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By CHRIS DIXON IN 1933, a radical arts academy opened in a remote valley about 15 miles east of Asheville, N.C. Simply called Black Mountain College, after the town where it was built, the school was founded by John A. Rice, a maverick educator who sought to create a sort of paradise for painting, architecture, sculpture and the liberal arts in the heart of Depression-era Appalachia. The college’s board of directors included Albert Einstein and the poet William Carlos Williams, while professors included painters, like Willem and Elaine de Kooning, and the visionary designer Buckminster Fuller. The college closed in 1957, but in its time, it gave Black Mountain a per capita level of cultural significance as great as that of any other town in the United States. The intellectual seeds planted by the college still flourish in Black Mountain today. Along the way, the town has become a magnet for second-home owners and retirees, local residents and real estate agents say. It’s easy to see why. In the bustling downtown, tourists and local residents wander into myriad art galleries, restaurants and antique stores. In the parking lot of the popular Dripolator Coffeehouse, you’re as likely to see a shiny S.U.V. as a battered Mercedes powered by vegetable oil. Inside the Dripolator, its owner, Amy Vermillion Carroll, offers fair-trade lattes and Wi-Fi, while the town’s motley bunch of hippies, yuppies, bluegrass musicians and self-described rat-race escapees plink at laptops or thumb through local newspapers. One such escapee is Chip Craig, a real estate broker who left a job at the First Union Corporation in Charlotte 12 years ago in search of a better place to raise his children. He competes with about 50 other real estate agents, but Mr. Craig’s GreyBeard Realty has a healthy business selling to retirees and second-homers and renting many of those homes out to vacationers. Among Mr. Craig’s clients are Dan and Leigh Anne Muggeo, 50 and 40, of Del Ray Beach, Fla. They bought a 1,500-square-foot house on the town’s central Lake Tomahawk Park three and a half years ago for $235,000. Today they spend an average of three months a year in the town with their 3-year-old son. “But if I could figure out a way to live here permanently, I’d do it tomorrow,” said Mr. Muggeo, a New York City native who owns a marketing firm. “You look at the town’s history with Black Mountain College, and today it’s still just such an eclectic place. You’ve got the Baptists, the Presbyterians and my next-door neighbors who look like throwbacks to the ’60s but are only 30 years old.” Judy Fore, 61, a mental health counselor, and her husband, Bill, 71, a retired specialist in internal medicine, were so taken by Black Mountain that they bought a 3,600-square-foot house in the town in 2001. “Five years ago, the community raised $1.2 million to buy the old town hall and start an arts center,” Ms. Fore said. “I figured that any town this small that had the moxie to have such an arts center must be a great place to live.” The couple now have their house on the market for $649,000 and plan to build a new, smaller home in the area. The Scene East of downtown, well-tended neighborhoods of wood-frame, Craftsman-style and brick ranch houses lie on a rough grid that runs downhill to Lake Tomahawk Park. There, in the shadow of an oddly linear progression of mountain peaks called the Seven Sisters, townsfolk feed the ducks, stroll, let their children frolic at a shore-side playground or gather for Park Rhythms, a Thursday night summer concert series. And if you’re just plain hungry, it’s a good place, too. On East State Street, you’ll find terrific places like Perry’s for barbecue or the cozy Black Mountain Bistro. A few blocks away, the turn-of-the-century Red Rocker Inn dishes out award-winning Southern cooking and gallons of sweet tea. Pete Lascheid, 47, a dentist, and his wife, Beth, 43, a dental hygienist, travel from their home in Jupiter, Fla. Three years ago, they decided to buy a two-bedroom house for $160,000 in the Lynch Cove subdivision. They plan to spend at least six months a year in the town when their children, who are 17 and 15, reach college age. “Everyone is just in a whole different mode in Black Mountain,” Ms. Lascheid said. “You come up to a stop sign and they smile and motion you through.” Black Mountain has significant outdoor and cultural resources. The half-million-acre Pisgah National Forest is adjacent to town and is known for some of the best hiking and mountain biking in the South, and streams like Curtis Creek make for excellent fishing. In addition to the Black Mountain Center for the Arts, galleries in town feature many local artists. The Real Estate Market Sizable plots and even farms are available outside town, and new developments, many with a conservation bent, are being built in the surrounding mountains. LAY OF THE LAND SIZE: 6.5 square miles. LOCATION: The town is off Interstate 40, about 15 miles east of Asheville and 115 miles northwest of Charlotte. WHO’S BUYING: Retirees are becoming full-time residents, while many younger families are buying vacation homes, furnishing them and offsetting the cost by renting. The town has become popular among South Floridians, refugees from Charlotte, and second-homers from Charleston, S.C. GETTING THERE: Black Mountain is an easy Interstate drive from many cities. The town is also served by the Asheville Regional Airport. WHILE YOU’RE LOOKING: The Black Mountain Inn (1186 West Old Highway 70, 800-735-6128; and the Red Rocker Inn (136 North Dougherty Street, 888-669-5991; are gracious old bed-and-breakfast inns. Rooms at the Black Mountain Inn are $118 to $159 a night; rooms at the Red Rocker are $95 to $200.
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