Development Beat
Development Beat: Renovation Roundup
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Work begins on a new Italian Gelato spot at the Edison in downtown Raleigh, while the highly-anticipated Dram & Draught tavern on Hillsborough Street undergoes its final stages of inspection.
Raleigh Public Record (https://theraleighcommons.org/raleighpublicrecord/author/jborden/page/11/)
Work begins on a new Italian Gelato spot at the Edison in downtown Raleigh, while the highly-anticipated Dram & Draught tavern on Hillsborough Street undergoes its final stages of inspection.
Site plans for a new psychiatric hospital in Brier Creek were recently approved by the Planning Commission, paving the way for the latest facility from Springstone, a national provider of mental health services.
We take a brief look inside the elaborate process for planning a new single-family home in Raleigh’s historic Oakwood District.
The man behind the distribution of a recent wave of KKK recruitment fliers in Raleigh and other North Carolina cities is also a reported FBI informant who provided evidence last year in a case against a fellow Klan member who sought to build a “mobile death ray.”
The former home of Rex Hospital and the current campus for the North Carolina Division of Employment Security is set to be sold for private development once due diligence on the property has been completed.
In the third and probably final part in our series of guides to playing Pokémon Go in and around Raleigh, we list off ten of the city’s rarest Pokémon, and where you can find them.
A new restaurant for the former home of Brewmasters, a new hookah lounge for Western Boulevard and a new bottle shop on far north Capital Boulevard are but three of the fascinating subjects in today’s edition of Renovation Roundup.
We take a look at plans for Magnolia Groves, a small apartment complex coming to North Raleigh.
Raleigh’s parks are an ideal place to get out, catch Pokémon, collect power-ups and join the ever-growing community of dedicated Pokémon Go users who are taking over the city faster than you can say “Pet Rock.”
A historic home at the intersection of Blount and Peace that’s fallen into disrepair over the years is set to undergo a significant exterior makeover thanks to its new owner.