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West Palm Beach staple Celis hopes to maintain city culture at $1 billion Nora District

Alex Celis (pictured) is the founder of Celis Juice Bar, a West Palm Beach favorite known for its juice, smoothies, and community events. Celis expanded into the $1 billion Nora District, a 40鈥慳cre mixed-use development and neighborhood.
Wilkine Brutus
Alex Celis (pictured) is the founder of Celis Juice Bar, a West Palm Beach favorite known for its juice, smoothies, and community events. Celis expanded into the $1 billion Nora District, a 40鈥慳cre mixed-use development and neighborhood.

Just north of downtown West Palm Beach, a $1 billion redevelopment project called the Nora District is transforming a formerly industrial warehouse corridor into a walkable, mixed-use neighborhood to meet the demands of a growing population.

For long-time local favorites like Celis Juice Bar & Caf茅 鈥 known for its smoothies, weekly run club and community events 鈥 moving into the district represents a major opportunity, with much to gain as they aim to help maintain the city's character.

鈥溾奝eople do want to create, have an experience when they are going shopping,鈥 said Alex Celis, founder and West Palm Beach native. Celis said the city鈥檚 demand for recreation is growing as fast as its population.

鈥淭hey want a little bit of everything from food to retail, to coffee shops, to ice cream shops, whatever the case may be.鈥

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West Palm Beach is the fastest-growing large city in Palm Beach County, with nearly 9% growth since 2020, outpacing nearby Palm Beach Gardens (7%), Royal Palm Beach (6%) and Riviera Beach (5%). And West Palm has a growing number of major corporate relocations that are reshaping how locals see the city's future.

, now open in the Nora District, is a true hometown story rooted in family tradition.

Launched as a produce delivery co鈥憃p inspired by founder Alex Celis鈥檚 father鈥檚 wholesale business, it grew through green markets and opened its first brick鈥慳nd鈥憁ortar in 2015 on Dixie Highway, just south of CityPlace. The Nora will be its fourth location, following its outlets on Dixie, Royal Poinciana, and Delray Beach.

Now, Celis sees Nora鈥檚 potential but amid so much change, he hopes the city can hold onto its diverse character: things like cross-cultural pop-up gatherings and the small-town feel of local businesses.

鈥淚t basically boils down to everything we do outside the juice bar 鈥 from our run club to community collaborations with local spots like Tropical Smokehouse and Zipitios,鈥 Celis said, referencing two family-owned, community-centered businesses located outside of Nora.

Live music of various genres, food tasting collaborations, day-parties and outdoor run clubs all feed into this desire to preserve the city鈥檚 鈥渟oul,鈥 reflecting a push to maintain its cultural diversity, local flavor and grassroots community spaces, and not just make way for polished, high-end brands.

It鈥檚 a common tension in large redevelopment projects, the tug-and-pull of balancing economic growth with community identity.

鈥溾'Cause if you hyper-focus on, like, money, money, money, next thing you know, it鈥檚 like 鈥 what? Where鈥檚 the soul of this city?鈥 Celis added. 鈥淎nd I just don鈥檛 wanna lose a soul.鈥

City's biggest redevelopment since CityPlace

, short for North Railroad Avenue, spans 40 acres in an area west of Dixie Highway and south of Palm Beach Lakes Boulevard 鈥 it鈥檚 the city鈥檚 biggest redevelopment since CityPlace, the renowned mixed-use shopping district originally opened in 2000.

Phase I of the Nora District broke ground in June 2023, with a soft opening for many tenants expected this year. Confirmed tenants include , , , , , , , boutique fitness , and others.

A 201鈥憆oom boutique hotel is slated for completion in late 2026, and future phases will add residential units 鈥 such as rentals, condos and townhomes 鈥 alongside more retail and office space.

Celis said Nora blends walkable lifestyle, commerce and potential for community, and that鈥檚 鈥渧ery promising.鈥

鈥淭he restaurants that are coming in have a huge draw as well for people,鈥 he said.

鈥溾奡o just to be rubbing shoulders with some of these companies, some of these owner-operators, is truly just a blessing because it also shows where our brand has gone from very, very humble beginnings.鈥

Wilkine Brutus is the Palm Beach County Reporter for SA国际传谋. The award-winning journalist produces stories on topics surrounding local news, culture, art, politics and current affairs. Contact Wilkine at wbrutus@wlrnnews.org
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