Tourism Highlands is increasingly becoming a two-season community; a summer-season community and an ever-growing winter-season community. The summer season (generally March through November) draws large numbers of Southerners from the summertime heat and humidity found throughout much of the region to enjoy the cooler mountains and hometown "Main Street experience". The town is dotted with
antique dealers, restaurants (six of which have received awards from
Wine Spectator), shops, and inns, as well as several buildings on the
National Register of Historic Places. For the performing arts there are four theaters: The Highlands Playhouse (founded in 1938), the Instant Theatre Company (founded in 1981), the Highlands Community Players (founded in 1995), and the
Martin-Lipscomb Performing Arts Center, which hosts touring groups. For the visual arts there is The Bascom - A Center for the Visual Arts, a new facility named for the artist and playwright, Louise Rand Bascom Barratt. The historic (NRHP-listed)
Lee's Inn, with an enormous tree growing through the middle of its dining room, was lost to an electrical fire in the 1980s and was not rebuilt. The historic
Old Edwards Inn (also NRHP-listed) continues to operate as an inn and spa catering to affluent demographics, with several properties in Highlands and the surrounding area.
Martin-Lipscomb Performing Arts Center The Martin-Lipscomb Performing Arts Center is a prominent venue in Highlands, featuring independent theater and local musical acts. When the building, which was formerly the Community Bible Church, went up for sale in 1999, the founding director of the Highlands-Cashiers Chamber Music Festival started a fundraising campaign to buy the property so that the festival could have a permanent home. Since then, the Performing Arts Center has brought over 255 performances to the southeastern Macon County area.
Public utilities and services There is one
public school in the town,
Highlands School, as well as a
public library, known as the Hudson Library. The Hudson Library is part of the
Fontana Regional Library, which serves Swain, Jackson, and Macon counties. The Hudson Library also housed The Bascom until May 2009; The Bascom is a nonprofit visual arts center that is housed on a six-building, six-acre campus, and offers exhibitions and educational programs. Highlands has one hospital, Highlands-Cashiers Hospital. Highlands has a
post office, with
ZIP code 28741 covering all of Highlands township and adjacent parts of Sugar Fork township. It is within
area code 828, and all telephone numbers served by the town's exchange begin with 526 or 482, with
seven-digit dialing allowed. Since buying
GTE,
Verizon is now the
telephone company for the area. It also offers
DSL high-speed Internet.
Television and Internet Cable television and
Internet services for the town of Highlands are contracted to Northland Communications Corporation and Highlands Cable Group. Both systems carry local
TV stations from the
Asheville/
Hendersonville Greenville/
Spartanburg Designated Market Area. Additionally, because there are many visitors and residents from
metro Atlanta, Northland carries two major-TV network stations from Atlanta:
WSB-TV 2 (ABC),
WAGA TV 5 (Fox). Highlands Cable Group now carries all the local networks and the 3 "PBS" networks as well as "Peachtree TV" and "Fox Networks". Highlands is the
city of license for two
radio stations.
WHLC FM 104.5 broadcasts from a house just north of the town and is one of very few stations to still have an
easy listening format. Its
omnidirectional broadcast range extends into all three surrounding states, going furthest into
upstate South Carolina.
W277CU on 103.3
relays Western North Carolina Public Radio from Asheville. UNCTV is relayed
digitally on
W35CK-D, replacing
analog W27BD.
Transportation There are four major roads in and out of town. Franklin Road and most of Main Street carry
U.S. 64 west and
N.C. 28 north, going briefly west and then northwest to
Franklin, along the
Mountain Waters Scenic Byway alongside the
Cullasaja River. Cashiers Road and north Fourth Street carry U.S. 64 east, going north and then northeast toward
Cashiers, with views of
Whiteside Mountain. Walhalla Road and south Fourth Street carry N.C. 28 briefly south, west around the south side of downtown, and then south again toward
Pine Mountain, Georgia, and
Walhalla, South Carolina, keeping the number 28 in all three states. Dillard Road carries N.C. 106 southwest, crossing the state line five times, and soon ending at
U.S. 441 in
Dillard. There are also other state secondary roads maintained by
NCDOT, with Buck Creek Road (N.C. 1535/1538) acting as a very curvy
bypass route around the town. There is no
public transportation within or through the town. The nearest municipal airport is
Macon County Airport, between Franklin and Iotla. While it is also the nearest
automated airport weather station, conditions there do not accurately reflect Highlands, as there is a major difference in elevation, and therefore
temperature and
precipitation. A
USFS RAWS automated weather station (HGLN7) operates from north-northwest of Highlands, along Flat Mountain Road (N.C. 1544). ==Recreation==