How Nascar Turned This Lakefront Community Into One of America’s Hottest Luxury Housing Markets
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How Nascar Turned This Lakefront Community Into One of America’s Hottest Luxury Housing Markets

The sport has become the driving force behind the Lake Norman area’s popularity, as big names like Dale Earnhardt Jr. and Denny Hamlin have built some of North Carolina’s most luxurious homes there

By LIBERTINA BRANDT
Tue, Dec 6, 2022 8:51amGrey Clock 9 min

Luxury real-estate markets across the country are propelled by the biggest local industries, whether it’s high finance in New York, big oil in Texas, Walmart in Bentonville, Ark., or Hollywood in L.A. On North Carolina’s Lake Norman, there’s no disputing the driver: It’s Nascar.

The Lake Norman area, located roughly 20 miles north of Charlotte, N.C., has long been home to some of Nascar’s most successful drivers, thanks to its proximity to the Charlotte Motor Speedway and the headquarters of some of the sport’s best known teams. Over the past decade, some of the wealthiest drivers have plowed their winnings into building and buying some of the state’s most luxurious residences, helping to propel the local market to new heights.

Local agents say that, as a result, prices in the Lake Norman area are higher than they’ve ever seen. In Mooresville, N.C., roughly 10 miles east of the lake, racer Ricky Stenhouse Jr. is listing his 140-acre equestrian estate for $15.995 million, records show. In Cornelius, N.C., slightly farther south, a lakefront estate owned by telecommunications entrepreneur Robert Stevanovski and his wife, Sonya Stevanovski, is asking $16 million. If either traded for close to its asking price, it would set a record for the area, where prices have historically topped out around $8 million, agents said.

The median sale price for a home in Cornelius, N.C., has gone up by about 114%, to $476,000 from $222,000, since 2012, according to data from Realtor.com, while the median sale price for a home in Mooresville has gone up by about 118%, to $428,000 from $196,000. In comparison, the median sale price for a U.S. home rose by 91% between 2012 and 2022, to $342,000 from $179,000. Between January and August, the average median sale price was 21.8% higher in Cornelius and 28.1% higher in Mooresville compared with the average median sale price in 2021, outpacing the U.S. market’s 15.6% sale price growth for that period, the data show. (News Corp, owner of The Wall Street Journal, also operates Realtor.com under license from the National Association of Realtors.)

Agents attribute at least some of that upward momentum to the cash that’s poured into the market from Nascar over the past decade. Real-estate agent Reed Jackson of Ivester Jackson said that, on listings priced at $2 million or more, he’s likely to have interest from a buyer that’s somehow tied to the Nascar industry.

Among the most impressive Nascar-linked properties in the area is a roughly 300-acre estate outside of Mooresville owned by driver and Nascar Hall of Famer Dale Earnhardt Jr., who started assembling land in 2002 and has continued adding to it since. He lived in a modular home there until he replaced it with a new four-bedroom home, which was completed in 2008. It has a basement bar room with a theatre and pool table, he said. Mr. Earnhardt declined to offer details about the home’s size, or the cost of construction. He met his wife, Amy Earnhardt, when she was on the design team he hired for the project.

Mr. Earnhardt, 48, is a third-generation race-car driver. His late father, Dale Earnhardt Sr., was a seven-time Nascar champion. Mr. Earnhardt Jr. competed in the Nascar Cup Series from 1999 to 2017 and retired from the series with 26 cup wins including two Daytona 500 wins. Today, he spends his time running his racing team, JR Motorsports, which he’s owned since 2006. He is also an analyst for NBC Sports, hosts a podcast called “Dale Jr. Download” for his company, Dirty Mo Media, and just launched a vodka brand, High Rock, with Ms. Earnhardt.

Their estate has a string of unusual amenities, including an 800-square-foot treehouse with a loft that was built in 2015. The pièce de résistance: an elaborate life-size replica of an old western town in the backyard, complete with a saloon, a sheriff’s office with two jail cells, a bank with teller windows, and a church. Most of the buildings are just for show with a few props inside. Initially, Mr. Earnhardt used the town for partying with friends, but now that he and his wife have children, the space is mostly used for birthday parties, charitable events and sometimes music videos, he said. The inspiration came from watching the musician Willie Nelson on television giving a tour of a property he owned in Texas, which included an old western town movie set.

The property has some Nascar-inspired details, including about 70 acres of wooded, four-wheeler trails dotted with about 80 old race cars that have been ruined in accidents by his team and other teams across the industry.

“I call it the race-car graveyard,” Mr. Earnhardt said. “We go out there and ride the trails and there’ll be cars around every corner. You just never know what you’re going to see.”

Another of the area’s most valuable homes, according to local agents, is a roughly 30,000-square–foot lakefront estate on a peninsula in Cornelius built around 2016 for driver Denny Hamlin. The house is a sports fan’s paradise, with a full-length indoor basketball court, a putting green, a bowling alley, a golf simulator and a billiards area, as well as a large lounge with numerous TV screens, a spokesman for Mr. Hamlin confirmed. A Toyota race car that Mr. Hamlin drove to victory at the Daytona 500 in 2016 is on display inside a glass garage bay, complete with confetti still on the chassis from Victory Lane. There is also an area where Mr. Hamlin, who has won close to 50 Nascar Cup Series races as well as three Daytona 500s, displays his trophies and racing memorabilia. Local agents estimated that construction of the home could have cost between $15 million and $20 million. Mr. Hamlin declined to comment.

Driver Mr. Stenhouse’s home, the one on the market for $15.995 million, is evidence of Nascar’s continued influence on the area. Over the past two decades, it’s been owned by three prominent drivers, Ernie Irvan, Joe Nemechek and Mr. Stenhouse, who is now listing it for sale. The massive, 140-acre equestrian estate has a more than 9,000-square-foot home and an outdoor entertaining area with a lounge pavilion and an infinity pool.

The Nascar community began developing around the Charlotte area decades ago because it was central to many of the tracks that hosted races, according to Nascar Hall of Fame’s executive director, Winston Kelley. It was the birthplace of Holman-Moody in 1957, a major race-car manufacturing and restoration company and former race team, Mr. Kelley said. Even more eyes were drawn to the area in the 1960s, when the popular Charlotte Motor Speedway was completed in Concord, roughly 20 miles southeast of the lake. The track was among the largest at the time, Mr. Kelley said.

While many of the smaller, original tracks are no longer in business, the proximity of the Charlotte Motor Speedway still makes the area a racing hub. In Mooresville alone, which has been dubbed “Race City USA,” there are 54 motorsport manufacturers and teams with over 2,500 employees, according to the town’s mayor, Miles Atkins.

“All of the employees, drivers, mechanics, everybody really involved in the industry mostly lives in this area. It’s just become the hub,” Mr. Earnhardt said. “It’s just a coincidence that I was born and raised here but I suppose that if Nascar was located in another part of the country that’s where I’d be.”

Josh Tucker, an agent with Corcoran HM Properties in Mooresville, said there’s significant overlap in the Lake Norman area between Nascar and real-estate industries. He started his career as a mechanic for Nascar vehicles and eventually became what’s known as a “car chief,” making sure vehicles meet the criteria of Nascar inspections, before making the switch to real estate. He said he can’t remember a time when the area wasn’t a hub for Nascar greats.

“It seems like a lot of people I either represent on the buy side or the sell side end up having some connection down the line to Nascar,” he said.

Around Lake Norman, a flurry of recent big-ticket deals have been linked to the Nascar community in some way.

In June, a Cornelius estate that was owned by driver Joey Logano, two-time Nascar Cup Series champion who won at Daytona in 2015, sold for $4.3 million, a profit over the $3.6 million Mr. Logano paid in 2014, records show. The roughly 1-acre property sits directly on the lake and includes an Old World-style estate with cathedral arches, a beach, a dock, a billiards room and a four-car garage, according to the listing. Mr. Logano didn’t respond to requests for comment.

In September 2020, Rick Hendrick, the owner of the Nascar team Hendrick Motorsports, purchased a $6.3 million house on the lake in Denver, according to property and corporation records. The roughly 2.5-acre estate, located in a gated community, includes a four-car garage and a grand English manor-style home with a slate roof, glass lanterns and five bedrooms, the listing shows. It also has a pier with a helicopter pad.

It’s not just drivers and team owners driving prices up in the area. Agents say Nascar dollars spill over into other industries, like the news media that covers the sport, manufacturing, maintenance and marketing. “If you buy a lunchbox at Walmart with Jeff Gordon’s face on it, someone was involved in marketing that,” said local agent Ben Bowen, referencing one of the sport’s most well-known drivers.

Lake Norman has more to offer than just its Nascar associations, Mr. Tucker said, touting the area’s warm summers and mild winters, its big sprawling estates and the recreational possibilities of the lake. Lake Norman, created in the 1950s and 1960s as part of the construction of the Cowans Ford Dam, is one of the largest manmade lakes in the country and is a haven for boating, watersports and fishing. Alleged sightings of Normie, North Carolina’s equivalent of Scotland’s Loch Ness Monster, form local legend.

Much of the luxury real estate is on the east side of the lake, in the towns of Mooresville and Cornelius, which are more accessible to the airport and to the cities of Charlotte and Concord, where the Charlotte Motor Speedway, Nascar race shops, many of the Nascar teams, and the Nascar Hall of Fame are located.

On the west side of Lake Norman, in high-end communities like Denver, some of the wealthiest residents commute to Concord and Charlotte by helicopter, said Mr. Jackson, the agent.

The hottest areas are near two country clubs, the Peninsula Club in Cornelius and the Trump National Golf Club in Mooresville, agents said. While many buyers don’t want to live within the country club’s housing communities, the streets around them are considered the most desirable. Jetton Road, or what’s known locally as the “Jetton Peninsula,” which weaves past the Peninsula Club toward the Safe Harbor Peninsula Yacht Club, is home to some of the most elaborate properties. Similarly, in Mooresville, the “Brawley Peninsula,” Brawley School Road, goes past the Trump National Golf club out to the edge of the lake.

Starting in the late 1990s and through the mid- to late-2000s, the area played host to an arms race of new mansion development, Mr. Tucker said. That coincided with the peak of Nascar’s popularity and a wave of sponsorship dollars flowing into the sport. A large number of high-end homes were built on the edge of the lake, he said.

When it came to the drivers, many wanted significant garage space and lakefront docks.

“Just like they love fast cars, they also love fast boats,” said Mr. Tucker of his Nascar driver clients, noting that many drivers want their own docks with boat lifts.

Duke Energy, the company that operates the dam and a local power plant, regulates what can be built on the lake and requires a permitting process for new docks, however. A spokesman for the company said that, as development on the lake continues, it’s become more challenging to find property that’s appropriate for the construction of new deep-water docks.

“If a home already has a dock that’s grandfathered in, you likely wouldn’t be able to replicate that dock today,” Mr. Tucker said. “So a lot of buyers are looking for these older homes that have bigger docks that stick out further into the water.”

For some, restrictions around the lake are so tight that they would rather have a more rural property a little farther away from the water, Mr. Jackson said. “It’s not uncommon for them to buy more rural properties in farm areas around Lake Norman, and put up a separate automotive garage,” Mr. Jackson said.

The wave of new mansion development slowed down thanks in large part to the 2008 financial crisis, Mr. Tucker said, but saw an uptick again during Covid, as homebuyers looked for more space and greater access to amenities and the lake.

“When Covid hit, the McMansions became popular again,” he said. “People said, ‘Oh my gosh, we need more space, have a home theatre and home offices and fitness room and all these things.’ ”

The Covid crisis also brought many buyers to the area from Charlotte, a large number of whom worked in the financial-services industry at companies like Bank of America, which has its headquarters in North Carolina, said Mr. Tucker. He said this further drove up prices. In more recent months, Mr. Bowen said, agents have started to see more hesitation from buyers in the face of inflation, rising interest rates and recession fears.

Meanwhile, while Nascar has helped make the Lake Norman community what it is, some wonder if its influence will last forever. The declining popularity of the sport, as evidenced by lower viewership figures, means that some of the newer drivers aren’t making close to what the established drivers make. In the mid-2010s, the sport was a cultural phenomenon, inspiring the car-racing comedy movie “Talladega Nights: The Ballad of Ricky Bobby,” starring Will Ferrell. But only about 4.83 million people tuned into the Daytona 500 in 2021, compared with 16.65 million in 2013, a decrease of more than 70%, according to Sports Media Watch, a sports media publication.

According to Mr. Atkins, Mooresville’s mayor, one reason for the dip was because Nascar “got so big so fast,” and in the midst of corporate sponsorships, it lost touch with its base. But lately, he continued, there has been a renewed interest in driver personalities and rivalries, which were closely followed by the media when the organisation’s popularity hit its peak. When it comes to foot traffic, Mr. Kelley said that the Nascar Hall of Fame is bringing in more attendees now than before the pandemic, with attendance around 30% higher during the fiscal year of 2022 compared with 2019.

As for real estate, at least one agent said they don’t see the dip in viewership as an immediate threat to the real-estate market. “They’re still making enough money to buy very nice houses,” Mr. Tucker said.



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Italian supercar producer Lamborghini, in business since 1963, is also proceeding, incrementally, toward battery power. In an interview, Federico Foschini , Lamborghini’s chief global marketing and sales officer, talked about the new Urus SE plug-in hybrid the company showed at its lounge in New York on Monday.

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The Urus SE SUV will sell for US$258,000 in the U.S. (the company’s biggest market) when it goes on sale internationally in the first quarter of 2025, Foschini says.

“We’re using the contribution from the electric motor and battery to not only lower emissions but also to boost performance,” he says. “Next year, all three of our models [the others are the Revuelto, a PHEV from launch, and the continuation of the Huracán] will be available as PHEVs.”

The Euro-spec Urus SE will have a stated 37 miles of electric-only range, thanks to a 192-horsepower electric motor and a 25.9-kilowatt-hour battery, but that distance will probably be less in stricter U.S. federal testing. In electric mode, the SE can reach 81 miles per hour. With the 4-litre 620-horsepower twin-turbo V8 engine engaged, the picture is quite different. With 789 horsepower and 701 pound-feet of torque on tap, the SE—as big as it is—can reach 62 mph in 3.4 seconds and attain 193 mph. It’s marginally faster than the Urus S, but also slightly under the cutting-edge Urus Performante model. Lamborghini says the SE reduces emissions by 80% compared to a standard Urus.

Lamborghini’s Urus plans are a little complicated. The company’s order books are full through 2025, but after that it plans to ditch the S and Performante models and produce only the SE. That’s only for a year, however, because the all-electric Urus should arrive by 2029.

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Thanks to the electric motor, the Urus SE offers all-wheel drive. The motor is situated inside the eight-speed automatic transmission, and it acts as a booster for the V8 but it can also drive the wheels on its own. The electric torque-vectoring system distributes power to the wheels that need it for improved cornering. The Urus SE has six driving modes, with variations that give a total of 11 performance options. There are carbon ceramic brakes front and rear.

To distinguish it, the Urus SE gets a new “floating” hood design and a new grille, headlights with matrix LED technology and a new lighting signature, and a redesigned bumper. There are more than 100 bodywork styling options, and 47 interior color combinations, with four embroidery types. The rear liftgate has also been restyled, with lights that connect the tail light clusters. The rear diffuser was redesigned to give 35% more downforce (compared to the Urus S) and keep the car on the road.

The Urus represents about 60% of U.S. Lamborghini sales, Foschini says, and in the early years 80% of buyers were new to the brand. Now it’s down to 70%because, as Foschini says, some happy Urus owners have upgraded to the Performante model. Lamborghini sold 3,000 cars last year in the U.S., where it has 44 dealers. Global sales were 10,112, the first time the marque went into five figures.

The average Urus buyer is 45 years old, though it’s 10 years younger in China and 10 years older in Japan. Only 10% are women, though that percentage is increasing.

“The customer base is widening, thanks to the broad appeal of the Urus—it’s a very usable car,” Foschini says. “The new buyers are successful in business, appreciate the technology, the performance, the unconventional design, and the fun-to-drive nature of the Urus.”

Maserati has two SUVs in its lineup, the Levante and the smaller Grecale. But Foschini says Lamborghini has no such plans. “A smaller SUV is not consistent with the positioning of our brand,” he says. “It’s not what we need in our portfolio now.”

It’s unclear exactly when Lamborghini will become an all-battery-electric brand. Foschini says that the Italian automaker is working with Volkswagen Group partner Porsche on e-fuel, synthetic and renewably made gasoline that could presumably extend the brand’s internal-combustion identity. But now, e-fuel is very expensive to make as it relies on wind power and captured carbon dioxide.

During Monterey Car Week in 2023, Lamborghini showed the Lanzador , a 2+2 electric concept car with high ground clearance that is headed for production. “This is the right electric vehicle for us,” Foschini says. “And the production version will look better than the concept.” The Lanzador, Lamborghini’s fourth model, should arrive in 2028.

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