Development Beat
Development Beat: New Building Report
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Sitework is well underway for a new Sheetz getting built in far North Raleigh off Louisburg Road by a subsidiary of Charlotte real estate firm Tribek Properties.
Raleigh Public Record (https://theraleighcommons.org/raleighpublicrecord/topics/news/development-beat/page/12/)
Sitework is well underway for a new Sheetz getting built in far North Raleigh off Louisburg Road by a subsidiary of Charlotte real estate firm Tribek Properties.
Bare Bones, Fayetteville Street’s newest burger joint, recently underwent its ABC Permit inspection, and the Meridian at Sutton Square Apartments, opening in July, are now installing the saltwater pool.
Nearly three years after the adoption of the City’s new Unified Development Ordinance, the owners of a North Raleigh senior care facility realized they’ve been in non-compliance with the new zoning code this entire time.
An undeveloped piece of land of Falls of Neuse that developers wanted to turn into a grocery-anchored shopping center could soon be turned into a new senior housing development. Plus: a rundown of everything that happened at Tuesday’s Planning Commission.
We take a look at the long history of a small single-family in Southwest Raleigh that’s set to be torn down almost a year after City Council deemed it unfit.
Today on the Development Beat, we take a look at Northwest Raleigh’s newest luxurious living community: The Reserve at Brookhaven, which will be holding an open-house soiree later this month.
Raleigh’s newest burger joint is set to open on Monday, and the new location for the nightclub FuBar across from the Stanhope on Hillsborough will be welcoming guests for the first time next Thursday. Plus, renovations at Biscuitville & Player’s Retreat!
A 1960s-era office building at 1620 Hillsborough is set for a significant expansion that will add another 4,000 square feet of second-story office space over a surface parking lot. We also take a look at the surprisingly rich history of this property, which started off as part of the Cameron Park neighborhood.
Planning Commissioners only heard one rezoning case at its most recent meeting: a Northwest Raleigh town home development they recommended Council deny. The property owners subsequently withdrew their application before Council got a chance to vote, so we try and find out what that means for the future of this property.
On this week’s Teardown Tuesday, we’ve got three clusters of residential demolition projects to look at. Are any of these demolitions tied to a larger project? We try to find out.