General News
Mayor: Transit sales tax funding may be at risk
It was an attention-getting moment Monday night: The Charlotte City Council voted 7-4 to apply for a $75 million* federal grant for the second phase of its controversial streetcar project. As is typical, council members said why they supported or opposed the project. Council member Michael Barnes, for example, said, “I don’t think it’s in […]
The ancient bowfin – a unique fish
As you kayak along the Uwharrie River, you’ll likely see longnose gar. These strange dinosaur-like creatures are hard to miss, with their large size of 2 to 3 feet, their brownish olive coloring, and long narrow snout and sharp teeth. Another species related to the gar and found in some parts of the state, but […]
Will light rail change the way University City develops?
Local streets have jammed with back-to-school traffic this week, as Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools opened for a new year. In most parts of the city, the start of UNC Charlotte’s academic year has not been as noticeable. But those of us at UNC Charlotte’s 1,000-acre campus 8 miles northeast of uptown see our own back-to-school jams, as […]
Passenger pigeons: Marking a century-old extinction
Sept. 1 marks a sad centenary in our nation’s natural history. In the early days of World War I, a passenger pigeon died alone in her cage at the Cincinnati Zoo. “Martha” had lived her entire life in captivity. She was the last of her kind. The estimated population of passenger pigeons had once been […]
Charlotte and Raleigh top U.N. list of fastest growing large U.S. cities
City population projections produced by the United Nations show Charlotte and Raleigh as growing the fastest among large U.S. cities from 2010 to 2030. The United Nations produces population estimates and projections for cities from Shanghai to Johannesburg – including cities in the U.S. The U.N. uses areas it calls “urban agglomerations,*” which measure the […]
Listen to a guided tour of the Uwharrie Trail
As you hike along the Uwharrie Trail, you may come upon a newly installed Uwharrie Trail audio tour marker and wonder what it is. If you have cell service, you can click on the QR code shown and hear a short story about the historic, natural or cultural significance of the very spot to which […]
A dining parklet for Price’s patrons
PlanCharlotte.org is asking readers to nominate spots in the Charlotte region that need a design makeover. (See our first installment in this series here.) Urban designers Keihly Moore and Alex Borisenko have launched a website, www.completeblocks.com, where they’re proposing a series of urban design retrofits, many of them nominated by readers. Among their designs so […]
Talk of the Towns: Rock Hill
Talk of the Towns is a PlanCharlotte series visiting planners from the 14-county Charlotte region. This installment takes us to Rock Hill in York County, S.C. The former industrial town of about 68,000 people is searching for a new image. Bill Meyer has been planning and development director in Rock Hill since 2006. He talked […]
A paddle a day keeps the doctor away
“A paddle a day keeps the doctor away.” That isn’t quite the famous saying, but it rings just as true. Kayaking and canoeing are fun and healthy ways to enjoy the outdoors, and there is plenty of water to be paddled nearby. One of those great streams in the N.C. Piedmont that’s now easily accessible […]
Can innovative interchange plan survive suburbia?
With the long-delayed final leg of Interstate-485 set to open soon, residents near the new interchange at Prosperity Church Road are bracing for growth. The question is, what will that growth look like? A 15-year-old plan calls for an “urban village” of compact streets and walkable, mixed-use neighborhoods. When envisioned in the late 1990s, it […]