Nexton Announces the Grand Opening of the Midtown Club

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Press Release: Nexton recently announced the grand opening of its expansive resident amenity, the Midtown Club. The $9 million, 8,000-square-foot facility is now open in the heart of Nexton’s newest neighborhood, Midtown, located just a short distance from Brighton Park Village and Del Webb Nexton.

Wellness is a core value for Nexton, and the Midtown Club is the latest and greatest way our residents can benefit from their choice to live in our community,” says Nexton’s Vice President of Operations, Brent Gibadlo. “From a group exercise class, to creating lasting connections around shared interests, to just enjoying a dose of pool-side sunshine, this will be a hub of health and connection for Nexton.”

The Midtown Club’s indoor space includes a large contemporary living room with a kitchenette and Gigabit Wi-Fi technology to support remote work by day and social and club events in the evenings. An additional multipurpose room will host classes and will be available for homeowners to book for private events.Inside, the options are truly endless. The design is meant to welcome people of all ages and lifestyles, whether they need a quiet place to wind down with a glass of wine after a long day’s work or want to attend a fitness class. “Our goal for the Midtown Club was to create a space that is modern and fresh, yet approachable,” says Kelly Gilreath, of LS3P, who handled the interior design. “We want residents of Nexton to enter the modern coastal clubhouse and feel like they are entering a part of their own home.”A state-of-the-art fitness room also offers cardio equipment, weight stations and has a dedicated yoga studio with a children’s playroom.

Photo credit: Cove Creative Studio

“The words ‘Nexton’s happy place’ come to mind when I think of the Midtown Club,” says David Burt, of LS3P, who handled the building architecture. “We wanted the layout of the Midtown Club to flow as seamlessly as possible to create a real sense of community for Nexton’s residents. Each part leads to another. The park and the pool even have a yin and yang connection at the pavilion structure where both sides of the building are activated.”

Outdoors, Midtown Club’s four-acre green space has a food truck plaza with benches, string lights and a kettle fountain, surrounded by multiple nature trails encouraging walkability. Additionally, there are two tennis courts, four pickleball courts, a half basketball court, a covered pavilion and a playground.

The 7,200-square-foot resort-style pool, accented with tropical vegetation and coastal-themed furniture with non-linear, multi-dimensional design, creates distinct areas for residents to unwind in their area of choice.“It’s been very rewarding to see the Midtown Club come to life,” says Mary Martinich, landscape architect at Seamon Whiteside. “My firm values well-designed and connected open space that is an integral part of the community fabric, and the Midtown Club truly embraces this concept.”The Midtown Club serves the Nexton Residential Association, which encompasses homeowners at Midtown, Brighton Park Village and Del Webb. Outside memberships are not available.

For more information on Nexton, visit www.nexton.com

The Cape on Kiawah will span 14 acres and 1,000 feet of beachfront property – the largest of any development on the island: Construction is set to be complete in 2023 with 78 residences in six buildings

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Mayor John Labriola seized an opportunity to set the record straight at the recent Kiawah Island Town Council meeting on July 5. The issue that he addressed was in relation to the development of The Cape on Kiawah, which will be located on West Beach and is being developed by East West Partners. The Kiawah Island Architecture Review Board presented at the Town Council meeting in April in relation to the clear cutting of 50 trees that many Kiawah residents had questioned at that time. After the presentation, members of the Kiawah community sent questions, which the Town prepared responses to at the beginning of June. “What started out as questions has elevated to some pretty serious accusations,” Labriola stated. “In terms of the Kiawah Partners’ ability to misuse the role and control of the ARB to manipulate calculations.” 

The Kiawah Island Town Attorney Joe Wilson consulted with the Town and released an opinion on behalf of Council. Labriola said that even after that opinion was released, “the accusations continued.” Labriola announced that they then received a second legal opinion in relation to this issue and how East West Partners had “not violated any standards related to the development agreement at The Cape.” “We have legal opinions that have supported the Town’s position, which is what we stated back in June that the ARB acted appropriately,” Labriola said. 

Labriola said that the calculations are not in question by a core group of concerned Kiawah Island residents, but rather how the lot coverage is measured. 

“That is core issue.” Labriola addressed the definition of highland and stated that the ARB has exclusive jurisdiction to determine those standards and the definition of highland as used in those standards. According to the Kiawah ARB, Labriola stated that the definition of highland is all the area above mean high water. “Under this interpretation, the development was in the 33% standard adopted by the ARB.” Labriola continued by saying that their interpretation of highland is a reasonable one and the S.C. attorney general has adopted it. He said that this definition is used frequently in other contexts including in the Town’s ordinance. The other definition of highland has been claimed by some as the land above the Ocean & Coastal Resource Management baseline. 

OCRM is under the umbrella of SCDHEC. Neither the Kiawah ARB nor the Town of Kiawah adopts the OCRM baseline. However, the Kiawah ARB and the Town do adopt the OCRM critical line that is marsh frontline for marsh front property, but the OCRM baseline only applies to beachfront property, as explained by Labriola. Labriola added that the town’s own density standards for multi-unit development allows for 60% of coverage based on the entire lot and that there is no reference to highland in the town’s density standard. “So even under the Town’s standards, this development would have been approved because it is under 60% of the entire lot.” 

Labriola concluded by reiterating that the ARB has exclusive jurisdiction over lot coverage standards put forth by the ARB guidelines. “It is to the Town’s position that the ARB interpreted the language and calculations the lot coverage consistently with previous beachfront projects and in a manner that is reasonable and commonly used.” The Town will be adding a Development Resources page to their website where a full text of the development agreement will be shared, in addition to FAQ’s that will be updated regularly. “We encourage residents to view the page for accurate information,” Labriola said. Labriola also noted that he didn’t think this would stop the accusations, but that he wanted to be transparent. “We will provide the community with the information as we see it, as we understand it and as we know it. I don’t know what else we can do except to say those words and put them in print to send out to everyone.” Additional groups within the community have recently come to fruition, including a new nonprofit organization called Preserve Kiawah, which is comprised of hundreds of concerned Kiawah residents who want to preserve the way of life they have come to love by living on Kiawah Island. In response to the newly formed groups, including Preserve Kiawah, the Town of Kiawah Island has commissioned Lou Hammonds Group to act as a liaison in communication with the Town, the residents and Kiawah Partners. On the agenda at the July meeting was approving their contract to begin working on the communication initiative. Maura F. McIlvain, a resident of Kiawah Island, commented that she thought a communication consultant was a great idea. “A level of suspicion is there. Whether it is warranted or not. A level of suspicion is there in regards to a relationship that the Town shows to the developer. Some say communication coming from the Town has been poor, defensive, mangled – however you want to say it.” McIlvain’s suggestion on the contract with Lou Hammonds was to take out the part about them being a liaison between the Town and the Partners. “You shouldn’t want that in there given the current environment. When the Town has been accused of coordinating with the partners – that is not where you want to be right now. I would take that out.” 

Lou Hammonds Group has a history of working with East West Partners, but Kiawah Island Town Administrator Stephanie Tillerson said they were chosen, without an official RFP, because they came “highly recommended” from several entities in the Charleston area, including from Helen Hill, the CEO of the Charleston Area Convention and Visitors Bureau. “They are well respected in the community,” Tillerson explained in the Town Council meeting. Finally, Brad Belt of the Preserve Kiawah group, spoke at the meeting as well in response to the mayor’s comments on accusations being made toward the Town in response to the handlings of The Cape development. 

“I welcome the commitment to transparency and I thank the mayor for that,” Belt commented. 

“But I am disappointed by the term ‘accusations.’ We are a community that is trying to understand the governing documents and we are systematically working through those in a fact-based way. We are simply outlying issues that warrant attention. If we are wrong, I would be the first one to welcome being corrected.” He went on to note definitions in the Town’s own ordinances in regards to critical areas and highlands. “Critical area in regard to the Town’s definition is the area from the mean high water mark to the setback line. The critical line means the jurisdiction boundary of the critical area as determined by the OCRM staff. Highlands is the area above the OCRM critical line which has just been defined by the Town’s own ordinances as including the area from the high water mark to OCRM setback line.” Belt went on to say that the definitions are clear and straightforward within the Town’s own ordinances. “This is contradictory to the positioning interpretation that the ARB has taken.” Preserve Kiawah has retained counsel for the newly established nonprofit. The Lou Hammonds Group contract was unanimously approved by Town Council and the intention is that it would begin working very soon. 

The Cape on Kiawah will span 14 acres and 1,000 feet of beachfront property – the largest of any development on the island. Construction is set to complete in 2023 with 78 residences in six buildings. There will also be a clubhouse. The development completely sold out in Phase II for a total of $248 million. 

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The Daniel Island Recreation Center is now leasing its space for Sunday Church Services

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The Daniel Island Recreation Center is closed for business on Sunday, but not for church. Starting this Sunday, the multipurpose room will be the temporary worship site for Point Hope Presbyterian Church.   At last month’s June 21 Charleston City Council meeting, the city entered into a year-long lease with the church for $33,000.

The proposal passed unanimously and was unprecedented as well. For the first time in the recreation center’s short-lived history, since opening its doors last summer, it has entered into a long-term agreement with a church to rent its space. An agreement that is advantageous for both parties as well as basketball players looking to shoot hoops. 

“I’m excited to have this congregation out on Daniel Island,” said Charleston City Councilman Boyd Gregg. “They’re a great member of the community and will be a great addition.”    

Since June 2020, near the genesis of the coronavirus, the church has been meeting at The Church of the Holy Cross on Daniel Island every Sunday at 5 p.m. for a Bible study, prayer time, and singing, according to founder Pastor Rob Hamby.  Worship began at Hamby’s home in 2020 with just his family and now the church has more than 50 members.  Now, the church has secured a temporary home at the recreation center. The cherry on top of the cross is that they get to have morning worship as opposed to an evening one.  

The church’s lease covers the cost of the building rental, a damage deposit of $5,000, and a non-refundable $2,000 replacement fee for chairs and desks used during the service. The church will pay half of the rental expense up front and the other half at a later date, according to the city’s Recreation Department.  The revenue from the church’s rental is additional income for the city that was previously unbudgeted. Also, a portion of the dollars will be used toward funding city-wide swim lessons.  

More so, the recreation center will provide access to the gym during the four hours of the church’s services. This will take place in the coming weeks once staffing is satisfied. However, this arrangement does not satisfy the church’s long-term goal of building a brick-and-mortar place of devotion. The church does not currently own property but is hopeful to be a community staple. 

“We want to be a church that reaches Daniel Island, but we also want to reach the Point Hope area down at Philip Simmons,” Hamby said. 

On July 10, the church held its first informal gathering at the recreation center.  The first official service open to the public will be held Sunday, July 17. The church plan’s to host a grand opening on Sept. 11 with a full staff as well as an open gym for all the hoopsters.

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Cummins Turbo Technologies opens a New Manufacturing Facility in Charleston, South Carolina

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Cummins Turbo Technologies, formerly known as Holset Turbochargers, has officially opened its newest manufacturing plant in Charleston, SC. The business, a division of Columbus, IN-based Cummins Inc. is headquartered in Huddersfield, England, and is one of the world’s largest manufacturers of turbochargers for diesel engines. The new 110,000-square-foot plant will produce turbochargers for heavy-duty engines and will complement the company’s existing manufacturing facility in Charleston.

CHARLESTON, SC — Cummins Turbo Technologies, formerly known as Holset Turbochargers, has officially opened its newest manufacturing plant in Charleston, SC. The business, a division of Columbus, IN-based Cummins Inc. is headquartered in Huddersfield, England, and is one of the world’s largest manufacturers of turbochargers for diesel engines. 

The new 110,000-square-foot plant will produce turbochargers for heavy-duty engines and will complement the company’s existing manufacturing facility in Charleston. The new plant, built at a cost of approximately $13 million, is expected to eventually employ about 180 workers and produce 200,000 turbochargers a year. 

The new facility brings Cummins Turbo Technologies’ number of worldwide manufacturing locations to six, and builds on its existing presence in the U.S., Brazil, the United Kingdom and its Asian joint ventures in China and India. 

For more information about Cummins Turbo Technologies, go to:  www.cummins.com/turbos

New Romantic Drama “Oak on the Outside”, filmed in Charleston and other parts of SC, now Available

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Film Production company Shadowmoss Entertainment, in association with Respiration Films, releases the much anticipated Romantic Drama, “Oak On The Outside”.

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

ONE OF THE MOST IMPORTANT LOVE STORIES OF OUR GENERATION CHARLESTON, SC. –

Shadowmoss Entertainment has released its most recent feature film, “Oak On The Outside”, which is now available on Amazon, YouTube and Vimeo ON DEMAND. The film stars Italian-born actor, Gaia Passaler, who now lives in Los Angeles, California, and Brandon Scott Hughes.

A gifted PhD. In Psychology ventures out to help a traumatized veteran where she discovers a war on child trafficking and an unexpected romance.

“At first, I was skeptical about a script that marries a romance movie with an underlying child trafficking plot line, but after I read the screenplay and saw how beautifully the story moves and how seamlessly the themes are integrated, then I decided I wanted to be a part of bringing it to the screen” says Executive Producer, Scott James, of the Adrian Roman script.

The film was shot all over the state of South Carolina; Columbia, Charleston, Mt. Pleasant, and North Charleston, but the bulk of the shooting was done on a 300-acre Animal Rescue farm in Nesmith, SC and on an additional farm in Hemingway, SC.

The movie is available on Amazon, Vimeo ON DEMAND and free with ads on YouTube.

Click to watch: https://youtu.be/c_apHYVUFrI

For more information go to: www.Shadowmossentertainment.com

10 Best Places to Visit in South Carolina – New Travel Video by Touropia

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The gorgeous state of South Carolina lies alongside the Atlantic Ocean and is tucked away between North Carolina and Georgia. Within its borders, you will find stunning beaches, national forests, thriving cities, traditional villages, and plenty of Southern charm.

Coastal destinations are a top pick for many, but South Carolina is also a nature lover’s dream getaway. As you plan your trip to the Palmetto State, be sure to check out this list of best places to visit in South Carolina:

Charleston Restaurant Best: Page’s Okra Grill in Mount Pleasant, SC – Video Review

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About the Video by Let’s Go Liz

Page’s Okra Grill is rated the #1 restaurant in Mt Pleasant SC so we decided to check it out!

Page’s Okra Grill has been featured on The Travel Channel and in Southern Living Magazine.

We started with a Bloody Mary – It was delicious and no wonder it continuously wins Best Bloody Mary in Charleston.

First, we tried the Sweet Potato Pancakes with Crispy Fried Chicken. This entree was amazing and I would definitely order it again next time! The sweet flavor of the pancakes with the cinnamon and honey butter paired with the delicious fried chicken was a perfect pair.

Next, we tried Ashleigh’s Shrimp & Grits. This award-winning entree was featured on the Travel Channel. It is unique because the grits are battered & fried into a moist cake. The grits were topped with a smoked andouille sausage cream sauce and jumbo pan-seared shrimp.

The shrimp and grits were good but I was blown away by the Sweet Potato Pancakes with perfectly fried chicken so I crown the Sweet Potato Pancakes as the best meal!

If you are too full for dessert be sure to order one to go. We ordered banana pudding to take home but it was so good I started eating it in the car!

Mount Pleasant’s SAVI Cucina + Wine Bar Wins Wine Spectator Award of Excellence

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Mount Pleasant’s beloved upscale coastal Italian restaurant, SAVI Cucina + Wine Bar, was selected for the third year in a row as a Wine Spectator Award of Excellence winner (2020-2022). A variety of restaurants and wine bars across the country are selected by a panel of expert judges based on their well-chosen assortment of quality producers, along with a thematic match to the menu in both price and style. A wine list must have at least 90 selections in order to be considered.

SAVI offers guests a variety of wine flights, selected by SAVI’s in-house somms, including Co-Owner and Certified Sommelier Ty Raju, along with 150+ wines by the bottle and an extensive list of 35+ wines by the glass. The SAVI Society Wine Club is a great way for guests to try a sampling of wines from around the world on a monthly basis. Members can visit anytime with a guest for their monthly tasting of 5-6 premium wines and can leave with two bottles of their choosing to take home. To learn more about membership, click HERE.

A full list of 2022 Wine Spectator Award of Excellence winners can be found HERE.

Is the Charleston Housing Market Going to Crash? – Get the truth from this new video

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About the video from Natasha and Charleston Lifestyle

Let’s talk about what is going on with the housing market locally and nationally.

Should you be worried or concerned? Check out this video to learn my thoughts about it all!

Are you interested in moving or relocating to Charleston, South Carolina, and want to know what life in the Lowcountry looks like? 

As a Lowcountry native myself, I love all things Charleston and helping people learn about all that the area has to offer!

I have a passion for sharing information about all different aspects of life here such as local recommendations, housing market updates, and more. 

Contact Natasha

Yes Virginia, Santa is Real…Importance of Symbols and what does the flag really mean..

In 1897, 8 year old Virginia O’Hanlon wrote a letter to the editor of the New York Sun. Newsman Francis Pharcellus Church on September 21st, provided an unsigned response in what is considered one of the greatest editorials in American journalism history.

Virginia wrote:

DEAR EDITOR:

I am 8 years old.
Some of my little friends say there is no Santa Claus.
Papa says, ‘If you see it in THE SUN it’s so.’
Please tell me the truth; is there a Santa Claus?
VIRGINIA O’HANLON.

115 WEST NINETY-FIFTH STREET.

The response was so poignant that it has continued to have meaning one hundred and eighteen years later.

VIRGINIA, your little friends are wrong.

They have been affected by the skepticism of a skeptical age. They do not believe except they see. They think that nothing can be which is not comprehensible by their little minds. All minds, Virginia, whether they be men’s or children’s, are little. In this great universe of ours man is a mere insect, an ant, in his intellect, as compared with the boundless world about him, as measured by the intelligence capable of grasping the whole of truth and knowledge.

Yes, VIRGINIA, there is a Santa Claus. He exists as certainly as love and generosity and devotion exist, and you know that they abound and give to your life its highest beauty and joy. Alas! how dreary would be the world if there were no Santa Claus. It would be as dreary as if there were no VIRGINIAS. There would be no childlike faith then, no poetry, no romance to make tolerable this existence. We should have no enjoyment, except in sense and sight. The eternal light with which childhood fills the world would be extinguished.

Not believe in Santa Claus! You might as well not believe in fairies! You might get your papa to hire men to watch in all the chimneys on Christmas Eve to catch Santa Claus, but even if they did not see Santa Claus coming down, what would that prove? Nobody sees Santa Claus, but that is no sign that there is no Santa Claus. The most real things in the world are those that neither children nor men can see. Did you ever see fairies dancing on the lawn? Of course not, but that’s no proof that they are not there. Nobody can conceive or imagine all the wonders there are unseen and unseeable in the world.

You may tear apart the baby’s rattle and see what makes the noise inside, but there is a veil covering the unseen world which not the strongest man, nor even the united strength of all the strongest men that ever lived, could tear apart. Only faith, fancy, poetry, love, romance, can push aside that curtain and view and picture the supernal beauty and glory beyond. Is it all real? Ah, VIRGINIA, in all this world there is nothing else real and abiding.

No Santa Claus! Thank God! he lives, and he lives forever. A thousand years from now, Virginia, nay, ten times ten thousand years from now, he will continue to make glad the heart of childhood.

Two very important lines remain with me each and every time I read this response:
There would be no childlike faith then, no poetry, no romance to make tolerable this existence. We should have no enjoyment, except in sense and sight. The eternal light with which childhood fills the world would be extinguished.

The question deep down was not the existence of Santa, but the goodness that he stands for. Santa stands for faith and compassion for mankind. Media and commercialism will manifest Santa into a larger than life being, but deep down he is billions of microscopic heartbeats inside each of us that guide us to goodness and provide the path to a life of righteousness. In that respect, Santa is very real.
The key thing we must remember is that Santa is a “symbol” of innocence and virtue. At the heart of it, he is a symbol. The moment he goes from a reality to a fantasy is different for each of us, but his importance in our lives remain.

Much like Santa, the Confederate flag is a symbol. To some it is a reminder of a significant historic period in America’s growth and to others, it is a reminder of racism, slavery and hatred. The question of whether the flag remains visible over government buildings will be decided by the dominant opinion. It won’t change key tragic events in our past. Lives will not come back from the dead, racism won’t fade away and the ignorance that blinds equality will remain.

The flag is on the forefront of our minds, yet we can pick anything and make the argument of removal.

Should George Washington be removed from the $1.00 bill and nation’s capital be renamed because he owned slaves?

Should Robert E. Lee street signs be abolished because he defended something he believed in?

These questions can go on for hours. Where does one draw the line?

I don’t know the answer. I do know that we are exhausting energy on things that should not matter in our lives and we should be putting it on the things that truly do.

My symbols are compassion, love, family, generosity, hope and meaning.