Development Beat
Development Beat: Hello Hawthorne My Old Friend
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We take a look at the renovation and expansion plans for the 70s-era Hawthorne Ridge Apartment complex in North Raleigh.
Raleigh Public Record (https://theraleighcommons.org/raleighpublicrecord/topics/news/page/5/)
We take a look at the renovation and expansion plans for the 70s-era Hawthorne Ridge Apartment complex in North Raleigh.
We take a look at the history and proposed future of a home built in 1908 and known as the Lamar House on North Person Street.
An eight-unit apartment complex off Litchford Road in North Raleigh is being torn down to make way for a much larger, 240-unit complex being developed by Dewitt Carolinas.
FInal site work permits were issued last week for Raleigh’s newest Panera Bread, which will be located at the redeveloped Villages of Lake Boone.
Three new bars received permits ranging from $1,800 to $98,000 last week: we take a look at all of them. Plus: a new canopy at Angus Barn, a new location for Red Wing shoes and the City of Raleigh leases some office space in Highwood Realty’s One City Plaza.
A new Taco Bell restaurant is coming to the Forestville Crossing shopping center on Louisburg Road; unfortunately it won’t be designed in one of the chain’s four new upscale “Cantina” styles.
Brought to you by Rufty-Peedin Design Build
Wednesday, October 12, 2016: Major Work Wednesday
Major/Minor Work Wednesday is a semiregular feature that takes a look at recently filed applications with the Raleigh Historic Development Commission.
A home on State Street that was designated as Raleigh Historic Landmark in 2009 is now set to undergo a dramatic renovation that seeks to restore the property to its original, 1917 state. Last week, we published a column about plans for a new 42-unit apartment complex at 113 Chamberlain just off Hillsborough Street. Many readers expressed through social media and in our comments section their displeasure with the project and the overall trend of historic properties being torn down to make way for generic, high-density apartment complexes. Hopefully those folks will be pleased to learn that North Street LLC is seeking to “restore the house to as close as is feasibly possible to the original condition. The house was added on in many different ways over the years. In the few cases where the scope of work does not necessarily restore the house to its exact original condition we believe the work does not make its current condition worse.”
A 1950s-era office and warehouse complex on Capital Boulevard is being torn down to make way for Raleigh’s newest self-storage facility.
The Record has gained not-so-exclusive access to a trove of files that were put together for the purpose of giving potential Master Plan consultants for Dix Park a better idea of what they’re getting into when it comes to planning the future of this beloved space.
We take a look at some recently issued renovation permits, including Raleigh’s first Sprouts Farmers Market, a big renovation of a South Raleigh fire station and an addition of a kitchen to downtown Raleigh’s London Bridge Pub.