Secrets inside the beltline
New Bern Avenue, Raleigh
![]() The historic Longview Poe House off New Bern Avenue, below, is immaculately maintained and rented out for parties and weddings. Photo by Lissa Gotwals |
One of the best-kept secrets in Raleigh, though, is the quiet neighborhood that was among its first to be integrated, some 40 years ago, and that remains its most racially and economically diverse today.
Longview Gardens was developed in the 1940s and '50s on the 800-acre farm then owned by Clarence Poe, founder-editor of the Progressive Farmer magazine. Poe pitched it as Raleigh's "best-planned suburb" and "most beautiful subdivision," and initially it attracted such socialites as the Aycocks, the Bensons and the Eures, as in Secretary of State Thad Eure. But an enclave intended by Poe for upscale whites (or, more specifically, upscale white Christians) never really worked in East Raleigh, traditionally the "black" side of town. And when whites-only covenants were declared illegal, it opened the door to a very different Longview--a neighborhood of graceful hills and ponds, big houses and small, on generous lots of at least half an acre each and usually more, that is by far the most affordable neighborhood in town.
![]() Raleigh Country Club, off New Bern Road, is aspiring to be one of the best golf courses in the state. Photo by Lissa Gotwals |
There's even a roundabout on North King Charles Road--a "traffic-calming" method so old it's brand new in most of Raleigh.
And how do you get to this undiscovered jewel? You take New Bern Avenue, and you turn right or left, because New Bern bisects Longview. See why it's on our "best" list?
Allen Wilson, a software designer who's co-chair of the newly revived neighborhood association, didn't know a thing about Longview when he and his partner were moving back to Raleigh from Apex three years ago. Or, rather, he thought he knew that there was nothing in East Raleigh he wanted to look at.
So when they went looking for a lot to build on, he promptly crossed the one on New Bern Avenue off the listings and had to be talked into scoping it out. "I'd never gotten past WakeMed, coming from the I-440, or Raleigh Boulevard coming from downtown," he says. "I remember saying to myself, 'Wow, I can't believe there's a lot like this one inside the Beltline.'"
They grabbed it, they built, and today they have a new home that's a mile inside the Beltline and backs up to Longview Lake. And Wilson's a huge Longview booster.
![]() Allen Wilson, co-chair of the Longview Gardens neighborhood association, enjoys a large lot on New Bern Avenue that backs up to Longview Lake. Photo by Lissa Gotwals |
Another attraction is the diversity of the neighborhood. It's remained racially integrated--a steady 60-40 split between whites and blacks--over the years, according to Wilson. And it's increasingly a place of age diversity as well.
Indeed, one of the reasons nobody knows about Longview is that a lot of the original owners are still there. And, because Longview never really caught on as a neighborhood for rich people, properties haven't appreciated so much that folks were tempted to cash out and move.
But time is changing that, according to residents there, as owners age out at the same time Raleigh's downtown core picks up steam and cachet. Younger owners are moving into Longview, fixing up, adding on and gradually taking charge, says Lynette Pitt, who heads the East Raleigh CAC, the area's citizens advisory council.
A neighborhood task force wrote a small-area plan and is working on a conservation overlay district, Pitt says, and next expects to tackle a corridor plan to spruce up New Bern Avenue. All are staples of Raleigh city planning.
"There's always been a great sense of community in the area, which is wonderful," Pitt says. "Now we're in a real transition period. A lot of people are working very hard, and some positive things are starting to happen."
One thing that's happening is that friends are telling friends. Wilson's got a friend who bought a lot on Albemarle Drive--his favorite street in Longview, by the way--and is about to break ground on a new house. "I'm a big advocate for getting people to move here," Wilson says. "We have big houses, small houses, and a lot of nice, older houses that need some TLC. There are just a lot of options here--for a lot of different people."






