Central Florida is in the middle of one of the most significant construction booms in its history. From Downtown Orlando's long-awaited street revitalization to a 27,000-acre master-planned community in southeast Orange County, the development pipeline across all four major counties is unprecedented. Below is every major project you need to know — fully cited, with real estate implications for each.
🏙️ Downtown Orlando
Church Street "Festival Street" 🔨 Under Construction
Downtown Orlando's Church Street is being transformed into a pedestrian-first "Festival Street" — the city's most significant streetscape overhaul in decades, part of the DTO Action Plan. City commissioners approved Phase 2 on April 3, 2026, days after Phase 1 broke ground this spring. Traditional curbs are being removed and replaced with wide pedestrian plazas and sidewalk café spaces flexible enough for weekend markets, live music, and community festivals. Phase 1 covers Church Street from the Central Florida Rail Corridor to Garland Avenue; Phase 2 extends the transformation to Orange Avenue.
Real estate impact: Walkable street-level activation consistently drives downtown residential appreciation in comparable cities. As Church Street becomes an all-day destination rather than just a nightlife strip, expect continued demand pressure on downtown condos and the creative district corridors surrounding them.
Westcourt — Orlando Magic's 1M+ Sq Ft Mixed-Use District 📋 Groundbreaking 2026
Westcourt is the most transformative project in Downtown Orlando's history. Developed by JMA Ventures, Mohari Hospitality, Machete Group, and SED Development — an entity wholly owned by the DeVos family (owners of the Orlando Magic) — Westcourt will occupy over 1 million square feet directly north of Kia Center, bounded by W. Church Street, Division Avenue, W. Central Blvd, and S. Hughey Avenue.
Components include: 270 luxury high-rise apartments with panoramic views of the downtown skyline and Disney fireworks; a 260-room lifestyle hotel with outdoor pool deck, marquee restaurant, and 16,000 sq ft of meeting space; up to 300,000 sq ft of Class A office space (30% pre-leased at announcement); a 3,500-capacity live events venue for concerts, galas, and private events; and 1,140 structured parking spaces. Groundbreaking is targeted for 2026; completion Q4 2028. Machete Group founder noted tariff-related uncertainty could affect timeline.
Real estate impact: Westcourt is designed to serve 100,000+ future residents in the downtown core. A development of this scale adjacent to Kia Center fundamentally revalues downtown Orlando residential and reinforces the case for the entire creative district.
Creative Village Phase 2 — $600M Innovation District Expansion 🔨 Under Construction
Creative Village is Downtown Orlando's technology and innovation district, anchored by UCF Downtown and Valencia College. Phase 2 — a $600 million investment — is actively under construction. Master developer Craig Ustler broke ground in January 2026 on a $60 million mixed-use building on Parcel H, with a second mixed-income apartment building (The Beacon — 115 units) delivering before year-end. Phase 2 adds 450 market-rate apartments, 600 student housing beds, new office space, and a 180-room hotel.
The landmark future project: the $30 million adaptive reuse of the historic Bob Carr Theater, with Baker Barrios Architects converting the century-old building into a creative technology and innovation hub.
The Canopy Park & Camping World Stadium Renovation 📋 Construction Summer 2026
The Canopy is a new public park being built beneath the I-4 overpass in Downtown Orlando — transforming underutilized highway infrastructure into community-activated space beginning summer 2026. Public art, seating, and gathering areas will create a pedestrian connector between downtown neighborhoods historically divided by the highway. Similar projects (Atlanta's BeltLine, Chicago's 606) have driven meaningful residential appreciation in adjacent markets.
Camping World Stadium is receiving major capital improvements as part of the downtown package, with construction beginning in 2026 and timed to complete before the Jacksonville Jaguars play their full 2027 NFL home season at the venue while their Jacksonville stadium is rebuilt.
🟠 Orange County — Beyond Downtown
Sunbridge — Tavistock's 30,000-Home Master-Planned Community 🔨 Active Development
Sunbridge is Tavistock Development Company's follow-up to Lake Nona — the same developer behind one of America's most celebrated master-planned communities. At 27,000 acres spanning Orange and Osceola Counties, Sunbridge is permitted for up to 30,000 homes. Active builders include Taylor Morrison, Toll Brothers, Del Webb, Ashton Woods, and Craft Homes. Approximately 1,000 homes will deliver in 2026, with a commercial district groundbreaking also planned this year. Current neighborhoods: Del Webb Sunbridge (55+) and Weslyn Park (primary family community, now selling).
Real estate impact: Buyers entering Sunbridge now — especially Weslyn Park — are in at the ground floor of what may become the next Lake Nona. Tavistock's track record is unmatched in Central Florida real estate.
🔵 Osceola County
NeoCity City Center — $150M Performing Arts Center & 1.5M Sq Ft Innovation Hub 📋 Development Agreement Finalized
NeoCity is Osceola County's purpose-built technology innovation district in Kissimmee, focused on advanced manufacturing and semiconductor research. The development agreement — finalized between Osceola County and a joint venture of Sciame Construction and Edward J. Minskoff Equities — calls for more than 1.5 million square feet of retail, dining, entertainment, office, and residential space across 13 acres adjacent to Lake Toho Water Restoration Pond.
The $150 million Performing Arts Center is the crown jewel: Osceola County issued $125 million in bonds, with the design RFP releasing Q1 2026. An upscale hotel will anchor event activity at adjacent Osceola Heritage Park. A 30,000 sq ft multi-purpose R&D laboratory is expected to break ground in early 2026.
Real estate impact: NeoCity adds high-paying STEM employment to historically affordable Osceola County. St. Cloud and Celebration — both within commuting distance — stand to benefit most from the spillover employment demand.
🟢 Lake County
Wellness Way Corridor — 16,000 Homes, $90M Pulte Land Deal, Resort Communities 🔨 Active Development
The Wellness Way corridor in southern Lake County — directly adjacent to Orange County's Horizon West — is 2026's breakout residential growth story in Central Florida. The 15,000+ acre corridor is entitled for roughly 16,000 homes and over 11 million square feet of commercial space. Lake County projects adding approximately 75,000 new residents by 2030, with Wellness Way as the primary driver.
Esplanade at McKinnon Groves (Taylor Morrison) — 658 resort-style homes on 358 acres, mid-$400s, no age restrictions. Resort pool, fitness center, clubhouse, and pickleball courts. One of the best lifestyle communities at this price point anywhere in Central Florida right now.
Pulte Homes closed a Lake County-record $90 million deal for ~549 acres near Schofield Road, paving the way for nearly 1,500 new homes. Lennar is also active with rate buy-downs available through 2026. Hills of Minneola launched nearby in early 2026 from the low $400s.
Real estate impact: Buyers entering Wellness Way now are ahead of the commercial build-out — historically the window when Central Florida communities see their sharpest appreciation. That window is open right now.
The Bottom Line for Buyers and Sellers
The scale of active development across all four Central Florida counties in 2026 is genuinely historic. Downtown Orlando is being reimagined as a walkable urban core. Orange County's southeast quadrant is gaining its own Lake Nona. Osceola County is evolving beyond tourism into a STEM employment hub. Lake County's Wellness Way is creating a new suburban growth axis. All of it is backed by real job creation, real population growth (1,500 new residents per week), and real capital investment — not speculation.
For buyers, the implication is consistent: communities in proximity to these projects are in an appreciation window. The best time to buy in these corridors is before the build-out is complete — not after. For sellers, these development narratives are authentic selling points that sophisticated buyers respond to when presented accurately.
Want to Know Exactly How These Developments Affect Your Home or Your Search?
I track every corridor in real time and work across all four counties. Let's talk about how a specific development affects your next move — whether you're buying, selling, or investing in Central Florida.
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