Downtown Walking Tour (part 3)

Here is the third set of 10 pictures from the Downtown Raleigh Walking Tour. You can really tell how different the pictures look in the winter then if taken in the summer. When the trees have their leaves, they block most of the sites and it is hard to get the whole building into the frame. Most of these pictures were also taken by my much smaller camera, with no zoom by the way, so the picture quality is modest. The newer ones that I am taking now are with a much better camera. The State Bank was a tough one because it had trees in the way, plus its in a difficult location.

I may wait a month or so for the leaves to fall before I continue taking pictures of the walking tour. I think I prefer the pictures to be without any leaves obstructing the view. What do you prefer?

21. Horton-Beckham-Bretsch House (c. 1890)

22. White-Holman House, “White Hall” (c. 1799)

23. Montgomery House (1906)

24. Haywood Hall (c. 1799)

25. State Bank of North Carolina (1833)

26. Christ Episcopal Church (1854)

27. Richard B. Haywood House (1854)

28. North Carolina Museum of History (1994)

29. Agriculture Building (1923)

30. Labor Building (1888)

[UPDATED] Press Conference: Campbell Law Moves Downtown

I’ve been waiting patiently at work to hear about Campbell’s announcement of moving their law school downtown. Mayor Meeker gave the announcement on the capitol grounds today at 10:00 A.M. Yesterday, officials from the school were downtown and were taking pictures of The Hillsborough Place building at 225 Hillsborough St. The rumor was that this building will be sold to Campbell early next year. It looks like this has now become more concrete but no real details yet, just speculation. From the WRAL article:

Raleigh — City officials confirmed Thursday that Campbell University’s law school would relocate to a downtown Raleigh office building by 2009.

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Raleigh is the largest state capital in the U.S. without a law school.

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Essary, Campbell University President Jerry Wallace and other faculty members were downtown Wednesday afternoon, having their photo taken in front of Hillsborough Place, the office building at the corner of Hillsborough and Dawson streets that will house the law school.

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Tenants of the building, which is owned by former state lawmaker Art Pope, said they were notified by letter Wednesday that the 107,000-square-foot building would be sold to Campbell by early next year.

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[UPDATE]The News & Observer also has an article about the move. They have the same information but add to it somewhat. Read it here.

A letter to tenants of the building had said that the sale
should be final by March; renovations will begin next summer.

The move will bring an infusion of young people to the state capital just months before the city plans to open its new $221 million convention center, a Marriott Hotel and an underground parking garage.

In all, $2.5 billion in private and public investment is being pumped into downtown. Supporters say those efforts to remake Raleigh into a 24-hour city are working.


Wow, that investment number just keeps going up. I remember in 2005 when it was just $1 billion in investments. Campbell made a great move here. 350 students plus faculty and staff will be a big boost to the downtown area. Having met some students who go to the law school currently, I can say this move will be a step in the right direction to get more life downtown after work hours and weekends. Here’s the most important question of the day; when students are burned out from all that reading, what bar will you find them all hovering over some pints?

Reynolds Tower

WRAL has an article on the newest plans for ‘The Hillsborough’ that will be at 301 Hillsborough St. This is the same project that has been going on since the Reynolds, who brought us the Quorum Center, purchased the lot back in 2001. It was earlier called ‘The Raleigh’ but I think ‘The Hillsborough’ is still not an original name. Watch the video for picks of the renderings. I mentioned this project before in this post but have to ask, will this finally be the end and we will start seeing construction?

Raleigh — Plans have been filed for a 23-story mix of retail shops, a hotel and condominiums at the corner of Dawson and Hillsborough streets in downtown Raleigh.

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Attorney Ted Reynolds is developing the $65 million project, which will include 17,500 square feet of retail space, a 136-room hotel and 26 condos on the top floors. He earlier proposed offices in the building but recast the project in recent months.

Exploris + Playplace = Marbles

The Exploris Museum has now merged with Playplace at its Hargett St. location to create The Marbles Kids Museum. The Opening was on Saturday; go to WRAL for more details or watch a video.

Raleigh — Wake County has a new hot spot for kids. Marbles Kids Museum at 201 East Hargett St. in downtown Raleigh welcomed its first visitors Saturday.

The museum’s opening comes after the merger of the former Exploris and Playspace museums in July.
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the Marbles Kids Museum is in the 83,000-square-foot former home of Exploris.

Close to 11,000 people were estimated to have rolled into the museum on Saturday. Chris Babson took his four daughters to the free celebration, which featured kids’ bands, clowns and magicians.

Bike Fest A Success

There was a lot going on downtown this weekend. We’ll go over it all throughout the week but let’s start first with the Bike Fest on Fayetteville St. Fayetteville, Martin, and the streets surrounding Moore Square were taken over by bikers from all over. It was like a mini-fair with tons of food vendors and shops. Two stages were set up with music being played later in the day. I had fun just walking around checking out the scene. Will this be Raleigh’s largest event, the one the city is known for? More pics from WRAL.








3rd Annual Bike Fest Roars Into Downtown

Fayetteville St. will be taken over this Friday and Saturday (28th and 29th) for the 3rd annual Capital City Bike Fest. I’ll be in town this year so count on me being out there and getting some pictures and hopefully meeting some cool people.

3rd Annual
Ray Price Capital City Bike Fest

presented by Nationwide Insurance

Fayetteville Street & Moore Square
Downtown
Raleigh, North Carolina

Friday September 28th
Saturday September 29th

FREE MOTORCYCLE LIFESTYLE EVENT FOR BIKERS & NON-BIKERS

Convention Center Booking Above Expected

Mayor Charles Meeker released some good information about the new convention center. From an article in the N&O:

Raleigh officials are trumpeting progress on the new downtown convention center, which they said today is now 75 percent complete.

The convention center is expected to open in September 2008, along with a new Marriott Hotel and an underground parking deck. The hotel is currently 50 percent complete, while the parking deck is 85 percent complete.

Downtown boosters say that first-year booking of the convention center has reached 164 percent of their goals, including 23 conventions. There are 58 events scheduled for the second year so far.

From WRAL:

Twenty-three conventions have been booked for the first year of operations, and 58 events have been lined up for the second year, officials said. More than 63,600 nights in the four-star, 400-room Marriott hotel next to the convention center have been booked in the first year, they said.

This obviously sounds like a success story and we are still one year from opening. Based on the numbers from WRAL, 63,600 hotel nights in the 400 room hotel means that the Marriott could be at capacity on an average of 3 nights a week just for the first year. This is also just the Marriott, I’m curious to see if the Sheraton and Clarion have seen increase in bookings. I would imagine they have. Perhaps a successful convention center, once up and running, will get the Winston Hotel Project and the LaFayette into the fast lane as these hotels have been quiet recently.

As a side note, if you really want to read a different opinion of this news, browse through the WRAL comments. Most of it is just bashing the fact that the convention center exists, with the exception of a few supporters. I am obviously no expert and am not claiming to be, but it should be great news that such a huge investment is showing great signs of being successful. The fact that thousands of people are now traveling to Raleigh for a convention is a positive thing for our city. They and their businesses will spend money in restaurants, shops, the airport, hotels, rental cars, and other services that all have a tax in some way. This tax is added revenue for the city to be used on other projects, like infrastructure or schools. I do not want to get into a numbers battle to see if the $220 million spent is worth it but thinking about it this way makes sense to me. Everyone has their own opinion and that is fine. Heck, $220 million could have gone towards a nice rail line, similar to the old proposed TTA light rail, but this is the way our city leaders went. Let’s just be happy it is a success and be proud of the city we live in.