Home > General > Pro Baseball Venues

Pro Baseball Venues

October 14th, 2007 admin Leave a comment Go to comments

pro baseball venues

Research Triangle

Counties
Chatham
Durham
Franklin
Harnett
Johnston
Orange
Person
Awakening
Cities
The region of the triangle, as defined statistically as the CSA Raleigh-Durham-Cary, divided into eight departments, though the U.S. Census Bureau U.S. has divided the region into two metropolitan statistical areas and Micropolitan Area in 2003. Some local television stations to define the area of Raleigh-Durham-Fayetteville. Although Fayetteville, North Carolina, about 50 miles (80 km) from the city limits of Raleigh is in the designated market area.
Main Cities
Raleigh, 380 173
Durham 217 847
Chapel Hill (town), 54 492
Suburbs over 10,000
Apex
Carrboro
Cary
Clayton
Fuquay-Varina
Pick
Holly Springs
Morrisville
Sanford
Smithfield
Wake Forest
Residential areas of less than 10,000 people
Angier
Bahama
Bear Creek
Bennett
Benson
Bonlee
Bonsal
Buies Creek
BUNN
Bynum
Carbonton
Centerville
Cleveland
Coats
Maroon
Dunn
Efland
Erwin
Fearrington
Feltonville
Four Oaks
Franklinton
Friendship
Goldston
Gorman
Gulf
Haywood
Hillsborough
Mills Barrier
Kenly
Knightdale
Lillington
Lama Lizard
Louisburg
Mebane
Micro
Moncure
New Hill
Oxford
Pine Level
Pittsboro
Princeton
Rolesville
Rougemont
Roxboro
Saxapahaw
Selma
Siler City
Silk Hope
Timberlake
Wendell
Smithfield West
Wilson Mills
Youngsville
Zebulon
Education
Secondary public education in the triangle is similar to that of most of the State of North Carolina, where systems schools throughout the county (with the exception of The Chapel Hill Carrboro City Schools Orange County, but outside the Orange County Schools). Wake County School System Public, which includes the cities of Raleigh and Cary, is the largest school system in the State of North Carolina and the largest 18 U.S. officially register workforce of 139 599 students in the 20th of the 2009-10 school year. Other important systems in Durham Region include public schools (approximately 33,000 students) and fast-growing Johnston County Schools (about 31,000 students).
Higher education institutions
Duke University Duke Chapel.
Campbell University
Central Carolina Community College
Duke University
Durham Technical Community College
Meredith College
Carolina Central University North
University of North Carolina
Peace College
Pfeiffer University
Piedmont Community College
Shaw University
Colegio San Agustin
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Vance-Granville Community College
Wake Technical Community College
Sports
Varsity Sports
Ramses, the mascot of the North Carolina Tar Heels.
With the large number of universities and colleges in the region and the relative absence in the professional sports league major NCAA sports are very popular, especially those in which most sports excels Atlantic Coast Conference, including basketball, football and football.
The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Tar Heels in Chapel Hill, North Carolina State University Wolfpack Raleigh and Duke University Blue Devils in Durham are all members of the CAC. The rivalry between these schools are very strong, driven by proximity to each other, with annual competitions in each sport. Add the rivalry is large number of graduates and secondary schools in the region forward to each local universities. It is very common for students to learn about students have many other universities in the region, thereby increasing the potential for "boasting" among schools. The four ACC schools in the state, Duke, North Carolina, North Carolina and Wake Forest University called Tobacco Road by sportscasters, especially in basketball. The four teams always produce high-caliber teams. Each of the triangle universities based on the list have won at least two NCAA Championships basketball.
The East Carolina University Pirates are 75 miles (121 km) away in Greenville, North Carolina. Contests contests against East Carolina popular outside conferences many schools in the Triangle research and the university is considered a rivalry by some fans.
Three traditionally black colleges, including the new members of Section I of the University of North Carolina members of the Central Division II St. Augustine College and Shaw University also increase the popularity of college sports in the region.
Professional Sports
The region has a team of industry professionals from all major sports, the Carolina Hurricanes of the NHL, with Headquartered in Raleigh. Since joining the Research Triangle area of Hartford, Connecticut, which were a great success, including won a Stanley Cup and advance to the final the Eastern Conference. With an option only sport at the professional level, minor league baseball and other sports are very popular in the region. The Durham Bulls in the center of Durham is a subsidiary AAA Minor League Baseball Tampa Bay Rays, and the Carolina Mudcats, based in Zebulon, 10 miles east of Raleigh, is a AA affiliate of the Cincinnati Reds. In Cary, the Carolina RailHawks are a United Soccer Leagues First Division Football Team.
Trade
Anchored by high business technology, government and world-class universities and medical centers, the region's economy has performed exceptionally. Significant increases in employment, income, personal income and retail sales are expected over the next 15 years.
growth region includes high-tech companies IBM, SAS Institute, Cisco Systems, Nortel Networks, NetApp and Credit Suisse First Boston. Besides the high technology, the region is considered among the top three in the U.S. with a concentration in life sciences companies. Some of these companies include GlaxoSmithKline, Biogen Idec, BASF, Merck & Co., Novo Nordisk, Novozymes, and Wyeth. Research Triangle Park and the Campus of the University of North Carolina State Centennial in support to innovation through R & D in Raleigh and transfer of technology between businesses in the region and research universities (including Duke University and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill).
The region is doing relatively well in the recession during the late 2000s ranked as the largest region in North Carolina by the Brookings Institution and among the top 40 in the country. The change in employment during the period 2008-2009 was 4.6% and house prices was 2%. Most Greensboro was among the lowest in the second and the Charlotte area between the environment in the country.
Major Employers
American Airlines
BASF
Bayer
The Body Shop
Burt's Bees
Cisco Systems
Credit Suisse Group
Duke University
Public schools in Durham
DuPont
Eaton
Fidelity Investments
Environmental Protection Agency
GE
GlaxoSmithKline
IBM
LabCorp
Lenovo
Netapp
Nortel Networks
North Carolina Government State (including the University of North Carolina system)
Progress Energy
Qualcomm
Red Hat
Research Triangle Institute
SAS Institute
Sony Ericsson
Syngenta
Teleflex Medical
Toyota
Forest Service United States
Verizon
County School System Public Wake
hospitals, medical centers and the largest
Patients at Duke University Medical Center monorail rapid transit Durham.
North Carolina Memorial Children's Hospital in Chapel Hill.
Durham VA Medical Center Durham.
The Research Triangle area is served by the hospitals and physicians include:
Hospitals Health System Duke University
Duke Ambulatory Surgery Center (Durham)
Duke Children's Hospital and Center Health (Durham)
Duke Raleigh Hospital (formerly Raleigh Community Hospital)
Duke University Medical Center (Durham)
Regional Hospital Durham (Durham)
Memorial Hospital of the person (Roxboro)
Hospitals Health Care System UNC
Chatham Hospital (Siler City)
Cancer Hospital North Carolina (Chapel Hill)
Children Hospital North Carolina (Chapel Hill)
Memorial Hospital North Carolina (Chapel Hill)
North Carolina Neurosciences Hospital (Chapel Hill)
The Women's Hospital North Carolina (Chapel Hill)
Rex Hospital (Raleigh)
WakeMed system hospitals
WakeMed Raleigh Campus (formerly Memorial Hospital and Wake Medical Center Wake)
WakeMed Cary Hospital (formerly Western Wake Medical Center)
Other Hospitals medical
Dorothea Dix Hospital (Raleigh)
VA Medical Center in Durham (Durham)
Franklin Regional Medical Center (Louisburg)
Johnston Memorial Hospital (Smithfield)
Transport
Roads and primary roads
I-40 through RTP.
The highway Downtown Durham via Durham.
The triangle is served by three major highways: I-40 I-85 and I-95 I-440 spur and I 540, and seven U.S. routes 1, 64, 70, 264, 401, and 15 and 501 to are multiplexed over a large part of the region of the U.S. 15-501.
Two of the three roads are different from each other in Orange County I-85 north to the North through Durham County Virginia, while the I-40 south through the south of Durham, through the center of the region, and serves as the main road in Raleigh. The road travel on I-440 and I-540 are mainly located in Wake County around Raleigh. I-440 begins in the southwestern United States and exchange of the I-40 from downtown Raleigh and arches on the north by the city with the official designation Cliff Benson Beltline / Raleigh (co-signed with U.S. 1 in three quarters of the northern route) and ends at its junction with the I-40 in southeast Raleigh. I-540 is about one third of flights, but it is sometimes called the Raleigh Outer Loop. The last tab to open 540 was designated as the Highway State (NC 540) and an interstate highway in anticipation of this segment before becoming a toll road. Highway 540 is currently the southernmost part of Research Triangle Park, Raleigh-Durham International Airport, North Raleigh and close to the edge of the north before emptying into the eastern U.S. Raleigh 64-264 Bypass. I-95 is the eastern end of area, through south-north through the suburbs of Johnston County.
United States Routes 1, 15 and 64 serving this region access roads or multi-lane roads with access roads. U.S. 1 enters the region southwest of Claude E. Pope Memorial Highway and travel through Apex suburb where it merges with U.S. 64 and continue north of Raleigh. The two routes are co-designated about 2 miles (3.2 km) to the U.S. 1 I O-440 and I-64-40 across the border in Raleigh-Cary. Capital Boulevard who is appointed U.S. 1 for half of its mandate and the U.S. 401 the other is a limited access road, although it is a great way to the north and north-central Raleigh.
Carolina North Highway 147, also known as Durham Road, is a limited access road which connects to I-85-40 in southern Durham County. The road of four lanes through downtown Durham and extends through Research Triangle Park. The road is often used as an alternative route to divert I-40 in Chapel Hill, where accidents traffic, congestion or construction delays.
Transit
Triangle Transit Bus
Chapel Hill Transit bus
A system of multiple partnership of transportation agencies is currently the Triangle region. Raleigh is served by Capital Area Transit (CAT) system transit, while Durham (DATA) Durham Area Transit Authority system. Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill is served by Transit, and Cary is also served by its own common systems. However, Triangle Transit, formerly known as the Triangle Transit Authority (TTA), works with all transit systems to provide a space transfers between its lines and other systems. Triangle Transit also coordinates an extensive vanpool carpool program is the largest employers in the region and travel destinations.
It is planned to merge all municipal systems in the transition region Triangle, Triangle, transport or has also proposed a regional rail system connecting downtown Durham and downtown Raleigh with many bus stops nearby and the area of Research Triangle Park. agency's original proposal was canceled in 2006, however, when the agency was unable to obtain adequate funding for the federal government. A works local transportation and government leaders are now working with Triangle Transit to develop a transportation plan for the new region, with different modes of rail and bus rapid transit, open options for consideration.
Air
International Airport Raleigh-Durham (RDU)
Article Home: Raleigh-Durham International Airport
(Code IATA: RDU, ICAO: KRDU, the top of the FAA: RDU)
RDU sign of welcome.
American Airlines Boeing 777 landed at RDU.
Southwest Airlines jet landing at RDU.
The General Assembly of North Carolina chartered the Raleigh-Durham Aeronautical Authority 1939, which would be changed in 1945 to the Airport Authority Raleigh-Durham. The terminal was opened in 1955. A terminal (now Terminal 1) opened in 1981. American Airlines began service to RDU in 1985.
RDU opened the runway of 10,000 feet (3,000 m), 5L-23R, 1986. American Airlines has opened its operations center north RDU south in the new Terminal C in June 1987, which increase considerably the size of operations with a new terminal at RDU, including a new platform and the track. States RDU United first international flights bound for Bermuda, Cancun, Paris and London.
In 1996, American Airlines has ceased operations at the center of RDU by Pan Am and Eastern Airlines. Pan Am and Eastern were Miami's main tenants until 1991, when both companies went bankrupt. Their platforms were taken at the MIA by United Airlines and American Airlines. This created a difficulty to compete with U.S. Airways' Charlotte hub and the hub of Delta Air Lines Atlanta for passengers traveling between smaller cities in the North and South. Midway Airlines entered the market, from the service in 1995 with the relatively new concept, the 50-seat CRJ to offer a service to its center primarily RDU on the east coast. Midway, originally built in Chicago, had some success after moving its operations in the mid-term review of the eastern United States to RDU and headquartered in Morrisville, North Carolina. The company ultimately could not overcome three challenges weight: the arrival of Southwest Airlines, American Airlines refused to renew loyalty held with members of Midway (So sending prices much higher than businesses pay the airlines with destinations awards) and the shock to 11 September 2001. Midway Airlines Chapter 11 bankruptcy August 13, 2001 and ceased its activities only October 30, 2003.
In February 2000, RDU has been classified as the second fastest growing nation in the major airport in the United States, by the Airports Council International, based on 1999 statistics. passenger growth was 24% over the previous year, ranking second RDU International Airport to Washington Dulles. RDU Terminal A South Hall open to Northwest and Continental Airlines in 2001. The addition added 46,000 square feet (4,300 m2) and five aircraft from the terminal door. Terminal A is now designated as Terminal 1 on October 26 2008. In 2003, RDU also dedicated a new general aviation (GA) of the terminal. RDU continues at the pace of growth for the redevelopment of Terminal C, a new terminal state of the art, now known in Terminal 2, which opened its doors in October 2008.
Other airlines at RDU International Airport:
Air Canada International Airport the first carrier, has introduced the service to Toronto in 1996.
Southwest Airlines, the nation's largest low cost carrier, began service to RDU in 1999.
America West (which merged with U.S. Airways in 2005) began his service to RDU in 2002 with flights to Phoenix and Las Vegas.
JetBlue began non-stop operations between RDU and New York and Boston in 2006, with an additional service to Fort Lauderdale, which began in January 2008.
Public interest airports General Aviation
In addition to the MDU, several small airports General Aviation Public Property also operate in the metropolitan area:
Horace Williams Airport in Chapel Hill
Franklin County Airport (IATA code: LHZ, ICAO: KLHZ, the top of the FAA: LHZ), Louisbourg
County Airport Johnston (IATA: JNX, ICAO: KJNX, top FAA: JNX), Smithfield
Horace Williams Airport (IATA: IGX, ICAO: KIGX, the top of the FAA: IGX), Chapel Hill
JetPort regional Harnett (IATA: HRJ, ICAO: KHRJ, the top of the FAA: HRJ), Erwin
Person County Airport (ICAO: KTDF FAA LID: TDF), Roxboro
Siler City Municipal Airport (ICAO: K5W8, the top of the FAA: 5W8), Siler City
private airfield
There are many licensed private general aviation fields agricultural aviation in suburban areas of the region and around rural communities:
Ridge Lake Airport (8NC8) in Durham
Bagwell Airport (FAA LID: NC99), Garner
Ball Airport (FAA LID: 79NC), Louisburg
Barclaysville Field Airport (FAA LID: NC44), Angier
Brooks Field Airport (FAA LID: 8NC6), Siler City
CAG Farms Airport (FAA LID: 87NC), Angier
Charles Field Airport (FAA LID: NC22), Dunn
Helmsman Airport (FAA LID: NC81) Apex
Crooked Creek Airport (FAA LID: 7NC5), Bunn
Airport death of dog (FAA LID: 8NC4), Pittsboro
Deck Aeroparque Airport (FAA LID: NC11) Apex
Duchy Airport (FAA LID: 5NC5), Chapel Hill
Eagle Landing Airport (FAA LID: 9NC8), Pittsboro
Dreams Field Airport (FAA LID: 51NC) Zebulon
Fuquay / lid Angier Field Airport (FAA: 78NC), Fuquay-Varina
Hinton Field Airport (FAA LID: NC72), Princeton
Kenly Airport (FAA LID: 7NC3) Kenly
Lake Ridge Aero Park Airport (FAA LID: 8NC8), Durham
Miles Airport (FAA LID: nC34) in Chapel Hill
North Raleigh Airport (FAA LID: 00NC), Louisburg
Stolport peacock Airport (FAA LID: 4NC7), Garner
Raleigh East Airport (FAA LID: 9NC0), Knightdale
Riley Field Airport (FAA LID: 1NC5), Bunn
Ron Ultralight Field Airport (FAA LID: 1NC1), Pittsboro
Triple W Airport (ICAO: K5W5, the top of the FAA: 5W5), Raleigh
LID Airport Womble Hill Field (FAA: 3NC9), Chapel
Heliports
The license following heliport serving the Research Triangle area:
NC92 heliport at Duke University Medical Center
Betsy Johnson Memorial Hospital Heliport (FAA LID: NC96), Dunnublicly property, medical
Heliport Duke University North (ICAO: NC92, FAA LID: NC92) Durhamrivately property, public health services
Garner Road Heliport (FAA LID: 3NC2), Raleighublicly property, state government services
Holly Green Heliport (FAA LID: 83NC), Durhamrivate
Sky-5 Heliport (FAA LID: 3NC2), owned by WRAL-TV Raleighrivate
MidAtlantic Telecom Sprint Heliport (FAA LID: 11NC), Youngsvillerivate; business services
Wake Medical Center Heliport (FAA LID: 0NC4), Raleighublicly property, medical
Heliport Western Wake Medical Center (FAA LID: 04NC) Caryublicly property, medical
A number of heliports (ie, marked the landing sites is not classified in the system of FAA LID) are also great for additional medical facilities (such as the UNC Hospitals at Chapel Hill), and private interests institutional and government in the region.
Shopping
notable shopping centers:
Northgate Mall in Durham
Brier Creek (Raleigh)
Brightleaf Square (Durham)
Cameron Village (Raleigh)
Carolina Premium Outlets (Smithfield)
Cary Towne Center (Cary)
Crabtree Valley Mall (Raleigh)
Crossroads Plaza (Cary)
Northgate Mall (Durham)
North Hills (Raleigh)
South Square Mall – deceased (Durham)
Streets at Southpoint (Durham)
Triangle Towne Center (Raleigh)
University Mall (Chapel Hill)
locally based retailer or Independent:
A Southern Season – gourmet detailing the nation's largest (Chapel Hill)
Entertainment
Film Festivals and Events:
Flicker Film Festival – Carrboro
Full Frame Documentary Film Festival – Durham
Escape Festival Film – Durham
Retrofantasma Film Festival – Durham
Nevermore Film Festival – Durham
Film Festival North Carolina Gay and Lesbian – Durham
Notable Arts and concert halls:
The Time Warner Cable Music Pavilion Walnut Creek – Raleigh
Koka Booth Amphitheatre Regency Park – Cary
Progress Energy Center for the Performing Arts – City of Raleigh
RBC Center – Raleigh
Performing Arts Center Durham – Durham
Theatre and dance
Dance Festival American – Durham
Media
Print
many newspapers and magazines serving the Triangle market.
Subscription and payment
Offices The Herald-Sun of Durham.
News & Observer, Raleigh's largest newspaper and the largest in the region, with a significant number of regional and state readers (especially east of the triangle).
The Herald-Sun, the leading newspaper of Durham.
Durham News, a weekly newspaper that serves the community of Durham County.
News Cary, a local weekly newspaper serving suburban Cary and western Wake County.
News Garner, Garner suburban community weekly newspaper in Southern Wake County.
The Apex Herald, the local weekly neighborhood in western Wake County Punta.
Holly Springs Sun, the weekly newspaper of the suburban community Holly Springs in southwestern Wake County.
Cleveland Post, the weekly newspaper of the community in the suburbs of Cleveland and near the northwest and the South Johnston counties Wake.
Fuquay-Varina Independent, the weekly community newspaper Fuquay-Varina suburbs southwest Wake County.
The Wake Weekly, a weekly newspaper that serves the suburban community of Wake Forest in northern Wake County and southern Franklin County.
The Chapel Hill News, bi-weekly community serving Chapel Hill, a suburb of Orange County and northern Chatham County
The Chatham Daily, weekly community and surrounding suburbs Chatham County Pittsboro.
The Clayton News-Star, a weekly community newspaper in the western suburbs of Clayton and Johnston County.
The Daily Record newspaper of the community for a day and around Dunn Harnett County.
The Courier-Times, bi-weekly community newspaper near Roxboro and Person County.
The Triangle Business Journal, a weekly Journal Regional Economic.
Chapel Hill Magazine, a bimonthly magazine that serves 12,500 households and local businesses 1600 Chapel Hill, Carrboro, Hillsborough and northern Chatham County.
Free
The independent weekly, an independent regional free weekly published in Durham Press.
The Carolina Journal, a monthly newsletter published Raleigh Regional.
The Raleigh Downtowner, a free monthly magazine in Downtown Raleigh and surrounding areas.
The ax of Raleigh, a free monthly newsletter.
The Daily Tar Heel, free newspapers (during the academic year) student newspaper at UNC-Chapel Hill.
The technician, free weekday (during the year Academic) student newspaper at the University of North Carolina State in Raleigh.
The Chronicle, a free daily (but independent of) Duke University and its surrounding community in Durham.
Blotting paper, a monthly literary Songs local newspaper.
Fifteen-501, a free magazine for Cerro Durham-Chapel (named for the nearby U.S. Route 15-501).
Latino accent, a free Spanish-language weekly published in the Raleigh area.
Online Only
The Raleigh Telegram, a source of news every day for the Greater Raleigh Songs.
The Wake Forest Gazette, a free articles weekly news site in Wake Forest Local Interest
TV
Emission
The triangle is the area of Raleigh-Durham-Fayetteville Designated Market for television, which currently contains the following channels:
WUNC-TV (4), the PBS affiliate stations and main funded by viewers of the University Carolina television station in the North.
WRAL-TV (5), the CBS affiliate, licensed to Capitol Broadcasting Company.
WTVD-TV (11), the ABC affiliate owned ABC / The Walt Disney Company.
WNCN-TV (17), the NBC affiliate owned by Media General.
WLFL-TV (22), a CW affiliate owned by Sinclair Broadcast Group.
WTNC-LP (26), Telefutura affiliate, owned by Univision Communications, Inc.
WRDC-TV (28) the My Network TV affiliate owned by Sinclair Broadcast Group.
WRAY-TV (30), an independent station owned by the multicultural broadcasting.
WUVC-TV (40), the Univision affiliate, owned by Univision Communications, Inc.
WRPX-TV (47), the Pax / ION affiliate (Raleigh-Durham), held by ION Media Networks.
WRAZ-TV (50), a subsidiary of Fox, which is operated by Capitol Broadcasting Company.
Cable
Raleigh is home to Research Triangle Region's regional office cable news channel News 14 Carolina.
On-line
The region Triangle has hosted the first North Carolina television station online, RTP-TV (Research Triangle Park Television), which broadcasts news and programs of interest Regional Internet from Research Triangle Park location until ceasing operations in 2006.
Radio
The triangle is home to North Carolina Public Radio public radio station NPR, provider that brings listeners around the country. Raleigh and much of the area of the triangle is the Arbitron radio market # 43. Stations include:
FM:
WKNC 88.1 FM (NCSU) College of radio at the University of North Carolina State
WRTP FM 88.5 (RTN) Christian ("His Radio WRTP)
WXDU FM 88.7 (DU) Radio University Duke University
WSHA 88.9 FM (SU) NPR / Jazz Shaw University
WXYC 89.3 FM (UNC) University radio UNC-Chapel Hill
WCPE 89.7 FM Classical music and opera
WNCU FM 90.7 (UNCAC) NPR / NC Central University Jazz
W216BN 91.1 FM (RTN) Christian ("Your Radio WRTP)
WUNC 91.5 FM (UNC) NPR affiliate of UNC-Chapel Hill
WYFL FM 92.5 (BBN) Christian radio network of the Bible
WKSL FM 93.9 (CC) of rhythmic adult contemporary (93.9 FM, Kiss ")
WQDR FM 94.7 (CMG) Country (94.7 QDR)
WBBB FM 96.1 (CMG) Rock ("96 Rock")
WKRX Country 96.7 FM ("Kickin 'Country")
WYMY 96.9 FM (CMG), Spanish ("La Ley 96.9)
WQOK FM 97.5 (R1) Hip Hop (K-97.5 ")
W255AM FM 98.9 (RTN) Christian ("His Radio WRTP)
WCMC 99.9 FM (CBC) Sports ("ESPN 99.9 Radio Fan)
WRVA 100.7 FM (DC) Rock (100.7, The River ")
WZTK 101.1 FM (CMG) Talk (Talk 101.1 FM)
101.5 WRAL-FM (CBC) Adult Contemporary ("Mix 101.5)
WKXU FM 102.5 (NCM) Country (Kicks 102.5)
WWMY FM 102.9 (CMG) Oldies ("Y-102.9)
103.3 FM WAKG (PB) Country (103.3 WAKG)
WNNL 103.9 FM (R1) urban Gospel (103.9, The Light ")
WFXK FM 104.3 (R1) of the Urban Adult Contemporary (Foxy 104)
WDCG FM 105.1 (CC) and contemporary pop hits ("G-105)
WRDU FM 106.1 (CC) of the country ("Country Rooster ")
WKVK FM 106.7 (CEM) Contemporary Christian
WFXC FM 107.1 (R1) Adult Urban Contemporary ("Foxy 107")
W299AQ 107.7 FM (RTN) Christian ("His Radio WRTP)
WVDJ Community Radio 107.9 FM-LP
W300AR FM 107.9 (RTN) Christian ("His Radio WRTP)
stations AM:
540 AM Spanish WETC
570 AM WDOX talk, sports and music ("570 WDOX)
Sports WDNC 620 AM ("620 The Bull")
WPTF AM 680 News, Talk and Sports ("News / Talk WPTF 680)
750 AM WAUG urban programming from the University of San Agustin
WRBZ Sports 850 AM ("The they say 850 ")
Christian WDRU 1030 AM ("The Truth, 1030)
1240 AM Christian WPJL
1310 AM Spanish WTIK
WCHL 1360 AM News, Talk and Sport
Urban Gospel 1410 AM WRJD
WRXO Country 1430 AM (Oldies 1430)
1490 AM Spanish WDUR
1530 AM Spanish WLLQ
Gospel 1550 AM Urban WCLY
1590 AM Christian WHPY
Triangle Map
major cities and towns
A – Raleigh
B – Durham
C – Chapel Hill
D – Cary
E – Morrisville
F – Apex
G – Holly Springs
H – Fuquay-Varina
I – Garner
J – Knightdale
K – Wendell
L – Zebulon
M – Rolesville
N – Wake Forest
O – Hillsborough
P – Carrboro
Q – Pittsboro
R – Clayton
S – Youngsville
T – Franklinton
U – Creedmoor
V – Mother
W – Butner
Counties
1 – Wake up
2 – Durham
3 – Orange
4 – Chatham
5 – Harnett
6 – Johnston
7 – Franklin
8 – Granville
Parks and water bodies
a – Research Triangle Park
b – Umstead State Park
c Lake Jordan –
d – Haw River
E – Harris Lake
f – Lake Wheeler
g – Benson Lake
h – Falls Lake
interstate
1 – I-40/I-85
2 – I-85
3 – I-40
4 – I-440
5 – I-540
Other main roads
U.S. 1-15
2 – USA 1
3 – USA 401
4-64
U.S. 5-70
6 – USA 401
7 – USA 1
8 – U.S. 15-501
9-64
U.S. 10-70
11 – USA 501
12 – NC 147
13 – 64-264 U.S.
14-64 companies
Classifications
1 High Tech Region (Raleigh-Durham) – "Dare competition: A Reality Check from region to region," Silicon Valley Leadership Group, September 16, 2005
Location of the top 10 utility companies (Duke Energy) – September 2005
Expansion Management's Top 12 real estate market (Raleigh-Durham) – August 2005
Top 10 Venture Capital State (North Carolina) – Moran Stahl & Boyer, LLC, site selection, July 2005
Problem No. 2 Top Business Opportunity Metros (MSA Durham, Raleigh-Cary MSA) – 2005 Mayor's "Top Business Opportunity Metros" Expansion Management July 11, 2005
1 City (Raleigh-Durham) for biotechnology – "The Polo Greater Philadelphia Life Sciences," the Milken Institute, June 2005
2 City (Raleigh-Durham) for Life Sciences Human Capital – "The Greater Philadelphia cluster of life sciences, "the Milken Institute, June 2005
4 City (Raleigh-Durham) working life sciences – "The cluster life sciences Greater Philadelphia, "the Milken Institute, June 2005
17 Best Running City in America (Raleigh) – Runner's World, MSN, June 2005
U.S. Life Sciences 5 groups (Raleigh-Durham) – Milken Institute, June 2005
A southern state in the year (North Carolina) – Southern Business and Development, June 20, 2005
One of the 10 major markets in which the University Act Together (Raleigh-Durham-Chapel Hill) – Southern Business & Development, Summer 2005
2 Best Place (Raleigh-Durham) for Business & Careers – Forbes, May 5, 2005
5 Best Knowledge Worker Metro (Raleigh-Cary MSA) – "Knowledge" worker ratio, Expansion Management, May 2005
Most eight Unwired City (Raleigh-Durham-Chapel Hill) – Intel 3rd Annual "Most cities wireless "survey, May 2005
Top 9 State (NC) in Nanotechnology – Small Times, March 2005
Top Companies 9 State (NC) – Copa Governor 2004, site selection, March 2005
Top Small Business Site Selection in U.S. cities (Dunn, # 82) – March 2005
8 most popular job (Hill Raleigh-Durham-Chapel) – American City Business Journal, TBJ, March 11, 2005
1 Best Place to Work (United States Agency for Environmental Protection, RTP) # 4 (NIEHS) and No. 1 Educational Institution (Best of the UNC-Chapel Hill) for post-doctoral fellows – "Places to Work for Postdocs: 2005," The Scientist, February 14, 2005
4 Top Pro-Business State (North Carolina) – "Pollina Corporate Top 10 states and companies for 2005: Keeping Jobs in America," Pollina Corporate Real Estate, Inc., 2005
4 Best State (North Carolina) and availability of care – "the ratio of health spending," Expansion Management, February 2005
Lyrics Top 34 (Hill Raleigh-Durham-Chapel) for growth and employment performance technology – Outlook, February 2005
Hottest American 17 Expansion of cities in the Administration (Hill Raleigh-Durham-Chapel) – November 2004
One of the most entrepreneurial campus in America (UNC-Chapel Hill) – Forbes October 22, 2004
3 best places to live in America – Forbes, 2003
See also
Corridor I-85
I-40
Atlantic Piemdont
Piedmont Crescent
Piedmont Triad
References
^ American FactFinder. " Office of the United States Census. Http: / / factfinder.census.gov. This document of 31/01/2008.
Snipes ^ Cameron (June 17, 2009). "Brookings Report ranks Raleigh-Cary, North Carolina metro strong." Triangle Business Journal. http://www.bizjournals.com/triangle/stories/2009/06/15/daily31.html. Retrieved on 23/06/2009.
^ "North Carolina Hospitals and medical centers. The Agape Center. http://theagapecenter.com/Hospitals/North-Carolina.htm. Retrieved on 30/05/2008.
^ "The regional transportation needs: the next steps. "TTA website. Http://www.ridetta.org/Regional_Rail/Overview/3-07LatestTransitNeeds.htm. Retrieved 4/7/2007.
^ The Raleigh-Durham Airport International
For other uses of this article by adding reliable references. reference material may be challenged and removed. (August 2007)
References
Greater Raleigh Chamber of Commerce
Research Triangle
Google maps
v, d, e

North Carolina State
Raleigh (capital)
Topics
Climate | Culture | Economy | Education | Geography | History | | North Carolina Music | Politics | Wildlife | Tourist Attractions
Parts
Western | High Hills | Country | Piedmont Piedmont | | Metro Charlotte Triad | Triangle | dunes | Coastal | | Eastern Cape Fear normal | Domestic Banks | Outer Banks | Crystal Coast
Major cities
Asheville | | Cary Charlotte Durham | | Fayetteville | Gastonia | Greensboro | Greenville Point | | Hickory High | | Jacksonville Raleigh Wilmington | Winstonalem |
Small towns
Albemarle | Apex | Asheboro | Burlington | Chapel Hill | Concord | Eden City | Elizabeth | Goldsboro Graham | | Havelock | Henderson | Hendersonville | Kannapolis | Kings Mountain | | Laurel Kinston | Lenoir | Lexington | Lumberton | Monroe | Morganton Bern | New | Newton | Reidsville | Roanoke Rapids | Rocky Mount | | Salisbury Sanford | Shelby | Statesville | Thomasville | Waynesville | Wilson
Major cities
Beaufort | Boone | Carrboro | Clayton | Cornelius | Dunn | Fuquay |-Varina Garner | Harrisburg | Holly Springs | Hope Mills Trail | Huntersville | India | Kernersville | Knightdale | Leland | Hill Matthews | Midland | Currency | Mooresville | | Morehead | City Morrisville Mount | Pleasant Oxford | Shallotte | Smithfield | Southern Pines Wake | Tarboro | Forest
Counties
Alamance Alexander | Alleghany | | Anson | Ashe | Avery | | Beaufort Bertie | Bladen | New Brunswick | Buncombe | Burke | Cabarrus | Caldwell Camden | | Carteret | Caswell | Catawba Chatham | | Cherokee | Chowan Clay | Cleveland | | | Columbus Craven | Cumberland | | Currituck Dare | Davidson | Davie | Duplin | Durham Edgecombe | | Forsyth | Franklin | Gaston Gates | | Graham | Granville | Greene Guilford | | Halifax | Harnett | Haywood | Henderson | Hertford | Hoke | Hyde | Iredell | Jackson | Johnston | Jones | Lee | Lenoir | Lincoln | Macon | Madison | | Martin McDowell Mecklenburg | | | | Mitchell Montgomery Moore | Nash New Hanover | | Northampton | Onslow | Orange | Pamlico | Pasquotank | Pender | Perquimans | Person | Pitt | Polk | Randolph | Richmond Robeson | | Rockingham | | Rowan Rutherford | Sampson | Scotland | Stanly | Stokes | Surry | Swain | Transylvania | Tyrrell Union | | Vance | Warren | Alarm | Washington | Watauga | Wayne | Wilkes | Wilson | Yadkin | Yancey
v, d, e
Greater metropolitan area of Raleigh (Raleigh-Durham-Cary CSA)
Main Cities
Raleigh Durham Cary
Other major cities
Punta Carrboro Chapel Hill Clayton Fuquay-Varina Garner Holly Springs Morrisville Smithfield Wake Forest
Counties
Chatham Durham Franklin Johnston Harnett Person orange trail
Large universities
Duke Meredith College NC Central NC State UNC Chapel Hill Shaw
Several
Research Triangle Park Triangle J Council of Governments Triangle Transit
Categories: Categories Research Triangle, NC North | North Carolina Metropolitan Business | districtsHidden high-tech stubs from August 2007 | All articles with references About the Author

I am a professional editor from
China Manufacturers
, and my work is to promote a free online trade platform.
http://www.cheaponsale.com/ contain a great deal of information about

teak furniture indonesia
,
60 folding round table

welcome to visit!

St. Louis historical baseball stadiums: Sportsman’s Park


Nicktoons MLB


Nicktoons MLB


$19.99


Nicktoons take onbaseball’s bestProduct InformationIn Nicktoons MLB it’s fastball versus stinkball as SpongeBob ZIMDudley Puppy Fanboy Chum Chum Stimpy and more “go yard” withsuperstars from all 30 MLB clubs.  Out-of-this-worldballparks color mentary by Perch Perkins and exciting baseballaction bring this epic showdown home.  Featuring 25 topNicktoons and more than 300 MLB players Nickto…

Nicktoons MLB


Nicktoons MLB


$14.65


Nicktoons MLB X360…

Nicktoons MLB


Nicktoons MLB


$16.95


Nicktoons MLB DS…

Skinit Arizona Diamondbacks - Secondary Solid Distressed Vinyl Skin for Dell Venue Pro/Lightning


Skinit Arizona Diamondbacks – Secondary Solid Distressed Vinyl Skin for Dell Venue Pro/Lightning


$14.99


IMPORTANT: Skinit skins, stickers, decals are NOT A CASE. Our skins are VINYL SKINS that allow you to personalize and protect your device with form-fitting skins. Our adhesive backing can be applied and removed with no residue, no mess and no fuss. Skinit skins are engineered specific to each device to take into account buttons, indicator lights, speakers, unique curvature and will not interfere w…

Skinit San Francisco Giants Home Jersey Vinyl Skin for Dell Venue Pro/Lightning


Skinit San Francisco Giants Home Jersey Vinyl Skin for Dell Venue Pro/Lightning


$14.99


IMPORTANT: Skinit skins, stickers, decals are NOT A CASE. Our skins are VINYL SKINS that allow you to personalize and protect your device with form-fitting skins. Our adhesive backing can be applied and removed with no residue, no mess and no fuss. Skinit skins are engineered specific to each device to take into account buttons, indicator lights, speakers, unique curvature and will not interfere w…


Subscribe To Our Free "GameOnToday.com" Mailing List To Occasionally Receive Discounts, Sports Updates, Surveys And Promotional Stuff

  1. No comments yet.
  1. No trackbacks yet.