Cary,
the second-largest town in Wake County and the fifth-largest center
in North Carolina, has sought to carefully manage its growth and development
over the past decade. It even chose to keep the “town” designation
in spite of its population of around 100,000. Offering a range of living
options, Cary is especially popular with people who work in the Research
Triangle Park.
The
county is also home to smaller communities such as Apex, Wake Forest,
Morrisville, Zebulon, Holly Springs and Fuquay-Varina and other towns
offering a mix of the rural, suburban and urban. Among the largest counties
in the state, Wake County is a place where high-tech and homegrown sit
side by side.
Durham
County
The county seat, Durham, is home to Duke University, North Carolina
Central University, Durham Technical Community College, and the North
Carolina School of Science and Mathematics. It’s a city rich in
history that grew rapidly after the Civil War, largely due to the tobacco
and textiles industries. Today, tobacco and textiles have given way
to medicine and technology, and the city is nationally known for a growing
creative class as much as the famed Durham Bulls of Hollywood fame.
An historic strength of the city is its diversity of cultures and perspectives
that together make for an open and welcoming community. Durham was home
to “Black Wall Street” in the early 20th century, and a
strong African-American business community continues to thrive to this
day.
Duke
University, which began as Trinity College in 1892, is now known as
one of the world’s finest universities. Its business, medical
and law schools consistently rank among the nation’s best, and
its storied NCAA men’s basketball team (the Duke Blue Devils)
has made 14 NCAA Final Four appearances.
Durham
is especially famous for its downtown areas, and the community hosts
several nationally recognized arts events. Downtown’s historic
Carolina Theatre is the host of the North Carolina Gay & Lesbian
Film Festival and the Full Frame Documentary Film Festival. The American
Dance Festival, a six-week series of dance performances by nationally
renowned artists, is held on the Duke campus every summer, and there
are numerous jazz and blues festivals and concerts throughout the year.
Specialty shops and galleries sit along Ninth Street and the redeveloped
West End, centers of Durham’s thriving creative population.
Home
to most of the Research Triangle Park and the Raleigh-Durham International
Airport, Durham County also boasts the North Carolina Museum of Life
and Science and Eno River State Park.
Orange
County
The county seat of Orange County is Hillsborough, a town rich in history
— it was once the capital of North Carolina and featured one of
the first NASCAR tracks of the inaugural 1949 season.
Its
most famous municipality, though, is Chapel Hill, home to the oldest
state university, the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. With
a population of slightly more than 50,000, the town of Chapel Hill offers
refined living with a college-town feel. It boasts a vibrant music scene,
a number of nationally recognized eateries, and a host of coffee shops,
bars and specialty shops in its downtown area. Franklin Street, the
town’s main boulevard, hosts numerous street fairs and public
activities as well as the Morehead Planetarium, the Ackland Art Museum
and plenty of unique retail opportunities. The UNC Tar Heels, a perennial
top-20 NCAA basketball team, play in the Dean E. Smith Center, popularly
known as the Dean Dome.
Carrboro,
located immediately west of Chapel Hill and known for its Carrboro Music
Festival, and Mebane are also found in Orange County.