District 12 of ‘The Hunger Games’ is now a historic place
RALEIGH, N.C. — What would the folks in the Capitol think? District 12 is now on the National Register of Historic Places.
The Henry River Mill Village, which served as the home of the three main characters from the original “The Hunger Games,” was named a historic place last month and announced by state officials earlier this week. It’s a designation that the new owners sought for the 72-acre (29-hectare) property because they “wanted to be the ones who got this property the recognition it deserves,” said Calvin Reyes, who bought the village in 2017 with his mother and stepfather.
When “The Hunger Games” was filmed in North Carolina in 2011, the mill village served as the home of Katniss, Peeta and Gale. But when Reyes talks about the proper recognition, he’s not referring merely to the filming of a box office smash.
“People come for ‘The Hunger Games,’ but they stay for the history,” Reyes said in a phone interview Thursday.