The City of Asheville and State of North Carolina have been pressured by many in the community to replace or renovate the aging Civic Center with more modern facilities. This debate has been going on for years, with no apparent end. City Council passed a measure funding basic maintenance and has earmarked $1.5 million for the implementation of a "living roof" to replace the aging conventional roof. The ultimate path for the Civic Center was unclear. A complete renovation was still an option. The most popular proposals from the community were to tear down and rebuild in the same location, or to rebuild in an area south of city hall, at the Biltmore Square Mall site, or near the Western North Carolina Agriculture Center. Renovation of the Thomas Wolfe Auditorium has been considered since 1982 but nothing was done until 2020, when a $100 million plan was announced. The
COVID-19 pandemic delayed that plan but as of 2023 the funding plan had still not been completed. However, starting in late July, the auditorium could no longer be used until
HVAC repairs expected to take six to nine months. At an August 21 meeting, five plans were presented using numbers based on a 2028 start date for work. A basic plan would cost $42 to $52 million, while the most expensive or "Broadway" plan would require $183 to $193 million. The auditorium technically reopened in October with a capacity of 1,200 but had not events scheduled until January 2024, with full capacity to be ready March 2024. ==Naming history==