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Wilmington housing, retail development approved on College Road

Specific tenants for the commercial space haven t been identified yet, but the applicant wants to include a gourmet store, electric car charging station, a coffee shop and a consumer-electronics store among the retail space available to the public. According to a county staff report, the rezoning will space commercial services along the S. College Road corridor from Monkey Junction to Shipyard Boulevard about every mile over the four-mile stretch. In response to concerns about traffic from nearby property owners, residents of Dry Pond s proposed development wouldn t be able to access adjacent neighborhoods by car.  However, pedestrian walk or bike access points are provided to the adjacent neighborhoods to encourage the reduction of traffic trips and promote pedestrian access, Dry Pond s application states.  

NHC Commissioners approve 65-acre development, get encouraging Covid-19 update

Hotel, grocery store, apartments planned for re-emerging South College Road development

Plans for Whiskey Branch include a mixed-use building, apartments, single-family homes, and office and retail space located off South College Road. (Port City Daily photo/Courtesy New Hanover County) NEW HANOVER COUNTY After developers walked away from plans to bring a mixed-use project to South College Road in 2019, a reimagined proposal for Whiskey Branch is back up for review. Though tenants aren’t yet concrete and a needed rezoning hasn’t yet been approved, developers are planning to bring a hotel, “gourmet grocery store,” coffee shop, consumer electronics store, and at least 460 new residential units to South College Road. Plans for the expansion of Whiskey Branch show its developer, Dry Pond LLC, is hoping full build-out will consist of at least 460 apartments, 50,000 square feet in general office space, and 122,750 square feet of retail.

Wilmington to allocate up to $230,320 toward stripping lead-based paint from low-income homes

cause permanent harm to the brain and other organs, as well as behavioral and cognitive impairment. About 75% of U.S. homes built before 1978 contain lead paint. As the paint ages, it chips off in pieces and poses a hazard to residents’ health. In Wilmington, both low-income homeowners with children and rental property owners marketing to these families can apply for a grant if they are eligible for the program. Priority will be given to families in low-to-moderate households in historic neighborhoods – including the Northside, Brooklyn, Dry Pond, the Bottom, Southside and Old East Wilmington. After a “competitive bidding process,” the city is now proposing partnerships with two service providers. The council will likely vote on both Tuesday evening through the approval of the consent

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Cherbourg-en-Cotentin Que faire de son sapin de Noël après les fêtes ?
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