logo
Sycamore adding another brewery location in Charlotte

Sycamore adding another brewery location in Charlotte

Yahoo20-03-2025

CHARLOTTE, N.C. (QUEEN CITY NEWS) — A longtime Charlotte brewery is expanding beyond its South End base, with Sycamore Brewing announcing plans for a new location Thursday.
One of the Queen City's beer-making giants, Sycamore says it will occupy 18,000 total square feet in the Cotswold Village shopping center at the intersection of Sharon Amity and Randolph roads.
Sycamore, known for its Mountain Candy IPA, opened in South End in 2013 and moved into new, multi-level digs next door on Hawkins Street 10 years later. This location will remain open.
Take a tour of North Carolina's breweries by train; several NoDa businesses are part of the 'bar crawl'
The new 7,000-square-foot location will also feature a 11,000-square-foot beer garden, an extensive lineup of house-brewed beers, an innovative craft cocktail menu and a seasonal food menu. It's expected to open in summer 2026.
'We're thrilled to expand into Cotswold and create a place where people can relax, connect and enjoy what we do best,' said Sarah Brigham, founder of Sycamore Brewing. 'With our beer garden, diverse drink menu and community events, this will be a spot for everyone.'
Designed with families in mind, the Cotswold location is expected to host weekend brunches, live music and kid-friendly activities.
The expansion comes as fellow stalwart Olde Mecklenburg Brewery is amid a multi-location expansion. Meanwhile, other, smaller local breweries have shuttered in recent years.
Sycamore also opened a location at Charlotte Douglas International in 2023. Its beer is distributed at major retailers in six southeastern states plus Ohio.
Before selling its original property, Sycamore had a large beer garden area that often hosted food truck rallies.
There are no other breweries in the Cotswold neighborhood.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Andy Nilsson files to challenge incumbent Senator Thom Tillis in 2026 midterms
Andy Nilsson files to challenge incumbent Senator Thom Tillis in 2026 midterms

Yahoo

time2 days ago

  • Yahoo

Andy Nilsson files to challenge incumbent Senator Thom Tillis in 2026 midterms

CHARLOTTE, N.C. (QUEEN CITY NEWS) — The midterm elections are more than a year away, but candidates are already jockeying for a position. Retired Winston-Salem businessman Andy Nilsson has filed to challenge incumbent Senator Thom Tillis. 'We've got someone who, when he's voting, votes against the president, and doesn't really show up here to explain why or defend himself, it's like we've got a senator who's absent,' Nilsson told Queen City News. Nilsson spoke with Chief Political Correspondent Andy Weber in Greensboro Friday as the state GOP gathered for their annual convention. The odds are against the Republican challenger, as Tillis has already raised several million dollars and brought on staff with ties to the Trump presidential campaign. 'I knew getting into this, that was a big mountain to climb. I knew how big it was. I mean, this is a guy who's been in for 12 years, who's running for 18. He's got a lot of money, he's got a lot of PAC support, but that goes to the center of my argument, that he's out of touch,' insisted Nilsson. Nilsson argued not only is he a better choice over Tillis, but that he also is the right person to face a potential democratic nominee and former North Carolina Governor, Roy Cooper. 'I'm not a typical politician. Everybody that Roy Cooper has run against in however many elections that he run has been a typical, recycled, swamp-dwelling politician, I'm not. I was 30 years in business until I retired and started coaching high school football, now I'm working with special needs kids, that's what I do.' Cooper himself has not announced if he will run. Senator Tillis' campaign did not respond to a request for comment on Nilsson's campaign. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

To spend or not to spend; boomers embracing the 'Die with Zero' philosophy
To spend or not to spend; boomers embracing the 'Die with Zero' philosophy

Yahoo

time3 days ago

  • Yahoo

To spend or not to spend; boomers embracing the 'Die with Zero' philosophy

CHARLOTTE (QUEEN CITY NEWS) — A growing number of Baby Boomers are embracing a new financial philosophy: 'Die With Zero.' Instead of leaving behind an inheritance, many are choosing to spend their hard-earned money on life experiences and retirement. Chief Business Correspondent Taylor Young talks about how this is sparking mixed reactions across generations. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

Another four-story mixed-use building proposed for downtown Huntersville across from controversial project
Another four-story mixed-use building proposed for downtown Huntersville across from controversial project

Yahoo

time4 days ago

  • Yahoo

Another four-story mixed-use building proposed for downtown Huntersville across from controversial project

HUNTERSVILLE, N.C. (QUEEN CITY NEWS) — A proposed development would bring a four-story building of mostly apartments to downtown Huntersville, but town planning staff and developers are focused on promoting the benefits of the project's retail space. Northstate Development is attempting to rezone a 1.7-acre property on Gilead Road that is across the street from the Holbrook Town Center, a once-controversial project that set a strong precedent for the future of downtown. This is Holbrook Phase 2. The new Northstate rezoning presented at Tuesday night's town board meeting seeks to construct a 60,000-square-foot building with a mixture of retail and apartments on the ground floor, and the three floors above all residential, totaling 55 units. The land is currently zoned Neighborhood Residential. The land is adjacent to the 760 Craft Works brewery, and the developer is seeking to share an entrance in order to maximize street frontage. All required parking would be on site, on the back side of the property. Huntersville's 2040 Community Plan suggests using the property to expand Holbrook Park south to Gilead Road. However, planning staff pointed to the narrower Downtown Plan that recommends retail use to promote the 'gathering' aspect of the evolving community. 'We want to promote a balance of food-and-beverage venues and those stores that support downtown life and appeal to visitors,' Assistant Planner Director Brad Priest said. 'They come for services, walkability, enjoy open space. Parks are a part of it, but businesses are as well. Staff recommends the mixed-use, gathering component.' When asked by Commissioner Amanda Dumas if Northstate would consider a residential-only building, company representative Rachel Krenz suggested it was unlikely. The Land Use Plan requires 60 percent ground-floor commercial for new downtown construction. 'We could develop only as residential, but we want to put retail there,' she said. 'We want to do this mixed-use, desirable building. We know retail is needed downtown, and we want to be part of that solution.' If the shared driveway is not approved, then Northstate is preparing to put the entrance on the left side of the building. A two-story home is that neighbor, and a fence would be built, along with a dense, 10-foot buffer. Huntersville planning board approves transit-oriented development in preparation for proposed Red Line There is also an option to make the main residential entrance along Gilead, one that the developer opposes since it will reduce retail square footage and 'make the space more difficult to lease.' The property is within a few blocks of Discovery Place Kids, Huntersville Elementary School, Holbrook Park, Town Hall, and the proposed Red Line station. It backs up to a greenway, where three pedestrian connections would be provided. Despite the controversial nature of the sister project, which spurred 'Save Downtown Huntersville' signs, there was only one speaker during the public comment period. The town planning board is scheduled to review the project on June 24, with commissioner consideration slated for July 15. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store