Preview:
Off Prosperity Church Road nestled near newly built townhomes, apartments and shopping centers sits a community fighting for its existence amid the weight of development pressures.
Last May, Leonel Chavez and many of his neighbors living in the Forest Park Mobile Home Park in northeast Charlotte were shocked when they received a letter from the property owner, Nesbit Oil Company, notifying them of their decision to sell after nearly 60 years.
Read MoreOur thoughts on this story:

I would typically say “and another park bites the dust” but it’s important to remind everyone as to why so many mobile home parks are being torn down right now – and this article demonstrates many of those factors. They include the simple facts that:
- Mobile home parks are just the right size, in terms of acreage, for apartment complexes.
- Mobile home parks have existing water, sewer, gas and electric access.
- Mobile home parks have great locations on major roads.
- Cities will give out any zoning or permitting required to get mobile home parks torn down.
When you add these four facts together, you can see why apartment developers long ago figured out that an existing mobile home park is the perfect location for a new apartment complex.