Building a More Connected Midtown: What the Walkable Midtown Plan Means for Our Community

Midtown Raleigh is growing—and so is the need to make our streets safer, more accessible, and more enjoyable for everyone. That’s where the Walkable Midtown Plan comes in. Developed with community input and adopted by the Raleigh City Council in December 2020, the plan lays out a roadmap for a connected, pedestrian-friendly Midtown that works for residents, businesses, and visitors alike.

Six Forks Road: What Changed and Why It Matters

Six Forks Road has long been a pivotal corridor in Midtown Raleigh—serving as a vital connector for commuters, residents, and local businesses. For more than a decade, planning efforts focused on reimagining the road to improve safety, mobility, and multimodal connections. But after years of study, public engagement, and shifting priorities, the project has taken a different direction.

The Midtown Story

Midtown Raleigh isn’t just a place on a map—it’s a story of transformation, community, and vision. From a bustling shopping center in the 1960s to one of Raleigh’s most vibrant urban hubs, Midtown has grown through thoughtful evolution and collaboration.

A Neighborhood with Roots

In the 1960s, the area we now call Midtown was defined by the North Hills Shopping Center, anchored by stores like Woolworth’s, JC Penney’s, and local favorites like Scottie’s hot dogs. For decades, it served as a central gathering place for residents and visitors alike. But as retail trends shifted, the shopping center declined, leaving a question mark over Midtown’s future.

By the mid‑1990s, visionaries in the community began imagining a new kind of Midtown—one that could honor its history while welcoming growth. Early efforts focused on revitalizing the area, encouraging local investment, and creating a neighborhood that could thrive economically, socially, and culturally.

A Growing Hub

As Raleigh expanded, Midtown became more than a shopping destination. New businesses, restaurants, schools, and parks began to define its character. Duke Raleigh Hospital expanded, First Citizens built multi-building campuses, and innovative companies chose Midtown as home. Residents found that the area offered both convenience and a sense of place: walkable streets, green spaces, and community-centered development.

The appeal of Midtown grew not just from its amenities, but from its blend of long-established neighborhoods and modern growth, creating a neighborhood that could feel both familiar and exciting.

Midtown Raleigh

The Midtown Raleigh Alliance: Supporting the Vision

Recognizing the opportunity to shape Midtown’s future collectively, community leaders, business owners, and stakeholders came together. In spring 2011, the Midtown Raleigh Alliance (MRA) was established. This nonprofit coalition set out with a clear mission: to promote Midtown, foster collaboration, and support sustainable growth.

The Alliance works to:

  • Highlight Midtown as a destination for businesses, residents, and visitors.
  • Advocate for community needs with city and county leaders.
  • Connect stakeholders to solve shared challenges and improve quality of life.
  • Strengthen the neighborhood’s identity through events, networking, and community engagement.

Through these efforts, MRA has become the backbone of Midtown’s ongoing transformation—a unifying voice ensuring that growth is intentional, inclusive, and reflective of the community’s values.

Designing Midtown: A Visual Story of Place

Midtown Raleigh’s story isn’t told with words alone—it’s told through color, art, and the details you notice as you move through the neighborhood. From street banners to community-created artwork, Midtown’s graphic identity plays a quiet but powerful role in shaping how the district feels and how people connect to it.