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The Arlington is a 310 feet (94 m) tall mixed-use high-rise in Charlotte, North Carolina. [1] The building was the first residential high-rise and first mixed use high-rise development in the city. The developer, Jim Gross, is also noted for the first downtown residential development (Ivey's) and the first loft-style development in the city ...
The Ellis is a high-rise residential building in Uptown Charlotte, North Carolina. [3] Construction was completed on June 23, 2021. The building was developed by Lennar and it is located between Eight and Ninth Streets on N College St fronting the Lynx Blue Line.
The subsidized homes built along Charlotte Street during the late 1980s in Crotona Park East, which originally cost $50,000 [6] were the first and still are the only ranch style homes in the South Bronx today; these homes are now worth over $500,000. This type of housing was selected due to its desirable traits.
The Park It Charlotte app will be replaced on June 1. Home & Garden. Lighter Side
The complex is composed of 2 apartment towers at the corner of Morehead Street and Euclid Avenue with a combined total of 626 units with 6,000 square feet (560 m 2) of ground level retail. [210] The 2 parcels that make up the lot were purchased by Spandrel Development in December 2020 for $17.8 million. [208] The project broke ground in May 2022.
Passport is a Charlotte, North Carolina–based curb management payment service provider and software company. [1]Specializing in mobile payments for transportation, Passport provides an enterprise software platform for cities, transit agencies, universities, and private operators in the parking and transportation industries throughout the U.S. and Canada. [2]
University City Blvd is a light rail station on the LYNX Blue Line in Charlotte, North Carolina, United States. It is located on North Tryon Street and Periwinkle Hill Avenue in University City. The station consists of a single island platform in the street's median, connected to an adjacent parking garage by a pedestrian overpass
However, in the 1980s, the Charlotte City Council decided to limit additional walkways, [10] and the uptown Belk and Ivey's closed by the end of the decade. [11] Southern National Center was the home of the Charlotte headquarters of Southern Bell from 1975 to 1995. When BellSouth, the successor company to Southern Bell, moved to the 16-story ...