranean Revival homes, tree-lined streets, and easy access to downtown and major civic buildings. The neighborhood takes its name from Rodrigo Díaz de Vivar, the medieval Spanish knight celebrated as El Cid, a choice that fit the Spanish Revival themes developers were pushing across South Florida in the early 1900s. Like many neighborhoods in the region, El Cid grew up as twentieth-century urbanization spread outward, with post-World War II suburbanization and waves of investment layering different architectural styles on top of one another. You can still see that mix today. | ||
The | The past few decades have been turbulent for the area. Historic preservation debates, rising housing costs, and luxury development have reshaped who lives here and what the streets look like. The at-risk status of specific structures has become impossible to ignore, particularly the home designed by architect W. B. Eckler and linked to Brigadier General Albin F. Irzyk, locally called the "General's House." Its uncertain future has forced conversations about preservation versus redevelopment that define El Cid right now.<ref>["Will Historic 'General's House' in El Cid Neighborhood Be Saved?", ''The Palm Beach Post'', November 19, 2025.]</ref> These pressures aren't unique to El Cid. Across [[West Palm Beach]], rapid growth and an influx of wealthy investors have squeezed the housing available to working- and middle-class residents. | ||
== History == | == History == | ||
El Cid | El Cid emerged from [[West Palm Beach]]'s rapid urbanization in the late 1800s. The city was incorporated in 1894, the same year [[Henry Flagler]] pushed the [[Florida East Coast Railway]] south through Palm Beach County. That single decision opened the floodgates. Settlement exploded along Florida's eastern coast as entrepreneurs, workers, and seasonal residents moved in to be near the rail corridor and the growing downtown. The land that'd become El Cid was part of this broader residential push. | ||
By the 1920s, the neighborhood had | By the 1920s, the neighborhood had taken shape. The Florida land boom brought Spanish Revival and Mediterranean Revival styles into vogue, and West Palm Beach builders embraced them enthusiastically. Stucco homes with red-tiled roofs, arched doorways, and ornamental ironwork rose up across the neighborhood. Naming streets and neighborhoods after Spanish historical figures like El Cid was deliberate marketing. Developers wanted to evoke Mediterranean romance for potential buyers.<ref>[West Palm Beach City Planning Department, Neighborhood and Historic Preservation Records.]</ref> | ||
The | Then everything stopped. The land boom collapsed in 1926. The Great Depression hit. A catastrophic hurricane struck in 1928. Development slowed to a crawl, but El Cid kept its residents through those lean years. The housing stock was maintained even when money was tight. | ||
Post-World War II growth changed everything again. Returning veterans and their families needed homes near the city center, and builders responded. This era brought mid-century modernism to El Cid: flat roofs, jalousie windows, terrazzo floors, concrete block construction. These materials and methods were practical for Florida's climate and reflected the era's faith in new technology. Today's El Cid is the result of that mix. 1920s Mediterranean Revival homes sit alongside 1950s and 1960s ranch-style and modernist structures, creating the neighborhood's architectural variety. | |||
Recent decades have brought preservation efforts into sharper focus. The [[West Palm Beach Historic Preservation Board]] has considered historic designation for several properties, and residents and preservation advocates have clashed over which structures deserve protection and how to balance that against a growing city's needs.<ref>[West Palm Beach Historic Preservation Board, public records and hearing minutes.]</ref> The "General's House" is the most prominent example. Preservationists say it matters because of its historic significance and its connection to architect W. B. Eckler. Others cite the steep costs of bringing it back. As of late 2025, nobody's sure what happens next.<ref>["Will Historic 'General's House' in El Cid Neighborhood Be Saved?", ''The Palm Beach Post'', November 19, 2025.]</ref> | |||
== Architecture == | == Architecture == | ||
El Cid | El Cid holds one of the better collections of early- and mid-twentieth-century residential architecture in [[West Palm Beach]]. The neighborhood's Mediterranean Revival and Spanish Eclectic homes from the 1920s land boom are unmistakable: stucco exteriors, low-pitched red tile roofs, decorative arched windows, courtyard configurations borrowed from Spanish and Italian vernacular building. They're smaller in scale than the grand estates across the water in [[Palm Beach]], but they reflect the same stylistic fervor that swept through South Florida back then. | ||
Layered | Layered on top are mid-century modern and ranch-style homes built after the war, when concrete block became the standard building method in Palm Beach County. Single-story layouts, carports, jalousie windows, terrazzo or tile flooring. Practical responses to Florida's weather that've acquired historic importance of their own. The [[Florida Division of Historical Resources]] recognizes mid-century modernism as a significant part of the state's architectural heritage, and El Cid has several examples that fall within the period preservationists typically consider significant.<ref>[Florida Division of Historical Resources, Florida Master Site File and architectural survey documentation.]</ref> | ||
W. B. Eckler's "General's House," associated with Brigadier General Albin F. Irzyk, stands as a documented mid-century example. Eckler was active in West Palm Beach's postwar architectural scene, and his El Cid work represents a local take on modernist residential design. The property's unclear future has sparked calls for a comprehensive survey of the neighborhood's mid-century structures before more are demolished or substantially altered.<ref>["Will Historic 'General's House' in El Cid Neighborhood Be Saved?", ''The Palm Beach Post'', November 19, 2025.]</ref> | |||
== Geography == | == Geography == | ||
The neighborhood occupies central [[West Palm Beach]] between the [[Lake Worth Lagoon]] on the east and [[Interstate 95]] on the west. Like the rest of [[South Florida]], it's flat, with streets laid out in a regular grid broken by small parks and landscaped medians. The subtropical climate keeps it warm and humid in summer, mild and dry in winter. Live oaks, royal palms, and tropical plantings provide a dense canopy that gives El Cid much of its visual character. | |||
To the north | To the north lies the West Palm Beach municipal government complex. To the south, the [[Palm Beach County Courthouse]] and civic core of the city come into view. The [[Palm Beach County Convention Center]] is a short drive away, reinforcing the neighborhood's role at the intersection of residential and commercial West Palm Beach. [[U.S. Route 1]] and [[State Road 7]] connect El Cid to downtown to the north and to southern Palm Beach County. [[Interstate 95]] links the neighborhood regionally to [[Fort Lauderdale]] and [[Miami]] to the south and to [[Palm Beach Gardens]] and [[Jupiter, Florida|Jupiter]] to the north. | ||
Several small parks and green spaces | Several small parks and green spaces dot the neighborhood. Residents have easy access to outdoor recreation. The [[Lake Worth Lagoon]] nearby offers kayaking, fishing, and wildlife watching. The waterfront draws both residents and visitors. | ||
== Preservation Efforts == | == Preservation Efforts == | ||
Preservation in El Cid involves competing interests. Longtime residents clash with property owners, developers, and city government. The [[West Palm Beach Historic Preservation Board]] oversees historic designation and reviews demolition or alteration permits for potentially significant structures.<ref>[West Palm Beach Historic Preservation Board, public records.]</ref> Neighborhood associations and ad hoc preservation groups have repeatedly advocated for designating individual properties or larger historic districts within El Cid. | |||
The | The "General's House" case shows how hard preservation can be when development pressure is intense. The property designed by architect W. B. Eckler and associated with Brigadier General Albin F. Irzyk has fallen into disrepair. Restoring it would cost a lot. Preservationists contend that the structure demonstrates mid-century residential architecture by a locally significant architect and that losing it would damage the neighborhood's historic fabric. Property owners and opponents counter that restoration costs are prohibitive and that owners have property rights to consider. What happens here and in similar cases will likely shape El Cid's future as redevelopment pressure intensifies.<ref>["Will Historic 'General's House' in El Cid Neighborhood Be Saved?", ''The Palm Beach Post'', November 19, 2025.]</ref> | ||
State-level | State-level support exists too. The [[Florida Division of Historical Resources]] maintains the Florida Master Site File, an inventory of historically significant properties across the state. El Cid properties meeting the criteria may qualify for state and federal historic tax credits, which can make rehabilitation financially possible for owners willing to take it on.<ref>[Florida Division of Historical Resources, Historic Preservation Tax Credit Program documentation.]</ref> | ||
== Culture == | == Culture == | ||
El Cid has | El Cid has been culturally active throughout its history as part of [[West Palm Beach]]. The neighborhood's position near downtown means residents can easily reach the [[Kravis Center for the Performing Arts]], the [[Norton Museum of Art]], and the established gallery district. The El Cid Neighborhood Association and adjacent civic groups have organized community events that provide forums for cultural exchange, seasonal celebrations, and civic engagement. | ||
West Palm Beach's growing film and television industry has added new dimensions to the broader area's cultural life. In early 2024, an ABC crime drama filmed on location downtown, temporarily closing streets and making the city visible as a production setting.<ref>["TV Crew Films in West Palm for New ABC Crime Show", ''Yahoo Entertainment'' / ''WPTV'', 2024.]</ref> While filming has concentrated in downtown rather than El Cid itself, the neighborhood's proximity to production locations and its residential character have made it a natural spillover zone for cast, crew, and industry support services during active shoots. | |||
Annual | Annual events matter too. Street fairs and historic home tours organized by local associations strengthen community identity and give residents chances to connect with the neighborhood's architectural heritage. These gatherings serve a preservation function as well by raising awareness of historic properties and building support for their maintenance. | ||
== Economy == | == Economy == | ||
El Cid's local economy reflects its position as a centrally located residential neighborhood | El Cid's local economy reflects its position as a centrally located residential neighborhood next to West Palm Beach's downtown commercial core. Small businesses line the neighborhood's commercial corridors: boutique retail shops, independent cafes, restaurants, personal service providers serving residents and visitors drawn by walkable streets and historic character. Professional service firms including law offices, real estate agencies, and financial advisors operate in or near El Cid, taking advantage of the neighborhood's proximity to the county courthouse, city hall, and the Palm Beach County Convention Center. | ||
West Palm Beach's broader economy has transformed since the mid-2010s. Financial industry firms, technology companies, and high-net-worth individuals relocating from the northeastern United States have poured investment into the area. This has supported robust commercial activity and pushed property values up. It's also created serious affordability pressures, especially in neighborhoods like El Cid. Residential property values have risen substantially. The luxury real estate market now dominates: single-family homes frequently sell above $450,000, often much higher.<ref>[Elizabeth DeWoody Real Estate, "The South End Advantage: Why This West Palm Beach Corridor Keeps Advancing," elizabethdewoody.com, 2024.]</ref> | |||
These economic conditions | These economic conditions directly affect the neighborhood's demographics and the kinds of businesses that survive here. Boutique and artisan businesses that once gave El Cid its character face rising commercial rents. Working- and middle-class residents who previously anchored the population find staying increasingly difficult. | ||
== Demographics and Housing == | == Demographics and Housing == | ||
El Cid's population | El Cid's population mirrors [[West Palm Beach]]'s demographic diversity. You'll find long-term residents, recent arrivals, and a growing share of higher-income households attracted by central location and historic character. The neighborhood has traditionally drawn people employed in professional, healthcare, legal, and service sectors. Its proximity to downtown has made it appealing to younger workers and retirees alike. | ||
Housing affordability has | Housing affordability has become El Cid's defining challenge, one that affects all of [[West Palm Beach]]. The rental market has tightened dramatically over two decades due to population growth, limited new housing construction relative to demand, and significant luxury residential development. Long-term residents report rent increases that've made staying financially impossible, displacing lower- and middle-income households and altering the neighborhood's social composition over time. [[Palm Beach County]] runs workforce housing programs offering income-adjusted rents to qualified applicants, but availability is limited and waitlists are long.<ref>[Palm Beach County Housing Authority, Workforce Housing Program documentation, pbcgov.org.]</ref> | ||
El Cid's housing pressure is part of a citywide pattern. Local reporting and community accounts show rents for modest units have more than tripled since the mid-2000s. The supply of housing accessible to individuals and families earning below the area median income hasn't kept up with demand. Younger residents and service workers who lack the income for independent households at current market rents have turned to shared living arrangements. These conditions have sparked ongoing discussion among city planners, elected officials, and community organizations about preserving economic diversity as development pressure continues.<ref>[Palm Beach County Housing Authority, Affordable Housing Needs Assessment.]</ref> | |||
== Notable Residents == | == Notable Residents == | ||
Throughout its history, El Cid has | Throughout its history, El Cid has attracted individuals who contributed to [[West Palm Beach]] and Florida. [[John D. MacArthur]], the philanthropist and businessman who became one of the largest landowners in Palm Beach County during the mid-twentieth century, was connected to the West Palm Beach area during the postwar decades. MacArthur's philanthropic legacy includes the [[John D. MacArthur Beach State Park]] in northern Palm Beach County, a conservation project reflecting his substantial investment in Florida's natural and public resources.<ref>[John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, historical records; Florida State Parks, John D. MacArthur Beach State Park.]</ref> | ||
Brigadier General Albin F. Irzyk, a decorated United States Army officer who served in World War II and Korea, is | Brigadier General Albin F. Irzyk, a decorated United States Army officer who served in World War II and Korea, is connected to El Cid through his residence in the W. B. Eckler-designed home now at the center of preservation debates. Irzyk's association with the neighborhood adds military history to El Cid's civic heritage. His former residence has been cited as an example of the kind of historically layered property that preservation advocates argue deserves protection.<ref>["Will Historic 'General's House' in El Cid Neighborhood Be Saved?", ''The Palm Beach Post'', November 19, 2025.]</ref> | ||
== Attractions == | == Attractions == | ||
El Cid and its immediate surroundings offer | El Cid and its immediate surroundings offer attractions for those interested in history, architecture, outdoor recreation, and urban culture. The neighborhood's streets themselves are the main draw: the combination of 1920s Mediterranean Revival homes, mid-century ranch houses, and mature tree canopy creates a visually distinctive environment that attracts architecture enthusiasts and those interested in Florida's residential history. | ||
[[El Cid Park]], a neighborhood green space within the district, provides walking paths and picnic areas for residents and visitors. | |||
[[ | [[Category:Neighborhoods in Florida]] | ||
[[Category:West Palm Beach, Florida]] | |||
[[Category:Historic neighborhoods in Florida]] | |||
[[Category:Residential areas in Palm Beach County, Florida]] | |||
Revision as of 17:47, 23 April 2026
El Cid sits in central West Palm Beach, a historic residential neighborhood that's hard to miss. Wedged between the Lake Worth Lagoon to the east and Interstate 95 to the west, it's known for mid-century modern and Mediterranean Revival homes, tree-lined streets, and easy access to downtown and major civic buildings. The neighborhood takes its name from Rodrigo Díaz de Vivar, the medieval Spanish knight celebrated as El Cid, a choice that fit the Spanish Revival themes developers were pushing across South Florida in the early 1900s. Like many neighborhoods in the region, El Cid grew up as twentieth-century urbanization spread outward, with post-World War II suburbanization and waves of investment layering different architectural styles on top of one another. You can still see that mix today.
The past few decades have been turbulent for the area. Historic preservation debates, rising housing costs, and luxury development have reshaped who lives here and what the streets look like. The at-risk status of specific structures has become impossible to ignore, particularly the home designed by architect W. B. Eckler and linked to Brigadier General Albin F. Irzyk, locally called the "General's House." Its uncertain future has forced conversations about preservation versus redevelopment that define El Cid right now.[1] These pressures aren't unique to El Cid. Across West Palm Beach, rapid growth and an influx of wealthy investors have squeezed the housing available to working- and middle-class residents.
History
El Cid emerged from West Palm Beach's rapid urbanization in the late 1800s. The city was incorporated in 1894, the same year Henry Flagler pushed the Florida East Coast Railway south through Palm Beach County. That single decision opened the floodgates. Settlement exploded along Florida's eastern coast as entrepreneurs, workers, and seasonal residents moved in to be near the rail corridor and the growing downtown. The land that'd become El Cid was part of this broader residential push.
By the 1920s, the neighborhood had taken shape. The Florida land boom brought Spanish Revival and Mediterranean Revival styles into vogue, and West Palm Beach builders embraced them enthusiastically. Stucco homes with red-tiled roofs, arched doorways, and ornamental ironwork rose up across the neighborhood. Naming streets and neighborhoods after Spanish historical figures like El Cid was deliberate marketing. Developers wanted to evoke Mediterranean romance for potential buyers.[2]
Then everything stopped. The land boom collapsed in 1926. The Great Depression hit. A catastrophic hurricane struck in 1928. Development slowed to a crawl, but El Cid kept its residents through those lean years. The housing stock was maintained even when money was tight.
Post-World War II growth changed everything again. Returning veterans and their families needed homes near the city center, and builders responded. This era brought mid-century modernism to El Cid: flat roofs, jalousie windows, terrazzo floors, concrete block construction. These materials and methods were practical for Florida's climate and reflected the era's faith in new technology. Today's El Cid is the result of that mix. 1920s Mediterranean Revival homes sit alongside 1950s and 1960s ranch-style and modernist structures, creating the neighborhood's architectural variety.
Recent decades have brought preservation efforts into sharper focus. The West Palm Beach Historic Preservation Board has considered historic designation for several properties, and residents and preservation advocates have clashed over which structures deserve protection and how to balance that against a growing city's needs.[3] The "General's House" is the most prominent example. Preservationists say it matters because of its historic significance and its connection to architect W. B. Eckler. Others cite the steep costs of bringing it back. As of late 2025, nobody's sure what happens next.[4]
Architecture
El Cid holds one of the better collections of early- and mid-twentieth-century residential architecture in West Palm Beach. The neighborhood's Mediterranean Revival and Spanish Eclectic homes from the 1920s land boom are unmistakable: stucco exteriors, low-pitched red tile roofs, decorative arched windows, courtyard configurations borrowed from Spanish and Italian vernacular building. They're smaller in scale than the grand estates across the water in Palm Beach, but they reflect the same stylistic fervor that swept through South Florida back then.
Layered on top are mid-century modern and ranch-style homes built after the war, when concrete block became the standard building method in Palm Beach County. Single-story layouts, carports, jalousie windows, terrazzo or tile flooring. Practical responses to Florida's weather that've acquired historic importance of their own. The Florida Division of Historical Resources recognizes mid-century modernism as a significant part of the state's architectural heritage, and El Cid has several examples that fall within the period preservationists typically consider significant.[5]
W. B. Eckler's "General's House," associated with Brigadier General Albin F. Irzyk, stands as a documented mid-century example. Eckler was active in West Palm Beach's postwar architectural scene, and his El Cid work represents a local take on modernist residential design. The property's unclear future has sparked calls for a comprehensive survey of the neighborhood's mid-century structures before more are demolished or substantially altered.[6]
Geography
The neighborhood occupies central West Palm Beach between the Lake Worth Lagoon on the east and Interstate 95 on the west. Like the rest of South Florida, it's flat, with streets laid out in a regular grid broken by small parks and landscaped medians. The subtropical climate keeps it warm and humid in summer, mild and dry in winter. Live oaks, royal palms, and tropical plantings provide a dense canopy that gives El Cid much of its visual character.
To the north lies the West Palm Beach municipal government complex. To the south, the Palm Beach County Courthouse and civic core of the city come into view. The Palm Beach County Convention Center is a short drive away, reinforcing the neighborhood's role at the intersection of residential and commercial West Palm Beach. U.S. Route 1 and State Road 7 connect El Cid to downtown to the north and to southern Palm Beach County. Interstate 95 links the neighborhood regionally to Fort Lauderdale and Miami to the south and to Palm Beach Gardens and Jupiter to the north.
Several small parks and green spaces dot the neighborhood. Residents have easy access to outdoor recreation. The Lake Worth Lagoon nearby offers kayaking, fishing, and wildlife watching. The waterfront draws both residents and visitors.
Preservation Efforts
Preservation in El Cid involves competing interests. Longtime residents clash with property owners, developers, and city government. The West Palm Beach Historic Preservation Board oversees historic designation and reviews demolition or alteration permits for potentially significant structures.[7] Neighborhood associations and ad hoc preservation groups have repeatedly advocated for designating individual properties or larger historic districts within El Cid.
The "General's House" case shows how hard preservation can be when development pressure is intense. The property designed by architect W. B. Eckler and associated with Brigadier General Albin F. Irzyk has fallen into disrepair. Restoring it would cost a lot. Preservationists contend that the structure demonstrates mid-century residential architecture by a locally significant architect and that losing it would damage the neighborhood's historic fabric. Property owners and opponents counter that restoration costs are prohibitive and that owners have property rights to consider. What happens here and in similar cases will likely shape El Cid's future as redevelopment pressure intensifies.[8]
State-level support exists too. The Florida Division of Historical Resources maintains the Florida Master Site File, an inventory of historically significant properties across the state. El Cid properties meeting the criteria may qualify for state and federal historic tax credits, which can make rehabilitation financially possible for owners willing to take it on.[9]
Culture
El Cid has been culturally active throughout its history as part of West Palm Beach. The neighborhood's position near downtown means residents can easily reach the Kravis Center for the Performing Arts, the Norton Museum of Art, and the established gallery district. The El Cid Neighborhood Association and adjacent civic groups have organized community events that provide forums for cultural exchange, seasonal celebrations, and civic engagement.
West Palm Beach's growing film and television industry has added new dimensions to the broader area's cultural life. In early 2024, an ABC crime drama filmed on location downtown, temporarily closing streets and making the city visible as a production setting.[10] While filming has concentrated in downtown rather than El Cid itself, the neighborhood's proximity to production locations and its residential character have made it a natural spillover zone for cast, crew, and industry support services during active shoots.
Annual events matter too. Street fairs and historic home tours organized by local associations strengthen community identity and give residents chances to connect with the neighborhood's architectural heritage. These gatherings serve a preservation function as well by raising awareness of historic properties and building support for their maintenance.
Economy
El Cid's local economy reflects its position as a centrally located residential neighborhood next to West Palm Beach's downtown commercial core. Small businesses line the neighborhood's commercial corridors: boutique retail shops, independent cafes, restaurants, personal service providers serving residents and visitors drawn by walkable streets and historic character. Professional service firms including law offices, real estate agencies, and financial advisors operate in or near El Cid, taking advantage of the neighborhood's proximity to the county courthouse, city hall, and the Palm Beach County Convention Center.
West Palm Beach's broader economy has transformed since the mid-2010s. Financial industry firms, technology companies, and high-net-worth individuals relocating from the northeastern United States have poured investment into the area. This has supported robust commercial activity and pushed property values up. It's also created serious affordability pressures, especially in neighborhoods like El Cid. Residential property values have risen substantially. The luxury real estate market now dominates: single-family homes frequently sell above $450,000, often much higher.[11]
These economic conditions directly affect the neighborhood's demographics and the kinds of businesses that survive here. Boutique and artisan businesses that once gave El Cid its character face rising commercial rents. Working- and middle-class residents who previously anchored the population find staying increasingly difficult.
Demographics and Housing
El Cid's population mirrors West Palm Beach's demographic diversity. You'll find long-term residents, recent arrivals, and a growing share of higher-income households attracted by central location and historic character. The neighborhood has traditionally drawn people employed in professional, healthcare, legal, and service sectors. Its proximity to downtown has made it appealing to younger workers and retirees alike.
Housing affordability has become El Cid's defining challenge, one that affects all of West Palm Beach. The rental market has tightened dramatically over two decades due to population growth, limited new housing construction relative to demand, and significant luxury residential development. Long-term residents report rent increases that've made staying financially impossible, displacing lower- and middle-income households and altering the neighborhood's social composition over time. Palm Beach County runs workforce housing programs offering income-adjusted rents to qualified applicants, but availability is limited and waitlists are long.[12]
El Cid's housing pressure is part of a citywide pattern. Local reporting and community accounts show rents for modest units have more than tripled since the mid-2000s. The supply of housing accessible to individuals and families earning below the area median income hasn't kept up with demand. Younger residents and service workers who lack the income for independent households at current market rents have turned to shared living arrangements. These conditions have sparked ongoing discussion among city planners, elected officials, and community organizations about preserving economic diversity as development pressure continues.[13]
Notable Residents
Throughout its history, El Cid has attracted individuals who contributed to West Palm Beach and Florida. John D. MacArthur, the philanthropist and businessman who became one of the largest landowners in Palm Beach County during the mid-twentieth century, was connected to the West Palm Beach area during the postwar decades. MacArthur's philanthropic legacy includes the John D. MacArthur Beach State Park in northern Palm Beach County, a conservation project reflecting his substantial investment in Florida's natural and public resources.[14]
Brigadier General Albin F. Irzyk, a decorated United States Army officer who served in World War II and Korea, is connected to El Cid through his residence in the W. B. Eckler-designed home now at the center of preservation debates. Irzyk's association with the neighborhood adds military history to El Cid's civic heritage. His former residence has been cited as an example of the kind of historically layered property that preservation advocates argue deserves protection.[15]
Attractions
El Cid and its immediate surroundings offer attractions for those interested in history, architecture, outdoor recreation, and urban culture. The neighborhood's streets themselves are the main draw: the combination of 1920s Mediterranean Revival homes, mid-century ranch houses, and mature tree canopy creates a visually distinctive environment that attracts architecture enthusiasts and those interested in Florida's residential history.
El Cid Park, a neighborhood green space within the district, provides walking paths and picnic areas for residents and visitors.
- ↑ ["Will Historic 'General's House' in El Cid Neighborhood Be Saved?", The Palm Beach Post, November 19, 2025.]
- ↑ [West Palm Beach City Planning Department, Neighborhood and Historic Preservation Records.]
- ↑ [West Palm Beach Historic Preservation Board, public records and hearing minutes.]
- ↑ ["Will Historic 'General's House' in El Cid Neighborhood Be Saved?", The Palm Beach Post, November 19, 2025.]
- ↑ [Florida Division of Historical Resources, Florida Master Site File and architectural survey documentation.]
- ↑ ["Will Historic 'General's House' in El Cid Neighborhood Be Saved?", The Palm Beach Post, November 19, 2025.]
- ↑ [West Palm Beach Historic Preservation Board, public records.]
- ↑ ["Will Historic 'General's House' in El Cid Neighborhood Be Saved?", The Palm Beach Post, November 19, 2025.]
- ↑ [Florida Division of Historical Resources, Historic Preservation Tax Credit Program documentation.]
- ↑ ["TV Crew Films in West Palm for New ABC Crime Show", Yahoo Entertainment / WPTV, 2024.]
- ↑ [Elizabeth DeWoody Real Estate, "The South End Advantage: Why This West Palm Beach Corridor Keeps Advancing," elizabethdewoody.com, 2024.]
- ↑ [Palm Beach County Housing Authority, Workforce Housing Program documentation, pbcgov.org.]
- ↑ [Palm Beach County Housing Authority, Affordable Housing Needs Assessment.]
- ↑ [John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, historical records; Florida State Parks, John D. MacArthur Beach State Park.]
- ↑ ["Will Historic 'General's House' in El Cid Neighborhood Be Saved?", The Palm Beach Post, November 19, 2025.]