Bring your builder and build your dream home. Home is NO Information deemed reliable but not guaranteed. Data last updated. Sign Up! Log In. Founding Council member of. Contact Us Founding Council member of Scott E. As you ride from one Inside-the-Beltline neighborhood to another, unless restricted by a historic designation, you will find a mix of what was built when the neighborhood was originally developed and recently constructed houses.
The new houses are often large and with a price that is a multiple of the cost of the lot, and maybe the house that was previously on it.
If you are considering the purchase of an older home, there are talented designers and contractors to renovate and add to existing houses in a way that works with the original character of a neighborhood. There are neighborhoods with walkable amenities, such as Mordecai See below and Five Points. For desktop users, the spatial map above has a feature that allows you to pick and display a radius you consider walkable from the school of interest. See Using the Maps. This neighborhood is partially in both the Downtown area and the Inside-the-Beltline area.
Mordecai and the surrounding areas have become popular for older houses with approachable prices that can be renovated into fresh close-in homes with walkable amenities. Mordecai includes the area around William Peace University, the adjacent Seaboard Station shops and restaurants, the redeveloped Halifax Court residential area, and the historic Mordecai neighborhood.
The southern boundary of this area runs through the intersection of Peace and Person Streets where Krispy Kreme is. Person Street becomes Wake Forest Road as you travel north, and for a couple of blocks or so, shops and restaurants make a convenient neighborhood focal point and gathering place. The area is super-convenient for anyone working at any of the NC State Government complex offices Downtown.
There also have been new houses built in the Oakwood North and other nearby areas area just east of the Mordecai neighborhood off Glascock Street. See the area behind Conn School on map. There are becoming fewer places Inside-the-Beltline to find vacant land the will support this size new neighborhood. From my earliest childhood, I remember going to the Seaboard Railroad Station to pick up a passenger or a package sent by rail. There are warehouses around the depot that have been renovated and new buildings built for shops and restaurants, such as the 18 Seaboard restaurant which has been there since One other remembrance from this neighborhood is the Krispy Kreme.
Not the one that is there now, but the one that was located across Person St. It was a big deal to go there with my Dad and Brother on the way back from wherever and watch the doughnuts being made and contemplating the finished varieties on trays like jewels in a case.
There was no way a full dozen ever made it home. This Neighborhood is considered on Five Points Neighborhood — a separate page. The rose garden made an impression on me in my childhood- row on row of beautifully tended roses set in what seemed like some kind of stadium.
It was actually an amphitheater built on the former site of the State Fairgrounds. The current Fairgrounds moved in to Hillsborough St. The term typically refers to the older and wealthier areas and neighborhoods that seek to maintain the charm of elegance and history.
Because of location, historic significance, and amenities, Inside The Beltline Homes can be more pricey than comparable homes in other parts of Raleigh. Living Inside the Beltline has a strong, unique appeal.
The area offers many core neighborhoods, each with a distinct historical identity along with a very eclectic mixture of homes. There are incredible historic homes and older bungalows or elegant luxury homes with historic designs. These are close-knit neighborhoods where people walk along and chat with neighbors.
People know each other here. People love living Inside the Beltline. They can walk to restaurants, coffee shop, grocery stores, boutiques, antique stores, parks, entertainment and on and on. It is the heart of Raleigh. Downtown Raleigh, near the arts district, is developing a more urban hip lifestyle with a plethora of condos and new restaurants to answer that call.
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