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Charlotte Supply Company Building

Buildings and structures in Charlotte, North CarolinaCommercial buildings completed in 1925Commercial buildings on the National Register of Historic Places in North CarolinaMecklenburg County, North Carolina Registered Historic Place stubsNational Register of Historic Places in Mecklenburg County, North Carolina
Charlotte Supply site
Charlotte Supply site

Charlotte Supply Company Building was a historic warehouse building located at Charlotte, Mecklenburg County, North Carolina. It was built in 1924–1925, and was a four-story, brick building measuring 40 feet wide and 127 feet deep. The building sat on a full basement and was designed by the architecture firm Lockwood, Greene and Company. It has been demolished It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1984.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Charlotte Supply Company Building (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Charlotte Supply Company Building
South Mint Street, Charlotte Uptown

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Latitude Longitude
N 35.226388888889 ° E -80.850555555556 °
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Mint Street Parking Deck

South Mint Street 410
28202 Charlotte, Uptown
North Carolina, United States
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Charlotte Supply site
Charlotte Supply site
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Catalyst (building)
Catalyst (building)

Catalyst is a 27-story 462-unit apartment building on West Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard in Charlotte, North Carolina. The concrete and glass skyscraper in Third Ward, designed by Smallwood, Reynolds, Stewart, Stewart, was built by Atlanta-based Novare Group and completed in 2009. Tony Skillbeck, president of Novare Carolinas Development, said that the name reflected the building's status as "a literal catalyst for the red-development and the regeneration of Third Ward" as well as the fact that for many residents, this would be their first home purchase, "a catalyst in our buyers' lives."Groundbreaking took place August 29, 2007. A 15-story, 363,000-square-foot (33,700 m2) office building called 440 South Church was built next door by Trinity Capital Advisors, designed by the same architectural firm. Novare was involved with the office tower, which has Ally Financial as a major tenant. However, Novare was dropped as an operating partner, though keeping its investment, because the company had significant debts that could result in foreclosures, and auditor Deloitte had "substantial doubt about the company’s ability to continue as a going concern." Novare's problems had little effect on the Catalyst project, however.In February 2009, half the Catalyst units changed from condominiums to apartments due to the decline in the condominium market. As of September 18, 2009, one hundred people lived in the building, and about half the units were leased. As of January 2013, the building is 98% occupied with renters. Novare managed Catalyst for "an investment fund controlled by affiliates of Lehman Brothers Holdings" with which the developer "restructured its relationship" in Summer 2009. Novare still owned the land and was building a parking lot.C and J Catalyst bought the Catalyst in 2011 for $103.3 million, or $223,500 per unit. The building was managed by John Joyce.Northwood Ravin LLC currently manages the building for owner C and J Catalyst LLC. Catalyst's first floor contains 19,792 SF of retail space and is leased by Hawthorne Retail Partners.

St. Peter's Catholic Church (Charlotte, North Carolina)
St. Peter's Catholic Church (Charlotte, North Carolina)

St. Peter Catholic Church is a Roman Catholic church at 507 South Tryon Street in Charlotte, North Carolina. Established in 1851, it is the oldest Catholic church in Charlotte, and until 1940 was the only Catholic church in the city. St. Peter's was originally at the extreme southern limits of the city, but today it stands in the heart of uptown, across from major art museums and next to The Green. It is most likely the oldest surviving edifice on Tryon Street.The original structure stood from 1851 until 1892. The building was damaged during the civil war and in 1892 was deemed structurally unsafe. The present structure, in a simplified Victorian Gothic style rendered in dark brick, dates from 1893. As the city grew and new parishes were established in the suburbs, St. Peter lost so many members that it ceased being a formal parish in 1970, and did not regain full parish status until 1986. Since that time, in cooperation with other churches in Charlotte, particularly their sister church, St. Peter’s Episcopal, they have been working to help the poor and unfortunate of Charlotte through low-cost housing, help for AIDS victims, and outreach to the homeless. Since 1986, St. Peter's has been staffed by the Jesuits.A prominent feature of the church interior was a triptych by American painter Ben Long, a three-part fresco depicting Christ’s Agony in the Garden, Resurrection, and Pentecost. The fresco was severely damaged in February 2002 and cannot be fully restored. Following the damage to the fresco, the interior of the Church was renovated in 2007.