The Research
Triangle Park area of Raleigh, Cary, Durham, and Chapel Hill, North
Carolina has been named "The Best Place to Live in America" by Money
magazine and "The Best City for Business" by Fortune magazine. If you
pick up a magazine or check with the Better Business Bureau about Research
Triangle Park, NC, you will continually hear the adjective
"world-class".
Vibrant and beautiful, the Triangle region (which includes Raleigh, Durham,
and Chapel Hill) has a population exceeding one million.
Local institutions offer world-class educational opportunities: Duke
University, North
Carolina State University, University
of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Meredith
College, North
Carolina Central University, and Peace
College have world-wide reputations for excellence in their fields.
Created in 1959, the Research
Triangle Park (RTP) is the most successful planned research park in
the United States. Originally 7,000 acres of North Carolina pine forest (8
miles x 2 miles in area), it may well be the largest in the United States also.
131 organizations are located in the Triangle, and about half of the employees
there work for multinational corporations. Estimates are that the total
payroll of the 45,000 employees is $2.7 billion. As envisioned by
business, academia and industry leaders in the area, R&D related
organizations account for more than 90% of usage of the Park.
Cultural and recreational facilities include dazzling multimedia
star shows at Morehead
Planetarium, world-class traveling exhibitions at the North
Carolina Museum of Art, the world's only Acrocanthosaurus
skeleton at North
Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences, NC Sports Hall of Fame, an
exhibit on moonshine at the North
Carolina Museum of History, and butterflies and bugs at the
North Carolina Museum of Life and Science.
The climate allows for a high quality of outdoor life with hiking trails,
cycling trails, campsites, boating, picnicking and fishing for 10 months every
year. Raleigh
Parks & Recreation, Lake
Wheeler, Lake
Johnson, and Pullen
Park take excellent advantage of the Neuse River, Walnut and Crabtree
Creeks and their tributaries, and are fairly connected by the Capital Area
Greenway. Both beaches (the Atlantic Ocean) and mountains (the Great Smoky
Mountains) are within a day's drive.
College and professional athletics are hosted in the world-class RBC
Center by the NCSU
Wolfpack football and the Carolina
Hurricanes hockey home teams. Less than 2 1/2 hours away, is
Charlotte, with its NFL and NBA franchises.
Cultural institutions in the Triangle are also world-class.
The new ALLTEL
Pavilion is not only successful and beautiful, it boasts the best
acoustics in the world and seats over 20,000. The BTI
Center for the Performing Arts includes Fletcher Opera Theater, for
opera, dance, and theatrical productions (featuring Carolina
Ballet,
the National Opera Company and the A.
J. Fletcher Opera Institute); Kennedy Theater (featuring Burning
Coal Theatre); The Lichtin Plaza (a 2 acre venue for festivals,
concerts, and social functions; and the Meymandi Concert Hall featuring the North
Carolina Symphony). The Artistic Director of Carolina Ballet in
Raleigh, Robert Weiss, has single-handedly revitalized Ballet with a stunning
new innovative production of The Nutcracker.
Working from Tchaikovsky and Petipa's original production notes, Weiss created
the production to honor the memory of George Balanchine.
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