Hot Listings in Charlotte: August 2021
Inviting homes with impressive amenities
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And others making major adjustments
Matt and Emily Bramwell couldn’t resist buying this nomadic 1929 farmhouse—or, within a year, renovating and selling it
An increase from the previous regular season
Here's an itinerary for each trip to Orlando, the Outer Banks, and Nashville
Building’s pending sale risks the very eclipse of Charlotte history that the museum has resisted
It’s one of the signature goals of the city’s new comprehensive plan, and these neighborhoods already meet some of the criteria
Jennifer Felts designs a tiny home for flexibility and fun
Five years after the furor of House Bill 2, the LGBTQ community—in Charlotte, in North Carolina, and across much of the nation—fights attacks on new fronts
She marched (and jumped) through a 22-year Army career—and uses what she learned to help other veterans at Bank of America
It's held onto its spot in Charlotte for more than 95 years
It wasn’t just a building year for the Hornets. Their followers expanded and evolved, too, even with the frustrations of (at first) an empty Spectrum Center and (later) postseason hopes dashed. But the bandwagon is tuned up and ready for passengers
The Independent Picture House will offer a moviegoing experience that supports and reflects the community
Including domestic and international options
The Colonial Pipeline panic illustrates Charlotte’s back-row position on the fuel supply line—and the prospect of another mad rush to the pumps
Charlotte’s new Major League Soccer team has slogged through COVID, indignation over ticket prices, and other complications before it’s built a roster, much less played its first match. Team officials say they expect a packed stadium for first kick anyway
After a quarter-century with grass fields, the venue goes synthetic—material with a long and consequential history that started in North Carolina
They hark back to 1940s and ’50s America
From woodwork to retail, the kindergarten teacher-turned-designer has learned how to do it herself
The city hasn’t adopted a comprehensive plan—a document that determines who can build what where, and who can afford to live there—since 1975. City planners have worked on a draft for three years. When they presented it to the City Council, all hell broke loose. Can the council get it together? What would it mean if they can’t?
Charlotte’s NPR station celebrates four decades of format changes, resonant voices, and the gradual growth of a thriving news source
Observations from one of Charlotte’s newest nonstop destinations and one of its family-friendly resorts
A surgery resident wrote a series of children’s books and created a special kind of medical magic
