Linens n’ Things Throws In Towel, Closing All Stores
Unable to compete with BB&B and warehouse stores, Linens n’ Things will close all of its stores including seven in the Triangle (Beaver Creek Commons, Crossroads, Renaissance Center (at Southpoint), New Hope Commons, White Oak, Poyner Place, and Glenwood Avenue (near Raleigh Grand theater). Liquidation sales are expected to begin tomorrow.
Ridgewood Shopping Center To Hold Turkey Trot
Ridgewood Shopping Center will host its Thanksgiving Day Turkey Trot on Thursday, November 27. Presenting the event are Ridgewood Shopping Center, Fleet Feet Sports of Raleigh and Mizuno Corporation. For the second consecutive year, proceeds will benefit the National Multiple Sclerosis Society of Eastern North Carolina.
The 2008 Turkey Trot will feature four events: a competitive and noncompetitive 8k race, a one-mile fun run and a kids’ dash. Along with the fastest runners, every one hundredth 8k competitive race participant to cross the finish line will receive a free pair of Mizuno shoes from Fleet Feet Sports of Raleigh. In 2007, more than 1,200 people from 31 states and Canada participated. In North Carolina alone, runners and enthusiasts came from 47 towns and cities raising more than $13,000 for charity.
“The Turkey Trot is a family tradition for people from all over the country,” says Bruce Bokish, volunteer race director. “We love the fact this event supports a nonprofit organization, and we look forward to a successful event supporting the National MS Society of Eastern North Carolina.”
The Turkey Trot race, sanctioned by U.S.A. Track and Field, will be held on a certified course and will feature Champion Chip timing. This year, the event also offers a “Sleep In” option. For a minimum donation of $20, participants can register to sleep in and receive a Turkey Trot event t-shirt.
Register online at www.active.com or call (919) 349-1719.
Ratdog Coming to Greensboro
Bob Weir’s Ratdog is coming to the Greensboro Coliseum’s War Memorial Auditorium on November 16. Tickets are available through Ticketmaster.
Fleming’s Opening In A Month
Fleming’s Prime Steakhouse & Wine Bar , the newest addition at Crabtree Valley Mall, has not set an actual opening date yet. However, word is that the restaurant will open its doors to the public in the second week of November.
Crisp Celebrates Birthday
Crisp Salads will celebrate its first birthday tomorrow. The store is located in the Crabtree Valley Mall food court, and will be giving away gifts such as vitamin water, birthday cake, water bottles, t-shirts and more from 11:30 to 3:00 on Wednesday (Oct 15).
Crisp is a local, one store outfit which specializes in salads, but also serves soups and sandwiches. All of the salad dressings are made from scratch, and the vegetarian soups and soups du jour are made from scratch, daily.
The GM of the operation is a chef who lived and trained for over a year in Perpignan, France. He relocated from Philadelphia to assist the owners with the growth of Crisp. “The idea of working in a Food Court, in a Mall, was hard to get my head around but once we laid out this concept, I knew I had to be part of the future of this industry in America.”
I was personally surprised to learn that Crisp is a one-store outfit, for now. The presentation is incredibly polished and the concept is rock-solid. The company plans to expand the concept to other locations, as well as to start a catering service this Fall.
Hopefully this will be the first of many birthday celebrations for Crisp!
Shred Identity Theft at Today’s Seminar
A free identity theft seminar will take place today at 5:30 at the RBC Center. Speakers include David Johnson, FBI Special Agent, and one of my dear old friends, Caroline Farmer, Deputy Director, N.C. Attorney General’s Office. They will address these questions and more:
- What is identity theft?
- Who is impacted?
- Are you at risk?
- How can you protect yourself?
- What can you do should your identity be stolen?
Please register for the seminar online at www.rbcbankusa.com/seminar .
The first 100 people to register and attend the seminar will receive a $10 gift card. People do not have to register online to bring documents for destruction at the Shred-A-Thon.
From 10 am to 8pm there will be a free, professional shredding service in the RBC Center parking lot.
Gas Price Complexities Hold Prices High
There are countless articles in the media and journals discussing the mechanics of gas prices , however there there is an interesting statistic not being discussed in many places; gallon prices as a proportion of crude oil barrel price. The latter variable is the focus of last week’s oil price crash . The former, though, is what we see at the pump.
When crude oil peaked during the week of July 14, so did America’s per-gallon gas price. At that time we were paying a price that was 2.76% of the crude oil price. Last week, oil crashed to $77.70 a barrel, but local gas prices stayed high. On Friday I paid $3.59 per gallon, a price that is 4.62% the price of crude oil.
Discuss amongst yourselves. In the meantime, have you seen raleighgasprices.com ? It appears that gas is ranging from $3.20 per gallon and $3.79 per gallon.
World’s Toughest Rodeo Coming to RBC Center
That’s right, partner! The World’s Toughest Rodeo’s “ Toughest Cowboy ” show will be swinging into town on Saturday, January 3. Tickets are available through Ticketmaster.
RDU Shows Off Terminal 2
On Saturday the Raleigh-Durham Airport Authority opened the doors to Phase One of the new Terminal 2 to the public with an impressive open house. The celebration showed off the new 920,000 square foot, $570 million terminal which will offer expanded security areas and improved efficiency with check-in and baggage security and routing.
After being shuttled to the upper levels of the hourly parking garage, visitors were greeted in the parking plaza with a jazz band, the first of many dotted throughout the terminal during this seminal event. Upon entering the front door of the terminal, it is easy to be swept away by the arcing, curved ceiling. Made of glue-laminated layers, the sturdy wood beams carry a shape reminiscent of a wing’s airfoil shape. Dramatic windows have been incorporated to allow in much natural light. The ticketing area contains two island style ticketing stations as well as individual kiosks for express check in.
The layout for the new terminal is essentially the same as that for the old Terminal C; a big “H”. The isthmus, again, is the site of security, only this time, there is no grade change until one is beyond the security areas.
The single, long concourse is similar to that in Terminal C, however the building is about 25 feet wider. The extra room accommodates bidrectional travelators as well as numerous full-service restaurants. The ceiling is a continuation of the arched airfoil concept, and contains many strips of glass to allow in natural light. The three big restaurants that will be open in this phase are 42nd Street Oyster Bar, Carolina Ale House, and Gordon Beirsch.
The concourse features some welcome improvements. The bathrooms are large and well-lit. The seating areas at the gates have some end tables with hidden power outlets. While AC outlets are offered, other form factors such as USB are offered. Finally, the large displays throughout the concourse are on par with the flatscreen displays that are appearing in the nation’s best airports.
As stated before, the isthmus is on the ticketing level, so arriving passengers must ride up a short escalator, then down a long escalator to access the baggage claim areas. The baggage claim area is unremarkable. The best kept secret in this complex, however, is the aluminum tree sculpture at the baggage claim entrance on the lower level. The tree’s base is outside, though some of its branches seemingly “pass through” the building’s two-story windows.
The terminal will no doubt offer an improved ticketing, security, and dining experience. The use of large windows will allow the building to utilize natural light for most of the time that passengers are using the building. Overall, the architectural design is stunning, and will make an excellent impression on those arriving to our area for the first time.
However, upon leaving the building, I have to wonder if this is the best way we could have spent just over half a billion dollars. Will the added natural light’s savings be offset by the additional costs to heat and condition the vast spaces inside the terminal? Will the movement of passengers up and down escalators eventually be seen as a backward way to move people? The facility only offers 4 more gates than Terminal C offered. Will this offer adequate revenues to help pay for this very expensive building? Will people actually use these full-service restaurants on the concourse? I can see this working in a hub setting, but in a point-to-point airport, the only customers they will get is those arriving early for their flight.
The new terminal is much like getting new shoes to wear with suits when your old shoes weren’t that bad…and your casual shoes are embarrassingly awful. The explanation I was given for replacing Terminal C first, instead of Terminal A, is that the airport could not move all of Terminal A’s functions into Terminal C while Terminal A is being replaced. With Terminal 2, they supposedly will be able to move the Terminal A airlines to 2 while replacing A. How will they accomplish this with just four more gates in Terminal 2?
Unfortunately Terminal 2 is another giant missed opportunity in RDU’s history. Ever since 1987 we have operated two airports at RDU; one right across the street from the other. Whether it be parking decks, ticketing areas, baggage claims, runways, control towers, or concourses, there are at least two of everything at RDU. If we’re building a baggage claim facility, a ticketing area, and a security area, why not build such that both concourses can use it?
By building a central terminal and connecting it to just the concourses in the existing terminals, RDU could have set itself up for easy, efficient expansion and renovation in the future as well as incredible efficiency in the present. This design is called the landside/airside design and it has been so beloved in Tampa since 1971 that Orlando used it when it built its new airport in 1981. A central terminal almost the size of Orlando’s could easily fit on the NE side of RDU’s parking decks. People movers are so flexible, that future gates could be put virtually anywhere along the runways.
There are two main arguments I’ve heard against the landside/airside design for RDU. One is that Southwest Airlines likes their arrangement in the Terminal B section of Terminal A. They have full control of their gates, their security area, and their baggage claim. They have apparently been resistant to any changes. Second, the inter-runway space between RDU’s two primary runways is much smaller than most airports. The original design was to build twin runways beside Terminal C, so the 5L/23R runway was placed as close as possible to Terminal C to allow for its eventual twin.
That said, most airside/landside arrangements have central terminals, but there is no law stating that the central terminal cannot be offset, as depicted above. (The green lines represent roadways and the orange lines represent people movers. Terminals 2 and C can be seen in the top of the picture, while Terminal A is at the bottom.). In fact, if the road entering the airport could be aligned to run along the edge of the parking decks, it would be entirely possible to rebuild Terminal A as a two-sided concourse.
While Terminal 2 is will be impressing a lot of people in the next few years, it depressing to think of what could have been.
Harlem Globetrotters Coming to RBC Center
The world-famous Harlem Globetrotters are coming to the RBC Center on Friday, February 27. The team’s roster features three former local players: “Airport” Greenup (Shaw ’04), “Ant” Atkinson (Barton ’07), and Orlando “El Gato” Melendez (UNC)
Tickets are available through Ticketmaster.
Opening Night for Canes
The Carolina Hurricanes open the season tonight hosting the Florida Panthers. The game will be carried in HD on TWC channel 291. The puck drops at 7pm.
Also don’t forget that gogoraleigh has the latest in in downloadable schedules. Click on the “Calendars” tab at the top of the page for area schedules that can easily be imported to Outlook, iPhones, Blackberrys, Google Calendar, iCal, and more!
Richard Lewis Coming to Charlie Goodnights
One of stand-up’s legends, Richard Lewis, is coming to Charlie Goodnight’s Comedy Club. Lewis is also known for his roles on Anything But Love and Curb Your Enthusiasm, will be performing six shows beginning November 6 .
Guru Guitars Open on Hillsborough
Tucked between Cup-A-Joe and Nice Price Books is a new guitar shop, Guru Guitars . Guru stocks a selection of many different types of guitars (handmade, vintage, used), banjos, and mandolins as well as effects pedals and accessories. The store is owned by local guitar makers Howard Critcher and Eugene Reinert.
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