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If you have questions about what is
being built where, please call 556-3409
or send a note to
cwpelosi@aol.com and we will try to
answer it. For large residential
subdivisions, go to
http://www.wakeforestnc.gov/residents/
planningzoning_subdivisions.aspx?rld=308
and look at “plan review information”
for the status.
We will update information
as we get it.
Update:
Although the owner, Barrett Hudson, died
last week at 34, his produce stand on
South Main Street opened today, March
14.
Update:
The Mellow Mushroom restaurant will soon
be built at the corner of Wait Drive and
South Main Street (U.S. 1-A) between the
American Pride carwash and Taco Bell.
(When first announced, Taco Bell was to
share a building with Long John Silver,
but planner Ann Ayers said they decided
to have just a single restaurant.)
Update:
Hope Lutheran Church is planning to
build a second phase on its site on
Rogers Road.
Update:
CSX has repaired the railroad crossing
on Friendship Chapel Road by paving it
with asphalt. The crossing, on the only
access to the town’s operations center
and two churches, had wooden ties that
had worn away, leaving exposed spikes.
Future restaurants
-
No Lone Star at the corner of Retail
Drive and Warmoven Street. The
company has pulled the building
permit and has been told to secure
the site. No reason was given.
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Old Chicago, featuring deep-dish
Chicago-style pizza and 110 beers
from around the world, is headed for
the former Bennigan’s building in
Wake Pointe Shopping Center, but
there is no activity at the building
yet.
-
A Texas Roadhouse, a Chili’s and a
Red Robin are under construction on
outparcels at the Shoppes at
Caveness Farm. The shopping center
is on Capital Boulevard between the
entrance to Wal-Mart and Caveness
Farm Apartments. Ground has been
cleared but there is no indication
yet which is going where.
-
A Steak ‘n Shake is possible at Wake
Pointe Shopping Center (Wal-Mart)
next to O’Charley’s.
-
Wendy’s on Capital Boulevard just
south of Wake Forest Crossing
Shopping Center (Lowe’s Foods) will
open soon. The sign is up; the
parking lot is being paved this
week. It is on taxable land owned by
Southeastern Baptist Theological
Seminary. There will be a second
tenant, not yet determined, south of
Wendy’s.”
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There will be a Hooters, we hear,
but it will be somewhere in
Wakefield.
-
Plans for a Carolina Ale House have
been approved at the corner between
the N.C. 98 bypass, the extension of
Retail Drive into the North Park
office buildings and the ramp from
the bypass to Capital Boulevard.
Ground is being cleared.
-
There may be a Japanese Steakhouse
coming as a second tenant in the new
building on Retail Drive.
New stores and services
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There will be a Steinmart at the
Shoppes at Caveness Farm, a shopping
center on the east side of Capital
Boulevard.
-
Some of the other national stores
said to be looking at Wake Forest
are Kohls, J.C. Penney, Marshall’s
and T.J. Maxx.
-
The YMCA at The Factory, an
extension of the Banks D. Kerr
Family YMCA in Wakefield, will open
this spring. It will have a
21,000-square-foot facility for
adult fitness with a nursery and
youth programs. A membership at one
YMCA includes membership at the
other. You can sign up now at
562-9622 or go to
www.YMCATriangle.org. No opening
date has been set.
Commercial projects
The clearing underway in the northwest
corner of Capital Boulevard and New
Falls of the Neuse Road is for the Rex
Health Park at Wakefield. There will be
a 39,500-square-foot wellness center and
a 113,000-square-foot multi-specialty
ambulatory care center.
The wellness center will be
similar to those Rex operates in Cary
and Garner, with a gym, heated pools,
physical rehabilitation services and
nutrition and exercise programs.
The ambulatory care center
will provide therapeutic and diagnostic
services, heart, vascular and oncology
services. It will not be an emergency
room. The WakeMed North Healthplex at
the corner of Falls of the Neuse and
Durant roads, already provides an
emergency room for the area.
In the future, the health
park will be part of a larger
development that will have retail space,
a library, hotels and other commercial
uses.
When representatives from
Rex introduced the plan to the Wake
Forest commissioners last summer – see
the June 7, 2006 issue of the Gazette –
clearing was to begin later in the
summer.
The main entrance to the
health park will be on Forest Pines
Drive.
* * * *
It has been a year since the planning
and town boards approved the plans, but
a three-story, 118-unit apartment
building for active seniors is now under
construction on the east side of South
Main Street just south of the N.C. 98
bypass.
The project is now called
the Wake Forest Retirement Residence,
but that will probably change. Curry
Brandaw in Salem, Ore., is the developer
and has about 300 similar facilities
throughout the country, about 15 in
North Carolina including ones in
Charlotte, Greensboro, Wilmington and
Cary.
The apartments will not have
kitchens. The residents, who are
expected to be single people in their
80s who do not need assistance, will eat
meals in the communal dining room.
* * * *
Crews are moving dirt around
on the south side of Rogers Road behind
the BB&T Bank and The Factory for a
32,000-square-foot, two-story building
that will be Heritage Medical Park. Andy
Ammons said he sold the land two years
ago and the developer now is a group
called Vanguard, headed by George
Venters of Raleigh. One of the tenants
will be a specialized pediatric dentist.
* * * *
The Radio Shack in the new
flex building on Retail Drive across
from Chick-Fil-A is close to opening.
There is no word yet on any other
tenant(s) in the building.
* * * *
At the end of South Main,
between it and Capital Boulevard, the
former Weavexx tract is being
transformed into Glenn Boyd’s Nissan
dealership. He also owns Crossroads Ford
in Cary and Wakefield Ford in Wake
Forest. Poythress Commercial is
constructing the large building and
parking lots; the January building
permit said the cost would be $2.8
million.
Housing projects approved for more water
Alexan at Ligon Mill will be
a 288-unit apartment complex south of
Caveness Farm Apartments, north of the
Wal-Mart store and east of the Shoppes
of Caveness Farm shopping center. The
increased water allocation for the
project was approved by the town board
in December. Once it has all the
approvals, construction may start in
2007. The developer is Trammell Crow
Residential. See the Nov. 29 and Dec. 20
issues of the Gazette for details.
* * * *
Holding Village will be a
1,200-home traditional neighborhood
development that includes shops and
services south of the N.C. 98 bypass,
east of South Main Street and the CSX
rail line, west of Heritage North and
north of Heritage Wake Forest. The town
board approved the increased water
allocation in October and changed the
town’s zoning ordinance to allow for a
traditional neighborhood in January. The
developers plan to start the first phase
on the land nearest the bypass in 2007.
See the Oct. 18 issue of the Gazette for
details. |