06/05/2026
Their plywood ends up in hospitals. In government buildings. In libraries. In universities. In the rooms where this region's most important work gets done.
So when the team behind Plywood Express looked at the Orange Blossom Trail, they didn't see what outsiders see. They saw the corridor's old self.
"OBT, long, long time ago, used to be the corridor for a lot of dreams and opportunities."
That line is worth sitting with. Every blighted block in America used to be somebody's main street. The decline didn't happen overnight, and the revival won't either. But it does have a name. It's called the OBT CRA.
A Community Redevelopment Area exists for exactly this moment. When private operators look at a corridor and see what it could be again, the public side of the table meets them halfway. Tax dollars generated here stay here. Funding gets routed back into the lighting, the sidewalks, the storefronts, and the small businesses willing to plant a flag before the rest of the market notices.
To the community: the dreams aren't gone. They're being rebuilt. To investors and stakeholders: this is when capital lands earliest, before a corridor gets "discovered." To anyone still questioning whether the OBT CRA earns its keep: ask the operators already here. They didn't show up for what OBT is. They showed up for what it's about to be.