Though Chapel Hill is a principal town of a large metropolitan area, it retains a relatively small-town feel. Combined with its close neighbor, the Chapel Hill-Carrboro area has roughly 85,000 residents. Many
large murals can be seen painted on the buildings. Most of these murals were painted by UNC
alumnus Michael Brown. Also, for more than 30 years, Chapel Hill has sponsored the annual
street fair, Festifall, in October. The fair offer booths to artists, craftsmakers, nonprofits, and food vendors. Performance space is also available for musicians,
martial artists, and other groups. The fair is attended by tens of thousands each year. has housed a movie theater (currently called the Varsity Theatre) since its construction in 1927. The
Morehead Planetarium and Science Center was the first planetarium built on a U.S. college campus. When it opened in 1949, it was one of six
planetariums in the nation and has remained an important town landmark. During the
Mercury,
Gemini, and
Apollo programs, astronauts were trained there. One of the town's hallmark features is the giant sundial, located in the green square in front of the planetarium on Franklin Street. Influences of the university are seen throughout the town, even in the fire departments. Each fire station in Chapel Hill has a
fire engine (numbers 31, 32, 33, 34, and 35) that is Carolina blue. These engines are also decorated with different UNC decals, including a firefighter
Rameses. Chapel Hill also has some
new urbanist village communities, such as
Meadowmont Village and
Southern Village. Meadowmont and Southern Village both have shopping centers, green space where concerts, movies, and other outdoor events have taken place, community pools, and schools. Also, a traditional-style mall with a mix of national and local retailers is located at
University Place.
Food Hailed as one of America's Foodiest Small Towns by
Bon Appétit, Chapel Hill is rapidly becoming a hot spot for pop American cuisine. Among the restaurants noted nationally are
Mama Dip's (
Food Network's
$40 A Day With Rachael Ray), Sunrise Biscuit Kitchen (
The Splendid Table), caffè Driade (Food Network's
$40 A Day With Rachael Ray),
Music In the realm of popular music,
James Taylor,
George Hamilton IV,
Southern Culture on the Skids,
Superchunk,
Polvo,
Archers of Loaf,
Ben Folds Five,
The Kingsbury Manx,
Spider Bags and more recently
Porter Robinson, are among the most notable musical artists and acts whose careers began in Chapel Hill. The town has also been a center for the modern revival of
old-time music and
bluegrass with composer as
Elizabeth Cotten and such bands as the Ayr Mountaineers, Hollow Rock String band,
Watchhouse (formerly known as Mandolin Orange),
Steep Canyon Rangers,
Mipso, the Tug Creek Ramblers,
Two Dollar Pistols, the Fuzzy Mountain String band, Big Fat Gap and the
Red Clay Ramblers. Chapel Hill was also the founding home of now Durham-based
Merge Records.
Bruce Springsteen has made a point to visit the town on four occasions. His most recent appearance was on September 15, 2003, at
Kenan Memorial Stadium with the
E Street Band.
U2 also performed at Kenan on the first American date of their 1983
War Tour, where
Bono climbed up to the top of the stage, during pouring rain and lightning, holding up a white flag for peace. The 2011
John Craigie song, "
Chapel Hill", is about the singer's first visit there. One song from
Dirty, a
Sonic Youth album, is named after the town.
Sports , home of
North Carolina Tar Heels men's basketball The University of North Carolina has been very successful at
college basketball and
women's soccer, and a passion for these sports has been a distinctive feature of the town's culture, fueled by the
Tobacco Road rivalry among North Carolina's four
ACC teams: the
North Carolina Tar Heels, the
Duke Blue Devils, the
NC State Wolfpack, and the
Wake Forest Demon Deacons. The two largest sports venues in the town both house UNC teams. The
Dean Smith Center is home to the men's basketball team, while
Kenan Memorial Stadium is home to the football team. In addition, Chapel Hill is also home to
Carmichael Arena which formerly housed the UNC men's basketball team, and currently is home to the women's team, and to the new
Dorrance Field, home to men's and women's soccer and lacrosse teams. Many walking/biking trails are in Chapel Hill. Some of these include Battle Branch Trail, Morgan Creek Trail and Bolin Creek Trail, Chapel Hill's oldest trail and most popular greenway.
Media •
WCHL: local AM radio station (1360AM, 97.9FM) providing talk radio, news, and local sports coverage as the flagship station of the
Tar Heel Sports Network. •
WUNC: local public radio station (91.5FM) located on the UNC campus. •
WXYC: noncommercial student-run radio station (89.3FM) on the UNC campus. In 1994, it became the first radio station in the world to broadcast
over the internet. •
The Daily Tar Heel is the nationally ranked, independent student newspaper that serves the university and the town. The free newspaper is printed thrice weekly during the academic year and weekly during summer sessions. •
The Sun Magazine is an independent, ad-free magazine that for more than 40 years has published personal essays, interviews, short stories, poetry, and photographs. •
Carrboro Citizen was a locally owned community newspaper covering local news, politics and town government of Chapel Hill and Carrboro. The last issue was published in October 2012. • The metro area has TV broadcasting stations that serve the
Raleigh-Durham Designated Market Area (DMA) as defined by
Nielsen Media Research. ==Transit==