I love how old maps show what the mapmakers valued.
I recently came across this map of Charlotte circa 1986. (You'll want to click it to zoom in.) It
was among the things Owen Furuseth found as he cleaned out his office after
almost 40 years at UNC Charlotte. Furuseth left June 30 as associate provost
of Metropolitan Studies, the wing of UNCC academia under which nestles the UNC Charlotte Urban Institute, where I
work. Because Owen is a geographer and
planner, he was keeping the map but he let me borrow it to copy the image.
The map’s credit line says “Charlotte Mecklenburg Planning
Commission 1986.” That probably helps explain why the route for the then-unbuilt I-485 is shown, although construction on the highway didn’t start until 1988, and the
full outerbelt was not completed until 2015. Notice, also, how the I-485 route shown on the map is
pretty much where it eventually was built. One small exception: The northern section is south of Eastfield Road, which is farther south than
shown on the 1986 map.
Those of you who’ve been in Charlotte only a decade or so might get a chuckle out of seeing the “New
Coliseum” west of I-77 off Tyvola Road. The “New Coliseum,” was just under construction in 1986, the year this
map was made. After it was replaced in 2005 by the Time Warner Cable Arena
uptown, the Tyvola coliseum was demolished in 2007 (see its implosion here).*
Note the prominence of Eastland. That was Eastland Mall. It’s now a vacant city-owned plot of land, after the mall failed about a decade ago.
Note city limits of Charlotte. “Rea Road Extension” south of
N.C. 51, the huge chunk of south Charlotte south of N.C. 51, and UNCC and
University Place were not inside the city in 1986.
Finally, note the relative lack of prominence of “UNCC”
compared to University Place, a shopping center and suburban-form mixed-use
development north of the university. I wonder what that reveals about the
university’s prominence in the minds of the city-county planners. I’ll leave
that to your imagination. Today the university is almost 28,000 students, a
campus surrounded by some of the most gawd-awful strip-shopping-center and
big-box unwalkable and unbikeable suburbia that you can envision.
* About that Coliseum implosion video. I had never watched that until I dug up the
link today. It made me cry. At that
just-opened venue in November 1988, I and 23,000 other people watched the old
Charlotte Hornets – including Dell Curry, father of today’s more famous Curry –
debut to a tuxedo-and-formal-gown wearing crowd, lose by 40 points. They got a standing
ovation. Less than 2 months later, on
Dec. 23, Kurt Rambis’ last-second shot defeated Michael Jordon’s Chicago Bulls.
(Read
the Chicago Tribune story here.) The old Coliseum hosted 364 consecutive
NBA-game sellouts. We loved the Hornets in those days. Loved Dell and Muggsy
and for a time even loved George Shinn, though that came to a bad end. Our then
toddler daughter loved Scott Burrell. Look him up. He
was a bouncy jumper.
The coliseum also hosted Frank Sinatra, Springsteen and
Mother Teresa among other icons, and the 1994 Final Four, complete with
then-President Bill Clinton, various and sundry FOBs (Friends of Bill), and an
Arkansas victory.
The Coliseum was built in the wrong place and was poorly
designed for what NBA arenas came to need just 10 years later. But it was fun
while it lasted.