Sugar Mountain (North Carolina)

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Sugar Mountain
Sugar Mountain with sign.jpg
Highest point
Elevation 5,236 ft (1,596 m)
Prominence 1,160 ft (350 m)
Coordinates 36°07′29″N81°52′33″W / 36.12472°N 81.87583°W / 36.12472; -81.87583 [1]
Geography
USA North Carolina relief location map.jpg
Red triangle with thick white border.svg
Sugar Mountain
Location in North Carolina
Location Avery County, North Carolina, U.S.
Parent range Blue Ridge Mountains
Topo map USGS Newland

Sugar Mountain is a mountain in the North Carolina High Country and wholly in the Pisgah National Forest. Its elevation reaches 5,236 feet (1,596 m) and is split along the Eastern Continental Divide, generating feeder streams for the Linville, Elk, and North Toe rivers. On its north slope resides the Village of Sugar Mountain.

Contents

Attractions

Sugar Mountain has two golf courses, Sugar Mountain Country Club [2] and Linville Ridge Country Club [3] (on adjacent Flattop Mountain), which are open late spring to early fall. Walking and mountain bike trails are also open during the summer months on the mountain. In the Winter, the Sugar Mountain Ski Resort [4] is open, and offers skiing, snowboarding, and tubing.

North Carolina Ridge Law

The Citadel, viewed from Grandfather Mountain The Citadel, Sugar Mountain, NC Oct 2016.jpg
The Citadel, viewed from Grandfather Mountain

In 1983, the Citadel was built on what is known as Sugar Top. [5] The condominium complex, which can be seen from miles away, became what many consider an eyesore. [6] Because of many complaints by locals and visitors, the state of North Carolina passed the Mountain Ridge Protection Act of 1983 [7] so that nothing similar can be built again. Many students of nearby Appalachian State University in Boone, NC refer to the building as "The Sugar Cube" because of its unnaturally awkward square shape on the horizon.

References

  1. "Sugar Mountain". Geographic Names Information System . United States Geological Survey, United States Department of the Interior . Retrieved March 8, 2010.
  2. Golf Courses
  3. Linville Ridge Country Club
  4. Sugar Mountain Ski Resort
  5. Sugar Top
  6. The view from the top: The battle over mountaintop development in WNC
  7. "Mountain Ridge Protection Act of 1983".