NICE

NICE logo

What is NICE?

Administered by the City's Communications Department, the Neighborhood Improvement & Community Engagement (NICE) Program is building community engagement and improving the fabric of the community, neighborhood by neighborhood.

Port St. Lucie currently has 35 neighborhoods and NICE helps facilitate engagement between neighbors, community members, and the City. Some neighborhoods are newly developed, currently being built or already have a pre-established group that meets regularly.

Contact Us

Would you like City staff to come to your neighborhood? Please contact us at nice@cityofpsl.com.

Meetings include free educational fun for all ages and a chat about:

  • How to prevent common code compliance issues
  • Re-working the swale system and discontinuing the plastic swale liner program
  • The various ways to stay informed about local City news, programs and more
  • Activities the Boys and Girls Club of St. Lucie County offer
  • Any other questions or topics that residents want to discuss or learn about

Past neighborhood meeting discussions:

  • Public art & the Public Art Master Plan
  • Adopt-a-Street and Keep Port St. Lucie Beautiful (KPSLB)
  • The City's Beautification Plan and Stormwater Master Plan
  • Adopt-a-Park and the 10-year Parks Master Plan
  • The City Strategic Plan
  • City events & City University
  • The history of the City
  • The history of the NICE Program
  • The Neighborhood Directory
  • The NICE Training Program
  • Crime prevention
  • Utility box wraps
  • Creating a neighborhood recognition program
  • New neighborhood grant ideas
  • City tools and where to find them, in particular interactive maps
  • 1PSL and City swales & culverts
  • The City's Project Tracker

History & Awards

Neighborhood Planning History

Incorporated in 1961, Port St. Lucie has undergone a remarkable transformation in a short period. Originally marketed globally, especially in the Northeast, by the General Development Corporation (GDC) as a retirement haven, the city has grown from a small community of 330 residents in 1970 to an award-winning, full-service city with over 240,000 residents today. This significant growth involved overcoming GDC's inadequate community planning and infrastructure development. The ongoing efforts include one of the nation’s largest municipal septic sewer conversions, building parkways, and retrofitting sidewalks. Crucially, it also involves upgrading and revitalizing the older GDC-developed neighborhoods that lacked names, a sense of identity, gateway signage, edges, neighborhood parks, walkable streets, and social cohesion. This effort is vital for the city's future success, especially with new master-planned communities emerging in the western annexation areas.

With this vision, the City established the Neighborhood Improvement and Community Engagement (NICE) Program in 2017. Through the program, the City helps organize neighborhood meetings, workshops, and training programs where citizens contribute, envision, and plan for their neighborhoods' future.

Awards