Development Beat
Development Beat: Planning Commission Report
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Planning Commissioners this week discussed case Z-6-16, a new grocery-anchored shopping center near the intersection of Leesville and Strickland Roads in North Raleigh.
Raleigh Public Record (https://theraleighcommons.org/raleighpublicrecord/author/jborden/page/22/)
Planning Commissioners this week discussed case Z-6-16, a new grocery-anchored shopping center near the intersection of Leesville and Strickland Roads in North Raleigh.
The former home of Harry’s Guitars will soon be transformed into Glenwood South’s newest nightclub care of local bar owner Dan Lovenheim.
The Board of Adjustment met Monday to hear a number of requests for variances and exceptions to the City’s zoning and code requirements for development, chief among them one from the developers of a new condominium project on New Bern Avenue.
Blue Green Construction was issued permits back in October for a single-family home at 301 Wade Avenue, located right at the split between Wade and West Streets and next to the railroad bridge.
Today on Terrific Tuesday we take a look back at the old Yarborough House, once one of Raleigh’s finest hotels and home to a number of the state’s governors in the late 1800s.
The Earth Day on Hillsborough Street festival was held this past weekend, and The Record was on hand to snap a few photos.
The IHOP at 1313 Hillsborough closed its door this Saturday, so today we take a look at the developer’s future plans for the site: a new, 83-unit apartment complex.
Today on the Development Beat, we take a look at some recent renovation projects around the city, including a new wings place on Hillsborough and some improvements at The Ritz music venue in North Raleigh.
An ongoing dispute between a Raleigh neighbor and a private club owner over possible violations of the City’s noise ordinances spilled over into City Council earlier this week, where the man accused the Raleigh Police Department of shielding the bar from criminal and civil citations.
South Saunders Street could soon be welcoming a new Spanish-language business center, where patrons will be able to file taxes, have documents notarized, pay bills and perform other assorted services.