Anthony V. Pugliese III: Environmentalist and Energy Conservationist

Anthony Pugliese III is someone who understands that the environment needs to be protected, and he utilizes conservationist concepts in many of his projects that work toward this goal. He has been involved in the South Florida and New Jersey as a designer, businessman, collector and benefactor to bring natural resource issues to the forefront of the communities.

His business, the Pugliese Company, has developed an automated storage and retrieval machine with LEED-Certified construction called Safe and Secure Automated Self Storage that earned the Green Building of America Award from more than 2,500 projects, an honor for its energy efficiency and space-saving qualities. LEED, or Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design, is a certification program that recognizes green buildings that save resources, including money, promote renewable, clean energy and be healthy to its occupants. In June 2009, the building also won the 2010 Outstanding Green Facility from more than 52,000 facilities in the U.S. and Canada.

He developed another eco-friendly venture, an innovative recycling facilities company in New Jersey, called Green Sky Industries. The vertical recycling operation, that employs 127 people. The company is the largest dedicated to private recycling in the state with 75 municipal contracts. It also helps businesses form new recycling programs.​

Earlier in his career, he designed a 135,000 square-foot building, the Crystal Corporate Center office building, in Boca Raton, Florida. It won the National Association of Office & Industrial Parks (NAOIP) Award and a best brochure design for an office building.

Another architecture project that incorporated the outdoors into its design is a natural-look pool that he first introduced in 1969 in the Northeast where it gained popularity among wealthy residents in the area.

Anthony Pugliese - Former Owner of 007 Odd Job Hat

Pugliese is also a collector who has donated rare pieces to auctions and other charity endeavors in the name of supporting the environment. In the case of a popular culture collection of approximately 800 pieces that included Marlon Brando’s fedora from “The Godfather,” the hat of the witch in “The Wizard of Oz” played by Margaret Hamilton in 1939, and the bowler hat worn by Odd Job in “The Goldfinger,” he sold the items at Guernsey’s Auction House in Las Vegas. The proceeds, which included $130,000 for the bowler hat and $208,000 for the witch hat, were then donated to the Audobon Society with the intention to support its mission to protect and preserve the earth. The organization works toward the goal of conserving and restoring natural ecosystems to protect the world’s biological diversity, according to its mission statement.

 

Source:

http://uhaulnews.com/Articles/158/eMove-Premier-Storage-AffiliateU-Haul-Dealer-wins-sustainability-award

 

A Commitment To Youth Sports, A Commitment to Community

Anthony V. Pugliese Miracle Field Scoreboard

Anthony V. Pugliese Miracle Field Scoreboard

Anthony V. Pugliese III donated $150,000 to The Miracle League to build a baseball field for children that are mentally and physically challenged. It gives them opportunity to play baseball as a member of a team. He is a well known Delray real estate developer and humitarian. He donated this money in honor of his grandson who suffers from autism in 2010.

The Anthony V. Pugliese Miracle League Field is located in Delray Beach, Florida. The Miracle League helps children play baseball despite their limitations. The rules of the game is each player gets to bat once. play in a safe environment, and have other children in the community serve as buddies to help with the baseball. games.

The field that Anthony V. Pugliese helped build is made of recycled rubber so that wheelchairs can have access. The bases are painted on the rubber. The dugout on the field are extra wide for the kids. After years of participating in planning and fundraising Pugliese likes to see the results of children playing baseball and enjoying the game. The Miracle League staff says this is the ideal field for their community and program.

The city of Delray liked the idea and donated land in the Robert B. Miller Park. The field cost over $550,000 to build. The park where it is located needed a face lift and the city decided that this would work well with a special needs baseball field. There are only two special needs baseball field in South Florida and only 223 nationwide. The fields have wheelchair ramps and full concession stands.

Players for baseball are matched up with volunteer buddies that are often middle or high school students. Volunteers help kids swing the bat to help them run around the bases. Here kids learn that players with special needs are much different than they are. None of the kids in the Delray league would be able to play if not for the generosity of major donors like Pugliese and others.

On Saturdays mornings in the spring and fall you will often see about 60 kids playing baseball on this field. A Miracle League game is often described as a fun game for kids with a handicap. It a place where kids get excited about the game and leave with their self esteem in tact. It teaches kids how to be part of a team.

Anthony Pugliese dontated money to have a swimming pool built for an autistic child that enjoyed swimming. He had read about the child’s inability to communicate. He donated $15,000 to have the pool build for the boy who was also blind. He hired a contractor and had the pool built in 1996. Pugliese says that he has always gotten more out of giving and helping others out than receiving. He is known as a humitarian in the Delray Beach area.

Anthony V. Pugliese

Anthony V. Pugliese III throws the first pitch at the opening of Miracle Field

Witch’s hat and Jack Ruby’s gun under the hammer

Witch’s hat and Jack Ruby’s gun under the hammer

Anthony V. Pugliese  - most prized photo

Original photo of Jack Ruby Shooting Lee Harvey Oswald – Owned by Anthony V. Pugliese III

Original article: http://www.theguardian.com/world/2008/mar/17/kennedy.usa

Eccentric developer sells off Americana collection to finance new town in Florida

But destiny is calling for the owner of the 850 lots that went under the auctioneer’s hammer over the weekend in a casino in Las Vegas.

Anthony Pugliese, an eccentric developer, is planning to build a new town for 100,000 people on 41,000 acres of land in central Florida.

Pugliese, who has a reputation for wearing alligator shoes with alligator eyeballs still attached, has put his entire collection up for sale partly to finance the new town, which he calls Destiny.

On Saturday it was the turn of his lovingly gathered film relics. Top billing went to the witch’s hat worn by Margaret Hamilton in The Wizard of Oz during the sequence in which Dorothy splashes her with water and she cries out: “I’m melting!”

The hat fetched $170,000 (about £84,000) after 13 bids in person at the Palms Casino and online through eBay.

Then there was the tailcoat worn by Orson Welles in Citizen Kane with a K embroidered on each cuff, which fetched $27,000. Other lots included the late Christopher Reeve’s Superman costumes ($45,000); the steel-reinforced black felt hat that Oddjob used as a deadly weapon in the James Bond film Goldfinger ($110,000); several canes carried by Charlie Chaplin ($4,200 and upwards); and Harrison Ford’s bullwhip in Indiana Jones ($57,500).

Apart from the film memorabilia, politics also features highly in Pugliese’s collection.

The centrepiece of this weekend’s sale was the handgun with which Jack Ruby shot and killed Lee Harvey Oswald two days after Oswald had himself assassinated John F Kennedy.

Ruby bought the gun for $62.50 in 1960, before turning it on Oswald in the underground garage of Dallas police headquarters on November 24 1963. The gun sat in a secure locker for 20 years, the subject of a legal dispute between Ruby’s family and other claimants, before it was sold in 1991 to Pugliese for $220,000.

He was hoping to receive at least five times that much in the auction.

The identity tag tied to the toe of Oswald’s corpse and a lock of his hair were also for sale, as were several handwritten papers, a humidor and a rocking chair belonging to JFK.

Pugliese told the Dallas Morning News that he had decided to sell the gun and the rest of his collection because his thoughts had turned to Destiny. “It’s a matter of passion. If I do something, it’s a matter of passion, and now I have a new passion.”

Pugliese has been assiduously buying up plots of land in the central Florida area of Osceola County and says he intends to build a “green, eco-sustainable community” with the proceeds of the sales.

Environmentalists, however, have questioned the value of a new town on relatively undeveloped land that will be largely powered through the controversial biofuel ethanol.

Pugliese may be quite glad to see the back of the Ruby handgun, which has caused him considerable trouble.

Soon after he bought the piece, he dispatched it with an assistant to Washington to appear on the Larry King Live show. The assistant was intercepted by police on Capitol Hill who threw him in jail overnight and threatened to have the gun melted.

It took Pugliese several thousand dollars in legal fees to retrieve it.

Original Content on: http://www.theguardian.com/world/2008/mar/17/kennedy.usa

 

Anthony Pugliese News: Miracle League of Delray Beach gets special field

Miracle League of Delray Beach gets special field

By Samantha Frank

Palm Beach Post Staff Writer

DELRAY BEACH —

After six years of hard work and patience, Jeff and Julia Kadel finally have their field of dreams.

The Delray Beach couple started The Miracle League of Delray Beach, a local chapter of a national nonprofit organization that provides children with mental and physical disabilities with the opportunity to play baseball, and as of May 15, they have their own special baseball field.

The “field” is made from recycled rubber (there is no grass or dirt), making it wheelchair accessible, and the bases are painted on the rubber. The dugouts are extra wide.

“After all these years of planning and raising money, it’s nice to get back to the basics of just playing baseball,” Julia Kadel said.

She said that the idea for the local league began when she and her husband watched an HBO documentary about a Miracle League in Atlanta.

“We thought this would be a perfect fit for our community,” she said.

The city of Delray Beach agreed and gave them the land for the field at Robert P. Miller Park and $10,000 to get them started.

Former Palm Beach County Commissioner Mary McCarty gave $250,000 toward the building of the field.

The Anthony V. Pugliese V Miracle field was named after a donor’s grandson, who has autism.

At the same time that Kadel and her husband were busy raising money for the $550,000 field, city officials decided that Robert P. Miller Park, which was originally built in the early ’70s, could use a facelift.

“It desperately needed some renovations,” said Tom Kwiatek, a recreation supervisor for Delray Beach. “It was showing a lot of wear, and the layout didn’t make sense because the park was built in phases over the years.”

After the major hurricanes in 2004 and 2005, the park was used as a dumping site for debris, which took its toll on the park, said Linda Karch, director of parks and recreation for Delray Beach.

So the city decided to start from scratch, tearing up the fields and redesigning the entire park into a pie shape, with fields centered around a new concession stand/press box building.

The park, at 1905 S.W. Fourth Ave., is named after Robert P. Miller, who went to the mayor and city commission in the early 1970s to lobby for a Little League baseball field. At the time, Delray Beach was the only city between Vero Beach and Key West not to have one.

Slowly the city started adding more fields. Then Bucky Dent’s Baseball School moved to the southend of the park with an agreement with the city to help maintain the fields.

Earlier this month the city completed more than $6 million worth of renovations to the park that include three new Little League fields, one major league field for older kids and adults, four batting cages, a storage building with three bays and a pitching/hitting wall area. In addition, the original park playground was moved, more parking was added, energy-efficient lighting was installed and the fencing, dugouts and play surface were replaced at Little Fenway, the first field that was built at the park.

The renovations were done in three phases, beginning in January 2008.

The Miracle League of Delray Beach is in its fourth season, and until the recent opening of the new field, the teams were playing at Bucky Dent’s Baseball School. The local league attracts anywhere from 50 to 75 players during a season, and then there are the many volunteer “buddies,” typically high school students, who teach the kids how to play baseball and serve as a friend and mentor to them.

Kadel’s three sons, ages 15, 12 and 6, all serve as volunteer buddies.

“It’s a huge family affair for us,” Kadel said.

To get involved with the next season of the Miracle League of Delray Beach, which begins in October, call Julia Kadel at (561) 414-4441 .

The Island – An Original Painting by Anthony V. Pugliese

Anthony V. Pugliese III has long exhibited a creative spirit.  His creativity has helped him in the world of pool construction, real estate, entrepreneurship, and more recently through his original paintings.  Below is The Island by Anthony V. Pugliese III.

Island Sky - By Anthony V. Pugliese III

Island Sky – By Anthony V. Pugliese III

Together – An Anthony V. Pugliese III Original Painting

Anthony V. Pugliese III – Family Man

Anthony V. Pugliese III is a dedicated family man who was taught American family values from his parents.  Working for his father, Anthony V. Pugliese III was a dedicated son who helped his father become an innovator.  Anthony V. Pugliese III’s creative mind and innovative spirit helped reimagine the way that pools were built.  Combined with Anthony V. Pugliese III’s love of nature, Pools by Pugliese became a household name for natural preservation and aesthetic quality.  Anthony V. Pugliese III learned the values of hard work, creativity, and the American way while working for and with his father.  Taking what he learned from his father, Anthony V. Pugliese III soon ventured off and started to create businesses of his own.  From pioneering real estate to helping others achieve their own American Dream, Anthony V. Pugliese has embodied the ideals of family.

That’s why Anthony V. Pugliese III has always supported his children and has helped them succeed in business and life.  He has instilled values of education, hard work, and family.  Those values have been since passed along to the grandchildren of Anthony V. Pugliese III.  When it comes to being a family man and having family values no one embodies those ideals like Anthony V. Pugliese III.

The Finest 20th Century Pop Culture Collection Ever Privately Assembled

THE PUGLIESE POP CULTURE COLLECTION

March 15 & 16, 2008
Palms Casino Resort
Las Vegas, Nevada

The Pugliese Collection may well be the finest collection focusing on 20th Century pop culture ever privately assembled. Approximately eight hundred and fifty of the most extraordinary objects imaginable from the worlds of motion pictures, popular music, magic, television and politics were gathered over several decades by Anthony Pugliese, a man who might well be described as a true visionary. Indeed, Mr. Pugliese is sharing his wonderful Collection with the rest of the world as he shifts his interests towards the creation of Destiny, the nation’s largest eco-sustainable community currently being sensitively created in central Florida.  A portion of the proceeds from the remarkable event are earmarked for the Audubon Society, long known for its important environmental work.

Catalogue

A massive (over 3 pounds) and beautifully-designed book documenting the nearly 1,000 lots in this extraordinary collection is available in a very limited edition. Click here to securely order your copy of this one-of-a-kind catalogue.

View the online catalogue:

Session One: Movies (Saturday, March 15 @ 11am)
Session Two: John F. Kennedy, Houdini, Music (Sunday, March 16 @ 11am)
Session Three: Television, Bob Mackie, History, Icons, Political Cartoons (Sunday, March 16 @ 4pm)

Sale History

Many items in the Pugliese Collection have been acquired at auction. Click here to download a PDF listing many of these lots with details regarding their acquisition. If you have purchased a catalogue, this same information can be found on pages 252 and 253 of your catalogue.

 

Read more at: http://www.guernseys.com/Guernseys%20New/puglieseauction.html

Domainer’s Magazine: Spotlight on Anthony V. Pugliese III

Anthony V. Pugliese III PDF Print E-mail
Written by Jerry Nolte
Wednesday, 12 March 2014 15:25

Anthony V. Pugliese III is larger than life. And it’s not a matter of stature. It’s solely due to his accomplishments, sweeping visions and artistic appreciation.

To know Pugliese is to know that feet and inches don’t matter – personality and intelligence do this down-to-earth family man – and accomplished business tycoon – acts on his creative impulses yet knows how to navigate the business world like a modern day Magellan.

What makes him especially unique in the business world, however, are his priorities.

“The most important things in life are family, loyalty and your word. Those things are more important than anything else – money never comes first.”

The other trait that makes him a rarity in the business world is his innate creative ability. As an art student at Arts High School in Newark, New Jersey, he studied mechanical drawing, painting and design. But instead of heading off to college Pugliese did what came naturally – he went into the pool business with his father, Anthony V. Pugliese Jr.

“In the winter you couldn’t build pools so we started rehabbing vacant buildings in Northern New Jersey and Newark. Then we started buying industrial parks and office buildings,” said the father of four.

It wasn’t long before Pugliese’s business skills and boundlessness led him to South Florida. He invested in buildings in Boca Raton, Delray Beach and the Florida Keys. Pugliese also found a venue that married his creative right brain with his analytical left brain. And the results were pretty spectacular.

“We designed a 135,000 square foot building in Boca Raton that won the 1986 National Association of Office & Industrial Parks Award. We also won an award for best brochure design for an office building,” he said (he uses the collective we quite often as a way of inclusiveness).

The Crystal Corporate Center on Military Trail may have garnered Pugliese accolades from his peers, but it’s his philosophy and pledge of honor that continues to garner him humble followers and co-workers. “I’ve never met a person who’s more brilliant in all ways and walks of life. He’s a handshake kind of guy, his word is his honor,” said Mel Urban, of CSS Building and Design, Inc.

If you talk to anyone who knows Pugliese, you will hear the same adjectives – wonderful, intelligent, funny, creative, productive, fair, honest, humble, caring and a good friend. There’s also a sense of awe at his worldly accomplishments

He has amassed millions of square feet of retail, industrial and commercial properties, holds patents in IP video technology, electronic ticketing and automated self-storage. And Pugliese’s latest acquisition (or real estate prodigy) is a project known as Destiny. This lush 41,300 acreage of land in Central Florida (that is three times the size of Manhattan) is being heralded as the first eco-sustainable community. The Destiny motto is to conserve, recycle and preserve – and its ambitiousness and credo seem to be borrowed from the Al Gore playbook.

“We are going to change the way people live at Destiny, they will be able to embrace a green lifestyle,” said the proud papa of this gargantuan project that will house 250,000 people. The Destiny brochure reads “Land is our past, our present and our future.” And according to Pugliese, sprawling congestion is not what he is after, but something greater in scope. “It is our vision to insure a major pristine piece of old Florida is saved through the thoughtful preservation of tens of thousands of acres of land that we named Destiny.”

But that’s not the only thing he does with his time. Pugliese collects rare slices of popular culture that are true testaments of time and space. He owned Marlon Brando’s fedora from the movie, “The Godfather”, the witch hat worn in 1939 by Margaret Hamilton in “The Wizard of Oz.,” and the bowler worn by Odd Job in the movie, “The Goldfinger.” In all 800 precious pieces owned by Pugliese were recently sold at an auction in Las Vegas by Guernsey’s Auction House. The Odd Job bowler fetched $130,000 and the witch hat worn by Hamilton brought in $208,000.

According to the Pugliese Pop Culture catalogue the auction “marked Pugliese’s intention to refocus his efforts to help protect and preserve our great natural heritage by supporting the Audubon Society….and to develop Destiny, Florida’s first Eco-sustainable community.”

There are other dimensions to this multi-tasking dreamer as well. In his spare time he enjoys painting. “Some guys like to play golf, I like to paint,” he says. But one gets the idea that Pugliese’s artwork is akin to the colorful and expressive side that takes up residence in his cerebral cortex.

In the Pugliese work environment there are signs of his creative genius everywhere. Dispersed throughout the wood paneled rooms that make up the Pugliese Company headquarters are oil paintings by the boss himself. Most are hung at dizzying heights that soar above the innumerable offices occupied by loyal Pugliese employees. There are colorful paintings of zaftig women as well as pastoral nature scenes. There’s also a collage of human forms in orange, blue and green that is a metaphor for his belief that “time melts away.”

But everyone who knows Pugliese knows that time rarely melts idly away in his orbit. “Anthony is one of the few people who can negotiate a deal and each side walks away feeling like they got what they deserved. Sometimes meetings go on for a long time and Anthony’s enthusiasm, focus and sense of humor keep everyone excited about the project,” said Michael Weiner, a zoning and real estate lawyer in Delray Beach.

Maybe that’s because of the Pugliese mind set. “You should treat people as you would expect to be treated. Respect and loyalty should take precedence over money. Money should never be your God because no matter how much money you have it cannot buy you respect and loyalty.”

Pretty heady stuff coming from a man who claims he’s not religious or spiritual. But if you were to hear the Pugliese philosophy, you would know that this man of vision is religious in his own context. “Religion is knowing that God is in your heart and your mind. The image you leave behind can only be formed by the image you create while you are alive,” he said.

OK so he’s not religious, but the man with the street named after him in Pineapple Grove appears to have an artistic appreciation for others religious expressions. There’s a colorful oil painting of dancing Gopis outside his office and delicious depictions of Shiva and other deities lining the walls of this museum-like corporate milieu.

Inside his spacious, yet electrifying office is a mélange of collectables usually reserved for museums and galleries. Standing on a shelf behind his desk is the original statue of the Maltese Falcon from the 1941 John Huston film, “The Maltese Falcon” (starring Humphrey Bogart). And perched high above the adjacent wall is a massive elephant head.

But it is the bronze Perillo sculptures in his office that really tell a more vivid Pugliese story board. There’s the Buffalo Hunt, the Mighty Hunter and a few other ambitious bronze’s on pedestals throughout his office. And if a person is part and parcel of their surroundings then no one displays a better art form of consciousness than Pugliese. “Sometimes you have to be soft, sometimes you have to be rough, but you have to be able to do both. If you are soft all the time you get buried and if you’re hard all the time you are a bastard – the idea is to be fair.”

You can say that again. Pugliese is known for being fair in the same way that Gandhi was known for his peaceful continence. “Anthony’s word is his honor, you don’t need a 65,000 word contract, his word is like God,” adds Urban.

But this fearless leader of all things real estate (and beyond) has other interests as well. He owns Green Sky Industries, a recycling company that employs 127 people in New Jersey. He also owns a software company called Video Protein, run by his son Anthony V. Pugliese lV. This web-based patented software manages video cameras from anywhere in the world. “All you need is a camera, that’s why they call it, ‘plug and play,’” he said.

In his spare time (one wonders where this comes from) Pugliese comes up with story ideas and characters that are made into movies. His film production company, World Films Inc., produces movies with names like “The Butcher,” “The Last Sentinel,” and “Soft Target.” His next film, which goes into production later in the year, is a horror film called, “Grotesque.”

The man with the golden touch also has a heart to go with it. When his friends are in need of inspiration he makes up quotes to pull them out of the doldrums. Some go like this, “When life casts its darkest shadow upon you, that’s when you must find even the smallest ray of light within to guide you through the darkness.”
And what does this real estate maven do to inspire himself? Well, it seems that Pugliese holds on tight to his family ties. He can be found playing with his five grandchildren at the beach and relishing time with his glamorous (and quite intelligent) wife Laura. The rest of the Pugliese brood includes nine-year-old Roman, 35-year-old Anthony lV, 32-year-old Alvise and 31-year-old Lana.

To honor his grandson, Anthony V. Pugliese V, he is creating the Anthony V. Pugliese V Miracle League field. This playing field will be located in Miller Park off of Linton Blvd. and is being built for handicap children to play sports. The park will be finished in late 2008.

To quantify the accomplishments of the man with the Pugliese heritage (granddad was Anthony Pugliese, dad was Anthony V. Pugliese Jr.) would be like counting the pebbles at the edge of the Grand Canyon. It makes the task seems insurmountable, which leads one to wonder, is this a man that defies description, is he a mere mortal that looms larger than life (and we’re not talking feet and inches).

Perhaps, or maybe it has something to do with the fact that his father, Anthony V. Pugliese Jr. once imparted this wisdom at this feet, “You never want to burn your bridges because you never know when you might need to go back over them.”

That might be the reason that Pugliese always has a safe port in the storm – a front row seat in the boardroom of life. No matter how high he leaps or how much traction he needs Pugliese always has that steady bridge to propel him forward.

But one thing for sure, he never leaves anyone in the dust on the way there. “Anthony is the most wonderful person – he’s loving and caring and has never made an enemy,” said Urban. “I’ve been lucky to meet someone like him.”

See the original article on the Domainers Magazine Website http://www.domainersmagazine.com/Industry-Press-Releases/Anthony-V.-Pugliese-III.html

Profile: An Interview with Anthony V. Pugliese, III

Profile: An Interview with Anthony V. Pugliese, III

The Pineapple sat down for a chat recently with Anthony V. Pugliese, III CEO of the Pugliese Company of Delray Beach, a South Florida real estate developer. Pugliese is an avid art collector and philanthropist. Recently, the idea of combining the two passions emerged and a great concept was born: Art Works 4 Food. Through Art Works 4 Food, Pugliese hopes to bring together emerging artists, established artists, art galleries and collectors to donate their creations, time, and resources to help feed children in need. An artist himself, Pugliese will be leading the way by providing 100 paintings (painted by him) for sale in various art galleries around Florida. One hundred percent of the sales proceeds after third party sales commissions and expenses from art sales will be donated to Art Works 4 Food. 

Pineapple: For people who don’t know who you are, can you tell us a little about your company?
Pugliese: The Pugliese Company’s main focus is in raw land development dealing in commercial, industrial and residential properties. We own and manage close to 2 million- square-feet of industrial, office and self-storage in Florida and New Jersey. I started out in the building business when I was 17-years-old.

Pineapple: We understand in August 1999 you bought an old blighted, two- acre property (an old Winn Dixie) on NE 1st Street and 2nd Avenue to develop the first Pineapple Grove commercial project.
Pugliese: Yes, Delray has always had its own special thing; with connectivity and a hometown flavor. From my viewpoint even though the property was in a blighted area I knew it would one day come into its own because of its close proximity to all the action on Atlantic Avenue and 2nd Avenue.
In 2001, we built our Corporate Offices and a 30,000 Square-foot Retail store, Creations. I guess we must have done something right because we received an award from the Delray Beach Community Redevelopment Agency (CRA) for our Development at 101 Pineapple Grove Way in Delray Beach.

Pineapple: Tell us about your non-profit organization, Art Works 4 Food that raises awareness and funds to provide healthy food to the growing number of homeless and hungry Palm Beach County School Children.
Pugliese: Clearly hunger is an issue around the world, but what completely shocked me was the fact that here in affluent Palm Beach County there is a growing number of homeless and hungry children. Since 2007, we have had an 83 percent increase in Palm Beach County school age child homelessness. In the past two years a 66 percent growth in poverty in our School Districts, and 61 percent of school children are now receiving free or reduced lunch programs. These “food insecure” children not only demonstrate higher health and behavioral issues, but what is really worrisome is that the school drop-out rate is five times higher. These children, for the most part, only have access to processed foods filled with sugar, fats and salts. Clearly not the right body and brain food they need to have a chance to succeed.

Pineapple: Can you tell us about the Art Component of your new charity, Art Works 4 Food?
Pugliese: My concept is to raise some necessary funds for the Healthy Food Programs by selling my artwork and other artist’s work. I painted 103 original paintings over several years, and I did that as a way to bring awareness to this issue. We are looking for young talented children, professional and amateur artists who want to donate art work and receive a portion of the proceeds from the sale of the art. The rest will be donated to Art Works 4 Food.

Pineapple: We hear you are launching a new technological format, “Augmented Reality” at your fundraiser that will take place on October 24th in at Max’s Harvest.
Pugliese: Both art and technology have been of major interest to me, so it seemed like a natural progression for me to incorporate it into my artwork. Augmented Reality merges the virtual and physical worlds through the use of technology. It combines the real and virtual worlds with interactive and real-time images that are 3D. It’s very intriguing – just bring your Smart or IPhone.

To learn more about Art Works 4 Food, and the fundraiser visit www.Artworks4food.org. or contact Roz Gatewood, Executive Director @ 454-1616 or 561- 561-271-8102