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DeleteMe

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  1. 10 hours ago, Jones_ said:

    As an aside, it's my firm belief that governments should have been encouraging dense development all along. Whether it be extremely high taxes on non-farm acreage, an urban growth boundary or what I don't know, but the pure sprawl is not a sustainable pattern on multiple fronts, the most concerning to me being shrinking amounts of untouched land. Can't do anything to scare away the god damned developers around here, so unchecked soul sucking, land wasting sprawl is what we get. We'll be in very dire straits before the effing 'market' self corrects any of this. Where are you John Hood? I want to hear how endless population growth spread evenly on 1/4 of an acre parcels is supposed to work in the long term before any negative effects become 

    It's tragically ironic that the John Hood's of the world screaming about fiscal responsibility havent figure out the least fiscally responsible pattern of development is the one currently engulfing the Triangle.   "Government should be run like a business" my a##. If government were run like a business the business would be land and services, the income, tax revenue and property owners would be shareholders.  We would be maximizing the return on existing investments and maximizing development where public investments have made instead of forfeiting our fiscal responsibility because god-forbid we mess with "personal property rights" regardless of what it does to our shareholders.  If a business operated like that, they'd be out of business.  If government were run like a business, we'd be analyzing land suitability and telling Joe Blow, sorry but allowing a shopping center on your property isn't part of our strategic investment plan.   The Triangle Realtors Association, NC Homebuilders, NC GOP, Art Pope, John Hood and the rest of the rest of their kind lose their s&!t over government running like a business because it means they might have eat their own words and play be the rules.  They are worse than hypocrites.  

    • Like 2
  2. 23 minutes ago, NcSc74 said:

    I'm sure they had concern and compassion when they got corproate relocations from other states.  

    No, they just use it as an example of how the Atlanta, GA sprawopolis is master of the known universe and that they are "world class" because has their biggest hub there. 

    BTW, what the Georgia chamber of commerce misses in their touting of the "massive" population of the Atlanta MSA is that being the only city of any consequence for 100 miles means no local competition.  It also means the MSA has been able to grow geographically to approximately the same size as CLT-GSO-RDU combined.  The point should be, given it's in the US,  the lack of competition, its status as state capital, the invention of air conditioning, automobile, and airplane, if Atlanta wasn't a large city today, it would be an anomaly.  

    • Like 1
  3. 2 hours ago, C85 said:
    1 Charlotte † 889,019 731,424 +21.55% City Mecklenburg
    2 Raleigh †† 485,679 403,892 +20.25% City Wake (seat), Durham
    3 Greensboro † 292,265 269,666 +8.38% City Guilford
    4 Durham † 279,501 228,330 +22.41% City Durham (seat), WakeOrange
    5 Winston-Salem † 247,222 229,618 +7.67% City Forsyth
    6 Fayetteville † 208,254 200,564 +3.83% City Cumberland
    7 Cary 170,330 135,234 +25.95% Town WakeChatham
    8 Wilmington † 123,432 106,476 +15.92% City New Hanover
    9 High Point 113,791 104,371 +9.03% City GuilfordRandolphDavidsonForsyth
    10 Concord † 96,635 79,066 +22.22% City Cabarrus
    11 Greenville † 93,184 84,554 +10.21% City Pitt
    12 Asheville † 91,587 85,712 +6.85% City Buncombe
    13 Gastonia † 76,593 71,741 +6.76% City Gaston
    14 Jacksonville † 66,479 70,145 −5.23% City Onslow
    15 Chapel Hill 59,862 57,233 +4.59% Town OrangeDurham
    16 Huntersville 56,212 46,773 +20.18% Town Mecklenburg
    17 Rocky Mount 54,523 57,477 −5.14% City EdgecombeNash
    18 Burlington 53,077 49,963 +6.23% City Alamance
    19 Apex 50,451 37,476 +34.62% Town Wake
    20 Wilson † 49,348 49,167 +0.37% City Wilson
    21 Kannapolis 48,806 42,625 +14.50% City CabarrusRowan
    22 Wake Forest 42,269 30,117 +40.35% Town Wake

    Link-https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_municipalities_in_North_Carolina#

    2019 population estimates.

    At this pace, Charlotte cracks 1 million in 6 years.  We surpass Jacksonville in 5.

     

     

    • Like 1
  4. Really good article.  I think it echoes what a lot of people say when they visit for the first time -- they are surprised to find that people can formulate complete sentences and have all their teeth,  Then, they realize Charlotte is pretty awesome.  I'm sorry to say that I've never been to the Levine Museum, but one thing I'd hope they would include would be the fact that it was Charlotteans who went to Boston to teach them how to racial segregation and hatred.  

    • Like 2
  5. The lawsuit brought against the City by a few homebuilders is about to set a very bad precedent and will have far-reaching implications if the court supports the homebuilders.  

    https://www.usnews.com/news/best-states/north-carolina/articles/2019-01-15/homebuilders-sue-north-carolina-city-over-sewer-water-fees

    Basically, you can't charge for "future" services, roads, water, sewer, etc..

  6. 10 hours ago, kermit said:

    I agree that well-executed walkability in the inner neighborhoods combined with decent off-street trails (like the rail trail)  in multiple directions could be our thing. Developers have been slow to get on board with walkability but if they bothered to look at what is happening along the Beltline in Atlanta they would quickly change their tune.

     

    I believe that what Charlotte has started with the light rail corridor trail that makes it superior to what they've done in Georgia, and what makes it superior to a generic greenway, is that rail makes the trails, public spaces, artwork, etc. accessible to those who are not otherwise mobile, and like the San Antonio river walk, parallels a mode of transportation.  I think developers are on-board with walkability in Charlotte, and the City supports it. but we need more -- including more public awareness, more public investment in art, public venues, design, and IMHO, more boosterism.  We also need a much more multifaceted vision that makes greenways more than corridors for walking, biking, etc., but are, like roads and waterways and rail lines, mobility corridors that have nodes for focusing development and public activities.  There's nothing unique about the Georgia project greenway that utilizes an abandoned rail corridor -- but, one thing I think they have done well is convincing people that they invented the wheel and have secured public-sector and private support of their vision.    I think Charlotte has to make the light rail trail and Sugar Creek Greenway and the development and public spaces investments taking place along them, BETTER than anywhere else.   You all have talked about the features we need to be fighting for -- an architecturally-significant (symbolic) bridge to connect the light rail trail to Uptown and your thoughts about the design of projects in the South End, Optimist Park, NODA, and Metropolitan - Elizabeth neighborhoods.   Imagine, vehicular corridors become the back doors to development -- the front doors open onto non-vehicular corridors (an element of the Greenbelt communities was to have houses face open space while vehicular movement and storage was "in the back".)   In essence, the opposite of how places are typically built, but which is happening in Charlotte right now with projects like the light rail trail and the Metropolitan.  I'm rambling....  Sorry everyone...

    • Like 4
  7. Charlotte-based CitiSculpt first proposed a mixed-use development two years ago, with plans calling for 255 apartments, a shared parking deck and what's now a seven-story, 90,438-square-foot office building on a site generally bounded by Kenilworth Avenue, Greenwood Cliff and Harding Place.

    https://www.bizjournals.com/charlotte/news/2018/12/05/developermidtown-boutique-office-project-could.html#i/10236635

    • Like 3
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