
The dream lasted barely a year. In September 1926 the Great Miami Hurricane tore through South Florida and the land boom collapsed behind it; the Mizner Development Corporation went bankrupt in 1927, and Addison Mizner died, his fortune gone, in 1933. But the architecture outlived the money. The Cloister Inn passed through new owners to become the Boca Raton Club, then the Boca Raton Resort & Club, and finally The Boca Raton, the pink tower of its 1969 addition still presiding over the water. Around it survive the Mediterranean Revival bones Mizner laid down — the bungalows of Old Floresta, the courtyard of The Addison, and the old Town Hall, now the city's history museum.
Mizner was hired as Town Planner in May 1925 with a vision of a Mediterranean dream city — barrel-tile roofs, stucco walls, wrought iron, courtyards, and a grand twenty-lane boulevard called El Camino Real. He formed the Mizner Development Corporation and sold five million dollars of stock in less than a week to a who's-who of the age — among them Harold Vanderbilt, Rodman Wanamaker, Irving Berlin, and Elizabeth Arden. Ground broke on the Cloister Inn that August, and on February 6, 1926, its doors opened: a hundred rooms, vaulted ceilings, and fourteen-karat gold-leaf columns, billed as the most expensive hundred-room hotel ever built.
Why People Visit Boca Raton
Boca Raton rewards visitors who want South Florida with a century of style behind it — Addison Mizner's Mediterranean Revival architecture, a beautiful stretch of Atlantic beach, the arts and dining of Mizner Park, and a genuinely surprising history that runs from a secret WWII radar school to the birthplace of the personal computer. People come for the beaches and the resort glamour, for the Boca Raton Museum of Art, and for an easy, refined coastal day with deep roots.