Greater Charlotte Arts and Recreation
Sites
of interest
Sports
The
Charlotte, NC region has an opportunity around every corner for the
recreational athlete. There are more than 20 area YMCAs that offer everything
from swimming, weight training and yoga classes to youth and adult leagues
for basketball, baseball and soccer. In addition, Ray's Splash Planet
is an indoor water park in Uptown that's drawing families for year-round
fun.
If
you like adventure, the area boasts a host of beautiful parks and lakes.
Whether you're a duffer, hiker, fisher or swimmer, you'll find a variety
of outlets for your activity.
Public Parks
There
are, literally, hundreds of public parks in the Charlotte area. Latta
Plantation Nature Preserve is one of the largest. The 1,343-acre preserve
on the wooded banks of Mountain Island Lake includes an equestrian center,
16 miles of hiking and riding trails, fishing and picnic shelters. Its
also home to the Carolina Raptor Center, a rehabilitation facility for
injured birds of prey. There are several other nature preserves, such
as 1,108-acre McDowell Nature Preserve on Lake Wylie and 727-acre Reedy
Creek Park and Nature Preserve in northeast Charlotte.
Each
county in the region has a variety of parks in varying sizes. Many of
the larger parks have lakes or ponds for fishing, but be prepared to
abide by state fishing regulations.
There
are also countless ball fields available for public use. Check with
the county park and recreation department if you'd like to rent a field
and picnic shelter for your league tournament or family reunion.
State Parks
The
area also boasts a number of state parks. Crowders Mountain State Park,
south of Gastonia, is a popular hiking and rock climbing spot. Lake
Norman State Park in Iredell County provides access to Lake Norman,
including a new swimming beach and mountain biking trails. Kings Mountain
State Park in York County has 16 miles of hiking trails amid its 6,883
wooded acres, and nearby Kings Mountain National Military Park, the
site of a Revolutionary War battle, adds another 4,000 acres.
Water Sports
Charlotte
is also known for its water recreational opportunities. The U.S. National
Whitewater Center opens along the banks of the Catawba River in 2006.
The park, which covers 300 acres, is modeled after the 2000 Olympic
facility in Sydney, Australia, and will bring Olympic-caliber athletes
from around the country here to train. The center also includes an artificial
river with controllable rapids, an adventure center with climbing walls
and ropes courses, more than 11 miles of hiking and biking trails and
a 37-acre island for camping.
The
Charlotte region is home to three lakes, all of which are sources for
hydroelectric power for Duke Energy Corp. There are more than 20 public
boat launching areas on the three lakes and at least 25 marinas.
Lake
Norman, the largest manmade lake in North Carolina, has 520
miles of shoreline that touches four counties: Mecklenburg, Iredell,
Lincoln and Catawba. The lake is packed on weekends from spring through
fall with boaters, jet skiers, fishermen and water skiers.
Mountain
Island Lake, in northwest Mecklenburg, is the source for
Charlotte's drinking water. It's also home to a waterfowl refuge,
so keep your eyes open for some unusual creatures.
Lake
Wylie, on the border of York, Gaston and Mecklenburg counties,
is smaller than Lake Norman with 325 miles of shoreline, but is equally
popular with local residents. You can rent pontoon boats, hire a chartered
boat or fish from a dock or bass boat.
Lake
Norman, Lake Wylie and Mountain Island Lake have restrictions regarding
watercraft operation, so be sure to check with the respective marine
commissions to learn the rules.
Golf
Aside
from water sports, perhaps the Charlotte region's most popular recreational
activity is golf. The Carolinas are home to some of the finest golf
courses in the country, and Charlotte certainly has its share. In the
last decade, there has been a boom in public-access course construction,
creating much-needed alternatives for those who do not belong to the
area's private country clubs.
For
more than 60 years, the region has drawn some of the most respected
names in golf course design, including Tom Jackson, Tom Fazio, Arnold
Palmer, Raymond Floyd, Greg Norman and Jack Nicklaus. You don't have
to drive to Pinehurst to experience a Donald Ross course, either. Two
little-known gems in the Charlotte region Monroe Country Club and Mooresville
Golf Club feature Donald Ross designs. And you can see the stars play
in the Wachovia Championship at Quail Hollow Club in May.
Charlotte
area golf has something for everyone. There are several courses owned
by the City of Charlotte and surrounding counties where you can play
18 holes very economically. If you prefer to feel as though you're playing
at an exclusive club, you can play courses such as Ballantyne Resort,
Birkdale or Highland Creek. When it opened a few years ago, Ballantyne
was dubbed the best new public course in the state.
Several
public-access courses offer league play for men and women, as well as
youth programs. There are also a number of excellent golf schools in
the area, including the schools at Regent Park and Ballantyne Resort.
Ballantyne Resort is home to the nationally known Dana Rader School
of Golf; Rader is ranked by Golf Magazine as one of the Top 100 instructors
in the country.
Sports
Charlotte
has much to offer the casual and avid sports fan. For fans of professional
football, the region is proud of their Carolina Panthers,
an NFL franchise which debuted in 1995. The Panthers play in Bank of
America Stadium, located Uptown in Charlotte. The team won the 2004
NFC Championship by defeating the Philadelphia Eagles in Philadelphia.
They went onto Super Bowl XXXVII, where they were defeated by the New
England Patriots in February of 2004.
From 1988 to 2002, Charlotte hosted an NBA franchise named the Charlotte
Hornets. The franchise relocated to New Orleans, LA in 2002. In 2004,
Charlotte was awarded its second NBA expansion team, the Charlotte Bobcats.
The team plays in the Charlotte Bobcats Arena, which opened in fall
2005 in downtown Charlotte.
The Charlotte Hornets, a minor league baseball team,
originated in 1901 and was active until 1973. Today, the Triple-A Charlotte
Knights, is the top minor league affiliate of the Chicago White Sox.
Them team’s stadium is located just outside of Charlotte in Fort
Mill, South Carolina.
As
for hockey, the Charlotte Checkers are a farm team
for the NHL’s new York Rangers. They play at the Charlotte Bobcats
Arena. Charlotte also has a professional inline hockey team called the
Charlotte Outlawz.
Charlotte’s soccer team is the Charlotte Eagles
of the United Soccer Leagues. Each year, Charlotte hosts the Wachovia
Championship, one of the prestigious stops on the PGA Tour. Additionally,
Charlotte hosts the NCAA Meineke Car Care Bowl each December at the
Bank of America Stadium.
Several major stockcar races are held at Lowe’s
Motor Speedway, which many in the sport consider to be NASCAR’s
'home track'. The majority of NASCAR teams and race
shops are located within 40 miles of Charlotte, and most NASCAR drivers
maintain a residence in or near the city. As previously mentioned, the
NASCAR Hall of Fame is set to open in Charlotte in early 2009.
Charlotte is the hometown of 16-time World Heavyweight Champion,
the legendary Ric Flair, nicknamed “Nature Boy”. Flair earned
his first WCW title by defeating then WCW World Champion Beg Van Vader
in Charlotte (His 11th in the NWA/WCW title lineage and his thirteenth
overall at that time, counting his two WWF championship reigns). The
bout took place at the Independence Arena in Charlotte in December of
1993 at Starrcade.
Despite the fact that no NCAA schools from Charlotte
play in it, the Big South Conference is headquartered in the city. However,
Winthrop University and Gardner-Webb University, both located nearby,
are Big South members.
Another favorite national professional and recreational sport, golf
is an similarly appreciated in and around Charlotte. The Wachovia Championship
is held each May at the Quail Hollow Club. It debuted in 2003 on the
men's PGA Tour, and Tiger Woods is the current defending champion. The
US Open has been held at the Pinehurst course, which is located about
2 hours east of Charlotte.
Over 10,000 people from all over the country flock to Mineral Springs
to enjoy the Queens Cup Steeplechase, one of steeplechase
horse racing’s major annual events. The day long event, held the
last Saturday of April, consists of several steeplechase races, a Jack
Russell Terrier judging contest, and other activities.
Sites
of interest
-
Afro-American Cultural Center – dedicated to the preservation,
promotion and presentation of African-American art, history and culture
-
Belmont Abbey College and Basilica – the college itself, the
monastery and the grotto are all on the historic registry
-
The Billy Graham Library – located on the grounds of the Billy
Graham Evangelistic Association headquarters
-
Bluementhal Performing Arts Centre
-
Carolinas Aviation Museum - dedicated to the preservation of historic
aircraft
- Carolina
Raptor Center - dedicated to the conservation and rehabilitation of
birds of prey
- The
Carolina Renaissance Festival
-
Carowinds - a regional amusement park located on the border of North
and South Carolina
- The
Charlotte Comedy Theater - Charlotte's only professionally trained
improv theater and training center.
- Charlotte
Convention Center
- The
Charlotte Museum of History
- The
Charlotte Symphony Orchestra
- Children’s
Theatre of Charlotte
- Daniel
Stowe Botanical Garden - a 111 acre botanical garden located just
west of Charlotte in Belmont
- Discovery
Place - a science museum and IMAX Dome theater
- Historic
Latta Plantation
-
Historic Rosedale Plantation
-
Historic Rural Hill Farm
-
ImaginOn - innovative educational children's library and theater
-
Kings Mountain National Military Park - the site of a decisive Revolutionary
War battle, located approximately 30 miles west of Charlotte in Blacksburg,
SC
-
Museum of the New South - located in Uptown Charlotte, focusing on
Charlotte's post-Civil War growth from a textile mill town to a financial
hub
- Lowe’s
Motor Speedway
-
The Mint Museums - two separate facilities, one dedicated to fine
art and the other to craft and design
-
Reed Gold Mine - site of the first gold find in the United States
- U.S.
National Whitewater Center - state of the art facility opened in August
2006.
- University
of North Carolina at Charlotte Botanical Gardens
-
Wing Haven Gardens and Bird Sanctuary
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