About
Us:
The Kissimmee Civic Center is located in beautiful Central Florida
and is part of a charming and historic downtown business district. Close
to many area attractions, local restaurants and abundant natural
resources, our beautiful water front park setting will enhance the
stay of your guests and help to make your event extra special. The
Civic Center is highly accessible with transportation hubs within
minutes of the center. They
include one of America’s premier airports just 20 minutes away, Orlando
International; the City of Kissimmee’s quaint, yet highly economical
regional airport only five minutes from the Civic Center; one of
Central Florida’s few Amtrak depots is just a hundred feet away from
our front door, along with highly accessible car, limo, taxi and
bus rental services. We are confident that your stay in Kissimmee
will offer unlimited opportunities to enjoy yourself before, during
and after your event at the Kissimmee Civic Center. Best of all,
the staff at the Kissimmee Civic Center is dedicated to make your
event successful by working step-by-step with you and your planners.
History:
The Civic Center was built in 1994 and is owned by the City of
Kissimmee. Designed
as a multi-purpose facility in the heart of the community, it has
blossomed into a major venue for professional and amateur sports,
community fitness and wellness club and a premier ballroom/conference
center for the business and residential communities. The property
is one of the crown jewels of the Parks & Recreation inventory and
managed by the Recreation Division. The
Kissimmee Civic Center has a support staff of 25 team members dedicated
to making your events spectacular, your recreation and fitness membership
convenient and fun.
Kissimmee's Name:
Local historians have offered many variations
of the origin of the city's name. Most agree that Kissimmee is a modern
spelling of a tribal word. The book, Florida Indians and the Invasion
from Europe by Jerald T. Milanich, links "Kissimmee" to a village
of the Jororo, one of Florida's lesser-known tribes. Historian John Hann
researched Spanish documents about missions established to convert the
Jororo and other groups to Christianity in the late 1600's. Spanish records
indicate that a mission was built near the tribe's main village, also
called Jororo. Another mission was called Atissimi. Milanich writes, "Hann
suggests that the name Atissimi, sometimes given as Jizimi and Tisimi,
may be the source of the modern place name Kissimmee." A 1752 Spanish
map used the name "Cacema" which has evolved into today's spelling,
Kissimmee.
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