The Nebel Mill Annex

Name and location of the property: The
property formerly known as the Nebel Knitting Mill Annex is located at
127 West Worthington Avenue at Camden Road in Charlotte, NC.
Name, address, and telephone number of
the present owner of the property:
The owner of the property is:
Camden Square Associates LLC
c/o MECA Properties
908 S. Tryon St.
Charlotte, NC 28202
Telephone: (704) 372-9461
Representative photographs of the
property: This report contains
representative photographs of the property.
A map depicting the location of the
property: This report contains a
map that depicts the location of the property.
Current Deed Book Reference to the
property: The most recent deed to
this property is listed in Mecklenburg County Deed Book 8984 on page 972.
The Tax Parcel Number of the property is 121-022-03.
A brief historical sketch of the property:
This report contains a brief
historical sketch of the property prepared by Emily D. Ramsey.
A brief architectural description of the
property: This report contains a
brief architectural description of the property prepared by Emily D.
Ramsey.
Documentation of why and in what ways the
property meets the criteria for designation set forth in NCGS
160A-400.5:
a. Special significance in terms of its
history, architecture and/or cultural importance:
The Historic Landmarks Commission judges
that the property known as the Nebel Knitting Mill Annex does possess
special significance in terms of Charlotte and Mecklenburg County, based
on the following considerations:
The Nebel Knitting Mill Annex is a
tangible reflection of the tremendous growth that the hosiery industry
in particular experienced during the post-war period in
Charlotte-Mecklenburg.
The Nebel Knitting Mill Annex is
important for its association with William Nebel, the founder of the
Nebel Knitting Company, a pioneer in the southern hosiery business and
the man responsible for bringing the hosiery industry to Charlotte.
The Nebel Knitting Mill Annex is
architecturally significant as one of the few examples of the Art
Moderne building style in the Charlotte area, and represents the
aggressive efforts towards modernization within the
Charlotte-Mecklenburg hosiery industry after World-War II.
The building was designed by Herman V.
Biberstein, noted Charlotte engineer and architect and son of Richard C.
Biberstein, who designed the Nebel Knitting Mill at 101 West Worthington
in the 1920s.
b. Integrity of design, setting,
workmanship, materials, feeling and/or association:
The Historic Landmarks Commission contends
that the architectural description included in this report demonstrates
that the Nebel Knitting Mill Annex meets this criterion.
Ad Valorem Tax Appraisal: The
Historic Landmarks Commission is aware that designation would allow the
owner to apply for an automatic deferral of 50% of the Ad Valorem taxes on
all or any portion of the property which becomes a designated
"historic landmark". The current appraised value of the
improvements is $469,360. The current appraised value of the .719 acres is
$112,750. The property is zoned UMUD.
Date of Preparation of this Report: 14
August 1999
Prepared by: Emily D. Ramsey
745 Georgia Trail
Lincolnton, NC 28092
Telephone: (704) 922-5198
Statement of Significance
The Nebel Knitting Mill
Annex
127 West Worthington Avenue
Charlotte, NC

Summary Paragraph
The Nebel Knitting Mill Annex, erected in
1946, is a structure that possesses local historic significance as a
building that reflects, both in its style and its function, the push
towards modernization and the tremendous growth that occurred in the
Charlotte hosiery industry after World War II. William Nebel, a
third-generation German knitter who brought the hosiery industry to
Charlotte when he established the Nebel Knitting Company in 1923, was a
pioneer in the hosiery industry. His company produced innovative styles
for full-fashioned lady's hosiery until the late 1960s, and Nebel himself
held over a dozen patents for his original designs. The Nebel Knitting
Company initiated a period of rapid growth in the fledgling Charlotte
hosiery industry throughout the 1920s and 1930s and created much needed
diversity within the city's textile industry, which was dominated by
cotton textile manufacturers. The Nebel Knitting Company continued to
flourish through the Great Depression, with a newly expanded building
located at 101 West Worthington Avenue. William Nebel and his company were
in a prime position at the end of World War II to meet the tremendous
demand for women's full-fashioned nylon hosiery, and in the post-war
period the Nebel Knitting Company became the largest and most productive
hosiery concern in Mecklenburg County, and an internationally known name
in hosiery. As the center of a large expansion program designed to
modernize the Nebel Knitting Company completely, the 1946 annex to the
Nebel Knitting Mill is a tangible reminder of this boom time in Charlotte
industry, and represents the importance of modernization within the
textile industry during the post-war period.
Architecturally, the Nebel Knitting Mill
Annex is significant as one of the few buildings within the
Charlotte-Mecklenburg area designed in the Art Moderne style. Most textile
mills in the area, including the adjacent Nebel Knitting Mill at 101 West
Worthington Ave, were "revivalistic structures" which reflected
the "conservative philosophy that characterized the political, social
and economic thinking of Charlotte's business elite". Herman V.
Biberstein's innovative design for the Nebel Knitting Mill Annex broke
with this conservative trend. The strong horizontal lines of the facade,
emphasized by closely spaced concrete stringcourses and subtly balanced
with simple pilasters are elements which characterized the revolutionary
art and architecture movements of the early twentieth century. The
building was decorated only with its clean lines, understated details and
symmetry - elements that were indicative of the Art Moderne style. Such a
structure not only broke with the architectural tradition of the Charlotte's
textile community, it also reflected the move towards a more modern
industry. The Nebel Knitting Mill Annex housed the most up-to-date
knitting machinery available after the war, and the modern elements of the
structure reflected the changes taking place within the industry, giving
the Nebel Knitting Company a modern image to go along with its
revolutionary knitting techniques.
Commerce and Industry Context and
Historical Background Statement
The Nebel Knitting Mill Annex, erected in
1946, housed operations that contributed significantly to the
revolutionary growth of the Southern hosiery industry within the Charlotte
area during the boom period following World War II. When William Nebel, a
German immigrant and third-generation knitter, came to Charlotte and
established the Nebel Knitting Company in 1923, the city was "on the
crest of the wave" in terms of its textile production and prosperity.
Charlotte was, at that time, "the largest center in the South for
textile mill machinery and equipment," and the city served as the
heart of a large and profitable textile region that covered North and
South Carolina as well as large parts of Tennessee and Georgia. Charlotte's
reputation within the textile community made it an attractive site for a
diverse array of new businesses and manufacturers, including William Nebel.
When the Nebel Knitting Company began its small operation on the second
floor of a building on East Kingston Avenue, it was the first knitting
manufacturer in the Charlotte area. Although other knitting manufacturers
soon followed (there were five hosiery mills in Charlotte by the 1930s),
the Nebel Knitting Company continued to prosper. The company quickly
outgrew its East Kingston Avenue location, and in 1925 Nebel moved his
operations into a much larger building at 1822-1824 South Boulevard. By
the end of the 1920s, the company had again expanded its production to
meet the skyrocketing demand for women's full-fashioned hosiery. The
construction of a new building, situated beside the Southern Railroad line
at 101 West Worthington Avenue in the heart of the prestigious Dilworth
industrial sector, reflected Nebel's tremendous success in Charlotte.
The new mill was completed in 1927 and expanded in 1929 to more than
double its original size, making it the largest hosiery mill in the city.
The economic devastation of the Great
Depression, which destroyed many Charlotte textile manufacturers during
the 1930s, did not stop production in the area's relatively new hosiery
industry. The Nebel Knitting Company continued to produce nylon hosiery
throughout the Depression, and William Nebel would later claim that his
company, even during the most difficult times, had "never had a year
when it wasn't in the black". The beginning of World War II opened
even more opportunities in the hosiery industry. Many manufacturers
switched to war-time production of nylon military supplies, which had
replaced silk in the manufacturing of tents, ropes, and parachute
material.
The post-war period was a tremendously
prosperous time for the Nebel Knitting Company and for the industry as a
whole. After the war, the Southern hosiery industry was poised to enter
its biggest boom period to date. As soon as December of 1945, the Charlotte
Observer proclaimed that there would soon be "a great expansion
of the South's knitting industry", brought about by an
unprecedented demand for women's full-fashioned hosiery; Taylor R.
Durham, secretary of the Southern Hosiery Manufacturers Association,
revealed in the article that "quite a number of companies [were]
planning expansion of their production capacity". William Nebel,
determined to take advantage of the boom in business and the new
technologies within the knitting industry, outlined an ambitious plan for
the expansion and complete modernization of the Nebel Knitting Mill. The
cornerstone of this plan involved the building of a new, modern addition
to the existing building at 101 West Worthington, which would give the
company a total 125,000 square feet of working space. Nebel commissioned
Charlotte architect Herman V. Biberstein, son of Richard C. Biberstein
(who had designed the Nebel Knitting Mill) and head of the architectural
firm Biberstein & Bowles since his father's death in 1931, to design
the new addition. The resulting structure, the Nebel Knitting Mill Annex,
was completed in 1946 and outfitted with the most modern knitting
machinery available within the next two years. By 1949, Women's Daily
Wear magazine reported that the Nebel Knitting Company was beginning
"production of 60-gauge, 15-denier nylon full-fashioned hosiery"
at its newly modernized plant.
To draw attention to the company's newly
outfitted and modernized facilities, and to the innovative styles of women's
hosiery produced in the mill's modern annex, William Nebel began an
extensive and aggressive national advertising campaign in the late 1940s.
The new ads, which appeared in prestigious women's magazines such as Vogue,
Charm, Bazaar, Seventeen and Glamour, featured
well-known movie star Jane Russell and helped to make Nebel a top name in
hosiery not only in the South, but throughout the country. The company's
success and its rising prestige within the industry during and after the
1940s made it not only the "largest and most productive hosiery
concern in Mecklenburg County" but also one of the largest in the
Southeast. William Nebel followed the lead of other major textile
operators in the Carolinas and kept an office on the eighteenth floor of
the Empire State Building. "Nebel and nylons", the Charlotte
News declared in 1953, "are two words that are often spoken by
the nation's retail merchants".
The Nebel Knitting Company led the
Charlotte hosiery industry into a new era of modern manufacturing during
the boom period following World War II. William Nebel,
Charlotte-Mecklenburg's most successful hosiery manufacturer and a
pioneer in the hosiery industry, not only brought the industry to
Charlotte, but continued throughout the post-WWII period to push for
modernization and innovation within the hosiery industry. The Nebel
Knitting Mill continued to produce women's hosiery and pantyhose until
1968, when the complex (including the original structure and the annex)
was sold to Chadbourn, Inc. The Nebel Knitting Mill Annex is currently
occupied by Design Center of the Carolinas.
Architectural Description and Historical
Background Statement
The Nebel Knitting Mill Annex, constructed
in 1946, stands on the corner of West Worthington Avenue and Hawkins
Street at 127 West Worthington Avenue. The structure is one of many
buildings that comprise the industrial sector of nearby Dilworth,
Charlotte's first streetcar suburb. The location of the Nebel Knitting
Mill Annex and its neighbors is intimately tied to three important events:
the laying of the first Charlotte line of the Southern Railroad along
South Boulevard in October of 1852; the development of Charlotte's first
cross-town electric streetcar system in 1891; and the subsequent rise of
Dilworth, Charlotte's first streetcar suburb. Edward Dilworth Latta and
the Charlotte Consolidated Construction Company developed the Dilworth
area during the late nineteenth century and the early twentieth century.
The key to Dilworth's long-term success as a residential community lay
in the development of a nearby industrial sector, which brought hundreds
of families to the area. Large manufacturing plants like the Atherton
Cotton Mill, the Charlotte Trouser Factory, and the Park Manufacturing
Company formed the basis of the new industrial district, which the
Charlotte Observer dubbed in 1895, "the Manchester of
Charlotte". "Because employees found residences in
Dilworth," historian Dan Morrill explains, "the newly
established industries in the suburb enabled the residential scheme of the
Charlotte Consolidated Construction Company to survive." With
easy access to both the railroad and a main streetcar line that ran from
Dilworth to the intersection of Tryon Street and Trade Street (the heart
of downtown Charlotte), it was inevitable that the area between South
Boulevard and the railroad line in Dilworth would develop into a major
industrial sector.
When William Nebel came to Charlotte in
1923 to set up the Nebel Knitting Company, the Dilworth industrial sector
was a thriving area of diverse businesses and manufacturers of trousers,
flour, shirts, textile supplies, elevators and heaters were just a few of
the products that flowed out of the district. It was an ideal location for
the first Charlotte hosiery concern, and Nebel set up his modest operation
in the second floor of a building on East Kingston Avenue. As the company
prospered and expanded, Nebel kept his company near the Dilworth area,
first moving to a larger building at 1822-1824 South Boulevard and finally
constructing his own plant on West Worthington Avenue, bordering the
railroad tracks.
By the time plans for a modern annex to
the Nebel Knitting Mill were drawn up in 1945, the streetcar line was
gone, and an ever-expanding network of paved highways that had begun
converging in Charlotte during the 1920s made trucks a rival to the
railroad as a means of transporting goods. The end of World War II
signaled the beginning of a modern era for the hosiery industry, and
William Nebel's ambitious plans for the expansion and modernization of
his plant and his products reflected the post-war boom in hosiery. The
new, modern annex, which would house $500,000 worth of top-of-the-line
knitting equipment that Nebel had ordered, was the center of the expansion
plan. The contract was awarded to the Atlanta Building Company in December
of 1945, and a building permit was issued on January 29, 1946. Herman V.
Biberstein, son of noted Charlotte architect Richard C. Biberstein, was
chosen as the architect for the estimated $150,000 project.
Designed in the distinctive 20th
century Art Moderne style, which stressed the reflection of a structure's
function through emphasis on the utilization of new technologies, simple
massing and very little ornamentation, the building was a fitting symbol
for the new direction that the Southern hosiery industry, led by the Nebel
Knitting Company, was taking. Not only would the 30,000-square-foot,
steel, concrete and brick structure be outfitted with the most modern
equipment, it would also feature "the most modern type of
air-conditioning and artificial lighting" and a new form of
insulation which would be "inside the masonry". Although Nebel
intended the new annex and the existing plant to operate essentially as
"one unit," the Nebel Knitting Mill Annex, with its distinctive
and atypical Art Moderne elements, must have seemed an odd contrast to the
more conservative style of the Nebel Knitting Company's main building, a
traditional "revivalistic structure" that reflected "the
conservative political, social, and economic thinking" of the past
decades. H. V. Biberstein's innovative design for the annex broke with
these traditions, creating one of the few Art Moderne structures in the
Charlotte area.
The Nebel Knitting Mill Annex consists of
a single structure located on a rectangular lot on the corner of West
Worthington Avenue and Hawkins Street, to the southeast of the center city
area on the west side of South Boulevard and the Southern Railroad line.
It borders the sidewalk on both the northeast and northwest sides, and
faces West Worthington Avenue. The building is a two-story, square-shaped
red brick building in common bond, five bays wide by six bays deep, with a
flat roof interrupted by a centrally located arch which indicates the
location of an interior atrium.
The facade of the building is done in a
deep russet face brick. The strong horizontal lines of the facade are
emphasized by closely spaced concrete stringcourses which lead the viewer
to the front entrance, a centrally located recessed entryway covered by a
curved metal roof which bears the name of the current occupant, the Design
Center of the Carolinas. The entrance itself is highlighted with
alternating rows of stack-bonded brick and concrete which surround the
recess. The strong horizontal emphasis of the first floor of the facade
is subtly balanced with simple brick pilasters in stack bond. A plain
concrete stringcourse runs along the facade and visually separates the
upper and lower floors. The fenestration of the building is regularly
punctuated along the facade. Two groupings of three windows flank each
side of a large central window that rises to the top of the arched
roofline of the atrium. The windows have a rectangular, 5 over 6
configuration with clear glass panes and blue-painted metal muntins. Four
grouping of two windows with the same configuration can be seen on the
northwest side of the building.
The interior of the Nebel Knitting Mill
Annex was remodeled extensively in the mid-1990s. The original layout, two
separate stories of uninterrupted space designed to accommodate Nebel's
large knitting machines, has been converted into a series of small
business spaces surrounding a central atrium. Much of the second floor was
removed to create the atrium; the original wood flooring was used to
create the new second floor balconies. A new metal staircase rises to the
second floor balconies at the front of the atrium. The fenestration on the
facade and the northwest side, as well as clerestory windows above, were
added to light the new space.
Although the building was altered during
this 1995-96 remodeling, it still retains many of its important exterior
features, and no changes have been made to the overall massing of the
structure. The building retains its clean lines, understated details and
symmetry - elements that were indicative of the Art Moderne style. The
Nebel Knitting Mill Annex is a structure that is significant not only
because it broke with the architectural tradition of Charlotte's textile
community, but also because it is reflective of the move towards a more
modern industry in the post-war years. The Nebel Knitting Mill Annex
housed the most up-to-date knitting machinery available after the war, and
the modern elements of the actual structure reflected the changes taking
place within the industry, giving the Nebel Knitting Company a modern
image to go along with its revolutionary knitting techniques.
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