
Boca Raton's modern story is stranger and more inventive than its resort glamour suggests. From 1942 to 1945 the Boca Raton Army Air Field was a top-secret base — the only place in the country that trained military radar operators, and a training ground for B-29 crews. After the war the airfield's land became Florida Atlantic University, founded in 1962, whose campus still traces the old runway lines. And on August 12, 1981, in an IBM facility in Boca Raton, a small team unveiled the IBM Personal Computer — the machine that launched the modern PC era. For a city built on a Mediterranean fantasy, Boca turned out to be a quietly serious place.
Today Boca Raton is a city of about a hundred thousand on five miles of Atlantic beach, refined and easygoing at once. Its story runs from the Glades culture and the Spanish inlet, through the pineapple farms and Mizner's 1926 dream, to the radar school, the university, and the birthplace of the personal computer. Our Boca Raton designs gather that layered identity into wearable form — the alligator and the Mediterranean line, the pink tower and the tide. Boca Raton, Florida: the city Addison Mizner built, a hundred years on.
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.