ABOUT THE CITY
The Piedmont Triad is a region of North Carolina in the Piedmont that consists of the area centered around the cities of Winston-Salem, Greensboro, and High Point. Long known as one of the primary manufacturing and transportation hubs of the southeastern United States, the Triad is also an important educational and cultural region and occupies a prominent place in the history of the American Civil Rights Movement. The Piedmont Triad Region, located in the northern Piedmont section of North Carolina, between the Blue Ridge Mountains and the Atlantic coast, benefits from a temperate climate. There are typically about 217 days of sunshine every year and Extreme low and high temperatures are very rare during any part of the year. What a pleasant place to call home.
About Piedmont Triad
The Piedmont Triad is a region of North Carolina (locally known simply as “The Triad”) that consists of the area surrounding the cities of Greensboro, Winston-Salem, and High Point. The area is connected by Interstate 40 and Interstate 85 and is served by the Piedmont Triad International Airport. Long known as one of the primary manufacturing and transportation hubs of the southeastern U.S., the Triad is also an important educational and cultural region and occupies a prominent place in the history of the American Civil Rights Movement.
Neighborhoods
Ardmore/Miller Street/Medical Centers
Ardmore was merely cornfields until about 1915. Created as an influential middle-class neighborhood, it is dotted with period cottages and craftsman bungalows and is bordered by the two regional medical centers.
Brookstown/Old Salem
Step into Winston-Salem’s past. Stroll down the streets of historic Old Salem. Look north to downtown to remind yourself that more than 200 years have passed since the settlement of this area.
Climate
Month | Avg Hi | Avg Lo | Avg Precip | |
Jan | 47°F | 25°F | 3.89 in. | |
Feb | 52°F | 27°F | 3.49 in. | |
Mar | 61°F | 34°F | 4.66 in. | |
Apr | 70°F | 41°F | 3.56 in. | |
May | 77°F | 52°F | 4.31 in. | |
Jun | 84°F | 60°F | 3.93 in. | |
Jul | 88°F | 65°F | 4.10 in. | |
Aug | 87°F | 63°F | 3.33 in. | |
Sep | 80°F | 56°F | 4.00 in. | |
Oct | 71°F | 43°F | 3.69 in. | |
Nov | 60°F | 34°F | 3.13 in. | |
Dec | 51°F | 28°F | 3.54 in. |
By Car
Freeways/Highways
An east-west I-40 bypass runs south of downtown, allowing trucks to avoid commuter traffic. Business Interstate 40 and U.S. Highways 52, 158, 311, and 421 all run through the city. Interstates 85 and 77 (both running north-south) are about 30 minutes away. I-74 runs north-south through the city, following the route of U.S. Highway 52.
Public Transportation
Metropolitan Transit Authority (316) 265-7221
The Downtown Trolley Service runs from 10 a.m.-5 p.m. on Saturdays and costs 25 cents. The trolley runs from the Farm and Art Market in Old Town to the Museum District with stops at Cowtown, Botanica, the Winston-Salem Art Museum, and the Mid-American All-Indian Center.
Inter-City Transportation
Amtrak (800) 872-7245
From its depot in downtown Greensboro, provides passenger rail service for travelers. A shuttle to the terminal is available from downtown Winston-Salem.
Greyhound Bus (800) 231-2222
Service from City to numerous locations throughout the United States.
Air Transportation
Piedmont Triad International Airport (GSO)
6415 Bryan Boulevard
Greensboro, NC 27409
Greensboro: (336) 665-5600
Winston-Salem: (336) 721-0088
High Point: (336) 454-3213
The Piedmont Triad International Airport has about 75 flights daily to major cities across the United States, mainly along the east coast. It has 25 gates and is served by most major airlines. The airport is just west of Greensboro.
Taxi
ABC Taxi (316) 264 4222
American Cab, Inc. (316) 262-7511
Best Cabs, Inc. (316) 838-2233
Smith Reynolds Airport
3801 N. Liberty St.
Winston-Salem, NC 27105
(336) 767-6361
Smith-Reynolds Airport is a public airport located about 3 miles northeast of Winston-Salem. The airport has two runways, and is used primarily for general aviation and flight training. It is home to the Winston-Salem air show, which is usually held in September.
Local Phone Numbers
City Area Code
The area code for the Piedmont Triad is 336.
Emergency | |
All Emergencies | 911 |
Winston-Salem Police | (336) 773-7700 |
Winston-Salem Fire Department | (336) 773-7900 |
Crisis Pregnancy Center | (800) 395-4357 |
Forsyth County Sheriff’s Department | (336) 748-4100 |
Poison Control | (800) 764-7661 |
Runaway Hotline | (800) 392-3352 |
Financial Services | |
Automatic Teller Information | |
ATM Locator | (800) 248-4286 |
MasterCrd ATM | (800) 424-7787 |
VISA Plus System | (800) 843-7587 |
Lost or Stolen Credit Cards | |
American Express | (800) 233-5432 |
AT&T Universal Card | (800) 423-4343 |
Diners Club | (800) 234-6377 |
Discover Card | (800) 347-2683 |
JCB | (800) 736-8111 |
MasterCard | (800) 826-2181 |
VISA | (800) 336-8472 |
Lost or Stolen Travelers Checks | |
American Express | (800) 221-7282 |
Thomas Cook MasterCard | (800) 223-7373 |
Travelers Check Customer Service | (800) 645-6556 |
VISA | (800) 227-6811 |
Government Numbers | |
Internal Revenue Service | (800) 829-1040 |
Social Security Administration | (800) 772-1213 |
Hospitals | |
Forsyth Medical Center | (336) 718-5000 |
Wake Forest University Baptist Medical Center | (336) 716-2011 |
Support Networks | |
Teen Link (Various Topics) | (800) 235-9678 |
Crisis Pregnancy Center | (800) 395-4357 |
Services | |
Directory Assistance | 411 |
Shipping & Postal Services | |
Airborne Express | (800) 247-2676 |
DHL Airways | (800) 225-5345 |
Emery Worldwide | (800) 443-6379 |
Federal Express | (800) 463-3339 |
UPS | (800) 742-5877 |
Utilities | |
City of High Point: | |
Electricity | (336) 883-3100 |
Garbage Collection and Recycling | (336) 883-3100 |
Gas, Piedmont Natural Gas | (336) 887-9350 |
Water and Sewer | (336 )883-3100 |
Time Warner Cable | (336) 886-4195 |
Television
2 | WFMY | CBS | |
8 | WGHP | FOX | |
12 | WXII | NBC | |
14 | WGPX-DT | ION | |
16 | WGPX | ION | |
19 | WCWG-DT | CW | |
20 | WCWG | CW | |
29 | WXLV-DT | ABC | |
31 | WXII-DT | NBC | |
33 | WMYV-DT | MyTV | |
35 | WGHP-DT | FOX | |
39 | WGSR-LP | Ind. | |
43 | WLXI-DT | TBN | |
45 | WXLV | ABC | |
48 | WMYV | MyTV | |
51 | WFMY-DT | CBS | |
61 | WLXI | TBN |
Radio
AM Radio | ||
WSJS | 600 | News-Talk Radio |
WPIP | 880 | Berean Christian School |
WAAA | 980 | Oldies |
WPOL | 1340 | The Light Gospel Music |
WTOB | 1380 | Spanish Radio |
WSMX | 1500 | Religious Radio |
WFBJ | 1550 | Music From The Heart (Religious) |
FM Radio | ||
WFDD | 88.5 | Wake Forest University (NPR Affiliate) |
WBFJ | 89.3 | Music From The Heart (Religious) |
WSNC | 90.5 | Winston-Salem State University |
WXRI | 91.3 | Southern Gospel |
WMQX | 93.1 | Oldies 93 |
WZTX | 101.1 | FM Talk 101 |
WTQR | 104.1 | Country Radio |
WKZL | 107.5 | #1 Hit Music Station |
Newspapers
Greensboro News and Record
The News and Record is the largest paper in Guilford County. It averages around 100,000 daily circulation.
Winston-Salem Journal
The Journal has a just a little smaller circulation than the News and Record. It primarily serves Forsyth County.
Museums
Reynolda House Museum of American Art
2250 Reynolda Road
Winston Salem, NC 27106
(336) 758-5150
Reynolda House Museum of American Art displays a premiere collection of American art ranging from the colonial period to the present. Built in 1917 by Katharine Smith Reynolds and her husband Richard Joshua Reynolds, founder of the R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company, the house originally occupied the center of a 1,067-acre estate. It opened to the public as an institution dedicated to the arts and education in 1965.
Museum of Anthropology
Wake Forest University
PO Box 7267
Winston-Salem, NC 27109-7267
(336 )758-5282
The Museum’s permanent exhibits consist of objects from the Americas, Africa, Asia, and Oceania, including household and ceremonial items, textiles, hunting and fishing gear, and objects of personal adornment. Materials collected by Moravian missionaries can be found here, as well as prehistoric artifacts from North Carolina’s Yadkin River Valley.
Children’s Museum of Winston-Salem
390 South liberty St
Winston-Salem, NC 27101
(336) 723-9111
SciWorks is a fun, interactive museum for children, teaching basics in all areas of science, and offering fun experiments and educational tours. The Children’s Museum of Winston-Salem is based on classic stories and fairy tales and has several offering for younger children.
Southeastern Center for Contemporary Art (SECCA)
750 Marguerite Drive
Winston-Salem, NC 27106
(336) 725-1904
SECCA celebrates over 50 years of presenting contemporary art to the public. The James G. Hanes House was transformed into an elegant display case for contemporary art. SECCA now also has the addition of film, dance, drama, talk and conversation. SECCA consistently presents the diverse and provocative presentations of our world as seen through artist’s eyes and depicted in every medium from the traditional paint and clay through the unpredictable jigsaw puzzles, shampoo and old barn roofs.
Sawtooth Center for Visual Arts
226 N. Marshall Street
Winston-Salem, NC 27101
(336) 723-7395
Sawtooth Center hosts visiting artists’ works, special project exhibitions, and annual faculty/artists and juried student exhibitions.
Performing Arts
Stevens Center
405 W. 4th Street
Winston-Salem, NC 27101
(336) 721-1945
Stevens Center for the Performing Arts, an intimate, luxurious performance hall that is home to the Broadway Preview Series, where producers and playwrights such as Neil Simon bring their Broadway-bound plays for a final tune-up before their New York openings.
Winston-Salem Symphony
680 West Fourth Street
Winston-Salem, NC 27101
(336) 725-1035
All Classics Series and Kicked-Back Classics concerts take place at the Stevens Center in downtown Winston-Salem. Pops Series concerts are held at the RJ Reynolds Memorial Auditorium (301 N. Hawthorne Road).
Piedmont Opera Theatre
235 N. Cherry Street, Suite 100
Winston-Salem, NC 27101
(336) 725-7101
Piedmont Opera Theatre attracts audience members from 7 states and more than 100 communities throughout North Carolina. The mission of Piedmont Opera Theatre is to create and support consistently superior music theatre productions and programs that ensure recognition of the company as an important asset for entertainment and education, a force in city development and a magnet attraction for regional and national audiences.
Education
Community Colleges
Community colleges exist for two major purposes. The first is to serve as a bridge from high school to college by providing courses for transfer toward a bachelor’s degree. Four out of 10 collegebound high-school graduates start their college education this way.
The second function of community colleges is to prepare students for the job market by offering entry-level career training as well as courses for adult students who want to upgrade their skills for the workplace. They often offer programs that are not available at four-year schools, like fashion design.
Forsyth Tech Community College (336) 723-0371
2100 Silas Creek Parkway
Winston-Salem, NC 27103
Liberal Arts Colleges
Liberal arts colleges offer a broad base of courses in the humanities, social sciences, and sciences. Most are private and focus mainly on undergraduate students. Classes tend to be small and personal attention is available.
Online Learning
Recent years have witnessed the rise of online degree programs, to allow the busy professional a chance to work at their own pace from the comfort of their home on the path to getting a degree. The costs to students are typically the same as for traditional classes- and financial aid is equally available-while the cost to the institution can be much less.
There are online universities ranging from legitimate distance learning systems to fly-by-night degree-mills. It’s important to research a particular institution before deciding to enroll in their system. Generally, brick-and-mortar schools that also offer online classes are the safest, though there are plenty of fully accredited online universities out there.
Nearly 3 million students are believed to be taking online classes at institutions of higher education in the United States this year. That number has been growing about 25% a year recently. Now, virtually all public higher education institutions, as well as a vast majority of private, for-profit institutions, now offer online classes. By contrast, only about half of private, nonprofit schools offer them. Online schools offer everything from Associate’s degrees to Doctoral programs with available emphases in everything from Business Administration to Criminal Justice to Nursing. Some programs require students to attend some campus classes or orientations, but many are delivered completely online. Online courses generally require a computer with a broadband connection, but are now a serious option for the busy professional.
Public vs. Private
Public colleges are usually less expensive, particularly for in-state residents. They get most of their money from the state or local government. Private colleges rely on tuition, fees, endowments, and other private sources. Private colleges are usually smaller and can offer more personalized attention and often more prestige.
Universities
Bennett College (800) 413-5323
900 E. Washington Street
Greensboro, NC 27401
Bennett College is a small, private, historically Black liberal arts college for women.
Elon University (336) 278-2000
100 Campus Drive
Elon, NC 27244
Elon University is a private comprehensive university known for excellent arts and sciences along with outstanding professional programs.
Greensboro College (800) 346-8226
815 West Market Street
Greensboro, NC 27401
Greensboro College, a four year, independent, coeducational institution affiliated with the United Methodist Church, was founded in 1838. The College enrolls nearly 1,300 students.
North Carolina School of the Arts (336) 770-3399
1533 South Main St.
Winston-Salem, NC 27127-2188
An arts conservatory of international renown, the North Carolina School of the Arts was the first state-supported, residential school of its kind in the nation.
Piedmont Baptist College (336) 725-8344
716 Franklin Street
Winston-Salem, NC 27101
Universities
Generally, a university is bigger than a college and offers more majors and research facilities. Class size often reflects institutional size and some classes may taught by graduate students.
North Carolina A&T State University (336) 334-7500
1601 East Market Street
Greensboro, North Carolina 27411
North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University is a public, doctoral/research intensive, land-grant university committed to fulfilling its fundamental purposes through exemplary undergraduate and graduate instruction, scholarly and creative research, and effective public service.
Salem Academy & College (336) 721-2600
601 South Church Street
Winston-Salem, NC 27101
The University of North Carolina at Greensboro (336) 334-5000
1000 Spring Garden Street
Greensboro, NC 27403
PO Box 26170
Greensboro, NC 27402-6170
UNCG is the state university in the area.
Wake Forest University (336) 758-5255
1834 Wake Forest Road
Winston-Salem, NC 27106
Wake Forest is a private university in downtown Winston-Salem.
Winston-Salem State University (336) 750-2000
601 Martin Luther King, Jr. Drive
Winston-Salem, NC 27110
Upper Division
Upper-division schools offer the last two years of undergraduate study, usually in specialized programs leading to a bachelor’s degree. Students then generally transfer to an upper-division college after completing an associate degree or after finishing a second year of study at a four-year college.
Wake Forest University Bowman Gray School of Medicine
Medical Center Boulevard
Winston-Salem, NC 27157
(336) 716-4264
Wake Forest University School of Medicine, one of 125 accredited U.S. medical schools, and North Carolina Baptist Hospital together form Wake Forest University Baptist Medical Center.
Winston-Salem/Forsyth County School District
1605 Miller St.
Winston-Salem, NC 27103
(336) 727-2816
Winston-Salem/Forsyth County Schools (WSFCS) is a school district in Forsyth County, North Carolina. WSFCS has over 70 schools in its system, and serves about 48,300 students every year. WSFCS was formed in 1963 by the merger of the Forsyth County School System and Winston-Salem School System.
Guilford County School District
712 N. Eugene Street
900 English Road
Greensboro, NC 27401
High Point, NC 27262
(336) 370 – 8100, (336) 819 – 2700
Guilford County School District is the third largest school district in North Carolina serving more than 68,800 students. More than 9,600 full- and part-time employees enthusiastically share the district’s mission to graduate responsible citizens prepared to succeed in higher education or the career of their choice.
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