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Get to know Eastover/Myers Park

Myers Park and Eastover are overlapping historic neighborhoods located just a few minutes south of Uptown Charlotte. They were Charlotte's very first “streetcar suburbs” and today represent the Queen City’s oldest and best-known communities, chockablock with swoon-worthy landmarked homes. Eastover was developed some two decades after Myers Park, planned around a central loop—today's Queens Road—at the turn of the 20th century. Both communities boast breathtaking, tree-lined sidewalk streets with year-round flowering shrubs, lined with a welcome mix of restored gems and new construction. Locals and visitors alike enjoy close proximity to countless restaurants, boutiques, and parks, not to mention a myriad of cultural institutions: the Duke Mansion, Mint Museum, Theatre Charlotte, Wing Haven Garden & Bird Sanctuary, Nature Place Museum, and Queens University of Charlotte, just to name a few.

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Living in Charlotte

The Charlotte area was the site of America’s first gold rush, prompted in 1799 when 12-year-old Conrad Reed found a whopper of a nugget playing in a Cabarrus County creek. Today, people are drawn here by other lodes: booming commerce, vibrant culture, and a subtropical climate that’s palpably milder than just a state or two north. Greater Charlotte represents the fourth-largest metropolitan region in the Southeast and one of the fastest-growing in the entire country. Nearly three million make their home in the 16 counties surrounding the “Queen City,” located in both North and South Carolina—they’ve gained nearly 20% of their collective population over the past decade alone. Countless companies across all industries maintain headquarters, if not a substantial presence, in Charlotte’s thriving urban core, most notably the finance, technology, and higher education sectors. And while “Metrolina” is all well inland, water-borne recreation thrives on Lake Norman, the largest manmade lake in the state, and throughout the Catawba River basin.