Showing posts with label walking tour sarasota. Show all posts
Showing posts with label walking tour sarasota. Show all posts

Thursday, January 21, 2016

Getting Away from it All: Lido Beach Scenic Trail

If you drive to St Armands Circle (over the Ringling Causeway from downtown Sarasota), take your 2nd right off the Circle, and you'll find Lido Beach parking. (This is the St Armands Circle entrance to the beach, not the official beach pavillion entrance which is further down on Ben Franklin Drive.) 

After you park your car, head directly towards the wood entry ramp and deck that takes you onto the sands of Lido Beach. 
Lido Beach entrance pavilion at St Armands Circle, Sarasota
Walk about 20 feet onto the beach, and look to your right. You'll see a sandy path that parallels the beach (to the left) and the neighborhood (to the right). 
Lido Beach walking path at St Armands Circle, Sarasota FL
Start walking along the path.  

Sometimes when I'm here, it feels just like hiking in the Rockies high desert where I used to spend summers. The only thing that gives it away as being Sarasota is the sliver of blue-green Gulf at the horizon to the left. 

There's a bench for taking a pause, and the path is wide enough for bicycles. I also enjoy its gentle changes in elevation. A nice break from the flatness of most of Sarasota. 
If you walk the entire path, it eventually curves over (in less than a mile, I'd estimate) to reconnect with Lido Beach. You can then walk back to St Armands Circle along the beach. Or return via the footpath. Your choice.

Tuesday, January 12, 2016

Walking Tour of Sarasota Districts

Sarasota FL, a lush and quirky small city on Florida's Gulf Coast, is trying to use principles of New Urbanism to weave its various charming "old urbanism" districts into a cohesive live-work-culture-nature experience.

Blessed with a gorgeous location, nestled alongside the mid-Gulf Coast, an hour south of Tampa, protected by even more gorgeous barrier islands--here called "keys"--including Longboat Key, Lido Key, St Armands Key, Bird Key and Siesta Key--Sarasota is also the arts and culture capital of Florida.

In its very walkable and compact downtown, you'll find theatres, a beautiful opera house, a soaring modern library, a purple-painted waterfront concert hall, a municipal auditorium, upscale shops and restaurants, Whole Foods Market, and many art galleries.

A few blocks away, across the only scenic section of Tamiami Trail (Hwy 41), is the magnificent Sarasota Bayfront Park, lined each winter season with modern sculptures, and featuring a lovely tree-shaded walking path and park, impressive yachts, and two restaurants, one upscale and one of the sea-shack variety.

Several blocks south of Main Street, separated by a non-descript, pedestrian-indifferent office-building-zone, there is a charming antiques district, called Burns Square, along Pineapple and Orange Avenues, with restaurants and boutiques, an art movie house, and a neighborhood of artist studios offering monthly Friday night studio/gallery strolls.

Crossing Tamiami Trail and south a few blocks more, is the tiny retail crossroads called Southside Village, surrounded on one side by a lush neighborhood of old residental streets and on the other by the expansive Sarasota Memorial Hospital Center. Southside Village has been undergoing "upscaling" in recent years, and it's a delightful mix of lux gift shops, gourmet markets, restaurants featuring international cuisines, as well as cozy neighborhood bar-restaurants, bakery-cafes, hair salons and boutiques.

A few winding miles down the road is Siesta Drive, which crosses Sarasota Bay and winds through Siesta Key, a tropical paradise enlivened by Ocean Boulevard with its funky shops and restaurants, leading to an exquisite wide beach composed of soft, powdery white sand that is 99% crystal. Perfect for walking, swimming, sunning, parasailing, and sunset-watching and applauding, which is a nightly tradition on Siesta.

Heading northwest from downtown Sarasota, over a couple of short bridges, you enter the world-famous St Armands Circle retail district. It's a "circle" of short blocks that wrap around a park on St Armands Key. There is every kind of store and restaurant, as well as Lido Beach, a long and deep expanse of not-so-soft sand with unbroken vistas across the blue-green waters of the Gulf.

Over another couple of bridges and you're driving alongside the perfect lawns and landscaping of Gulf of Mexico Drive on Longboat Key, a golf-course- and luxury-high-rise-lined gold coast community with its own long strip of wild beach towards the north end. Cross another bridge and you're on lovely Anna Maria, a key of old houses and cute shops just north of Longboat and west of Bradenton.

All these bridges and keys, taken along with downtown proper, make Sarasota a diverting place to live. Within a few miles of any one spot is another with different views and amenities.