NoDa — Charlotte's North Davidson Arts District — has been the most consistently creative neighborhood in the city for decades. The mill worker housing along North Davidson Street, 36th Street, and the surrounding residential grid was built for the textile workers at the old Highland Park Mill in the early 20th century. That origin story gives NoDa its physical character — shotgun houses, Craftsman bungalows, and narrow-lot homes on a walkable street grid — but it also means the neighborhood's residential stock is now 80–100+ years old. The LYNX Blue Line extension north through NoDa added a transit layer that has accelerated development interest and pushed prices toward levels that were inconceivable when the neighborhood was still considered fringe. Want more? explore options for sell my house fast in Mooresville.
NoDa sellers who call us are typically longtime owners or heirs managing properties that carry both significant appreciation and significant deferred maintenance. The arts-district identity attracts buyers who want character — but those same buyers often expect the character to come without the 1940s electrical panel, the original plumbing, and the foundation issues that are common in mill-era construction. When a traditional buyer gets cold feet after inspection on a NoDa property, the seller is often left to find a cash buyer anyway. We are that buyer on the first call. Related reading: explore options for sell my house fast in Salisbury.
We Buy Houses in NoDa — Types of Properties We Purchase
- Mill-era shotgun houses and bungalows on the North Davidson / 36th Street corridor
- Properties with knob-and-tube wiring, original plumbing, or foundation issues from early 20th century construction
- Rental properties in the NoDa arts district being exited by investors
- Inherited homes from longtime NoDa families
- Properties adjacent to light rail stations with significant infill development pressure



