Examining New Urbanism....Village of Woodsong

Development History

The Village of Woodsong is a small walking community located in the town of Shallotte, North Carolina approximately 37 miles south of Wilmington. Shallotte is a predominantly white coastal community that has a population of approximately 1,500 permanent residents and covers an area of 5.4 square miles. The town relies heavily on visitors to the coastal region and can be considered a vacation destination along the North Carolina coast.

Shallotte features a number of championship golf courses, beaches and outdoor recreational activities related to the Shallotte River that courses its way through the town. The predominant development pattern of the town is single-family detached housing which contributes to the town’s low density.

The Milliken Company, a local real estate and development company that “specializes in development based on Smart Growth principles” is developin
g the Village of Woodsong. Thomas E. Low, a Charlotte-based architect who was formerly a member of Duany Plater-Zyberk and Company, designed the development.

The firm of Soil and Environmental Consultants, Inc., located in Raleigh, performed the environmental design of the development and the conceptual land planning was provided by the Department of Landscape Architecture at North Carolina State University under the supervision of Professor Robin Moore.

The development phase of Woodsong is 25-percent complete and the design calls for 164 dwellings to occupy the 22-acre site that will yield a build-out density of 7.4 units per acre. The development will feature a mixed-use
core that will provide office and retail space with residential facilities located on the upper floors of the buildings.

The different portions of the development have been sited in order to facilitate pedestrian movement throughout the entire site and each portion of the development can be reached via within a five-minute walking distance.

The predominant architectural style of the development pays careful attention to the coastal vernacular and features modest-sized residences with wrap-around porches to facilitate inter-personal communication.


Design Analysis

The design of Woodsong calls for the development of 164 residences in the form of single-family detached homes, townhomes a
nd mixed-use buildings that surround the development’s Market Square. The designs of the residences reflect the vernacular architecture of the region and are designed with New Urbanist principles in mind with regards to their relation with the street edge.

The vehicular-use system for the development places the pedestrian at the top of the transportation hierarchy and any portion of the development can be accessed via a five-minute walk. In addition to providing connections to the different portions of the development, a environmentally-sensitive trail network has been designed to facilitate outdoor recreational activities.


The design of the development features a number of community open-spaces and includes a small performance stage that lies on the peninsula of the development’s pond. This space is utilized for small concert performances, public readings and various small-scale performances.


The natural hardwood area directly adjacent to the performance space will be preserved and will be accessible through nature-trails that connect to the overall pedestrian circulation system.

The mixed-use core will feature the largest buildings in the development and will house office and retail uses as well as a residential component. A coffee shop, specialty retail stores, a village market and professional offices will occupy the commercial portion of the mixed-use core.


The residential component will consist of apartments located on the upper floors of the buildings and a series of rowhouse-style condominiums will be adjacent to the mixed-use core around a large community open space.



The gross heathenism of civilization has generally destroyed nature, and poetry, and all that is spiritual. -John Muir