Raleigh Magazine features Raleigh Union Station
Among the news-worthy items: free meeting space and WiFi access, construction on the lower mezzanine, special events and talks of a 1,700 SF restaurant.
Article: A Fleeting Calm
Among the news-worthy items: free meeting space and WiFi access, construction on the lower mezzanine, special events and talks of a 1,700 SF restaurant.
Article: A Fleeting Calm
Smedes recently appeared on In Focus with Loretta Boniti, a weekly, statewide public affairs show on Spectrum News, to discuss family owned businesses in North Carolina.
Segment 1: Family Owned Businesses in NC (Part 1)
Segment 2: Family Owned Businesses in NC (Part 2)
Segment 3: Family Owned Businesses in NC (Part 3)
With a booming housing market, York’s Association Management team has been busy advising developers on drafting strong, realistic HOA budgets.
You might notice that there are actually 6 takeaways below. No one says “top 6” though….so we went with 5 and you can consider that last one a bonus!
Meet Brandi Weaver, founder of the WORLD L!T STREET FOOD FESTIVAL:
Brandi is a Charlotte, NC based creative and catalyst for change, championing cross-cultural exchange. She is a Durham native and NC STATE grad, with fifteen-years as an engineer at Duke Energy. She recently traded in her STEM career for a focus on multiculturalism, working to bring the community together across cultural divides. She founded a platform called WORLD L!T where she promotes and curates local cultural events. Its purpose is to highlight the rich cultural fabric of her community and help guide people to opportunities to experience different cultures. She feels very strongly that exposure to persons of different heritage within our own communities can help dissipate the divisiveness of ignorance, and thus make us stronger.
The highlight of her work was the WORLD L!T STREET FOOD FESTIVAL. She founded and produced this event which debuted in Charlotte, NC at Camp North End on September 2019 and attracted over 2400 attendees. The WORLD L!T STREET FOOD FESTIVAL was the manifestation of Brandi’s vision to give people a chance to connect and experience a variety of cultures. The goal was to curate a fun, experience that was enriching for US natives, as well as for those who have journeyed here from afar. Recognizing the challenges (economic and otherwise) faced by newer members of our community, the WORLD L!T STREET FOOD FESTIVAL was designed to give them a taste of home at one of Charlotte’s hottest venues.
Brandi is working to grow this festival to increase its impact on the greater community.
Our brokerage crew has been hopping! Check out what’s in store:
That’s all for now. Stay in the loop about all the good retail updates by subscribing to our monthly newsletter. (Scroll to the bottom of most any page on our site – it’s down there.)
Throughout the month of February, we are shining the light on African-American history and stories here in Raleigh and Wake County.
The excerpt below is from Smedes York’s upcoming book Raleigh: What We Remember, a collection of oral histories from Raleigh natives. Joseph Holt, Jr. is one of the interviewees. We expect Raleigh: What We Remember to hit shelves at Quail Ridge in the second quarter of the year.
Joseph Holt, Jr. family’s trail-blazing efforts on behalf of the Civil Rights Movement and the integration of Raleigh’s school began two years after the U. S. Supreme Court’s Brown v. Board of Education ruling declaring segregation in the nation’s public schools unconstitutional, and one month after the NC General Assembly enacted legislation (the Pearsall Plan) designed to thwart public school integration. … The Holt struggle was a solitary one. They became socially isolated, as many former friends, fearing white reprisals, began to distance themselves from the family. Over the next several years [they] endured constant duress, experiencing intimidation and harassment from angry whites, receiving hate mail and threats on their lives from hate groups, enduring unreasonable demands from creditors, and suffering numerous economic reprisals. His parents even received word that there was a plot to abduct their son. The legal battle the Holts waged in federal court in the form of a suit against the Raleigh City School Board exhausted the family emotionally and physically. The Holt fight ended in October 1959 when Joseph H. Holt, Jr. was in his senior year at J. W. Ligon Junior-Senior High School.
We are thrilled to announce our very own Smedes York is Habitat for Humanity of Wake County’s Honorary Chair for the 2020 Blueprint Breakfast! This year’s breakfast will take place on Wednesday, March 25 at the PNC Arena.
The annual fundraiser draws more than 800 community leaders and has raised more than $2 million to fund the construction of homes in Wake and Johnston counties.
Join us in congratulating Smedes for this incredible honor as he helps to support local families in need of safe, affordable housing!
Franchise owners Eddie Elliott and Matt Wivell recently signed a deal to open two new Cape Fear Seafood Company (CFSC) restaurants in the Triangle, according to The News & Observer. The second location is set to be located in Cary later this year.
The laid-back restaurant specializes in providing exceptional food and service with southern hospitality. The company hails from Wilmington, NC where the first CFSC opened in 2008. There are now three tasty locations in that market and one here in Raleigh. For more on CFSC visit their website: www.capefearseafoodcompany.com.
York just completed its 110th year in business, solidifying us as one of the oldest companies in the Research Triangle region and certainly the oldest commercial real estate company. And, since we can’t comprehensively fact check the “oldest” claim (although Our State Magazine profiled the oldest 100 NC family businesses in 2017 and it checks out), we challenge any other locally-owned and operated CRE firm in the Triangle to debunk our claim!
In honor of this milestone, we thought it would be fun to take a look back at Raleigh in 1910 when Charles Vance (C.V.) York relocated from Greenville, NC to hang his shingle in the yet-to-be founded Research Triangle region.

Trolley at Fayetteville and Martin Streets
First a quick history lesson: Raleigh was founded in 1792 near the geographical center of the state on the Joel Lane plantation. Lane’s house was a popular stop for travelers, so the entrepreneurial Lane built a tavern and a church to cover all needs. This precursor to Raleigh was known as Wake Courthouse or Bloomsbury (also the name of our landscaping division!).
By 1910, Raleigh was modernizing and growing into a veritable city:

Shaw University Faculty

Baptist Female University/Meredith College
A self-proclaimed “City of Opportunity,” Raleigh was already attracting young, smart entrepreneurs like C.V. York from smaller NC towns to build their lives and businesses. Now on the fourth generation of York leadership, York Properties continues to grow its business based on the bedrock values of excellent service, integrity and community engagement.
Sources: “Raleigh: a City at the Crossroads, 1914”; Alumni News NCSU; “Charles V. York – Builder and Entrepreneur,” by Terry Henderson; Meredith College Timeline; City of Oaks by David Fleming; National Park Service “Raleigh: A Capital City”
We are pleased to welcome Patty Friedman to the Commercial Property Management Division where she will be working as a Commercial Lease Administrator.
Patty, who is originally from Iowa, called Denver, Colorado home for 30 years where she worked in both business management and property management. She moved to Raleigh 9 months ago to be closer to her twin son and daughter. She has a BA in Communications from the University of Denver and holds a Colorado Real Estate License.