Several
Fortune 500 companies have their headquarters in the district, including
Bank of America,
Duke Energy,
Honeywell, and the east coast operations of
Wells Fargo.[3][4] Uptown contains over 33 million square feet of office space.[1] Athletic and event facilities located in Center City include
Bank of America Stadium,
Spectrum Center,
Truist Field, and the
NASCAR Hall of Fame. Museums, theaters, hotels, high-density residential developments, restaurants, and bars are heavily concentrated in the Center City, with over 245 restaurants[5] and 50 nightspots.[6]
Name origins
Charlotte's central business district is referred to as "Uptown" by locals, although the term "Downtown" is understood and used by native Charlotteans since it references the same area of the city. There is some confusion brought about by the use of the terms "Uptown" and "Downtown" for Charlotte's center city area. The term "Up-Town", referring to the geographic location of Tryon and Trade Street—"uptown" actually does sit at a higher elevation than the rest of the city—was recorded as early as 1895 in the Charlotte Observer but fell out of use around 1929 for reasons unknown. The term "Downtown" was commonly used up until the mid-1970s by residents, media, and city leaders for the Center City. In 1973, a massive campaign was launched by local businessman Jack Wood to revamp the image of the downtown area and embrace the historic and arguably uniquely Charlotte term "Uptown" by reintroducing it to the general public. In September 1974 Charlotte City Council passed an official proclamation that said "The heart of Charlotte should be now and forever more known as Uptown Charlotte."[7] On February 14, 1987, the Charlotte Observer began using the term "Uptown" as a way to promote a more positive upbeat image of the Center City area.[8] School teachers were provided with "historical" documents justifying use of the term to teach to students.[9]
Tryon Street was named after
William Tryon, governor of the
Province of North Carolina from 1765 to 1771. A major southwest-northeast thoroughfare across Charlotte, it follows
NC 49 southeast of the Uptown neighborhood, and
US 29 northwest of Uptown. Within the Uptown Charlotte street grid (which is skewed about 45 degrees from compass directions), Tryon forms the boundary between streets labeled "East" and "West". Many of the tallest buildings in Charlotte have a Tryon Street address including:
Trade Street begins as a continuation of Elizabeth Street near the southeastern boundary of Uptown, and continues as a major thoroughfare northwest through the rest of the city. It serves as the division between "North" and "South" labeled streets within the Uptown street grid. The following major buildings have a Trade Street address:
Uptown Charlotte is divided into four neighborhoods, or "wards", by the intersection of Trade and Tryon Streets.[30]
First Ward
The first ward lies directly to the east of the intersection of Trade and Tryon. It is that quadrant bounded by North Tryon on the northwest and East Trade on the southwest.[32]
Once considered one of the most dangerous areas in Charlotte, the first ward has become one of the more desirable because of gentrification under a
HUDHOPE VI grants with many new developments under construction.[33] The award-winning Center City Building which houses the
uptown campus of the University of North Carolina at Charlotte is in the first ward. The Center City Building is 11 stories and was completed in 2011. it includes 25 state of the art classrooms, design studios, meeting space, and performance spaces.[34] The urban village includes a 4-acre (16,000 m2) park, which was completed in December 2015, 4,600,000 sq ft (430,000 m2) of office space, 1,182 residential units, 250 hotel rooms, and 192,000 sq ft (17,800 m2) of retail space.[35] Current attractions include the
Main Library, the
Spirit Square portion of the North Carolina Blumenthal Performing Arts Center,[36]ImaginOn Children's Learning Center,
Levine Museum of the New South, and
Spectrum Center (home of the
Charlotte Hornets).
Second Ward
The second ward lies directly to the south of the intersection of Trade and Tryon. It is the quadrant bounded by South Tryon on the northwest and East Trade on the northeast. Second Ward is the hospitality center of Uptown with about half of the hotel rooms in Uptown and it is an important employment center as well. It includes 7,700,000 sq ft (720,000 m2) of office space, 840 residential units, 3,682 hotel rooms with 1,136 additional rooms under construction, and 518,000 sq ft (48,100 m2) of retail space.
It is the location of Charlotte's "Government District" and is the site of the
NASCAR Hall of Fame. The second ward was formerly the location of the predominantly
black neighborhood,
Brooklyn, before an urban renewal project took place.[37] Today, second ward is home to
Queen City Quarter, a mixed-use entertainment and retail complex;[38] the
Charlotte Convention Center;[39] the
Victorian Gothic style
St. Peter's Catholic Church;[40]The Green, a downtown mini-park; and the
Harvey B. Gantt Center for African-American Art+Culture (named for
Harvey Gantt).
Duke Energy also has its corporate headquarters in the second ward.[35]
Third Ward
The third ward lies directly to the west of the intersection of Trade and Tryon.[41] It is the quadrant bounded by South Tryon on the southeast and West Trade on the northeast. It is the Ward that house a lot of the entertainment and culture attractions in Uptown which include Knight Theatre, the
Mint Museum, and the
Bechtler Museum of Modern Art, the
Carolina Panthers' and
Charlotte FC's
Bank of America Stadium,
Truist Field, home of the
Charlotte Knights, opened in 2014,
Romare Bearden Park, which opened in September 2013,[42] and Gateway Village. Gateway Village, one of the state's largest mixed-use developments, is 1.5 million sq ft (140,000 m2) in size, and home to offices, shops, restaurants, entertainment venues and over 500 housing units.[43]Johnson & Wales University's Charlotte campus is located directly across from Gateway Village, with
Johnson C. Smith University's campus located adjacent. Third ward is also the site of the upcoming
Gateway Station transportation hub, which began construction in July 2018. The Gateway Station will house a Greyhound bus stop, an Amtrak station,
LYNX Silver Line, and a
Charlotte Area Transit System (CATS) bus hub.[44] Overall the Ward includes 7,600,000 sq ft (710,000 m2) of office space, 4,397 residential units, 367 hotel rooms, and 150,000 sq ft (14,000 m2) of retail space.[35]
Fourth Ward
The fourth ward lies directly to the north of the intersection of Trade and Tryon. It is that quadrant bounded by North Tryon on the southeast and West Trade on the southwest.[45]
It is mostly residential and has many stately
Victorian homes.[46][47] It is an official
historic district, and is the location of
Old Settlers' Cemetery and the three-acre
Fourth Ward Park. It is a blend of historic residential neighborhoods, modern restaurants, and an employment center. The Ward includes 380,000 sq ft (35,000 m2) of office space, 4,844 residential units, 731 hotel rooms, and 52,000 sq ft (4,800 m2) of retail space.[35]
Economy
As of 2021 Uptown Charlotte employs 120,000 people[48] across 33 million square feet of office space,[1] hosts more than 18 million visitors a year, and is home to 35,000 residents.[1][49]
Uptown currently has 6,615 existing hotel rooms with 913 rooms planned.[82][83][84][85] The hotels planned or under construction include the
Intercontinental Hotel at Belk Place with 244 rooms,[86] Brooklyn Village with 280 rooms,[84] Moxy Hotel with 208,[84] and Element Stonewall Station with 181 rooms.[84]
Uptown needs more hotel rooms within walking distance from the Convention Center to attract more world class events. Charlotte's current hotel rooms count is fewer than its competitors for conventions.[83]
One step the city is taking to change this a land swap with developer Millennium Venture Capital. The city will give MVC 1.9 acres of its property at 501 S. Caldwell St. in exchange for 0.7 acres at 401 S College, which is located next to the Charlotte Convention Center. MVC closed on this 2.3 acre lot on December 16, 2022. The land may be used for a convention center hotel of 800 to 1,000 rooms. However, the city is unwilling to offer any public incentive for the hotel.[83][87]
Construction boom
Due to the
Great Recession's effect on Charlotte construction in Uptown was at a virtual stand still between 2010 and 2014.[88][89] The ground breaking of
300 South Tryon began a building boom in Uptown.[90][91][92] Between 2000 and 2010 6 million square feet of office space was added to Uptown.[93] In 2019 6.9 million square feet of office space was under construction or planned, 8,458 housing units were under construction or planned, 2,310 hotel rooms were under construction or planned, 948,167 square feet of retail was under construction or planned.[94] This pipeline includes a number of projects such as the
Duke Energy Plaza, Seventh and Tryon which is part of the North Tryon Vision project, 10 Tryon,
Ally Charlotte Center, JW Marriott Charlotte, FNB Tower, 650 S. Tryon, The Ellis, 500 W. Trade. Unfortunately three hotels have stalled due to the
COVID-19 pandemic they are the Moxy Hotel, Intercontinental Hotel at Belk Place, and the Hotel at The Ellis.[95][96][97][98][99]
Companies consolidating real estate has been a major factor in new commercial construction.[100][101][102] Three such buildings that are a part of real estate consolidation are
Ally Charlotte Center,[103]Duke Energy Plaza,[101] and the
Bank of America Tower[102] each is building a bigger building to unite at least two offices under the same roof. In the case of
Ally Charlotte Center and
Duke Energy Plaza it is at least 4 offices.[100][101] Part of the consolidation efforts have been brought up by adopting a hybrid model of work after returning from the
COVID-19 pandemic where most workers will work part time or full time from home. Obviously a smaller real estate foot print is needed.
Duke Energy specifically is aiming to cuts its real estate foot print from 2.5 million square feet to 1 million by 2050.[104]
One of the areas of Uptown that has seen the most development since 2015 to 2021 is the Stonewall Corridor which runs along Stonewall Street and next to I-277 South from McDowell St to
Bank of America Stadium.[105][106][107] The primary reason for the boom of the corridor is the abundance of land along Stonewall Street. After the I-277 interchanges were shrunk 5 big parcels of land each at least 2 acres were available on the north side of I-277.[108] One of the first new buildings on Stonewall to start the building boom was
Regions 615 which delivered in the Spring of 2017[109] since then the
Bank of America Tower completed in early 2019,[110]Honeywell Tower began construction in September 2019,[111]Ally Charlotte Center delivered in May 2021[112] and many other buildings.
Charlotte Center City is served by two branches of the
Public Library of Charlotte and Mecklenburg County now known as Charlotte Mecklenburg Library. The Main library is located on North Tryon Street.[126] In November 2019, new designs for the $100 million, 115,000-square-foot Main Library in Uptown Charlotte were revealed. The organization is planning to break ground in 2021 and complete the build in early 2024.[127][128]
ImaginOn: The Joe and Joan Martin Center is located on east Seventh Street.[129] ImaginOn is a collaborative venture of Charlotte Mecklenburg Library and the Children's Theater of Charlotte. The library provides services, books, CDs, DVDs and homework support for children and teens. ImaginOn contains the McColl Family Theatre and the Wachovia Playhouse, venues used by the Children's Theater for their performances.
The
Charlotte Convention Center attracts over 500,000 people a year to its 280,000 square feet (26,000 m2) of exhibit space. The Convention Center is currently undergoing an expansion to add an additional 50,000 square feet (4,600 m2) of meeting space and a pedestrian bridge connection to the adjacent Westin hotel.[142]
Within recent years, multiple museums have opened in Uptown. The first phase of the
Levine Center for the Arts opened in 2010, as part of the then-named Wachovia Cultural Campus.[143] List of museums in Uptown:
Uptown Charlotte is surrounded by
Interstate 277, an auxiliary highway which creates the boundaries of the four wards and is the innermost of the city's three
ring roads.[160]Interstate 77 also runs parallel to the west of Uptown's third and fourth wards.[161] The
Lynx Blue Line runs through Uptown, connecting Uptown to Charlotte's
University City to the northeast and
Interstate 485 to the southwest via light rail.[162]
^[ Proclamation Designating Central Shopping and Business District as 'Uptown Charlotte' ] by City of Charlotte Mayor John M. Belk; September 23, 1974; Note:This claim needs a reliable source and link