The Great Architects: Mizner in Boca Raton
In 1925 architect Addison Mizner moved to Boca Raton to create “the world’s most architecturally beautiful playground.” As Mizner Development Corporation (MDC), he purchased 1,500 acres of land, including two miles of oceanfront; some of it belonging to pioneer farmer Frank Howard Chesebro. Mizner’s backers included Rodman Wanamaker II, T. Coleman du Pont, Elizabeth Arden, William K. and Harold Vanderbilt, Clarence H. Geist, Irving Berlin, the Duchess of Sutherland, and Paris Singer. Association with such celebrity and extensive publicity resulted in sales of over $2 million on the first day.
Mizner’s plans for a large oceanfront hotel, Castillo del Rey, were taken over by the Ritz-Carlton hotel chain. Town commissioners appointed Mizner city planner, and he produced extensive designs, although all were not built. MDC constructed streets, riding trails, an administration building for the company, and the first houses in the Old Floresta and Spanish Village subdivisions, to encourage buyers to build on their lots. Camino Real, an east-west boulevard that is a main street today, was completed without its planned canal.
The Cloister Inn
Since the planned oceanfront hotel would take some time to build, Mizner quickly built a smaller inn on Lake Boca Raton. When the Cloister Inn opened in February 1926, it was said to be the most expensive hotel of its size, with furnishings costing $10,000 per room. To keep costs down, however, Mizner had furnished the inn with a mixture of his own designs made by Mizner Industries and, in the public areas, pieces from his private collection of rare antiques purchased on his travels. He confessed, “I have looted cathedrals, churches, and palaces and brought a shipload of two of everything from stone doorways to fine laces.”
The resort quickly attracted the leaders of American industry, show business, and society, including Vanderbilts, Elizabeth Arden, and Marie Dressler. Unfortunately, by the time it opened, the boom had already collapsed. A change of management failed to rescue Mizner Development Corporation from bankruptcy.
Mizner Industries
Although Mizner Development Corporation failed in 1927, Mizner Industries was still growing in 1929, according to this paid advertisement in a statewide newspaper:
Employing 40 persons, with an investment of approximately $75,000, the Mizner Industries, Inc., are supplying various products obtained from coquina rock brought to West Palm Beach direct from the company’s quarry at Key Largo. This new project raises the investment of Mizner Industries, Inc., in West Palm Beach to approximately $500,000. A payroll which will run around $6,000 weekly is estimated for the summer.