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As of 2007, Southport's population is 2,893 people, a population growth of 23.05% since 2000. The low unemployment rate in Southport of 4.30% is due mainly to recently positive job growth. Jobs here in Southport have increased by about 3.5% thanks to many business moving to the area.
Considering locating your business in Southport, North Carolina? There are a large number of commercial listings available ranging from small offices to entire office buildings depending on your needs. Check out some of the listings currently available in Southport.
For more information on Southport commercial real estate or any other Brunswick County commercial real estate, please contact the local Sloane Realty office below:
Sloane Realty Commercial Division
790-2 Sunset Blvd. North
Sunset Beach, NC 28468
sales@sloanecommercial.com
(877)369-5777 (Toll-Free)
(910)579-1808 (Local)
(910)579-1815 (Fax)
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Information believed accurate but subject to verification

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Just like people, there are a few areas of Brunswick County
that got it all when it comes to looks. Natural beauty is something that speaks to us internally. Not everyone has it...not every place has it...but it grabs you right away. Lockwood Folly is one of those special places. It's one of Brunswick County's oldest communities, with as pretty a golf course as you'll ever see. The locals would rather keep it a secret and it always surprises me when I hear an long-time resident tell me they've never been to Lockwood Folly. "No way!" I say.
But it's true.
Off the beaten path, but oh so strategically placed, where the Lockwood Folly River literally wraps around its entirety like a blanket. It is my observation that it's generally the best land in any given area that gets settled first. I call River Run, across the river, its sister development, although there is no relation. They do share the same characteristics geographically ..... beautiful trees, high elevations, rolling topography, and easy water access. It's no coincidence that these are two of our oldest but somehow still secret communities. And it's also no coincidence their proximity to Varnamtown. Maybe the name itself doesn't wax poetic but there is not a fishing community in North Carolina, that can rival this family of true-blue m
odern day men of the sea. Clammers, oystermen, shrimpers.....you'll see them at work ..... depending on the season. Somehow this proud and stubborn bunch has held on...and held on to a disappearing way of life in the fertile fishing grounds of the Lockwood Folly River and its inlet leading out into the Atlantic. There is not a prettier site 'round here than a shrimp boat coming home to roost at sunset. So for the environmentally conscious among you, take heart. There are still a couple places left in Brunswick County where development and livelihood can co-exist.
The 460 acre lush habitat, tucked away on a former hunting
preserve, encompasses all the “good things” one could ask for in a coastal living environment. Lockwood Folly's classic Willard Byrd course is a beauty that meanders through mature live oak forests, marsh and riverbank. The long-range views of this tidal estuary are truly breathtaking. Over 600 home sites offer wooded, marsh, waterfront and water views of the Lockwood Folly and the Intracoastal Waterway. The community boat launch is only I mile from the Atlantic and the sands of Holden Beach just a 10 minute drive.
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On the outskirts of town, Smithville Woods is a my top destination pick if you are planning to relocate to Southport and are looking for a family-friendly neighborhood with lots of kids. It's the kind of place I dreamed about growing up in. While living and raising our kids in Downtown Southport, I've always felt like they had the best of all worlds. Learning to ride their bikes on the sidewalk, playing ball in the street, walking down to the river every day to crab and pick up treasures, the freedom of walking on their own to the candy store, ice cream man, or the library. It was all very Norman Rockwell but it was absolutely real. The town was still full of locals, but young'uns were scarce except for a hand full that came and went. What I'm getting at is, that in spite of this
picture-perfect little world we were living in, EVERY SINGLE ONE OF MY KIDS...all four of them...expressed on a regular basis...that they ever-so-badly...wanted to live in SMITHVILLE WOODS. Deep down, I've always understood why. From moms out walking with their babies and toddlers, kids on bikes and skateboards, older kids on golf carts, surrounded by large undeveloped tracts of land for secret clubs and hideouts. What's not to love?
Although surrounding development is inching closer, Smithville Woods is still a quiet, safe haven reached by turning right on Robert Ruark Dr. at the stoplight just as you are entering Southport. It is a diverse neighborhood, with homes in a variety of styles and price ranges, starting out in upper 200s, averaging in the 350k to 425k range, and topping out with a small number of million dollar homes built on
the banks of Dutchman Creek. For the boater, who doesn't have his own dock on the creek, there is a private ramp for property owners to access the water, whose deep channel allows direct access to the Intracoastal Waterway and the Atlantic beyond.
Smithville Woods is, you could say, Southport's first suburb. Started back over 20 years ago, and laid out on the family-owned land of a local Cape Fear River Pilot, the various streets bear the names of relatives, and other local references. While I'm promoting Smithville Woods as a family oriented neighborhood, it has its share of retirees as well. In a day where modern developments advertise and target age and socioeconomic-specific buyers, it's important that we have communities like Smithville Woods, welcoming the young and the young at heart.
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On the eve of North Carolina's largest 4th of July celebration, Southport readies itself for a swell of visitors that you'd just have to see to believe. I say this after experiencing this colossal event first-hand for over 20 years. We're talking 50,000 festivarians in a town of less than 3,000 residents! Our home in Downtown Southport thankfully gives us a front-row seat. Once I get the groceries packed in tomorrow, the car stays put until Saturday. There are so many scheduled events and activities packed in the next few days, I'll have to let you look at the schedule for yourself. Under the canopy of ancient live oaks, Franklin Square Park will hold a hundred or so artist and craftsman booths, and enough food vendors to keep you satisfied until you can make your way down to the bottom of Howe St. There you'll find everything from the crowd-pleasing funnel cakes and bloomin' onions, to Thai food and fried grouper.
You'll have three days to take it all in, but the BIG DAY is the 4th, starting with the enormous crowd-pleaser of a parade at 11:00, and ending with a BAN
G at 9:00 PM as fireworks over the water put the suitable exclamation point on the entire celebration. I'll admit after all these years, I skip a lot of the festivities. But nothing can compare with sitting on a blanket looking out on the water....watching local boaters gather 'round in the twilight....seeing the launch barge with its pyrotechnic buffet slowly pull up and anchor right in front of you.....and then finally, just to lie back in the company of thousands and witness the glory of the deep cannon-like booms followed by cascading bursts of iridescent glow. I swear they are falling right on top of you!
It seem
s like everything started early this year. The annual Fireman's Competition, which used to be on the 3rd, is now held the Saturday before....no doubt as a favor to all the visiting firemen who can get in and out of town without fighting the traffic that ensues during the festival. I don't think I've ever seen as big a turn-o
ut of fire engine red, spit-shined with pride, and the will to win. I'm not sure which stations took home a prize but just to see the camaraderie and the fight for bragging rights under sunny 90 degree skies, was plenty to get my respect, not just for the competition, but what they volunteer to do for us on a day-to-day basis.
One event I have missed the last few years but plan to catch on Thursday, is the annual Naturalization Ceremony, on the Garrison lawn on the Waterfront. Not a lot of people know about it, but it is a partnership between the NC 4th of July Festival and the US Department of Homeland Security and its Bureau of Citizenship and Immigration. This year a record number, 96 individuals from 48 countries and all six continents will take their Oath of Citizenship and become United States citizens. At a time when our patriotism and values are battling a media blitz seemingly intent on undermining our sense of pride in being Americans, this I promise, will move you. These often tearful and grateful new citizens, are experiencing the culmination of a life-long dream, and in watching them take their oath, you can feel the weight of their words. And if that's not enough, cannons, military salutes, and community choirs join together to top off the welcoming event.
With 17 straight years providing technical support for our string of daughter's 4th of July lemonade stand, we no longer carry the burden of anything that even remotely has to do with responsibility. We can sit on the porch and watch the steady foot-traffic of families with their strollers, coolers, chairs, and blankets. We can smile and say thankfully, "been there, done that."
So if you fancy a simpler time......if you still like parades and pageantry, music and street dances, the smell of good greasy fo
od, kids and parents in their finest red, white, and blue.....well you might just like what Southport's 4th of July festival has to offer. I'm pretty sure there's not a birthday celebration anywhere quite like it. One little insider tip for the visitors. Park on the EAST side of Howe St. facing out of town and you'll find your traffic time cut in half when you leave after the fireworks. Be safe and "let freedom ring."
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What a celebration we have, The State of NC 4th of July celebration is held in Southport,
Parade is fabulous. Come early there's bound to be a parking problem in downtown Southport.
We have the state and national dignitary. The military really gets a chance to show their stuff.
We have the swearing-in ceremony for the new citizens of our country. That is a very special occasion.
The tears just seem to well up for all of the pride of country.
The weather is gorgeous,the beach is super and we are inviting you to "come on down"
Try to make it. love from NC Beaches, Helen
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