Just north of downtown Charlotte sits Camp North End. A former Ford manufacturing plant, the industrial space has been repositioned as a mixed-use community comprising startup retail, office space, community experiences and public parks. A unique mix of tenants, attracted by affordability and proximity to their target market, is testing out new retail experiences that they would not be able to afford to launch in traditional malls.
Read More“Camp North End is perhaps the shining example of how Charlotte is beginning to embrace its history and use it as a place to cultivate a creative class”
Read MoreA Midwest architecture firm is breaking into new geographic territory with the opening of a Charlotte office at Camp North End. M+A Architects is starting out with space at the Hygge Coworking facility within the massive adaptive-reuse project just outside of uptown.
Read MoreFor those watching the transformation of Camp North End, it should come as no surprise that its first restaurant will be anything but standard at the 75-acre adaptive reuse site just north of uptown. Enter Greg and Subrina Collier, just the team to do it.
Read MoreA second location for a local craft brewery reportedly is the latest tenant headed to the massive Camp North End redevelopment that's coming together near uptown. The Charlotte Observer reports Free Range Brewing plans to open an outpost there this summer.
Read MoreL’Occitane en Provence at 555 Fifth Avenue, New York City, is the Retail Design Institute’s 2018 Store of the Year. The reveal came at the Institute’s 48th Awards Gala, held May 22, 2019 in New York City, among nearly 200 attendees from the retail design industry.
Read MoreCamp North End calls on Charlotte’s innovators to celebrate the creative process at the first annual END-to-END festival, a two-day “confluence of innovation” on May 10-11.
Read MoreCamp North End calls on Charlotte’s innovators to celebrate the creative process at the first annual END-to-END festival, a two-day “confluence of innovation” on May 10-11. Known as a hub for creativity and forward-thinking ideas, the 75-acre historic site acts as the ideal location to deepen connections between mediums, industries and people. Attendees can look forward to digital art installations throughout WWII-era buildings, live music in the rusty water tower and cutting-edge tech demonstrations in the Ford Factory, as well as presentations from thought leaders on design, technology and the creative process.
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