| Heritage
Park Office Condos
Winter Springs Office Space, Lease Space, Medical
Office
Winter Springs, Florida 32708
Property on State Road 434 across from Winter
Springs High School
PROPERTY LOCATION:
Property is located on State Road 434 between Hwy
417 and I-4 across from Winter Springs High School
in prestigous Winter Springs, Florida. Frontage on
434, approximately 2 miles to 417 and 5 miles to I-4.
Just blocks from the new Winter Springs Town Center.
PROPERTY DESCRIPTION:
• Two-story medical / office condo building
to be built by HSP Developers / General Contractors
• Site plans are complete and all permits are
in the process of being approved.
• A .513 acre site
• Building approximately 8,000 SF built to your
specifications with elevators.
HSP AVAILABLE FOR BUILDOUTS
OF YOUR CHOICE AND SPECIFIC NEEDS:
• Class A 2-story building on your site
• Elevators
• Over 70,000 vehicles pass by location daily
• On signalized intersection
• Minutes from UCF, UCH Research Park, and:
1. Sanford International Airport (SFB) approximately
4 miles
2. Orlando Executive Airport (MCO) approximately 22
miles
3. Orlando International Airport (ORL) approximately
14 miles
Convenient to four major hospitals and the new proposed
Oviedo Medical Center. Walking distance to Seminole
Trail and Winter Springs High School.
• Lease suites after build for your needs
• Investment opportunity, profit center
• Tax advantages, depreciation scenarios
• 1031 exchange option, build equity, control
your costs
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Until the mid-1950s, Winter Springs
was nothing more than several square miles of scrub
pine and palmettos. That’s when developers Raymond
Moss and William Edgemon bought the land, subdivided
it and introduced the Village of North Orlando.
At the start of the 1970’s, a time of rampant
growth throughout Central Florida, the area contained
one small grocery store and roughly 300 homes straddling
State Road 434.
Tuscawilla, eastern Seminole County’s first
upscale golf course community, changed all that. Also,
a new city charter was adopted in 1972, changing the
city’s name to Winter Springs.
Today, the city’s growth rivals that of adjacent
Oviedo. In the past two decades, population has increased
800 percent, to more than 31,600. And more growth
is on the way, through both residential and commercial
development.
Officials are now eyeing more of the so-called Black
Hammock, a marshy wilderness north of the city, where
scattered homes are set on three- to five-acre lots.
Over the years, the city has annexed several Black
Hammock parcels and rezoned them to allow new subdivisions,
much to the chagrin of many Black Hammock residents.
In any case, Winter Springs is moving ahead on other
fronts. For example, a South Carolina-based developer
has completed Phase I of a 240-acre Town Center at
the corner of State Road 434 and Tuskawilla Road.
The complex will ultimately encompass 2,400 multifamily
residential units, 99 single-family homes, 591,000
square feet of retail space and 573,000 square feet
of office space along with apartments, parks and public
buildings. |