|
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.
Update:
Over the Falls Deli, damaged by a smoky
fire Jan. 12, will hold its grand
re-opening the weekend of March 29, 30
and 31, a recorded message from owner
John Laughinghouse says.
Update:
Clearing and grading has begun on the
future site of the American Legion
building on East Holding Avenue between
the water tower and the North Wake
Senior Center. The town owns all three
lots, but it will deed that middle
half-acre to the American Legion in
exchange for the land the current Legion
building occupies next to the existing
town hall. It is part of the land
acquisition for the new town hall on
Brooks Street. The town is also paying
for the new building and small storage
shed.
The town also
purchased the small building and 0.64
acres where the Green & Wooten Insurance
Agency stood, paying owners Shirley and
John E. Wooten Jr. $495,000.
John Wooten
III, who operates the agency now, said
it has moved to 10433 Ligon Mill Road.
“It was hard for us to leave downtown
Wake Forest,” Wooten said, but they
could not find a suitable site. Now his
customers can drop in on their way to
Wal-Mart, Wooten said.
Future shopping centers
-
Plans for Gateway
Commons at the corner of Jones Dairy
Road and the N.C. 98 bypass are
being reviewed by the town planning
staff. The shopping center will be
anchored by a grocery store, and a
public hearing about the plan may be
held by the Planning Board and Town
Board in May.
-
Wake Forest Towne
Center is planned for the
Parker-Hannifin site on Wake Union
Church Road. A major department
store will anchor the center, but
the name has not been announced and
plans have not been submitted to the
town.
-
The Shoppes at
Caveness Farm has an approved master
plan, and Weingarten Realty
Investors has announced Steinmart
will be one of the anchors. Three
restaurants are being constructed on
outparcels (see below).
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.
-
The Mellow Mushroom
plans to build at the corner of Wait
Drive and South Main Street (U.S.
1-A) between the American Pride
carwash and Taco Bell.
-
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.
-
A Steak ‘n Shake is
planned 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) has opened. It is on taxable
land owned by Southeastern Baptist
Theological Seminary. There will be
a second tenant, not yet determined,
south of Wendy’s.”
-
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
-
Some of the 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
-
Rex Health Park at
Wakefield is underway in the
northwest corner of Capital
Boulevard. 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 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 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 1,300-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.
|