General News

Like a fox on the run

Categories: General News Tags: History, Nature, Wildlife

The following is excerpted, with permission, from The Margins of a Greater Wildness: Nature Essays on Stanley Creek and Beyond, a collection of essays on local topics from the Stanley Creek community in eastern Gaston County, where the Rankin family has lived for many generations. Most people around the Gaston County town of Stanley today […]

PlanCharlotte’s best of the web for 2014

Categories: General News Tags: PLANNING

We hope you’ve enjoyed our offerings during the past year. In case you missed them, here are some of the PlanCharlotte.org 2014 articles that attracted the most readers. Cherry neighborhood rezoning sparks gentrification study After the approval of a controversial rezoning this spring in the Cherry neighborhood, one of the city’s oldest historically black areas, […]

City’s Charlotte WALKS initiative aims to improve walkability

Since the late 1990s, Charlotte has experienced a major policy shift toward creating more walkable streets. The evidence is seen in infrastructure investments that are making Charlotte a better place to walk. Yet the city still faces significant challenges: a legacy of our decades of auto-oriented development. On Monday, I gave a presentation to the […]

The nature of resolutions

I have a notepad on my kitchen counter for a running grocery list, and there’s one on my desk devoted to errands and chores. I’ve kept a digital file of all the books I’ve read for more than 20 years. My nature observations are recorded in a hefty, leather-bound journal. Despite an obvious affinity for […]

Institute’s best of the web for 2014

Categories: General News

We hope you’ve enjoyed our offerings this year. In case you missed them, here are some of the 2014 articles that attracted the most readers. From the UNC Charlotte Urban Institute Charlotte and Raleigh top U.N. list of fastest growing large U.S. cities The 2014 United Nations city population projections for 2010 to 2030 show […]

Protecting the Piedmont’s wild heart

In the heart of the Piedmont, there’s a place apart – a far cry from the skyscrapers, highways, shopping centers and subdivisions of our urban areas. The 5,160-acre Birkhead Wilderness Area, at the northern tip of the Uwharrie National Forest, is designated as a place “where the earth and its community of life are untrammeled […]

A new kind of zoning ordinance could help – or hurt – development

Since the first U.S. zoning laws in the early 20th century, one of their essential principles has been separating uses. Houses, stores, apartments and offices were kept apart from each other. One unintended consequence was more traffic, as people needed to drive from place to place. Another was that, as jobs and work changed, zoning […]

Study finds some Charlotte historic districts losing ground

The first comprehensive survey of Charlotte historic resources in 30 years recommends reducing the areas of several of the city’s historic districts, saying development has reduced the historic footprint in those neighborhoods. Among the findings in the first phase of Charlotte’s Historic Resources Survey: In the last 30 years, 37 percent of Charlotte’s potential historic […]

ISC announces faculty research grant award

The first recipient of a faculty research grant from the Institute for Social Capital, Inc. (ISC) will be Dr. Mason Haber, assistant professor in the UNC Charlotte Department of Psychology. The ISC this fall announced the creation of its first ISC Faculty Research Grant. The purpose of the grant is to provide funding to UNC […]

Moving to Charlotte? You’re not alone

People move to Charlotte from all over the United States (and around the world). This trend has continued for several decades and shows no sign of slowing. What has been changing is where those people are moving from. And, believe it or not, Mecklenburg County loses more people to some locations than it gains. Recently […]