New, more upscale Birkdale unfolds in Huntersville

Last Updated: September 12, 2022By Tags: , , ,

The stage at Birkdale / Staff photo

Sept. 12. By TL Bernthal. Birkdale Village Reimagined is on its way to becoming the lifestyle, dining and shopping destination its owners want it to be.

With the weekend opening of The Plaza that has the new stage and space for concert seating and Club Birkdale, what the owners call their “unique approach to concierge.”

The concierge service is an effort to infuse resort-inspired services throughout the Birkdale Village experience. And with a hotel planned for the property and new restaurants coming in, it’s a way to set the style and attitude of the village.

The Plaza

The Plaza boasts a covered stage for entertainers and a 16-by-20 LED screen. There’s some seating—not too comfortable—scattered around the lawn, but it’s still bring your own chair or blanket for the Live Under the Oaks concerts. No coolers allowed, you have to buy your food and beverage on site.

Birkdale Village concierge / Photo by Jason Benavides

Select NFL and NCAA games will be shown, along with promotional displays.

The Plaza is located in the green space between Chico’s/Starbucks and Sunglass Hut/Dressler’s.

Singer Shelley Ruffin commanded the stage on Friday, and her vocals carried to the back during songs, but her words were lost when she was talking. The temporary fencing at the back also made it difficult for patrons to navigate through the crowd.

A work in progress

Construction in the common area spaces such as The Plaza and Grove are complete, while tenant build-outs will continue into 2023.

Birkdale Village owners early this year began a $20 million redo which included eliminating the roundabout and fountain in the center of the complex.

Lifestyle center

Conceived as a modern-day interpretation of the shopping mall, lifestyle centers are characterized by outdoor settings and multiple uses, including office, multi-housing and hospitality in addition to upscale, national-chains and specialty retail.

Birkdale Village, as the ultimate lifestyle center in Huntersville, is planning to add a hotel, as well as office and commercial space and hundreds of multifamily units.

New hotel, offices planned

Look for more development at Birkdale Village. The new owners of Birkdale will come before the Huntersville Town Board three weeks from today with plans for 350 new multifamily units, a 125 -room hotel, 150,000 square feet of office and 25,000 square feet of commercial.

Concierge service

Birkdale Village concierge Jade Robinson

On our visit over the weekend, Cornelius Today found the concierge staff to be smart, well-trained, eager to help and thoughtful.

The concierge desk has restaurant menus, lists of shops and services. Staff will make a restaurant reservation, hold your shopping bags if you want to free your hands for more purchases, or call an Uber or Lyft if you’ve partied more than planned and don’t want to drive home.

You can charge your phone, grab an umbrella or blanket, and complimentary stroller and wheelchair rentals are available, as is a golf-cart tour of the village. First aid is available as well.

Bottles of water and mints are there for people, while dog treats and water bowls for their furry friends.

Hours are 10 am to 9 pm Monday through Saturday and noon to 6 pm Sunday.

The media experience

Birkdale Village owners added this new policy under concierge services: Concierge may provide guests with media passes, necessary for any professional photography on property, at the Concierge booth. Approval from property management required for larger productions.

A Cornelius Today photographer was nabbed by security for raising his camera without a pass. He received a warning and was told to pay $25 for a 24-hour media pass. The concierge staff said media “fines” would be donated to the Hope House, a nonprofit in Huntersville that offers housing and services to women and children.

For this reporter’s visit, Cornelius Today will donate $25 to Big Day at the Lake/Big Brothers Big Sisters of Central Carolinas.

Lifestyle centers, we gather, are geared toward controlling a visitor’s experience and the presentation of it.

On our second visit, the new public bathrooms were clean and in every politically correct flavor.

Valet parking, at a price

The valet parking, a new service for $12 plus tip, was quick and efficient. You hand over your keys, give the valet your cell phone number and get a text with your car number and links to pay and alert the valet when you are on your way to retrieve your car. Valet staff was terrific, too.

The under-the-building parking lot across from the concierge desk is reserved for valet parking. Long-time visitors are bemoaning the loss of the parking spaces throughout the village that came with the other changes.

For the residents

Birkdale Village owners are extending care to residents, too. For residents only, the concierge team can:

—Provide residents with food delivery from participating restaurants in Birkdale Village. Call the concierge desk to schedule delivery.

—Arrange for home cleaning and organizational services with their preferred local partners.

—Help schedule at-home makeup and hairstyling appointments with its preferred services.

–Help schedule car detailing appointments with its preferred providers. Shoppers who are going to spend some time at the Village, can call ahead and schedule an appointment.

Contact them

You can reach the team by emailing [email protected] or calling 704-817-2400. 

No Comments

  1. Karen Asche September 12, 2022 at 2:43 pm - Reply

    Huge disappointment.

    • Diana September 13, 2022 at 3:30 pm - Reply

      I agree! It was nice before.🤨

  2. Dianne Campbell September 12, 2022 at 4:42 pm - Reply

    What about the TRAFFIC congestion this will cause??

    • Pat September 12, 2022 at 9:33 pm - Reply

      The place is beautiful – this shows growth in the community.

      Any city in Charlotte would be proud to have a “Birkdale”.

      We are lucky to enjoy the fruits of Birkdale.

      I am just happy I am close enough to enjoy all of this.

      • Emily Lewis September 13, 2022 at 9:54 am - Reply

        Great for the community, very unfortunate for the residents whos once home is turned into a little party city filled with teenagers.

        • Brittany S September 13, 2022 at 4:54 pm - Reply

          I agree. Working from home with live music all day Friday really adds a professional look to my job. Not being able to walk out my front steps due to 20 of them obstructing the steps and refusing to move for me and my dog. But don’t be late on your rent payment. That’s all they care about.

    • Diana September 13, 2022 at 3:36 pm - Reply

      I have no idea! 🧐 there’s no more parking…

  3. Beth September 12, 2022 at 8:45 pm - Reply

    Games shown on a large screen at night? Feel sorry for the residents who have to listen to that. All this new stuff makes no difference unless they fix the parking problem. If they don’t fix that everything they do is for nothing. Still going to have the same congestion problems.

  4. Pete September 13, 2022 at 10:51 am - Reply

    Yeah, won’t be coming back to Birkdale anytime soon. More congestion and no parking. Catering to who?

    • Marie September 13, 2022 at 1:04 pm - Reply

      Agree
      Hard Pass on that area
      Ok restaurants and retail to match
      You’re lucky to get down Sam Furr never mind deal with that mess
      They just keep removing parking areas so you can valet.
      You’re not South Park.

    • Jill September 13, 2022 at 3:12 pm - Reply

      Not their residents :(

    • M September 13, 2022 at 10:19 pm - Reply

      Yes it is it going to be nice looking forward to
      To the finish.

  5. Kim September 13, 2022 at 1:17 pm - Reply

    I am glad to see others are just as disappointed as I am. Used to be a beautiful area. Now congested and cluttered. None of the small family businesses stick around and they kicked Corkscrew out. Very sad.

  6. Suzie Andrew September 13, 2022 at 1:18 pm - Reply

    The majority of people I have spoken to (including shop/restaurant workers), are not happy with the “new and improved” (bah humbug to that). The Norman Rockwell feeling of the family promenade was much more inviting. From what I have seen (as a Birkdale resident), the new area is horrible looking and appears to be catering to the young, party central adults and no longer family friendly. It was the promenade that was partly (a big part) of what got me to relocate to Birkdale.

  7. Katie September 13, 2022 at 3:18 pm - Reply

    This has changed the quiet quaint vibe in birkdale to a loud busy city feel. Kids speeding through the side streets of the village blaring their music. There is trash all over the ground and sidewalks now which has only added to the cockroach problem Birkdale already had. I feel bad for the residents.

  8. Donna Winter September 13, 2022 at 3:23 pm - Reply

    Another move to ruin what most residents loved about BV. We dont need another 350 housing units in the middle of the worst traffic spot in Huntersville. We also dont need $12 valet parking because most likely, fewer people will be frequenting Birkdale now that the corporate greed monsters have ruined it. Why doesnt someone worry about how residents are ever going to get around this town and do something meaningful about the roads!?? It’s taken a year and God knows how much of our tax dollars o Bud Henderson Road that has never been a problem to ruin yet another residental neighborhood, instead of doing something on 73 and Catawba or 73 and the Beatties Ford signal. I blame the city planners who have their heads where the sun doesnt shine and who knows where their hands are!! Dont they live here too? It’s all about the almighty dollar.

    • Nina September 13, 2022 at 4:20 pm - Reply

      👏 👏 👏 couldn’t agree more

    • M September 13, 2022 at 10:29 pm - Reply

      Okay agree with some of what you said
      What we need is more street lights on bud Henderson’s
      They should have pushed out the old business that gave Brook Village it’s started
      But let see what they do

    • Dawn Snow September 16, 2022 at 6:09 pm - Reply

      Agreed. Please attend the public hearing on Oct 3 at Huntersville Town Hall.

  9. Theresa Bunbury September 13, 2022 at 4:17 pm - Reply

    More traffic! where are they putting the hotel?! There’s no more room on the side with stores! No parking. They will be pricing out a lot of people if it gets too expensive.

  10. Gwen T. September 13, 2022 at 4:38 pm - Reply

    Yes, let’s add to the already growing bug problem by people who don’t live here and leave their food, spilled drinks, and trash everywhere. Who doesn’t love hanging out with cockroaches for a nice family filled evening?

  11. Brittany S September 13, 2022 at 5:21 pm - Reply

    Now they’re filtering comments… guess they really don’t care about the happiness of their residents.

  12. Marcus September 14, 2022 at 12:50 am - Reply

    stupid, stupid, stupid idea.

  13. Kay Fisher September 15, 2022 at 2:55 pm - Reply

    I just went there for the first time since all of these changes- I asked one of the employees at the store what she thought of it and she said “yeah all of the girls who work here used to walk out together to our cars”. Now with the lack of parking it creates an unsafe environment for employees who work late. Btw the valet garage was COMPLETELY empty and there were many expensive sports cars parked in regular spaces (meaning BV owners would assume those cars would be the “valet market”) so there is no reason to have so many designated valet spaces 🙄

  14. Dawn Snow September 16, 2022 at 6:05 pm - Reply

    The developer (North American Properties) has plans to even further ruin this area. They want to build a 12 story hotel, 7 story office/commercial building, 350 multi-family units, and 6 story parking garages all in Birkdale Village, which will involve replacing buildings and there is already a hotel and apartments approved across the street in Birkdale. There is a public hearing on Oct 3 at Huntersville Town Hall. Here is a link to the rezoning request, Case R22-01. You can read the details in the application. https://www.huntersville.org/2936/R22-01-Birkdale-Village

  15. Ralph Riccardi September 17, 2022 at 3:51 pm - Reply

    The whiney comments about this $20M investment in their community are unbelievable. Huntersville has taken a backseat to Davidson, Cornelius, and even Mooresville in terms of property values, retail, and entertainment for years. This is exactly the type of quality private investment our community needs. No, it’s not South Park, it’s better.

  16. Dorene September 17, 2022 at 6:59 pm - Reply

    My husband and I went there recently. It was HORRIBLE! no where to walk…much less park.Too crowded. Used to live right by there. Glad we’re gone.Won’t be back anytime soon. What a waste of $. Definitely not worth $12 to park! That alone will keep ppl away. $12+ food and drinks. And they’re not cheap either. Bye bye Birkdale.

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