| Northeast Charlotte
Everything in northeast
Charlotte is done on a grand scale. The area is home to Lowe’s Motor
Speedway, the largest sports facility in the Southeast and the “
Mecca of Motorsports,” as NASCAR enthusiasts call it.
The
area’s largest higher-education institution, the University of North
Carolina at Charlotte, is located here in the cradle of highways 49
and 29. At 19,000 students and counting, it’s the fastest-growing
university in the state system. In addition, some of the area’s
largest employers make University Research Park their corporate
campus.
Highland Creek, one of Charlotte’s hottest-selling
neighborhoods, grows by the day on Ridge Road. Skybrook, the area’s
newest golf course neighborhood, offers newcomers the opportunity
to
build their new home with golf course views. Other new developments
in Highland Creek include Prosperity Ridge and
Dominion.
University City, as the northeast portion of
Mecklenburg County is also called, has seen phenomenal growth in the
last 15 years. The area is decorated with new neighborhoods, new
shopping centers and new office buildings. The area is bisected by
North Tryon Street and sprawls north to I-77, south past UNCC to The
Plaza, and northeast into Cabarrus County.
University City is
home to more than 100,000 people, almost one-sixth of the population
of Mecklenburg County. And its popularity continues to fuel
population growth.
The University area takes its name from
UNCC, the fourth largest of the state’s public universities.
Enrollment at the university grows by about 1,000 students
each year. With enrollment on the rise, so are admission
standards.
The
average freshman entering UNCC has a high school grade-point
average of 3.6.
UNCC tailors its programs to meet the cultural and
economic needs of the 15-county Charlotte region and the
state of North Carolina. It offers a broad array of programs
leading
to
bachelor’s, master’s and doctoral degrees. It is organized
into seven colleges: architecture, arts and sciences, business
administration, education, engineering, information technology
and nursing and health professions.
To make room for expansive
growth on campus, the university has renovated and expanded
the J. Murrey Atkins Library. The library now offers students
access
to the
latest research technology and a comfortable place to study.
Construction on campus is ubiquitous – 2004 marks the opening
of new buildings for science and technology, the College
of Education and
for graduate engineering and research. A new College of Nursing
and Health Professions building is slated for 2006.
After
graduation, many students find careers right in University City,
where numerous companies have offices in University Research Park
off W.T. Harris Boulevard north of I-85. The park was created in the
late 1950s to attract research and development companies. Today, the
park has followed the lead of Charlotte as a whole and is home to
many back-office and support operations.
Wachovia Corp.,
headquartered in Charlotte, operates its Customer Information
Center here. The 2.1-million-square-foot facility is one
of the nation’s
largest single-tenant office buildings, about two-thirds
the size of the Pentagon.

Another major employer that recently moved its
headquarters to University Research Park is TIAA-CREF, a
national provider of retirement fund services. The pension
fund company
employs more than 1,500 workers, a number that continues
to increase. Other major employers in the area include IBM
and Duke
Energy.
Small businesses get a boost in University City, too.
The Ben Craig Center is a small-business incubator operated by UNCC
on Mallard Creek Road. The center supports new businesses, many of
them spawned by university students, by providing office space,
administrative services and expert advice.
With so many
companies locating in the area, homes have readily followed. The
University City area, which encompasses real estate areas 1 and 2,
includes numerous developments that dot what was once farmland along
Eastfield Road, Mallard Creek Road and Prosperity Church Road. More
new neighborhoods are appearing around the exits along I-85 headed
toward Concord and Cabarrus County.
The area has seen an
explosion in retail development, and it’s expected to continue.
Concord Mills, off I-85, opened in 1999 to great fanfare. The
state’s second-largest shopping center with 1.4 million square feet,
Concord Mills is hailed as the state’s top tourist attraction,
drawing 15.3 million visitors and thousands of tour buses
annually. Shopping destinations include an outdoor store
featuring indoor
trout streams and a 20-foot rock-climbing wall.
Nearby is
Verizon Wireless Amphitheater, an outdoor arena on U.S. 29 that
hosts summer performances by rock, pop and country
artists.
Developers continue to make plans for the 2005
opening of Northlake Mall, to be located at I-77 and Reames
Road. The mall’s developers say the project will have 1.2 million square
feet and include Belk, Dillard’s and Hecht’s department stores
as anchors.
Another
popular shopping draw is University Place, a great spot near
the university to catch a movie, enjoy dinner
at one of several restaurants that encircle a manmade lake
or do
some power
shopping at one of the big-box retailers nearby. On warm
summer weekend evenings, it’s often possible to catch the
sounds of an outdoor band while enjoying the ducks on the
lake.
Businesses
and apartments, many offering housing to students, are clustered
around the intersection of N.C. 49, called University City
Boulevard, and W.T. Harris Boulevard. Farther down Harris at its
intersection with Hickory Grove Road is another busy intersection of
apartments, restaurants and businesses. Newell, near UNCC along Old
Concord Road, is a mix of rural vistas coupled with suburban
developments of new homes. Back Creek, Caldwell and Rocky River
Road, once quiet country lanes, are seeing growth as builders
develop new subdivisions all the way to Cabarrus
County.
University Hospital, on W.T. Harris Boulevard at U.S.
29, provides medical care to northeast Mecklenburg and Cabarrus
residents. The 130-bed hospital, part of Carolinas HealthCare
System, includes a maternity center, sleep center, outpatient
services and general medical-surgical services.
Recreation in
the area includes numerous parks and recreational facilities. A
growing 62,000 square foot YMCA is located at W.T. Harris Boulevard
and Mallard Creek Road and features a crowd-drawing water park. The
Mallard Creek Greenway is a 3.6 mile paved walking trail along the
creek off Mallard Creek Road.
The area also is home to one of
the country’s largest indoor athletic facilities. Charlotte Sports
Center – located just off Harris Boulevard on Hankins Road, near
I-77 – is a 75,000-square-foot athletic center that offers indoor
basketball, volleyball, inline hockey, soccer, flag football and a
fitness center. No membership is necessary; it’s all pay
as you play.
Despite all the growth, University City still has a
hometown feel. A juicy hamburger at Herlocker’s drive-in
on North Tryon Street is still a favorite meal, and Reedy
Creek Park,
a
county-operated nature preserve between Rocky River Road
and The Plaza, is a picturesque 727-acre nature preserve.
East
Charlotte
Diverse neighborhoods and
affordable housing, historical landmarks, convenient shopping and
room to grow are just some of the appeal of east Charlotte, an area
roughly defined by Independence Boulevard at its southern end and
The Plaza/Plaza Road Extension at its northern end. East Charlotte
homes are listed in areas 2 and 3.
Three miles and 200 years
from Uptown are the Charlotte Museum of History and the Hezekiah
Alexander Homesite, Mecklenburg’s oldest surviving structure. The
wooded grounds on Shamrock Drive provide a relaxing and entertaining
retreat for visitors looking to escape the bustle of the Queen City
and learn a bit of her history as well. The site is also home to the
world’s largest ground-level bell, the American Freedom Bell, which
is nestled in a lovely setting on the property.
The
Plaza/Midwood area is less dramatic, but equally established. One of
Charlotte’s early streetcar neighborhoods, it includes a delightful
mixture of older, renovated and new residences. A mixed bag of
families and urban pioneers and a very active community make the
area desirable and popular. The lush median along The Plaza – once a
trolley thoroughfare – is a distinctive part of the neighborhood.
Van Landingham Estate on The Plaza, built in 1913, serves as a
lavish spot for weddings with verdant gardens and elegant rooms. The
Charlotte Country Club is also located in the Plaza-Midwood
area.
East Charlotte has an active commercial sector due to
development along Central Avenue, Albemarle Road and Independence
Boulevard. The area is also home to some of the city’s most
comfortable housing areas, many with prices that first-time buyers
find appealing. In addition to affordable housing, commercial
development gives residents some of Charlotte’s best and most
convenient shopping.
Eastland Mall, on Central Avenue between
Sharon Amity and Albemarle roads, is an east Charlotte landmark.
This 1.1-million-square-foot, double-decker center opened in 1975.
It boasts major department stores, specialty shops and a food court
as well as an ice rink, which is a great spot to learn skating or
cool off on a summer day. Spectators can watch the fun from
balconies over the rink.
Albemarle Road is a busy boulevard
lined with strip shopping centers filled with supermarkets,
drugstores, restaurants and specialty shops. Development along this
thoroughfare continues to grow, particularly on the outskirts of
Charlotte.
Currently being extended as a freeway down to
Sharon Amity Road, Independence Boulevard has sprouted many shopping
centers and retail/commercial areas. Look here for one of the city’s
biggest collections of automobile showrooms, huge home-supply and
furniture stores, restaurants and membership-only
warehouses.
Another trend shaping east Charlotte is the
influx of immigrants and new citizens who make their homes here.
Here’s where you’ll find the Hindu Center, the Islamic Center, the
Chinese Baptist Church and a host of other facilities, as well as
plenty of ethnic groceries and stores.
Accordingly, east
Charlotte also has developed an eclectic selection of restaurants,
including Italian, Chinese, Thai, Mexican, Vietnamese, steakhouses,
family restaurants and cafeterias.

Outdoor recreation in the
area includes Reedy Creek Park and Nature Preserve, which features
nearly 800 acres of nature trails, recreational fields, a disc golf
course, fishing ponds and picnic areas. Golfers will enjoy teeing
off at the area’s public and semi-private golf courses, including
Olde Sycamore Golf Plantation, The Divide on Stevens Mill Road and
the Charles T. Myers course on Harrisburg Road.
If you’d
rather fly than drive, check out Wilgrove Airport, off Albemarle
Road. This general-aviation facility offers charters, leasing and
pilot training.
Mint Hill, a town on the southern fringe of
east Charlotte, combines a country atmosphere with all the
convenience of the big city. Incorporated in 1971, Mint Hill traces
its history to Scotch-Irish settlers who first occupied the area in
the mid-1700s.
The town’s proximity to Union County – still
primarily rural and small-town – contributes to the cozy feel. The
area is a good place to look for sprawling ranch or two-story homes
with a little acreage, but also offers new construction. If you
prefer to live just across the line from Matthews or Mint Hill in
Union County, you’ll find plenty of new communities and older homes
with ample acreage.
The intersection of N.C. 51
(Matthews-Mint Hill Road) and Lawyers Road is the center of Mint
Hill, and shopping areas and town offices are nearby, as well as a
few manufacturing companies and business parks.
Mint Hill’s
54-acre community park includes a nature trail, playground, ball
fields and an asphalt track for walking, bicycling or in-line
skating. The county library system’s Mint Hill branch opened in
1999. The 14,000-square-foot facility boasts a community room,
computers and music CDs to check out.
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