What Is Noisette?
 


The Old Powerhouse was built in the Beaux Arts style, and when restored will become an important cultural destination.


Riverfront Park will serve to reconnect the community to the marshlands of Noisette Creek and the broad vistas of the Cooper River.


Montague Avenue is experiencing a renaissance, with new businesses locating in the existing buildings, including restaurants, a small grocer, and some small shops.
  What is Noisette?
Noisette is a 3,000 acre city-within-a-city. It is an area of North Charleston, South Carolina targeted for integrated restoration as a sustainable community – modeled on the belief that cities must be equally responsive to social needs, environmental responsibility and economic vitality (the philosophy embodied by people, planet, prosperity).

The Noisette community boundaries are roughly those that defined North Charleston when that community was incorporated in 1973. However, in the last 30 years, through annexation and “green-field” subdivision development, North Charleston has expanded into one of the state’s largest cities. Today, the Noisette area represents only a small corner of its parent city.

What’s Noisette like today?
Located beside the Cooper River, the main tributary of the South’s most famous harbor, the Noisette area supports a racially and economically diverse population of 13,000 people, plus a daily influx of thousands of workers, shoppers, students and others. It includes a wide mix of neighborhoods, retail areas, industries, schools, municipal buildings and parks, many of which have remained relatively stable in profile despite the rapid development of the Charleston/North Charleston metropolitan area.

For example, historic Noisette neighborhoods like Liberty Hill – founded in 1878 as a community of freed slaves – include many homes occupied by fifth generation owners. The layout of Park Circle, a mixed-use recreation center designed in the late 19th century, still reflects its original vision as a leisurely melting pot for residents and visitors. The East Montague Avenue business district looks much as it did in the days of two-dollar haircuts.

Other assets of interest include a network of tidal creeks, marshes and protected wetlands bordering the Cooper River. There’s also a range of well-preserved architectural structures and details, especially on property developed by the U.S. Navy. Their engineers arrived in 1901 to build a major base and shipyard, then the Navy’s collection of residential and industrial structures was vacated during the base closures of 1995. That base closure was the trigger for development of the Noisette concept.

Who’s behind the Noisette project?
In a unique public-private partnership, the Noisette Company and the City of North Charleston teamed up in the late 1990s to revitalize the Noisette area. In exchange for the right to purchase 400 acres of old Navy base property at the city-appriased fair market value – a small portion of the land promised to the city after the Navy’s departure – Noisette Company principal John Knott agreed to launch a master planning effort on an unprecedented scale.

The master plan would:
Outline Noisette Company plans for the development of their proprietary section of the old Navy base, and help guide the city’s efforts to redevelop the adjacent 2,600 acres of private residential neighborhoods, private commercial structures, and municipal property.

Contracting with two of the country’s premier architectural and land planning firms, and in consultation with an international group of environmental, social and professional organizations, Knott’s team created an outline for restoration of a healthy, sustainable, human-scale community.

The plan seeks to preserve historic architectural styles, neighborhood diversity and the area’s unique social fabric. It also works to restore environmental stability and beauty, attract jobs, improve services like education and healthcare, reduce dependence on car travel, promote recreation, eliminate the foundations of crime and poverty, and strengthen the sense of pride many North Charleston resident feel toward their community.

After years of development, community input and revisions, the master plan was presented to the City of North Charleston in December 2003. It was reviewed in community meetings, neighborhood gatherings and private one-on-one sessions. And it was accepted by the City as satisfaction of the Noisette Company’s contractual agreement in early 2004.


 

Noisette Poll
How often do you walk or ride a bicycle?
At least once a week
Twice or more per week
Infrequently
Never

  More Polls

Latest News
North Charleston – South Carolina’s Most Sustainable City?

Movers & Shakers: Interview with Noisette CEO John Knott

GOING GREEN! in the Carolinas

The New Charleston Green

Building in a Coastal Environment

Lowcountry HUB Contractor Business Academy Heralds

National Prisoner Re-Entry Pilot Program Graduates

2007 Marks Major Progress towards Sustainable Community

North Charleston, Navy Yard at Noisette Named

Green Built Hunley Waters Neighborhood Underway

Sustainability Institute Introduces New Green Building Directory for Region

Former Navy base's post office reborn after being saved from demolition

I’On Group’s Mixson project wins urban-design award

How an area became a city

Noisette Co Honored for Navy Yard Building Restoration

N. Charleston assessed by its founding mayor

Groundbreaking set for “Carol’s Home” Extreme Home Makeover


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