News

Lookin’ butter-fly: Renovated farmyard unveiled at WNC Nature Center

Lookin’ butter-fly: Renovated farmyard unveiled at WNC Nature Center

Left to right: Kate Frost, executive director of the Friends of the WNC Nature Center, Asheville City Council member Bo Hess, Asheville City Council member Maggie Ullman, WNC Nature Center director Chris Gentile and Mayor Esther Manheimer celebrate the WNC Nature Center ribbon cutting on Thursday, April 16. Photo: Saga Communications/Pruett Norris


ASHEVILLE, N.C. (828newsNOW) — Mayor Esther Manheimer, Asheville City Council members and Western North Carolina Nature Center staff participated in a ribbon cutting today for the Gateway to the Southern Appalachians exhibit, a renovated entrance, gift shop and farmyard with a brand-new butterfly garden experience.

The event was held at 1 p.m., Thursday, April 16 at the entrance to the WNC Nature Center, 75 Gashes Creek Road.

Entrance to a park or zoo with wooden buildings on each side and a decorative gate featuring teal and blue waves.
The renovated entrance to the Western North Carolina Nature Center.

Chris Gentile, WNC Nature Center director, Kate Frost, executive director of the Friends of the WNC Nature Center and Manheimer each took to the podium to share a few words before the ribbon cutting. They spoke to a crowd including WNC Nature Center and Friends of the WNC Nature Center staff, as well as WNC Nature Center visitors and members of the media.

Gentile noted that it had been 578 days since Tropical Storm Helene devastated Western North Carolina, including portions of the WNC Nature Center, which delayed the Gateway to the Southern Appalachians project.

“To be honest, I never thought we’d get this project back up and running,” Gentile admitted. “After that day, I don’t think any of us really did. But it’s a true tribute to the dedication, the hard work, the love, honestly, and just an undying spirit, because we got to work back on this project with our contractors about a month after the storm.”

A man in a blue shirt speaks into a handheld microphone at a wooden podium outside a nature center signboard.
Chris Gentile, WNC Nature Center director, speaking before the Gateway to the Southern Appalachians ribbon cutting on Thursday, April 16 at the WNC Nature Center. 

Manheimer acknowledged the hard work of city staff, the WNC Nature Center team and their contractors put into reopening the WNC Nature Center after the storm.

“Compliments to all of you. We see you take a tragedy and turn it into a triumph. You took this downtime, I’m gonna call it, to do some great work and to come back stronger than ever,” Manheimer told the crowd. “With the official opening of the Gateway, you can see the continuing commitment to the facility, to its animals and to the education and enjoyment of our community and visitors.”

“Stronger than ever” was no exaggeration. Manheimer said that spring break attendance at the WNC Nature Center was the highest it has been since 2010, with almost 11,000 guests passing through the gates between April 3-12.

In her remarks, Frost shone a spotlight on the new features of the Gateway, especially the butterfly exhibit.

“At the heart of this transformation is our native pollinator and butterfly garden. 
The completion of this project comes at a critical time, because pollinators are in decline, including the monarch butterfly,” Frost said. “Not only is it now a beautiful place for people to experience the butterflies, but it’s also a place for them to learn how they can be part of a solution in conservation action.”

The ribbon cutting was conducted by Gentile, Manheimer and Frost, as well as Asheville City Council members Bo Hess and Maggie Ullman.

After the ceremony, themed refreshments were offered to guests, including a monarch butterfly-shaped cookie.

Butterfly-shaped cookies with orange monarch wings outlined in black on a wooden board, arranged in a row with some cream-colored butterflies beside them.
Monarch butterfly cookies were offered at the ribbon cutting for the Gateway to the Southern Appalachians on Thursday, April 16 at the Western North Carolina Nature Center.

For tickets and more information about the Western North Carolina Nature Center, visit www.wildwnc.org.

Recent Headlines

2 hours ago in Entertainment

Man pleads guilty to plotting attack on a Taylor Swift concert in Vienna

Fresh

A man accused of pledging allegiance to the Islamic State group and plotting to attack one of superstar singer Taylor Swift's concerts in Vienna nearly two years ago pleaded guilty as his trial began on Tuesday, his lawyer said.

19 hours ago in Entertainment, Music

Michael Jackson streams skyrocket after ‘Michael’ biopic opening weekend, up 95% in the US

Michael Jackson once sang "Don't Stop 'Til You Get Enough." For fans of the King of Pop's music, it's words to live by: Streams of his catalog jumped 95% in the U.S. over the weekend when compared with the same dates the previous weekend.

1 day ago in Entertainment

Nedra Talley Ross, the last surviving member of the 1960s bee-hived pop band the Ronettes, dies

Nedra Talley Ross, the last surviving member of the 1960s bee-hived pop band the Ronettes, who sang the enduring hits "Be My Baby," "Baby I Love You" and "Walking in the Rain" alongside her cousins, has died. She was 80.

1 day ago in Entertainment, Music

Melanie C says she’s bringing joy to the club with ‘Sweat,’ an athletic album from the Spice Girl

Get your heart pumpin'. She'll make you "Sweat." Such is the promise sung by the artist known as Melanie C, or Mel C and Sporty Spice of the game-changing '90s girl group Spice Girls, in the lead single from her ninth album of the same name.

1 day ago in Entertainment

Summer Movie Preview: Nolan, Spider-Man and ‘Toy Story’ light up the cinemas

The movies always feel bigger in the summer. The budgets. The ambition. The names. The stakes. This summer, Hollywood has many of the regulars on the lineup: "Spider-Man," "Minions," "Star Wars" and "Toy Story." But the most eagerly anticipated is not a superhero, toy, or franchise: It's a 3,000-year-old epic poem.