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Category Archives: Asheville Live

Get Ready for Fall 2012

Looking Glass Falls - HDR 1

Looking Glass Falls – HDR 1 (Photo credit: JPott)

WNC and especially Asheville is preparing for the huge amount on tourist traffic every fall season brings. Continuing to be one of the greatest towns to visit during the fall, Asheville will be ready to host anyone and everyone wanting to spend some time in the national forest areas around town.
If you are thinking about visiting Asheville for the fall season this year you need to make hotel reservations asap as space is filling up fast.
Come join us for fall 2012 and if you are not able to come visit Asheville this year, you can always see the fall colors from our webcams!

Bele Chere 2012 Countdown

1 West Pack Square 2011

With Bele Chere 2012 only one day away, you can be sure everyone in town is getting ready for the City’s largest festival of the year. Be sure to check in on Asheville Live Cam to see live video of the entire festival 24-7. We will be covering the action from the center of it all starting Friday at noon.

With the festival bringing so many people in town, our parking problem gets worse. This year the BB&T Parking garage on the corner of College and Broadway will be open for public use Friday at noon through the end of the festival on Sunday. It is one of the best secrets of the festival because the road blocks will make Broadway appear closed. If you are at the festival wave at the cams and if you can’t make it, we know you will enjoy the view on Asheville Live Cam.

Asheville’s Historic Battery Park Hotel

Vintage Postcard, Battery Park Hotel, Asheville, North CarolinaThough it’s not been an active hotel since 1972, the historic Battery Park Hotel in Asheville is still worth a visit. It now houses apartments and offices, but from 1924 until 1972, it was a hotel for many visitors who came to Asheville to enjoy the beautiful mountain scenery and the refreshing climate.

The Battery Park Hotel Asheville History

The 1924 structure is 14 stories tall, a red brick building with accents borrowed from both Neoclassical and Spanish architecture. It was built by Edwin W. Grove, who also built the nearby Grove Park Inn, on the site of the first Battery Park hotel, a fancy Queen Anne style building that had been constructed in 1886. The need for a new hotel arose partly because the railroad was bringing so many new visitors to the area. Many people visited Asheville not only for its beauty but for the purity of the mountain air, making the city an attraction not only for tourists but for those recovering from tuberculosis. The original hotel was one of the first hotels in the region to have electricity and an elevator.

However, the history of the site goes back even further. The original hotel and the current day structure take their names from the fact that the hill on which they were built was a Confederate artillery battery during the Civil War. Confederate defenders dug in with Stony Hill, the highest hill in town – and now the site of the hotel – at their backs. The battle lasted only five hours and the Union troops retreated, so the Confederates never had to make their last stand at the hill.

The Biltmore Connection

Though many important and wealthy guests stayed at the original hotel, perhaps the most famous, at least from the local point of view, was George Vanderbilt. Legend has it that Vanderbilt looked out of the hotel window – or perhaps sat on the front porch — and saw the beautiful land on which he eventually built his famous Biltmore Estate, now one of Asheville’s finest historic attractions.

The “new” hotel, built in 1924, had its detractors as well as its fans. The novelist Thomas Wolfe, perhaps Asheville’s most famous native, was not overly fond of the new hotel’s architectural style. However, it seemed most people appreciated the 220 rooms, amenities and gorgeous view.

Battery Park Hotel Asheville history – they go hand in hand.

Asheville Beer Week

Eddie Money to Perform at Biltmore

Moogfest adds three more bands

Expect runners, traffic delays in Asheville Saturday morning