A Vibrant Evening in Union Square
Families stroll under the glow of new streetlights on Hickory’s City Walk, near Union Square. On a warm evening in downtown Hickory’s Union Square, the scene is almost storybook. Couples lounge by the Sails on the Square stage as a local band plays, and children scamper across the new Lowes Foods City Park playground under a modern art sculpture. The Hickory City Walk – a broad brick-lined path – winds through this lively plaza, linking shops and cafes bustling with patronscarolinaxroads.comcarolinaxroads.com. It’s a picture of small-city vibrancy: an open-air farmer’s market wrapping up under string lights, teens snapping photos by a public art mural, and neighbors greeting each other on evening walks. On the surface, Hickory’s center is alive and thriving, the kind of place that earned accolades like having one of America’s top 10 main streetscatawbaedc.org and even being rated 2023’s “most beautiful and affordable place to live” by a national travel magazineen.wikipedia.org. Yet, as the buzz of downtown suggests a city on the rise, a deeper look beyond the city core reveals a more complex story of growth and strain across Catawba County.
Rebranding the City: Trails, Tech, and Housing Booms
Hickory has eagerly embraced an economic rebranding, mixing civic projects and private investment to shake off the rust of its manufacturing past. The City Walk is just one piece of the planned 10-mile Hickory Trail network, a multimodal path connecting downtown to outlying neighborhoods and even the Catawba River waterfrontcarolinaxroads.com. This initiative – funded by local bonds – exemplifies Hickory’s push to reinvent itself as a modern, livable city. At the same time, major employers are investing in next-generation industries. Notably, homegrown telecommunications giant CommScope recently announced a $60.3 million expansion of its fiber-optic cable manufacturing operations in Catawba County, promising 250 new high-tech jobs and reaffirming Hickory’s role as a national “fiber cable hub”commerce.nc.govcommerce.nc.gov. These developments build on a modest uptick in population and a surge of new housing. After decades of stagnation, Hickory’s city population has crept to about 44,000 residentsen.wikipedia.org, and the broader metro has seen enough in-migration to rank 9th in the nation for inbound moves in a recent studycatawbaedc.org. National media have taken notice: U.S. News & World Report now ranks the Hickory area #25 among best places to live in the U.S. (and #3 in North Carolina)catawbaedc.orgwbtv.com, lauding its low cost of living and revived downtown. New subdivisions sprout on former pastureland and along the shores of Lake Norman in the county’s east. By many measures, Hickory and Catawba County are experiencing a renaissance – a carefully crafted narrative of affordability, fiber-optic connectivity, and small-town charm that promises a bright future.
But this optimistic narrative only tells part of the story. Beneath the accolades and construction cranes, Catawba County faces entrenched structural challenges that shiny new projects alone may not solve. For every freshly built apartment complex or ribbon-cut pedestrian bridge, there are deeper fractures in the county’s foundation that demand attention.
Beneath the Boom: Aging Workforce and Outlying Struggles
The Hickory region’s economy, once dominated by furniture factories and textile mills, still bears scars from decades of industrial decline. Manufacturing employment in Catawba County plunged from over 43,000 jobs in 1990 to about 23,500 by 2019 amid outsourcing and automationbusinessnc.com. Thousands of young workers left in the 2000s in search of opportunities elsewhere, and those who remained are now greying. Today, the county’s median age is about 42.4 – significantly above the state and U.S. averagecensusreporter.org – and local industries are literally facing retirement. In the flagship furniture sector, for instance, 28% of skilled workers were over 55 as of a few years agocommerce.nc.gov. Employers fear a talent vacuum as retirements outpace recruitment. This aging workforce not only threatens productivity; it also reflects a community struggling to retain its youth. Hickory’s much-publicized growth has so far leaned heavily on attracting retirees and remote workers (drawn by those “most affordable” rankingscatawbaedc.org), rather than on keeping or recruiting a new generation of skilled labor.
At the same time, the county’s physical growth has been uneven and sprawling, straining infrastructure in areas far from the vibrant downtown core. The Hickory-Lenoir-Morganton Metropolitan Area was infamously labeled “the country’s most sprawling metro” a few years agoen.wikipedia.org, and that pattern continues. Drive out of Hickory in any direction and you’ll find pockets of rapid development abutting stretches of neglect. In unincorporated Mountain View, a once-rural community southwest of Hickory now burgeoning with new homes, two-lane country roads like NC Highway 127 struggle to handle surging traffic. Farm fields have given way to cul-de-sacs of cookie-cutter houses, but many subdivisions still rely on wells, septic tanks, and volunteer fire departments, creating big-city demands on small-community resources. Over in Startown – a crossroads community between Hickory and Lincolnton – similar suburban growth is unfolding without the tax base or utilities of an incorporated town. Residents there face longer emergency response times and patchwork road maintenance. These outskirts exemplify the county’s infrastructure imbalance: while Hickory’s center sports new sidewalks and sculptures, outlying areas contend with aging bridges, spotty broadband, and overstretched services. The cracks show even in basics like road upkeep – the state only recently budgeted a mere $4.8 million to resurface 21 miles of county roads (including a stretch through Startown) over the next few yearsncdot.gov, a drop in the bucket for a county of 400+ miles of roads. Such disparities feed a sentiment that the county’s growth is bypassing some of the very communities that need investment the most.
Pillars of the Economy: Local Anchors Under Pressure
Amid these shifts, a few key institutions act as economic anchors – for better and for worse – in Hickory and Catawba County. Take Alex Lee, Inc., a locally headquartered grocery and distribution company founded in Hickory in 1931. As the parent of Lowes Foods and Merchants Distributors, Alex Lee has grown into a quiet giant with roughly 16,000 employees overallen.wikipedia.orgen.wikipedia.org. Its corporate offices and warehouses in Hickory provide hundreds of stable jobs and a generous corporate presence (they even sponsor that new City Park downtown). Alex Lee’s long history here is a source of community pride and stability – yet its success also highlights the limited diversification of the job market. Many of its roles are in traditional sectors like food distribution, which, while steady, don’t necessarily attract young professionals to settle in the area.
Another unlikely “anchor” is Republic Services, the waste management firm that operates the regional landfill serving Catawba County. Though less glamorous, the landfill and recycling centers represent critical infrastructure and a steady stream of blue-collar jobs. The county depends on Republic to handle the less pleasant byproducts of growth – more people and business mean more trash, after all. However, hosting a major landfill can be a double-edged sword: it concentrates heavy truck traffic and environmental concerns (odors, groundwater protection) in one locale. Communities near the Blackburn Landfill outside Newton reap some host tax benefits, but also bear the brunt of the nuisance. This dynamic raises questions of environmental justice and whether some parts of the county are sacrificing quality of life for the region’s convenience.
Hickory’s two hospital systems are also linchpins of local stability that are feeling the strain. Frye Regional Medical Center, a 355-bed acute care hospital near downtown, employs over 1,500 doctors, nurses and staffziprecruiter.com. Across the river, the county-owned Catawba Valley Medical Center (CVMC) is a 258-bed nonprofit hospital – the largest community hospital in the regioncatawbavalleyhealth.org. Together, these healthcare centers anchor hundreds of good-paying jobs and provide essential services for an aging populace. They have expanded specialties (heart centers, cancer centers) to meet community needs. Yet they, too, face headwinds. An older, poorer patient base means higher uncompensated care and pressure on margins. In recent years, Frye’s out-of-town corporate owners (a Duke-LifePoint partnership) have had to invest just to maintain aging facilities. Meanwhile, CVMC juggles increasing demand as retirees flock to the area, even as it competes for talent with bigger-city hospitals. These anchors – the grocery distributor, the landfill, the hospitals – each play a role in holding Catawba County steady. They provide jobs and services that underpin daily life, even as they themselves must adapt to the county’s changing demographics and economy. Their presence is a reminder that growth isn’t just tech firms and trails; it’s also who collects the garbage and cares for the sick. If any of these pillars wavers, the effects would ripple across the community.
Flash vs. Fundamentals: Glitzy Projects and Lagging Systems
In Hickory’s pursuit of reinvention, there’s an unmistakable tension between investing in flashy new amenities and shoring up basic infrastructure. The City Walk, with its artful benches and decorative arches, exemplifies the city’s push for wow-factor development. (Those now-infamous 40-ton wooden arches over Highway 127 were a bold design statement – until they collapsed in a storm just months after installation, prompting a lawsuit and $750,000 in damageswsoctv.comwsoctv.com. The collapse became a local metaphor of sorts, cited by skeptics who wonder what other basics were neglected to fund a $14 million beautification projectwsoctv.com.) At the same time, residents in many Catawba communities drive on cracked pavement and send kids to schools that haven’t seen major renovations in decades. Roads, schools, and utilities don’t make ribbon-cutting headlines, but their upkeep is what keeps a community functional. Catawba County’s public school buildings, for example, average well over 40 years old, and several high schools still operate in mid-20th-century facilities with only patchwork updates. Bond referendums for new school construction or water/sewer expansion are a tough sell politically, even as money is found for new dog parks or downtown streetscapes. The city of Hickory’s tax-funded improvements stop at the city limits, so rural areas depend on county funds or state support that often arrives slowly if at all. This has led to an imbalance in public investment: the “drive-through” parts of Hickory – its gateways and center – gleam with fresh paint and modern design, while many essential systems quietly rust in the background. Local leaders insist that quality-of-life projects like the City Walk attract talent and business, making them worthwhile. There’s truth to that – but the question hanging over Catawba County’s future is whether the foundation can support the shiny new façade. Without parallel investment in core infrastructure and maintenance, the fear is that Hickory’s growth could prove superficial or unsustainable in the long run.
A County of Many Corners: Growth and Strain in Its Schools
Perhaps nowhere are the county’s uneven fortunes more evident than in its public high schools, each a reflection of the community it serves. Catawba County’s education landscape is split among three school districts – the county system and the smaller city systems of Hickory and Newton-Conover – and within them lie starkly different socioeconomic zones. A quick tour around the high school attendance areas illustrates the patchwork of growth and strain:
Eastern Catawba (Maiden & Bandys High School zones): In the county’s eastern reaches, a mix of old and new defines life. Maiden, a small town once known for textiles, landed a huge Apple data center a decade ago, boosting the tax base but employing relatively few locals. The area around Bandys High School includes rolling farmland and the Lake Norman shoreline, where upscale homes for Charlotte-area commuters and retirees are springing up. This has begun to shift demographics – more affluent families near the lake, while old mill villages inland see youth moving away. Both Maiden and Bandys schools have deep community roots (Friday night football is a big draw), but they haven’t seen significant facility upgrades in years. Infrastructure is a mixed bag: a new elementary school opened in Sherrills Ford to accommodate growth, yet many rural roads lack sidewalks or lighting. Eastern Catawba feels on the cusp – if growth continues, it could flourish, but if not managed, long-time residents may feel left behind amid the new development.
Central Catawba (Newton-Conover & Bunker Hill zones): The Newton-Conover area, encompassing the twin small cities of Newton (the county seat) and Conover, bears the legacy of Catawba’s industrial peak and its decline. Here you’ll find aging furniture factories converted to warehouses or simply abandoned. Newton-Conover High School serves a diverse, modest-income student body; many students are children of factory workers or recent Hispanic immigrants drawn by poultry and manufacturing jobs. The city school system has tried innovative programs to boost achievement, but economic headwinds persist. Just north, Bunker Hill High sits in a rural expanse near Claremont and Plateau. That zone has seen new industries like plastics and automotive suppliers set up along I-40, yet the surrounding communities remain sparsely populated. Bunker Hill’s enrollment has been fairly stagnant, and parts of its 1960s-era campus show the wear of time. Central Catawba’s challenges center on revitalization – Newton’s downtown is slowly reviving with galleries and breweries, but neighborhoods still struggle with poverty. Public infrastructure here – from water lines to libraries – fights the image of decline. These central communities are stable but not booming, trying to reinvent themselves much as Hickory did, albeit with fewer resources.
Hickory Metro & Northwestern Catawba (Hickory High, St. Stephens, Fred T. Foard zones): In and around Hickory city is where growth has been most evident – and yet disparities persist. Hickory High School, part of the city-run district, benefits from a relatively strong tax base and enjoys updated facilities and special programming (like IB courses), drawing students from professional families as well as lower-income urban neighborhoods. The city’s efforts to attract talent mean Hickory High has seen slight enrollment growth and an influx of out-of-state transfer students as new families move in for jobs. Meanwhile, just outside city limits, St. Stephens High (northeast of Hickory) and Fred T. Foard High (to the southwest) serve large unincorporated areas. St. Stephens has long been a hub for working-class suburbs and the county’s sizeable Hmong-American community. Its zone has modest growth – new subdivisions along Springs Road – but also pockets of blight in older trailer parks. Fred T. Foard, covering Mountain View and rural stretches toward the county’s edge, is arguably ground zero for suburban expansion. Its once-rural feeder schools are now overcrowded with kids from rapidly built housing developments. Foard’s campus is straining at capacity, and traffic jams on Highway 127 in Mountain View attest to a community that grew faster than its roads and utilities. The Hickory metro area schools thus span the gamut: from a comparatively well-funded city high school to county schools grappling with growing pains (Foard) or high needs populations (St. Stephens). The contrasts in these districts underscore where investment has flowed and where it has not. Hickory’s city schools can invest in innovation and magnet programs, while some county schools hold PTA fundraisers just to fix leaky roofs.
These educational divides mirror the county’s broader demographic shifts. Areas with growth (western suburbs, lakefront communities) are pressuring officials for new schools and road widenings, while areas with stagnation (old mill towns) plead for reinvestment and social services. How local leaders prioritize these needs will shape Catawba’s future. The existence of three separate school systems itself hints at historical fractures – a legacy of city-centric development that can leave county areas feeling secondary.
Conclusion: Reconciling Growth with Resilience
Hickory’s recent rise is real – the downtown energy and outside recognition are well earned – but the county’s long-term resilience will depend on whether that growth extends beyond the city’s center. “The center cannot hold” if only Hickory prospers while its surrounding communities languish. A truly robust Catawba County must find ways to knit together its fragments: young and old, urban and rural, east and west. That means balancing flashy new investments with unsexy maintenance, channeling some of the new wealth back into aging schools, water systems, and transportation networks that form the county’s backbone. It means re-training and recruiting workers so that the next generation will stay and thrive locally, revitalizing those sleepy mill villages and not just the Hickory skyline. There are promising signs – from CommScope’s expanded fiber plants to small breweries popping up in Newton – that growth can spread. The challenge is ensuring that Catawba’s many moving parts work in unison rather than drift further apart. For now, Hickory’s bright present sits side by side with the county’s uncertain future. The coming years will test whether this community can convert its current momentum into a durable, inclusive prosperity – or whether the glittering revival at the center will be undermined by cracks in the periphery. In the end, Hickory’s true success will be measured not by magazine rankings or new construction alone, but by the resilience of the entire county it anchors. Only by confronting the disparities and investing in its people and infrastructure equally can Catawba County ensure that its growth story holds together for generations to come.
Sources: Public records, Catawba County economic development reports, local media (WBTV, WSOC), NCDOT releases, U.S. Census data, and North Carolina state press releasescommerce.nc.govcatawbaedc.orgcommerce.nc.govwsoctv.comziprecruiter.comcatawbavalleyhealth.org.
Written with the assistance of ChatGPT:
Google Doc for the cited work in this article
The Index of Hickory Hound Stories from 2025 onward
This list will permanently remain under the Problems & Solutions forum to your right.
Look directly above and that is how you sign up for the e-mail list of the Hickory Hound to get updates.
The Forgotten Grid: Towns That Industry Left Behind by hickoryhound
Echoes of Industry: The Rise and Fall of Drexel, Hildebran, and Valdese
Read on Substack