Shelter OS1190, Buenaventura Blvd at Ball Park

-Osceola Shelter OS1190- 2 Ad Faces. This northbound shelter on Buenaventura Boulevard in front of Buenaventura Lakes Community Park, with advertising sides facing both directions, offers solid traffic exposure on a key local corridor—perfect for family, retail, dining, recreation, or local services messaging!

SKU: OS1190
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Description

Southbound Buenaventura Blvd. right in front of the Ball Fields and Park in Kissimmee.


The bus stop shelter is located on the northbound side of Buenaventura Boulevard right in front of Buenaventura Lakes Community Park in Kissimmee, FL (Osceola County, ZIP 34743). This is a moderate-traffic residential and community corridor along Buenaventura Blvd, a primary north-south local route serving families, residents, and commuters in the heart of the Buenaventura Lakes subdivision, with connections to Osceola Parkway, Florida’s Turnpike, and US 192. The shelter has advertising sides facing both directions (northbound and southbound traffic), benefiting from strong visibility to drivers heading north toward residential neighborhoods and local amenities, as well as southbound traffic toward denser retail/commercial zones. It gains additional exposure from LYNX bus riders, pedestrians, park visitors, families, and local community activity. It’s a practical family-oriented, recreational, quick-service dining, and everyday convenience stretch in a densely populated suburban area with steady local resident, family, and commuter flow.

Nearest Businesses

  • Buenaventura Lakes Community Park (playgrounds, sports fields, picnic areas, community events)
  • Walmart Supercenter (near Osceola Pkwy & Buenaventura Blvd)
  • ALDI
  • Checkers
  • Denny’s
  • Neighborhood Market
  • Little Free BVL Library
  • Waters Edge Community
  • Various small local eateries (Venezuelan food, pizza, fast food)
  • Retail and services (tutoring centers, spas, pet groomers, auto glass)
    Other: Dense residential neighborhoods, apartments, single-family homes, and community spots; denser big-box retail and dining south toward Osceola Pkwy.
    This spot supports family recreation, grocery shopping, quick-service dining, convenience, and everyday community needs with high local resident and family traffic.

Traffic Counts

Segment
AADT
Year
Buenaventura Blvd near Buenaventura Lakes Community Park / Osceola Pkwy area
20,000–30,000
2025
Buenaventura Blvd broader segments in Buenaventura Lakes
15,000–25,000
2025
Nearby connectors (e.g., Osceola Pkwy, Florida’s Turnpike)
35,000–50,000
2025

Daily Impressions Potential: 20,000–30,000 vehicles daily (plus high pedestrian, park visitor, family, and bus rider exposure), generating tens of thousands of views. Dual-facing ads capture both northbound (toward residential neighborhoods and local amenities) and southbound (toward Osceola Pkwy/retail) traffic.
Trends: Moderate volumes with growth from dense suburban residential development; some congestion at intersections like Buenaventura Blvd & Osceola Pkwy; includes family vehicles, commuter traffic, and local service vehicles. Peaks during rush hours, weekends, evenings, and community park events.

Demographics (ZIP 34743 – Buenaventura Lakes Area, immediate vicinity)


Latest from U.S. Census American Community Survey 2024 5-year estimates and 2026 projections:

  • Population: ~40,000 (2024 est.); projected ~42,000+ for 2026 (density ~5,800 per sq. mile in suburban pockets).
  • Age: Median ~38–39 years (family-oriented: strong under-18 and 35–54 groups).
  • Gender: ~49% male, ~51% female.
  • Race/Ethnicity: Hispanic/Latino ~76% (growing Puerto Rican/other Latin influences); White (non-Hispanic) ~10%; Black/African American ~9%; Asian ~3%; two or more/other ~2%.
  • Income and Economy: Median household income ~$59,000–$63,000; median individual ~$27,000–$31,000. Poverty rate ~12–15%. Top industries: tourism/hospitality, retail, construction, healthcare. Unemployment ~4–6%; many commute to Orlando/theme parks (20–40 min average).
  • Households and Housing: Average size ~3.0–3.8; median home value ~$300,000–$350,000; median rent ~$1,500–$1,800/month. ~45–50% married/family households.
  • Education: ~20–22% with college degree or higher.
    Diverse, family-oriented, growing area with a mix of local residents and commuter influence (English dominant, Spanish common). Residents heavily use nearby parks, grocery, dining, and community facilities—ideal for family, recreation, food, convenience, or bilingual messaging.