Raleigh-area Mall / Life-Style Center / RTP Redevelopments

Summit Design & Engineering Services will be leasing 30K sqft on the 8th floor of 1000 Social

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It’s because you have good taste.
:gucci:

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Thank goodness the rezoning is complete, because the current council would send this to ā€œgrowth and natural resourcesā€ to kill it

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That’s right, I like people with that kind of taste.

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More reason to visit the Fenton. I’m excited for this sports bar, especially whenever they legalize sports gambling here in NC.

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Yeah that looks like a fun spot to spend a fall afternoon! Helps with our shortage of decent sports bars. Of course, if I’m drinking and watching a couple of football games, I’ll be factoring in an Uber there and back into my budgeting.

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Opening super bowl weekend, bold.

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I think once the food/beverage/shopping tenants have all moved in + the apartments got residences in them = Fenton will be quite popular place to be.

@CarnifeX I have a feeling one of the largest sports bars in the area (and NC) opening on one of the Holy Grail weekends of sports bars is probably by design if I had to take a guess.

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I’ll bet they would have preferred a little bit of practice, but I agree, this was the last target date all along. Excited to see it in action.

Side note, does Raleigh have a dearth of sports bars? There’s 3 (maybe 4) I can think of downtown.

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Tobacco Road and Ale House are fine, but I’m not in love with either. This one looks seriously legit.

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That’s a good question, I’m not sure what number of sports bars for an area is considered sufficient or lacking to be honest. Most likely it just depends on the part of Raleigh you’re in. Everywhere I’ve lived within Raleigh there were about 3-5 or so sports bars within a reasonable 10-15 minute drive. I live out in the Apex area now and there’s four I can think of off the top of my head within 10 or so minutes so maybe that’s the appropriate number of sports bars for an area?

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So… I drove past the Fenton development for the first time last night. It’s definitely… weird, just passing by at least. Like you get the idea that there’s a big mixed-used development in there… or maybe a new mall?. … … or a fancy new software company’s new ā€œurbanā€ campus?? … but it’s just so incredibly closed off from the outside world that it doesn’t seem to be inviting me to come explore as I drive by. It’s just f**king weird. I guess what I’m trying to say is that I really don’t like these closed-off fake ā€œdowntownsā€ that are seemingly going to become the norm. Hoping the Midtown Exchange project doesn’t end up like this but not super optimistic about that. At least with North Hills, the Iron District and the nearby East End development, they’re close enough to the main roads that you can actually see everything that’s going on inside these developments… I don’t know, I’m just rambling here but the best I can say from my drive-by experience with Fenton last night is that it’s just f%$king WEIRD.

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A fun standalone article - why are the lanes on Wake Forest north of the Beltline so obviously narrow?

https://www.newsobserver.com/news/local/article270945732.html

(short answer, when they added two more lanes in the 80s, they repainted the road rather than widening it, making the lanes hair-raisingly tight)

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I always wondered about that! I avoid that road precisely because of the narrow lanes.

It seemed genius at the time!
One of buddies lived right behind the hospital there, so it was unavoidable for me. But I was young and driving a smallish car, so I rocked on.

Some of that’s the grade change. Some of that’s because of the way the Trinity Road intersection curves into the site, cutting off a big chunk of land in front that’ll be offices someday. (I would’ve given it a tighter curve, but NCDOT likes its stroads.) But the #1 reason why it feels so far back is because it is – it’s nearly 1000 feet back from the road, so the closest part is further from the road than the furthest part of North Hills (or even Southpoint!). The choice spot up front was given to Wegman’s… which then backed out.

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That is dangerous for motorcyclists and bikers.

Not trying to change your preference against these inward facing ā€œfake downtowns,ā€ and I know you’re not the only one on here that feels that way. But the idea really isn’t for it to look cool for people driving by (that area seems so empty anyways). It’s supposed to be a destination where you know you want to go there already, and park your car (or Uber there), and then can walk around. I’ve been over there a few times… super close to my house… and it’s definitely starting to come together. The real thing will be when the apartments and offices fill up, and a few more of the unique retail spots open up. But even now, I feel like it’s a pretty nice space. I’d recommend actually going over there and getting a drink, seeing a movie, etc. and seeing if you find stuff you like. It’s not gonna be a cool urban downtown, but it’s a lot nicer than a mall like Crabtree Valley.

Still mad Wegmans pulled out.

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im not sure if a roundabout is worse for pedestrians or not. my folks have nearly been clobbered by right turners at spring forest and falls of neuse before and actually clobbered (knocked to the ground) at a metered crosswalk in reno with much less traffic…a doctor behind the wheel of all people. i would lean to just better flow in the 2nd option and perhaps some HI-VIS leds for peds crossing.

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I think Fenton has future promise. I do laugh when I see people compare it to North Hills. I do think it’s overrated in some aspects for now. I have been to Fenton and think it’s ok. I don’t think it’d be someplace I would go to often, but only because I live closer to North Hills. In the future, if done right, I can see it turning into a well integrated development. If they finish development with more apartments/offices and are able to provide ped/bike infrastructure, you’d have access to housing, shopping, jobs, grocery, elementary, middle, and high school, and Cary Medical Center all in less than a mile.

As far as the so called fake downtowns go, I’m ok with them. They show that dense mixed use developments are in demand. The cities aren’t able to keep up. While North Hills and Fenton are able to develop their units, the city is stuck arguing about about allowing townhomes.

My one complaint about North Hills is the biking infrastructure is severely lacking across Six Forks Rd. I do blame Main St on the Kane development, but Lassiter Mill on the city of Raleigh.

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