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Queen City Quarter (formerly known as the Epicentre) is a mixed-use development with an open-air shopping center, office, and hotels, located in Uptown Charlotte, North Carolina, United States. It was developed by The Ghazi Company. [ 1 ]
Uptown Charlotte’s EpiCentre has a new name to go along with what will soon be a complete facelift. The 302,324-square-foot mixed-used complex at 210 E. Trade St. is now called Queen City Quarter.
The weed-filled acreage where Terrell Town Center Area 2 will be built is pictured in the distance from across N.C. 150 in Terrell NC on Tuesday, Jan. 14, 2025.
In March, foreclosure proceedings started after Epicentre defaulted on its $85 million loan with lender Deutsche Bank. The sale of the 302,324-square-foot mixed-use center at 201 E. Trade St. was ...
210 Trade began construction in 2007 on a planned residential tower atop the Queen City Quarter mixed used development. Once completed, 210 Trade would have had 52 floors and became the tallest residential building in Charlotte, surpassing The Vue, as well as the second-tallest building in Charlotte by total floor count, after the Bank of America Corporate Center.
As of 2021 Uptown Charlotte employs 120,000 people [48] across 33 million square feet of office space, [1] hosts more than 18 million visitors a year, and is home to 35,000 residents. [1] [49] Charlotte is the second largest banking center in the country behind New York City.
Epicenter was a rock festival featuring acts on multiple stages started by Danny Wimmer Presents in Southern California where it was sponsored by KROQ. [ 1 ] Continuing in North Carolina , in 2019 Epicenter took the place of the Carolina Rebellion .
The Axios Charlotte article states to receive federal funding the area had to be legally considered a slum. The Charlotte Observer often said that more 77% of Brooklyn was "blighted". Willie Griffin, assistant professor of public history at UNC Charlotte claimed that half of all Brooklyn residents owned their homes. [20]