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Hot homes: 4 houses for sale in Charlotte ranging from $435K to $1.49M

Hot homes: 4 houses for sale in Charlotte ranging from $435K to $1.49M

Axios23-05-2025

This week's hot homes offer a variety of architectural styles, from a three-level Victorian in Dilworth to a sleek mid-century modern retreat in south Charlotte.
1817 Rush Wind Dr. — $435,000
Why we love it: This brick bungalow offers a quick commute (less than 10 minutes) to both Uptown and Camp North End.
Neighborhood: Genesis Park
Realtor: Marc Bastos • Mackey Realty LLC
Specs: 3 beds, 2 baths and 1,436 square feet
Notable features: Brick exterior, swing front porch, tile backsplash, spacious rooms, fenced-in yard.
7123 Linda Lake Dr. — $575,000
Why we love it: Previously used as an Airbnb, this split-level home could be a great investment property.
Neighborhood: Hickory Grove
Realtor: Charlie Miller • 5 Points Realty
Specs: 3 beds, 2 baths and 1,918 square feet
Notable features: Hardwood floors, fireplace, spacious bedrooms, open floor plan, large patio, outdoor fire pit.
545 Dilworth Mews Ct. — $1,200,000
Why we love it: Between the three-level Victorian design, multiple balconies, and walkable location near bars and restaurants — what's not to love?
Neighborhood: Dilworth
Realtor: Elizabeth Phares • Allen Tate Center City
Specs: 3 beds, 3.5 baths and 2,280 square feet
Notable features: Hardwood floors, shaded porch, balconies, open shelving, fireplace, arched walkways, spacious bedrooms, patio, fenced-in yard.
2121 Valencia Ter. — $1,499,000
Why we love it: The mid-century modern layout offers a spacious feel, and the guest house adds even more room for visitors or extended family.
Neighborhood: Governor's Square
Realtor: Matt Stone and Josh Stone • Stone Realty Group
Specs: 4 beds, 3 baths and 3,826 square feet
Notable features: Wood floors, fireplace, sleek cabinetry, large walk-in closet, pool, built-in grill.

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A treasure trove of new books to read during Pride Month
A treasure trove of new books to read during Pride Month

Washington Post

time5 days ago

  • Washington Post

A treasure trove of new books to read during Pride Month

The dazzling variety of current and upcoming books on LGBTQ themes is a reassuring reminder of how far we've come. This year, fans of queer romance can read books set in the worlds of Formula 1 ('Crash Test'), clandestine Victorian clubs ('To Sketch a Scandal') and Italian restaurants ('Pasta Girls'). In July, Phaidon is publishing a lavish survey of global queer art as a companion piece to Jonathan D. Katz's Chicago exhibition 'The First Homosexuals,' while the queer Korean vampire murder mystery 'The Midnight Shift,' by Cheon Seon-Ran, will draw first blood in August. Joe Westmoreland's autofiction classic 'Tramps Like Us,' a sort of gay(er) 'On the Road' first published in 2001, is being reissued. Alison Bechdel is back. There are two new studies, one by Daniel Brook and another by Brandy Schillace, of the groundbreaking LGBTQ advocate and sexologist Magnus Hirschfeld, whose books were burned by the Nazis. Phil Melanson's entertaining historical fiction debut, 'Florenzer,' imagines the early life and same-sex longings of Leonardo da Vinci against the backdrop of a conflict between the Medici family and the Vatican. The novel, which owes a debt to Hilary Mantel's 'Wolf Hall' trilogy in the detail and immediacy of its telling, feels freshly contemporary in its papal intrigue and plutocratic power battles. These books — and those I discuss at greater length below — are variously warm, comic, sad, jubilant, curious, violent and erotic. Each has insights of its own to offer, but they're united by their awareness of the continuing vulnerability of lesbian, gay, bisexual, trans and queer people. 'Gaysians,' which is 'Flamer' author Mike Curato's first graphic novel for adults, doesn't shy away from violence, racism and transphobia, outside the community or within it. The colors of the trans flag give the book its dominant palette, working especially well for its many nightclub scenes. The story, about a group of young Asian Americans living in Seattle in 2003, is most powerful when Curato unleashes his more expressionistic side to capture different characters' traumatic flashbacks and glimpses of historical tragedy. But this darkness is offset by the story's cozy, reassuring focus on friendship and found family. Some may find Curato leaning too heavily on sentimentality — his 'gaysians' give themselves the cutesy name 'The Boy Luck Club,' riffing on Amy Tan's novel 'The Joy Luck Club,' and speak mostly in catty clichés, as if auditioning for 'Drag Race.' For me, this mawkish tendency stunted the book's emotional range. One of the most curious books of the season comes from 'the emerging field of queer ecology.' In 'Forest Euphoria: The Abounding Queerness of Nature,' Patricia Ononiwu Kaishian makes a powerful case for trying to understand nature without the artificial binaries and hierarchies of human societies. Though she is, by training, a mycologist — a fungi specialist — she embraces all life forms, a disposition derived from her understanding of diversity being nature's 'very premise.' Sometimes this embrace borders on the erotic; one might well blush reading how, 'turgid with spring rains, mushrooms carefully arrange themselves into fruiting bodies, poking up through the soil to disperse their spores.' True to its nonbinary ethos, the book is really many things: an account of growing up in New York's Hudson Valley surrounded by snakes and slugs; a survivor's memoir about the path to healing following a childhood sexual assault; a story about growing to love one's own 'ambiguous,' 'amorphous,' 'amphibious' nature. It can sometimes feel a bit more like a manifesto than a work of science — 'How we treat swamps is an indicator of our societal health' is a typical assertion — but the radical-green politics are all part of the book's charm. And while Kaishian's inclination to romanticism occasionally threatens to undermine her mission as a scientist, as it does when she claims she'd prefer the mysteries of eel reproduction to remain outside human knowledge, it's nevertheless a fascinating book that celebrates difference in unexpected ways. I certainly know more about snail sexuality than I did before I opened it. One of the summer's most hotly anticipated titles is 'Deep House: The Gayest Love Story Ever Told.' Jeremy Atherton Lin's follow-up to 'Gay Bar,' for which he won a National Book Critics Circle Award, is a strong cocktail of memoir, legal history and sociology. He proceeds along parallel tracks to tell the romantic (and very horny) story of his relationship with a British man he met in 1996 and the jagged path taken by American and British legislatures and courts to eventually grant basic rights to people in same-sex relationships. 'We were aliens in each other's countries,' he writes, 'because in our own we remained second-class citizens.' Lin beautifully captures the Bay Area at the turn of the millennium: the creeping gentrification, the tech bros, the video shops, the aging hippies. He's also not shy in his descriptions of sex of many kinds and configurations, with all the attendant sensations. (At times you can almost smell it.) The liberated familiarity of these scenes in our less-prudish age makes it a little jarring when Lin reminds us of the difference a couple of decades make. 'By the year 2000,' he writes, 'when we rented our first weird, damp apartment, eighteen states still had sodomy laws on the books.' He and his boyfriend — who overstayed his visa by years to remain with Lin in California — dreaded immigration authorities so much that they became 'convinced you couldn't go to a hospital without being deported.' The metaphysical impact on Lin's boyfriend, who is addressed throughout in the second person, was drastic: 'I think after years without legal status, you sometimes considered yourself to be insubstantial.' Reading Lori Ostlund's excellent new short-story collection, 'Are You Happy?,' I found myself reflecting indignantly on the subtitle Lin chose for 'Deep House.' Surely laying claim to being the gayest love story ever told — or the gayest anything, however flippantly — risks devaluing that which isn't quite so … overt? Promiscuous? Coastal? Male? Though Ostlund's stories dwell less on heady sex and front-line politics, other hallmarks of the LGBTQ experience are everywhere present. Her protagonists have parents who never accepted them and colleagues they never told about their significant others. They sleep with their partners in the basement on separate couches when visiting home. Ostlund's stories may be less graphic than Lin's memoir, but there's nothing less gay about them. Besides, the lesbian couple that runs a furniture store named after Jane Bowles's 'Two Serious Ladies' could hardly be gayer — that's a pretty sapphic bit of branding. Don't let 'Are You Happy?' pass you by: There's not a word out of place in these brilliant Midwestern sketches. They're lonesome, for sure: Family members greet each other from a distance, 'like two people on opposite banks of a fast-flowing river.' But they're also hilarious. 'How is it possible,' one character wonders, 'for a family to have two stories about eating glass?' Also set a little further from the madding crowd is Seán Hewitt's first novel, 'Open, Heaven,' which takes place largely in a 'foggy northern village' in England. It's all a bit reminiscent of the film 'God's Own Country' — in rural Thornmere, to be gay is to be lonely and furtive — though with more longing and less flesh. As in Lin's 'Deep House,' we're reminded of how recently the culture has shifted toward tolerance. When James, our sensitive, stammering hero, comes out in 2002, Britain is still a year away from repealing Section 28, a sliver of legislation that effectively quashed discussion of sexuality in England's schools, and he is left feeling like a stranger in the only home he's ever known. While delivering milk bottles one morning before school, he meets Luke, a boy lodging with his aunt and uncle while his dad is in prison. Before long the strong-jawed Luke is all James can think about — but does Luke feel the same way? The book's appeal may depend on its readers' willingness to take adolescent romantic longing as seriously as we do when we're young. It succeeds because Hewitt knows when to stop — he casts a spell, like first love, that he knows can't last forever. Or can it? Throughout this short book, Hewitt muses on the passage of time, the way 'the years spin like this all of a sudden,' and considers how easy it might be for time to fold in on itself and the world to revert to an earlier state, taking us with it. The consequences of such a regression for our narrator, and for us all, are potentially dire. We have plenty of regressions to worry about outside of fiction, not least from the Supreme Court, which hinted only last year that it may be willing to revisit marriage equality. Progress in immigration reform also appears vulnerable: Lin, who finished 'Deep House' before January, has observed of the crackdown under Trump that 'our paranoia has become the reality.' Yet there is some consolation to be found, amid all this, in the humor, hope and humanity in the stories still being told. Charles Arrowsmith is based in New York and writes about books, films and music.

LeDroit Park condominium building was once a well-known funeral home
LeDroit Park condominium building was once a well-known funeral home

Washington Post

time6 days ago

  • Washington Post

LeDroit Park condominium building was once a well-known funeral home

When Washington was a segregated city, Black communities flourished in the Shaw and LeDroit Park neighborhoods, which were centers of jobs, worship and entertainment that revolved around institutions such as Howard University, the Howard Theater and Hall Brothers Funeral Home. For nearly 80 years, Hall Brothers served generations of families who crossed the transom of the Victorian townhouse on Florida Avenue to pay final respects to loved ones. Then gentrification arrived and younger Hall family members had no interest in continuing in the funeral business. The business, the last of a half-dozen Black-owned funeral parlors along the U Street-Florida Avenue NW corridor, closed in 2019 and the building was sold. A planned conversion to office space stalled during the pandemic and the building remained vacant and deteriorating. A car ran into the stoop in 2000 and destroyed the brass railings seen in many historic photos of the funeral home. Enter developer Ethan Arnheim, who bought the property in 2022 and saw an opportunity to preserve many architectural details while creating a seven-unit condominium that offered what many nearby buildings did not: three- and four-bedroom units. 'There is a market for larger units,' Arnheim said. 'D.C. needs more space for families.' Arnheim, who lives in the neighborhood, decided to 'lean in' to the funeral home history, naming the building Washington's Farewell Address as an homage to the city, the first U.S. president and the many farewells that took place in the building. As part of the LeDroit Park Historic District, the building's historic facade had to be maintained, which presented a few challenges, including restoring the unusual curved glass windows. Arnheim invested in custom replacements of some features, including the brass handrails, and used exterior paint colors that matched the originals. He preserved an artistic tile panel in the entry and installed several original art deco wall sconces and pendant chandeliers in a one-bedroom unit on the first floor. 'I hope that the restoration of this property will contribute to the neighborhood's outstanding and historically protected architecture,' Arnheim said. The building is across from the restored Howard Theater, which showcased jazz legends Duke Ellington, Louis Armstrong and Ella Fitzgerald as well as Motown stars James Brown and the Supremes. Units are laid out like railroad flats, and they are bright and airy with deco-inspired chevron-design cabinets. The four-bedroom, two-bath loft-style penthouse has a 430-square-foot deck and 20-foot ceilings, exposed brick and wood joists, and views of the Howard and the stone carvings that frame the condo building's windows. The three- and four-bedroom units have two bathrooms; one with a shower, the other with a soaking tub and shower. Rooms have space-saving pocket doors and closets have adjustable shelving. Each unit has stainless steel appliances, including stacked full-size washer-dryers, granite counter tops, European cabinetry with soft door closing and matte black finishes. Owners can choose their backsplash designs. Arnheim dug out a lower level in the deep lot to accommodate additional units, while preserving the natural light from above. The building is the first residential dwelling visitors encounter when entering LeDroit Park on Florida Avenue from the west. Shortly after he bought the property, Arnheim contacted Mural Arts and commissioned a bright abstract mural for its exposed west side. Open-concept kitchens includes granite countertops, stainless steel appliances, under-cabinet lighting and pocket doors. On a recent tour, Arnheim opened a closet to reveal the funeral home's original oak newel post from the elegant stairway off the reception room. He said he couldn't find a way to incorporate it into the new design. But didn't want to let it go until he does. Public Schools: Cleveland Elementary. Cardozo Education Campus is a combined middle and high school. Transit: The Shaw-Howard University Metro station, on the Green Line, is two blocks away.

Warning for Aussie families going camping ahead of the King's birthday long weekend
Warning for Aussie families going camping ahead of the King's birthday long weekend

Yahoo

time6 days ago

  • Yahoo

Warning for Aussie families going camping ahead of the King's birthday long weekend

Even though it's getting cold, some risks are heightened. Found out how to stay safe and avoid fines of up to $47,000. It's important to know the rules around campfires, as mistakes can be devastating for the environment and very costly for the camper. Source: Getty A warning has been issued for those planning to get away this long weekend. For many Aussies, public holidays go hand-in-hand with a trip away, but those heading outdoors to spend a couple of nights under the stars are being urged to stay alert. Now that it is officially winter, it may feel like the fire risk has passed – but authorities in one state are reminding campers that many parks and forests remain dry, meaning bush fire risk is still very real and present. In parts of western, southwestern and southeastern Victoria, a warmer and drier-than-average autumn has led to a higher fire risk than usual. Forest Fire Management Victoria Chief Fire Officer Chris Hardman said campfires can quickly become devastating bushfires. Authorities warn that even though the temperatures have dropped, the fire risk is actually heightened. Source: Forest Fire Management Victoria 'Even at this time of year, just one unattended or poorly managed campfire can cause serious damage to the environment and put lives and property at risk,' Mr Hardman said. ADVERTISEMENT 'This season, we've responded to more than 370 incidents involving campfires. This included the Boroka Lookout Fire, where an illegal campfire turned into a bushfire in difficult terrain, on the edge of the cliff diverting resources responding to bushfires in the Grampians National Park. 'With a little extra care around your campfire this long weekend, we can keep forests and parks healthy and safe for everyone to enjoy.' He added an important tip, reminding campers to never leave a campfire unattended and always use water to extinguish it. If it's cool to touch, it's safe to Fire Management Victoria Chief Fire Officer Chris Hardman Rangers will be patrolling the state's parks and forests on the lookout for any illegal campfires and rule flouters this long weekend. So what are the rules? You can light a campfire anywhere in a state forest if it is safe to do so No fires allowed on Total Fire Ban Days If it is hot and windy, reconsider if you really need to light a fire Fireplaces need to be either purpose-built by the land manager or in a hole in the ground at least 30cm deep Clear at least 3 metres around the fire of anything that could burn, like leaves, tents, clothing etc. Keep your fire and all logs under 1 metre across Never leave a fire unattended Fully extinguish a fire before going to bed or leaving the campsite – even for a short period of time Only use water to put out a campfire. Ashes can stay hot underneath dirt and soil, and can reignite days later ADVERTISEMENT Anyone found breaking the rules in Victorian public land face a maximum penalty of $19,759 if the matter goes to court. Lighting a fire on a Total Fire Ban day can land you a seriously big $47,421.60 fine and two years in jail. Do you have a story tip? Email: newsroomau@ You can also follow us on Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, Twitter and YouTube.

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