Development Beat
Development Beat: Atlantic Plaza
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A new shopping center is coming to the intersection of Atlantic and Spring Forest in North Raleigh, and it’s bringing with it the beloved fast-food chain Burger King.
Raleigh Public Record (https://theraleighcommons.org/raleighpublicrecord/topics/news/page/17/)
A new shopping center is coming to the intersection of Atlantic and Spring Forest in North Raleigh, and it’s bringing with it the beloved fast-food chain Burger King.
We’ve got two demolition projects to dive into today, including the former home of a modernist furniture store and a handful of Duke Energy warehouses in far North Raleigh.
Permits have been issued for Raleigh’s first retail banking location of the Greenville, NC-based Union Branch & Trust, which will be located on Mutual Court, near the intersection of Strickland and Falls of Neuse in North Raleigh.
The Regal Cinemas theater at Brier Creek is set to undergo an extensive upgrade that will see luxury reclining seats installed in all 14 of its auditoriums. Plus: work begins for Wake County’s newest charter school.
The Growth and Natural Resources Committee met Wednesday to discuss a rezoning case and two construction contracts: one for Moore Square and the other for Stone’s Warehouse.
City Council met this week for a work session, where they discussed Southeast Raleigh Tennis Courts, greener stormwater control measures and the Moore Square Park renovation project.
Planning Commissioners on Tuesday recommended approval of three new rezoning cases, including one for the Christian Hand of Hope Pregnancy Center, which plans to move in next door the to the Preferred Women’s Health Center, an abortion clinic.
If you’ve ever wondered how Brier Creek, a massive mix of retail, office, residential and dining came to be developed on the western outskirts of Raleigh, you’ve come to the right place.
The Development Beat takes a tour of the future home of the H-Street Kitchen, thanks to proprietor Gary Bryant and our friends over at Rufty-Peedin Design Build.
A former clothing-shop turned church storage building was first set to be torn down two years ago; the permits expired without the work ever taking place. Now those permits have been renewed.