![]() There’s a real barbershop, and if you poke your head into Linda’s Books, you’ll find more than 100,000 books filling the walls, shelves and even floors (note that the Friends of the Library also have a bookstore close by). Art galleries treat the eye and move the spirit you can scoop up treasures at Grateful Hearts, Alice Stroppel’s Studio 215 or Highlands Museum of the Arts. The Circle Theatre is here as well as the Children’s Museum of the Highlands. It offers down home restaurants like Dee’s Place – a fine choice for breakfast- and upscale fashion boutiques like Steve & Co or Southern Drawl Boutique & Salon. Huge oaks trees shade park benches, music plays over loudspeakers, and dappled sunlight shines brightly on public art displays.Ī Florida Heritage District, it’s old-fashioned, but not tired. The ‘City on the Circle’ invites you to take a stroll downtown to find a roundabout that encircles a flower-filled park. Well, Disney must have gotten the idea from George Sebring who, in 1911, created the circular plan as a focal point for this lakeside community. Nearly every guest who visits Walt Disney World hears from cast members how Walt created the park’s famed ‘hub and spoke’ design, each spoke radiating off to a new and exciting destination. Take a trip to the ‘City on the Circle’ to explore art galleries discover a famed raceway and enjoy quirky events and outdoor adventures.
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