BayCare Healthâs proposed YMCA (two black outlines at center left) and medical office building (top rectangle close to BBD).
As reported by Kelly Gilroy on her outstanding âPasco County Development and Growth Updatesâ Facebook page on Aug. 24 â after no updates since representatives from the YMCA first started attending local meetings a couple of years ago â BayCare Health Systems is having a pre-application meeting with Pasco County staff to propose 52,391-sq.-ft. YMCA and a 100,000-sq.-ft., two-story medical office building. The plan includes parking lots, a âNew Driveâ roadway and a curb-cut connection at the southwest corner of Bruce B. Downs (BBD) Blvd. and Eagleston Blvd., next to the new BayCare Wesley Chapel hospital. Weâll update this story once we have additional information.Â
Home Sense Opens Next To BeallsÂ
On Aug. 10, a new Homesense store opened in the Shoppes at New Tampa of Wesley Chapel, between the also-still-new Bealls Outlet and Flip Flop Shops stores in the plaza on BBD Blvd. south of S.R. 56.
Homesense â the off-price home store featuring high-quality furniture and accessories that is the newest retail banner of The TJX Companies, Inc. â now operates 50 stores in the U.S. TJX is the leading off-price retailer of apparel and home fashions in the U.S. and worldwide. The company operates nearly 5,000 total stores in nine countries, including 1,304 T.J. Maxx, 1,189 Marshalls, 901 HomeGoods, 81 Sierra, and now 50 Homesense stores.
I visited the new store the day it opened and it was packed with not only people, but as-advertised great prices on everything from couches to wall art to Halloween knickknacks (photo above). For more information, visit us.homesense.com or call (813) 991-0249.Â
Subaruâs Grand Grand Opening!Â
Although the dealership has been open for several months, we want to thank Subaru of Wesley Chapel (located at 26570 Silver Maple Pkwy., just south of S.R. 56) owner Scott Fink and his entire staff for hosting one of the greatest Grand Opening and North Tampa Bay Chamber ribbon-cutting (top photo) events in recent memory on Sept. 7.Â
An estimated crowd of at least 300 people attended the dog-friendly event (the dealership is a supporter of the Humane Society of Tampa Bay), which included three food trucks, lots of amazing raffle prizes (including a mountain bike, kayak and paddleboard) and lots of happy dogs, some up for adoption, others with their owners and some with their Pasco Sheriffâs Office handlers (photo, below).Â
âScott Fink and his Fink Auto Group definitely know how to throw a party,â said NTBC president & CEO Hope Kennedy. âWe appreciate the opportunity to be here to cut the ribbon.â For more information about Subaru of Wesley Chapel, call (813) 618-5051 or visit SubaruWesleyChapel.com.Â
A drone shot of the Anand Vihar 55+ community just north of the Pasco County line on Mansfield Blvd. in Meadow Pointe. (Map & photos provided by Hillsborough County & AnandViharTampa.com)Â
Earlier this year, we told you about Hillsborough Countyâs plans to build an indoor recreation center at Pride Park, just south of Pride Elementary.
The problem the county faced was how to fund the nearly $7 million needed to build the 16,000-sq.-ft. indoor Pride Recreation Center, which is planned to include space for basketball, volleyball, pickleball and even space for meetings, after-school programs and perhaps an outdoor splash pad.Â
The 61.89-acre parcel in Live Oak Preserve purchased by Anand Vihar, LLC, from Hillsborough County is outlined in purple.
Well, for many years, as part of the development of Live Oak Preserve, Hillsborough has owned an unused 61.89-acre parcel a little bit west and north of where the Pride Rec Center is planned that abuts the boundary between Live Oak in the county and the City of Tampaâs K-Bar Ranch/Easton Park development.
The same parcel, which is shaped like a much smaller version of the state of Nevada (see map), also extends north to the Hillsborough/Pasco County line, basically to where Kinnan St. (in the city) meets Mansfield Blvd. in Pasco â where there currently is a gated arm that only opens for emergency vehicles, as Pasco has rejected all attempts over the years to open that patch of roadway to regular vehicular traffic.
On Apr. 5 of this year, Hillsborough County sold this nearly 62-acre parcel of land â which countywide District 2 County Commissioner Ken Hagan said was not in the plans to be developed into a park by the county â to Anand Vihar, LLC, for the price of $6,001,200. It just so happens that Anand Vihar, LLC (and its development group, Convergent Capital Partners) is the same group that owned and developed the property immediately to the north, in Pasco County, as an age 55+ community by the same âAnand Viharâ name.
That Pasco-based property, which is home to a large number of doctors and engineers originally from India, was just turned over to the communityâs condo association in June 2023, and is now home to 167 attached townhomes.Â
However, Santosh Govindaraju, the chief executive officer of Convergent Capital partners, says that when plans are filed in November with Hillsborough County, Convergent will seek approval for 111 single-family homes on the new property, with homes ranging in price from $550,000 to $1 million, and from 1,800-2,500 square feet. The property in Live Oak also is expected to be developed as an age 55-and-older community.Â
The monument sign of the Anand Vihar 55+ community just north of the Pasco County line on Mansfield Blvd. in Meadow Pointe.
Although the original zoning approval for the site would allow for 143 homes, Govindaraju has said that with only 111 homes, there will be more open âgreenâ space available. In other words, whether the Hillsborough-based community also will be called Anand Vihar or not, it will prove to be a more upscale community than Anand Vihar in Pasco.
What remains to be seen, of course, is whether or not the two separate communities can ever be connected by anything other than the nature trail that is in the current site plan for the Hillsborough County property. At the present time, the residents of the Hillsborough County Anand Vihar property would only be able to access Pasco County by taking K-Bar Ranch Pkwy. east to Meadow Pointe Blvd., turn north to Beardsley Dr. and then back to the west on Beardsley Dr. to access the Anand Vihar property on Mansfield Blvd.
Is there a possibility â with former Dist. 2 Pasco Commissioner Mike Moore â who never budged on allowing the connection at Kinnan St./Mansfield Blvd. â now replaced by Commissioner Seth Weightman in Pascoâs Dist. 2, that a road connection between the two Anand Vihar communities could be allowed? That remains to be seen.
As for the Pride Recreation Center, Commissioner Hagan says the $6-million in proceeds from the Live Oak park site sale will pay for most of the cost of its construction, which is scheduled to begin in the first quarter of 2024 and be completed by the end of next year or early in 2025.
âThere was an additional funding need of about $750,000 or $775,000 to build the rec center,â Hagan says. âBut, we already have that additional funding worked out in our fiscal 2024 budget.â
Hagan adds that he is excited that the rec center is now coming to fruition.Â
Whether you or your child likes to dance for fun or dreams of a career on stage one day, the New Tampa Dance Theatre (NTDT) offers dancers a world-class, professional experience that is unmatched in the Tampa Bay area.
Located on Cross Creek Blvd. (across from Heritage Isles) in New Tampa, the 7,500-sq.-ft. NTDT is the largest professional dance training facility in the New Tampa/Wesley Chapel area. Owner and artistic director Dyane Elkins IronWing is in her 29th season of creating dance memories and futures for her students, many of whom have gone on to study dance in college and/or dance professionally.
âAs always, Iâm very proud of our students,â says Elkins IronWing. âOur dancers become excellent college students, with their impressive time-management skills, perseverance and creative thinking. Each season, our hearts burst with excitement creating with our beautiful students again. We plan to continue giving back to our community with the âPay It Forwardâ program by offering all new students $25 per month tuition for every class!â
Follow In My Footsteps?
Elkins IronWing says she started dancing at age 5, later trained in New York City and performed with Ballet Metropolitan in Columbus, OH.
She moved to Tampa in 1995 and immediately opened NTDT in the Pebble Creek Collection. In 2002, she purchased the current NTDT property on Cross Creek Blvd, and moved her school to the new building in January 2006.
With the bigger location, Elkins IronWing was off and running, offering smaller class sizes and larger, more varied schedules.
She says NTDT also has a larger pool of students today, with the ongoing explosive growth in Wesley Chapel, as well as in New Tampa.
âOur name might say New Tampa,â she says, âbut our location is much closer to Wesley Chapel than one might assume. We are extremely convenient to all the current growth (there). Wesley Chapel families are shocked to discover just how close we are and excited how quickly they can drive to our facility.â
Not Just For Future Pros!Â
NTDT caters to both the recreational dance lover (even adults, photo left) as well as the devoted pre-professional â and every level in between. The studioâs leveled curriculum offers multiple art forms for students to explore. Through personalized attention and professional expertise, NTDTâs professional faculty strives to provide a positive educational experience.Â
Children ages 3-4 can participate in the studioâs Early Childhood Program, ages 5-8 can take part in the Childrenâs Program and ages 9-18 are invited to join NTDTâs Youth Program.
In addition to classical ballet, NTDT offers full programs in creative movement, modern, jazz, tap and hip-hop.
Each program has its own directors and specific syllabuses guiding students in a structured manner through their studies.
The facilities at NTDT are as top notch as the instructors, and include maple flooring for the tap classes, 20-25-ft.-tall mirrored walls, student locker rooms and a large studio space that can accommodate up to 200 people.
NTDT has developed a reputation for creating strong, professional dancers with alumni who have moved on to highly respected dance companies, Broadway productions, national tours, and Walt Disney Company.
Because NTDT students learn to be proficient in multiple art forms, these students have an edge in the competitive world of dance and many of them have been accepted into prestigious summer intensive programs, including the School of American Ballet and American Ballet Theater in New York City, The Harid Conservatory in Boca Raton, the Joffrey Ballet in Chicago and the Boston Ballet.
âReflecting on 28 years in our community, itâs beyond words the gratitude and love for the amazing people who have been a part of our dance programs and family,â says Elkins IronWing.
One local former student certainly agrees with that assessment.Â
âI credit all of my success as a professional dancer to the foundational training I received at NTDT from ages 6-18,â says Victoria DeRenzo, who today is a professional dancer and choreographer who has toured internationally in 28 countries on four continents, most notably with the renowned Pilobolus Dance Theatre in Washington Depot, CT.
âI loved every second of my experience growing up there,â DeRenzo adds, âbut I had no idea how spoiled I was until I graduated. Not many people receive a top-notch dance education in multiple artforms during their lifetimes, let alone at the age of 6.â
If a student doesnât choose to pursue a career in dance after high school, they can still reach a level of artistry to be accepted into many college dance programs, says Elkins IronWing.
âBelieving in yourself, respecting the process of working towards a goal, and having a well-rounded dance education give our students the tools and confidence to continue discovering new passions throughout their lifetimes,â she says.
Participating In Productions
All students have the opportunity to perform in NTDTâs âSpring Productionâ and â through the studioâs nonprofit partner, the Dance Theatre of Tampa (DTT) â in the winter production of âThe Nutcracker,â as well as the âSummer Concert Series,â held in June at the University of South Floridaâs Tampa campus.Â
DTT provides more than 300 free tickets to NTDTâs corporate sponsors, local community supporters, alumni members and students.
New Tampa residents Brian and Trisha Mangan enrolled their daughters Mattie and Mikayla at any early age with NTDT.
âNew Tampa Dance Theatre holds a special place in our hearts, as our daughtersâ second home since the age of three, guiding them into their teenage years,â Trisha says. âWhat began as tentative steps has blossomed into a journey of incredible growth, thanks to the dedicated and caring instructors. NTDT has not only shaped them into skilled dancers, but into confident and determined young women embodying the values of hard work and perseverance, attributes that extend far beyond the studio.âÂ
Every holiday season, Elkins IronWing says local residents look forward to the communityâs largest and longest-running interpretation of Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovskyâs classic ballet, âThe Nutcracker,â now in its 24th DTT season. This year, it will be held Friday-Sunday, December 15-17, at the USF Tampa College of Arts Theater 1.
Prior to the performances at USF, DTT also will perform âThe Nutcracker Suiteâ Saturday & Sunday, December 2-3, at 6, 7 & 8 p.m., at The Shops at Wiregrass.
âItâs all about the children at NTDT, always has been and always will be,â Elkins IronWing says. âWe are a company that enables children to succeed. The key is setting high expectations, all while having fun and building self-confidence. With the new season ahead of us, we would like to thank all of our trusting and loyal families over the years and organizations that continually support our vision. Without their recognition and time, NTDT wouldnât be the magical place it has become!â
The New Tampa Dance Theatre offers year-round free trial classes for prospective dancers of all ages. To tour the facility or to rent it for a meeting, party or function, visit NTDT at 10701 Cross Creek Blvd. For more information and to check out the exciting lineup of Fall 2023 classes, visit NewTampaDanceTheatre.com, call (813) 994-NTDT (6838). You also can follow NTDT on Facebook and Instagram at âNew Tampa Dance Theatre.âÂ
Although Jannah and I enjoyed the Las Palmas food truck, we were excited to hear that our friends Ramses and Ana Garcia (photo) were getting close to reopening their Las Palmas Latin Grill in the same brick- &-mortar space as it was previously, at 6431 County Line Rd., off BBD, in the same plaza as LA Fitness and Five Guys.
Itâs been nearly two years since a kitchen fire shuttered Las Palmas, prompting Ramses to buy a food truck so he and Ana could still serve at least some of their delicious, award-winning Cuban-style fare to their loyal customer base. The revamped Las Palmas is expected to reopen by Thursday, October 12, or one day after the two-year anniversary of the fire. For more info, visit LasPalmaslatingrill.com
Dancers from the Tampa City Ballet catch some air during the ballet companyâs performance at the first-ever Fall Festival at the New Tampa Performing Arts Center Sept. 8-10. (Photo by Charmaine George and Gary Nager)
If you somehow missed the first-ever Fall Festival at the all-new New Tampa Performing Arts Center (NTPAC), you missed a truly special weekend (Sept. 8-10) of 100% free performances of virtually every kind.Â
A spectacular dance performance by the Jansen Dance Company.
Everything from ballet to modern dance and from Broadway to traditional Indian dance was available to attendees, thousands of whom packed the NTPAC throughout the weekend. NTPAC executive director Keith Arsenault (photo below) was clearly beaming all three days of the Fall Festival.Â
âWe couldnât be happier with the performances, the attendance and the feedback weâve received from everyone who visited this weekend,â Arsenault said. âItâs clear that this community has been hungry for more cultural opportunities.â
Although we werenât able to take pictures at every performance, Neighborhood News photographer Charmaine George and I were proud to be on hand for most of the weekendâs festivities, which also included Arsenault unveiling a plaque of thanks (bottom middle) to Hillsborough County Commissioner Ken Hagan (bottom left). Arsenault said that the land for the NTPAC was dedicated 15 years ago, and that it took 15 County Commission votes to make the Center a reality. âWe have many people at the county to thank,â Arsenault said, âbut we would not be standing here today without the long-standing efforts of Ken Hagan.âÂ
Hagan was clearly moved by the plaque. âPoliticians are rarely at a loss for words, but I am blown away by this. Thank you!â
Among the memorable performances and activities on Friday afternoon and evening at the NTPACâs Fall Festival were song-&- dance routines by the Freedom High chorus.A hands-on âInstrument Petting Zooâ sponsored by The Florida Orchestra.Members of the New Tampa Players theatre troupe (l.-r., Makayla Raines, TrevorLloyd, Alyson Gannon, pianist G. Frank Meekins & Kyle Billington) kept the huge crowd entertained with a cabaret lounge-style set of timeless classics.
After the impressive and super-fun performances on Friday afternoon and evening, the NTPACâs Fall Festival didnât rest on its laurels. To the contrary, it may have even stepped it up to another level on Saturday, as the outstanding Wharton High band (above) first filled the main stage theater and no one left disappointed.Â
But, as great as the âCats musicians were, the performance by the Tampa City Ballet (above pics) Saturday evening was the first of the weekend to have to turn away people who wanted to check out this professional-level ballet company, as somewhere between 20-30 people had to watch the dancers and the troupeâs incredible backgrounds that were projected onto the cyclorama (cyc) at the back of the NTPAC stage on a TV in the lobby.Â
There was no let-up on Sunday, either, as the Rudram Dance Company brought a huge number of traditionally-costumed Indian dancers to the NTPACâs main stage. Then, before two one-act plays (âCo-Workersâ and âSherlock Holmes & Case of the 5-Pound Noteâ) were presented by winners of the Tampa Bay Theatre Festival, the folk rock acoustic duo of Daisies & Axes performed in Studio 2. There also was a âFun with Broadway Triviaâ game presented by the New Tampa Players, followed by ATLAS Modern Balletâs contemporary dance performance, but we didnât get to shoot those because of our deadline. Wow! Canât wait âtil next year!âGNÂ
The Rudram Dance Company âs performance filled the Theaterâs stage with traditional Indian dance, costumes & pageantry. Daisies & Axes perform acoustic folk rock in Studio 2. âSherlock Holmes & the 5-Pound Note.âÂ