The Charlotte neighborhoods of Belmont and Villa Heights are experiencing an influx of white, professional residents in search of affordable housing close to uptown. Piedmont Courts, a housing project that dates to the 1940s, is gone, and crime is declining.
Click here to read the article about the neighborhoods’ revival.
Photographs by Nancy Pierce .
Villa Heights: Renovated large house at Grace and Parson streets.
Villa Heights: Interesting architecture on Allen Street.
Villa Heights: House-turned church on Harrill Street in Villa Heights, a common sight in the neighborhood.
Villa Heights: Sherman Memorial Church of God in Christ on Parkwood Avenue.
Villa Heights: Neighborhood fixer-upper for sale across from renovated houses, at Grace and Parson streets.
Villa Heights: Fixer-upper at rear, vacant lot in foreground.
Villa Heights: Fixer-upper at Grace and Parson streets.
Villa Heights: Crumbling wall, vacant lot where a house once sat, near Allen and Grace streets.
Belmont: Barbara Harlow and her son, Robert Smith, are fairly new residents. Their home is near Little Sugar Creek Greenway.
Belmont: Belmont Community Development Corp. project on Umstead Street.
Belmont: Note three houses in a row with arched porches, on Pegram Street.
Belmont: Renovated houses and yards on Allen Street near 20th Street.
Belmont: Northside Corner store at Kennon and Pegram streets.
Belmont: House on Kennon Street near Hawthorne Lane.
Belmont: Renovated houses and yards on Allen Street near 20th.
Belmont: Many corners in the neighborhood have small stores such as this one at Hawthorne Lane and Kennon Street.
Belmont: Mural on a former barber shop on Pegram Street.
Homes in Belmont seem to be right beneath the uptown skyscrapers.
Belmont neighborhood association president Vicki Jones, fourth from left, at a get-to-know-your-neighbor event.
Belmont: Renovated house on Hawthorne Lane.