APRIL 2020 - Atlanta INtown

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APRIL 2020 Vol. 26 No. 4 â– www.AtlantaINtownPaper.com

BLUE IN GREEN

Blue Heron Nature Preserve celebrates 20th anniversary with new milestones P. 6

ATLANTA INTOWN 6065 ROSWELL ROAD, SUITE 225 SANDY SPRINGS, GA 30328

PRSRT STD US POSTAGE PAID Atlanta, GA Permit NO. 3592


NEW TO MARKET

NEW TO MARKET

Morningside: 1261 University Drive. Outstanding all-brick, five-bedroom Morningside home in covenant Springdale Elementary. Beautiful serene creek setting on an oversized lot-. This wonderful home is in moveright-in-condition and loaded wow factor. The entrance leads to an outstanding top-of-the-line kitchen/great room combination with a separate breakfast room. 5BR / 5BA $1,375,000

Morningside: 791 San Antonio Drive NE. Morningside at its absolute, very best. San Antonio Drive is one of Morningside’s best-kept secrets with ideal walkability to restaurants, shops, and parks. This 8-years young home is in pristine, move-right-in-condition with an outstanding level, flat backyard with Astroturf design for maximum enjoyment. 5BR / 4.5BA $1,595,000

PRICE IMPROVEMENT

NEW TO MARKET

Morningside: 1740 West Sussex Road. Homes Are Seldom Available on this Street with an Outstanding, Level, Almost Half Acre. Features Include: All Brick, Move in Ready, 5 Bedrooms, 5.5 Baths, 2 Story Foyer Staircase, Paneled Library/Office, Finished Basement with High Ceilings, Large Deep Back Porch, Enjoys Total Privacy, 2-Car Attached Garage, Tremendous Expansion Possibilities. 10++ 4 BR / 4 BA $1,849,000

Morningside: 1374 Pasadena Avenue. Outstanding five bedroom Morningside/ Johnson Road Estate home. Located on quiet, low traffic Pasadena Avenue in Coveted Morningside school district. This move-in ready home enjoys gourmet, top-of-the-line kitchen with breakfast bar connecting to the family room and large dining room. 5 BR / 4 BA $1,095,000

NEW TO MARKET

UNDER CONTR ACT

UNDER CONTR ACT

UNDER CONTR ACT

Morningside: 1715 Lenox Road. Morningside home loaded with character, charm and function in Coveted Morningside School District. Handsome red tile roof and center courtyard. 4 BR / 4 BA $859,000

Candler Park: 1381 Euclid Avenue. Perfect Location on Two Parks in Heart of Candler Park! Double Your Square Footage with Inlaw Suite, Big Media Room, Kitchenette & Bonus Room. 5 BR / 4 BA $1,275,000

Morningside: 1262 Pasadena Ave. All brick Tudor home located on quiet, low-traffic street in Morningside that is loaded with charm. 5 BR / 4.5 BA $949,000

Morningside: 942 Plymouth Road. Morningside Home in Pristine Vintage Condition Featuring Full Expandable Attic and Terrace Level with High Ceilings. This Home is Ideal for Renovation. 3 BR / 2 BA $750,000

COMING SOON

COMING SOON

COMING SOON

COMING SOON

Virginia Highland: 700 Elkmont Dr. Fully renovated. 3 beautiful finished levels, just steps from Orme park.

Morningside: 1651 North Pelham Road. Exceptional Contemporary Morningside Home with Rare, Recently Renovated Coach House. 5 BR / 4.5 BA

Morningside: 1026 Robin Lane. Rare six bedroom Morningside home on 1.97 acres. Open floor plan and full finished basement on a quiet cul-de-sac street. Ideal for a growing family. 6 BR / 5 BA

Morningside: 1097 Mclynn Ave. Total package. 5 bedrooms with open floor plan, with fresh modern vibe, coach house & pool. 5 BR / 5 BA $2,150,000

5 BR / 3.5 BA

MORNINGSIDE’S MOST TRUSTED REAL ESTATE ADVISOR FOR OVER 20 YEARS

“Ken Covers has an amazing reputation but our trust in him is primarily from personal experience. He has helped us buy and sell in the past and there was no question when we put our house on the market that we would list it with Ken. No one knows Morningside and the surrounding neighborhoods better than Ken and his commitment is 100%. I’d say he’s got a gift except that I know how hard he works. I would and have recommended Ken to anyone looking to buy or sell and my advice to them is ‘listen to him. He’s worthy of your trust and he know what he’s talking about.” - Johanna Norry

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Your Life. Your Home. Your Realtor®.

Atlanta

©2020 Engel & Völkers. All rights reserved. Each brokerage independently owned and operated. All information provided is deemed reliable but is not guaranteed and should be independently verified. If your property is currently represented by a real estate broker, this is not an attempt to solicit your listing. Engel & Völkers and its independent license partners are Equal Opportunity Employers and fully support the principles of the Fair Housing Act. *Source: FMLS data from 1/1/2015 through 12/31/2019 in Morningside.

2 April 2020 |

At l a n t a I N t o w n Pa p e r. c o m


Our mission: Published monthly since 1994, Atlanta INtown provides its readers with hyperlocal news and information that helps foster a sense of community in a dynamic urban setting. Live, work and play—we cover everything that makes our city home.

CONTACT US

Contents April 2020

Sustainability

Editorial Collin Kelley INtown Editor collin@atlantaintownpaper.com (404) 917-2200, ext. 102

6 } Blue Heron Nature Preserve 10 } Trees Atlanta 12 } Earth Day Connections 12 } Aluma Farm 14 } Above the Waterline 16 } Atlanta Audubon

Contributors Sally Bethea, C. Cleo Creech, Kathy Dean, Clare Richie, Asep Mawardi, Jacob Nguyen, Kelci Sleeper, Tim Sullivan, Mark Woolsey

Neighborhood

Submissions Article queries and calendar submissions should be emailed to collin@atlantaintownpaper.com. Published By Springs Publishing LLC Atlanta INtown • Reporter Newspapers Atlanta Senior Life 6065 Roswell Road, Suite 225 Sandy Springs, GA 30328 Phone: (404) 917-2200 Fax: (404) 917-2201

18 } Big Brothers Big Sisters 20 } Coronavirus Impact 20 } Hulsey Yard Reopens 21 } TimmyDaddy

12

22 } Olympic Marathon Trials

Business

24 } AmericasMart Renovations 25 } Business of Houseplants 27 } Business Briefs

Steve Levene Founder & Publisher stevelevene@reporternewspapers.net (404) 917-2200, ext. 111

Home & Real Estate

Amy Arno Director of Sales Development amyarno@reporternewspapers.net (404) 917-2200, ext. 112

28 } Midtown Micro-Units 28 } Poncey-Highland Townhomes 29 } Real Estate Briefs

18

Rico Figliolini Creative Director rico@reporternewspapers.net (404) 917-2200, ext. 117

News You Can Eat

Deborah Davis Office Manager deborahdavis@reporternewspapers.net (404) 917-2200, ext. 110

32 } Rufus Rose House

Advertising

For information call (404) 917-2200 ext 119.

30 } Atlanta Community Food Bank 31 } Farmers Markets Reopen

Mountain Living

25

28

33 } Mountain Homebuying 36 } Georgia State Parks 38 } Making a Splash 41 } ABG Gainesville 42 } Parting Shots

Sales Executives Jeff Kremer, Janet Porter Cory Anne Charles Circulation/ Subscriptions Each month, 30,000 copies of Atlanta INtown are mailed to homes and distributed to businesses in and around ZIP codes 30306, 30307, 30308, 30309, 30324 and 30329. For delivery information, call (404) 917-2200, ext. 110. © 2020 All rights reserved. Publisher reserves the right to refuse editorial or advertising for any reason. Publisher assumes no responsibility for information contained in advertising. Any opinions expressed in print or online do not necessarily represent the views of Atlanta INtown or Springs Publishing, LLC.

On The Cover 33 Connect with Atlanta INtown AtlantaINtown Paper.com

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Blue Heron Nature Preserve staff, volunteers and supporters gather at the old dam to celebrate the nature preserve’s 20th anniversary. Front row, from left: Jackson Tilgner, Ellen Wickersham, and Melody Harclerode. Back row, from left: Khadijah Tilgner, Norris Broyles III, Betsy Lane, Kevin McCauley, Blakely Doyle, Scarlett Wills, and Courson Doyle. Photo by Asep Mawardi.

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April 2020 | IN


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A Note To Our Readers As this issue went to press, the impact of the Coronavirus pandemic was affecting all aspects of life in our community. Because this issue was produced in a shortened deadline, some of Atlanta INtown’s regular features and coverage are not included or will be moved online in the days ahead. Our editorial team is covering events on a daily basis, posting breaking news and updates at AtlantaIntownPaper.com (which has experienced a surge in online readership). Check the website often for new stories and announcements and subscribe to receive daily and weekly emails from us. Springs Publishing’s mission is to provide hyperlocal news and information that connect our readers to their neighborhoods and communities. To that end, please share your stories and experiences with INtown editor Collin Kelley or let him know of others who deserve recognition by emailing Collin@atlantaintownpaper.com. Thank you to our readers and advertisers for continuing to rely on our publications for their community connection. Steve Levene, Publisher Springs Publishing LLC Atlanta INtown/Reporter Newspapers/Atlanta Senior Life

Coronavirus: Covering a global story with an Intown focus This is not quite the issue of INtown we expected to be publishing in April. And this isn’t the letter I expected to be writing to you. As the staff began gearing up to produce our annual “Go Green” issue – jampacked with editorial about sustainability, Earth Day, spring events and home tours – the coronavirus pandemic arrived in Atlanta. Once the first two cases of COVID-19 in Georgia were diagnosed in Fulton County, what had seemed to be a faraway concern was suddenly on our doorstep. Overnight, our coverage at AtlantaINtownPaper.com and on social media switched almost exclusively to the impact of coronavirus. There were days when the situation was so fluid that we’d post news and minutes later have to update it. To say that the barrage of emails, phone calls, press conferences, event cancellations, and closure notices was overwhelming would be the understatement of the new decade. You’ll find quite a few mentions of COVID-19 in this abbreviated April issue, but we also wanted it to be a distraction from the boredom and uncertainty of being homebound. There are inspiring stories about the ever-evolving Blue Heron Nature Preserve, Trees Atlanta’s commitment to our canopy, and the lifeCollin Kelley saving work of Atlanta Community Food Bank. collin@atlantaintown Missing from this issue is The Studio, our monthly section on paper.com arts and culture happenings around Intown. In less than a week, every story we had planned fell apart due to event cancellations and venue closures. Similarly, the News You Can Eat section was rejiggered in light of restaurants shuttering or switching to take-out. The businesses and organizations that make up the fabric of Intown’s arts and culture community need your support now and in the future. If you can, please make a donation or patronize these organizations and businesses financially struggling due to the pandemic. The cliché about the road ahead being uncertain doesn’t seem like such a cliché as I’m writing this. What I am certain about is that INtown will be here to shine some light through the fog. I encourage you to bookmark AtlantaINtownPaper.com, follow us on Facebook and Twitter (@ATLINtownPaper), and sign-up for our alerts. We will get through this, and INtown will do our part to help weather this crisis. And to slightly modify a slogan made famous by the Brits: Keep Well and Carry On.

EDITOR’S LETTER

Atlanta Fine Homes, LLC fully supports the principles of the Fair Housing Act and the Equal Opportunity Act. Each franchise is independently owned and operated.

4 April 2020 |

At l a n t a I N t o w n Pa p e r. c o m


$92M+ Sold in 2019

80+ Homes Closed in 2019

Jim Getzinger Founding Member of Compass Atlanta

22

404.307.4020 404.668.6621 jim.getzinger@compass.com

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A Note from Jim These are truly uncharted times as we navigate COVID–19. Kindness, family, community and selflessness have never been so paramount. Take this time to pause, reflect and support your neighborhood restaurants and small businesses—they need all the help we can give right now. Stay healthy and safe, and know that we are all in this together.

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1045 Hudson Drive NE Sold | Offered for $1,199,000, Under Contract in 1 Day

Morningside

Ansley Park Ansley Park

35 Lafayette Drive NE Sold off Market | Offered for $4,200,000

596 Sherwood Road NE Under Contract | Offered for $1,695,000

Virginia Highland

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Compass is a licensed real estate broker and abides by Equal Housing Opportunity laws. All material presented herein is intended for informational purposes only. Information is compiled from sources deemed reliable but is subject to errors, omissions, changes in price, condition, sale, or withdrawal without notice. No statement is made as to the accuracy of any description. All measurements and square footages are approximate. This is not intended to solicit property already listed. Nothing herein shall be construed as legal, accounting or other professional advice outside the realm of real estate brokerage.

At l a n t a I N t o w n Pa p e r. c o m

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April 2020 | IN


Sustainability BLUE IN GREEN Recycling • Resources • Lifestyle

Blue Heron Nature Preserve celebrates 20th anniversary with new milestones

Mark Wills walks his dogs, Freud and Frida, along the Blueway Trail at at Blue Heron Nature Preserve in Buckhead. (Photos by Asep Mawardi)

By Collin Kelley

B

lue Heron Nature Preserve has plenty to celebrate in April. Not only will the North Buckhead environmental center mark its 20th anniversary on Earth Day, but also the arrival of a new executive director and the opening of phase one of the Blueway Trail. The Roswell Road environmental center installed two new bridges connecting 30 acres of greenspace with a three-mile walking trail known as the

6 April 2020 |

Blueway Trail. The project took three years to complete and Blue Heron raised over $750,000 for trail construction and improvements. “Visitors can now travel seamlessly to all three Blue Heron properties. It’s a significant milestone as we continue to grow and evolve,” outgoing executive director Kevin McCauley said. “Plans for Phase 2 include linking Blue Heron’s trails to nearby Chastain Park and PATH400.” A free festival is planned to introduce the new trail network to the public during the annual Earth Day Celebration on April

25. Highlights will include music, food, art, and family-friendly activities. The nature center is also celebrating the arrival of award-winning architect and environmentalist Melody Harclerode as its new executive director. Harclerode’s credentials include stints as director of the Sandy Springs Conservancy and program coordinator at Arabia Mountain. “We are thrilled to welcome Melody to Blue Heron,” McCauley said. “She has a passion for the natural world and brings a wealth of experience to expand the opportunities for us to bring an

understanding and appreciation for this special place.” “Blue Heron Nature Preserve has inspired children and adults about nature through the arts, education, conservation, research, and innovative projects for twenty years,” Harclerode said. “Building upon Kevin McCauley’s accomplishments, I am honored to work with the staff, board members, and volunteers, as the new executive director, to boost the impact, support, and appreciation of this amazing Continued on page 8 At l a n t a I N t o w n Pa p e r. c o m


R E A L E S TAT E . R E A L P E O P L E .

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1705 Monroe Drive NE Residence #A5 2 Bed | 1 Bath Offered at $80,000

Avondale East #25 4 Bed | 3 Bath | 1 Half Bath Offered at $525,938

Skyland Brookhaven Residence #73 4 Bed | 3 Bath | 1 Half Bath Offered at $514,482

Waldorf Astoria Residence #M3 4 Bed | 4 Bath | 1 Half Bath Offered at $2,750,000

Listing Agent: Leah Christian 313.995.6990

Listing Agent: TJ Edmond 404.502.5473

Listing Agent: Tyler Russell 404.510.2246

Listing Agent: Sam Morgan 404.556.6110

BUCKHEAD

GWINNETT

MIDTOWN

MIDTOWN

1480 Mount Paran Road NW 4 Bed | 4 Bath Offered at $899,000

1551 Misty Valley Dr 4 Bed | 2 Bath | 1 Half Bath Offered at $285,999

The Atlantic Residence #2907 2 Bed | 2 Bath | 1 Half Bath Offered at $649,900

1065 Midtown Residence #3603 2 Bed | 2 Bath | 1 Half Bath Offered at $1,399,000

Listing Agent: Christin Coffin 678.994.3915

Listing Agent: Adrian Davis 678.382.1024

Listing Agent: Renee Koenig 912.695.1240

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MIDTOWN

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The Atlantic Residence #3807 3 Bed | 3 Bath Offered at $889,900

District Lofts Residence #10226 3 Bed | 3 Bath Offered at $599,900

40 West 12th Residence #906 4 Bed | 3 Bath | 1 Half Bath Offered at $2,190,150

11560 Folia Circle #3 3 Bed | 3 Bath | 1 Half Bath Offered at $538,900

Listing Agent: Michael McLeod 404.606.0962

Listing Agent: Chad Davis 404.317.1896

Listing Agent: Susie Proffitt 404.915.9367

Listing Agent: Chad Davis 404.317.1896

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518 Alcott Drive 4 Bed | 2 Bath Offered at $299,900

2192 Monterey Drive NW 5 Bed | 5 Bath | 1 Half Bath Offered at $1,350,000

White Provisions Residence #PH910 3 Bed | 3 Bath Offered at $1,100,000

Listing Agent: Lonnie Bryant 404.668.3096

Listing Agent: Ashlee Heath 404.226.0734

Listing Agent: Ashley Battleson 404.281.5828

Listing Agent: Harold Monu 404.503.5176

SOUTH BUCKHEAD 1745 Peachtree Street NW Atlanta, Georgia 30309

MORNINGSIDE

Atlanta

1411 North Highland Avenue NE Atlanta, Georgia 30306

www.evatlanta.com ©2020 Engel & Völkers. All rights reserved. Each brokerage independently owned and operated. All information provided is deemed reliable but is not guaranteed and should be independently verified. If your property is currently represented by a real estate broker, this is not an attempt to solicit your listing. Engel & Völkers and its independent license partners are Equal Opportunity Employers and fully support the principles of the Fair Housing Act.

At l a n t a I N t o w n Pa p e r. c o m

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April 2020 | IN


Continued from page 6

You had a say in getting your baby in there... …you should have a say in how you get her to come out. Blue Heron staff, volunteers and supporters gather on the newly-installed bridge that is part of the Blueway Trail through the 30-acre preserve.

Atlanta Gynecology & Obstetrics includes you in the healthcare decisions surrounding your birth experience. Women have been having babies for centuries — our physicians, midwives and nurse practitioners have worked as a team for years, guiding women along their birth journey. We meet you at the crossroads of collaboration, choice, and safety. Our goal is for you to have the birth experience you’ve dreamed of — planning WITH you, not AT you, guiding you to the best birth possible.

green space in Atlanta.” Blue Heron Nature Preserve shares its facilities at 4055 Roswell Road with the Atlanta Audubon Society and The Amphibian Foundation, making the preserve an environmental asset unlike any other in metro-Atlanta. “We are 20 years young; I want to stress that!” Harcelrode proclaimed. “As a City of Atlanta park, Blue Heron has been nurtured and grown through community support.” Blue Heron’s unique focus on education means thousands of student have benefitted from the park’s programs, field trips and summer camps. There’s also a strong connection to the arts community with five murals and ongoing fine arts initiative. “I say the park is ‘recre-educational,’” Harclerode said. Harclerode said her training as an architect has given her a unique perspective on how people use indoor and outdoor space. “As an architect, I work collaboratively to create spaces that inspire, inform and educate. It’s placemaking. I’m taking that idea of placemaking and moving outdoors to create space that inspires.” For more about Blue Heron Nature Preserve, visit bhnp.org.

Visit AtlantaGYNOB.com to learn more, or call to make an appointment! Decatur Office 315 Winn Way Decatur, GA 30030 404.299.9724

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For those who seek an exceptional life

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1783 NOBLE DRIVE OFFERED FOR $1,895,000

1018 OXFORD ROAD OFFERED FOR $1,495,000

1429 WESSYNGTON ROAD OFFERED FOR $1,849,000

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1237 REEDER CIRCLE OFFERED FOR $1,149,000

936 KINGS COURT OFFERED FOR $1,299,000

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Atlanta Fine Homes, LLC fully supports the principles of the Fair Housing Act and the Equal Opportunity Act. Each franchise is independently owned and operated. Source: TrendGraphix, Top Producer, January 1, 2019 – December 31, 2019,

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April 2020 | IN


By Mark Woolsey Richard Sussman not only appreciates Atlanta’s nickname of ‘a city in a forest,’ he brings that catchy phrase right back home. “I have no grass,” he said of his home in the city of Atlanta. “Our landscaping is trees and shrubs and raised beds. I have completely eliminated grass.” Sussman had plenty of opportunities to get up-close and personal to sturdy trunks and leafy branches during a career with the U.S. Forest Service. Now retired, he’s taken that knowledge and his expertise as a University of Georgia Master Gardner and put it to good use with Trees Atlanta, the non-profit which over the last 35 years has worked tirelessly to protect Atlanta’s existing tree canopy and help grow new green space. During April, the group plans to take part in the 50th observance of Earth Day on April 22 by doing a tree planting project and educational programs. But understandably, the group’s bigger push has historically come on Arbor Day. In addition to that, a much bigger and decade-long offensive has just launched. Sussman is one of a strong corps of volunteers that helps with various aspects of the group founded in 1985. They perform tasks ranging from actual plantings to leading tours along the wildly popular BeltLine Trail—which Trees Atlanta has dubbed an arboretum, a botanical garden devoted to trees—to handling various datacollection and administrative tasks. Older adults are key to that effort, according to volunteer coordinator Susan Pierce Cunningham. She said many of the project leaders who helm various group initiatives are older volunteers. They work with staffers who are site coordinators—and Pierce Cunningham indicated that they are infinitely valuable. “Just like in all aspects of life, they have more life experience with everything,” she said. “That means they understand more quickly what we’re trying to accomplish. Also, by that stage in life, they have a better idea of what they’re interested in, so they come to us with a passion for tree preservation. And if they’re retired, they have more time to devote.” That raises the questions: just what has Trees Atlanta accomplished since its modest founding aimed at planting trees in downtown Atlanta? And what’s yet to come? The short answer to both queries isquite a lot. It’s like the old saying about mighty oaks growing from little acorns. “Trees” has broadened to include community tree planting programs in Atlanta and a number of suburbs, the ambitious BeltLine Arboretum, ongoing tree care, a kids’ program, workshops and educational events and advocacy efforts aimed at preserving and possibly expanding Atlanta’s tree canopy. The group said the city’s tree coverage stands at around 47% and is slowly dropping. Sussman is one of the docents who leads tours along the BeltLine, having joined the initial phase of the program back in 2012. He seems to delight in expounding on the value of the hundreds of graceful magnolias, oaks, evergreens and other species thrusting skyward along with shrubs and native grasses. He’s also quick to point out how the plantings create a transportation route for invaluable pollinators—birds, bats, insects and the like. The longtime volunteer said the native grass plantings proved controversial in some quarters but added that “native grasses

10 April 2020 |

Celebrating the Great Outdoors Trees Atlanta’s Mission Extends Beyond Earth Day

Above, Trees Atlanta volunteer Lawrence Richardson takes part in a tree planting. Opposite page, Richardson regularly leads tours along the Atlanta BeltLine, now dubbed an arboretum by Trees Atlanta. Right, the One Million Trees Initiative, led by Trees Atlanta, is a plan to save and plant 1,000,000 trees in the Atlanta metro area by 2030. All photos courtesy of Trees Atlanta.

survive very well in difficult conditions. That’s different from putting in a lawn that requires pesticides and herbicides.” Lawrence Richardson, another senior volunteer, pointed out that shade helps to moderate temperatures in the midst of highdensity urban development and that trees benefit the atmosphere by absorbing carbon dioxide and releasing oxygen. Richardson also leads BeltLine tours and speaks to community groups—and he doesn’t mind getting his hands dirty. Some of the trees planted along the BeltLine bear his touch.

Elaborating on his path to involvement: “After moving here in 2007, I wanted to do some planting and gardening, and being from up north I really didn’t know a lot about southern soil and plants. I thought (getting involved with the group) would be

a good way to learn.” Learn he did, as he took the group’s “Treekeepers” course and then built on that knowledge. He was named Volunteer of the Year in 2014. Co-executive director of the group At l a n t a I N t o w n Pa p e r. c o m


NEW LISTING

850 Oakdale Road

406 Spring House Cove

1915 Neel Reid masterpiece in Druid Hills restored and renovated throughout.

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1741 Meadowdale Avenue 3BR | 2BA | $825,000

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309 10th Street

4BR | 3BA | 2HB | $1,595,000

Amazing Victorian overlooking Piedmont Park chock full of historic details.

UNDER CONTRACT

Chic Morningside Bungalow on rare .6 acre lot.

610 Greystone Park

1371 North Decatur Road

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NEW LISTING

Harvin Greene

M 404.314.4212 O 404.352.2010 harvingreene@dorseyalston.com

FOR SALE

in the process, but more work needs to be done. Levine’s thinking lies along similar lines. He believes regulations should reduce disturbance on residential lots; he’d like to see the allowance for disturbance maxed out to 60-65%. Levine also wants better regulations for planting trees in parking lots that includes a goal of 50% canopy coverage, as well as better protection for longer-lived native species. That protection would require creative solutions to design around existing trees. Levine said he’s been involved for 24 years and with a degree in landscape architecture, his passion has long been for nature and forests. He lamented that “a lot of projects remove forests for not-the-most attractive buildings and designs. I want to make urban areas better working with landscape architects.” Preservation is indeed one goal of the group’s “One Million Trees” initiative launched on Feb. 20, but it’s far from the only facet. The effort will also include trees planted on both city land and public projects and others installed by residents and businesses on private property. “Trees” plans to fold in ten nonprofit groups in what’s billed as uniting diverse communities and approaches in a fight against climate change as well as environmental stresses stemming from urban growth. They aim to finish the farreaching campaign within 10 years. Older adults helping with the group said that above and beyond such lofty goals, getting involved is just plain fun. “You meet a lot of great people from all walks of life,” said Richardson. “There’s a common purpose, exercise and fresh air. You learn a lot about the city and the people and neighborhoods.”

UNDER CONTRACT

Greg Levine is also bullish about the help older adults have provided. He said they helped plant about 7,000 trees last year in 70 different neighborhoods in Atlanta and nearby cities. Volunteers also aided in reforestation in some 30 green spaces, wading into such tasks as removing aggressive and invasive species such as Chinese Privet. Sussman, for his part, does data collection on the city’s urban forests to answer such questions as, “Are trees previously identified or planted still standing and are they properly marked?”. Others serve on teams giving at least two years of followup care to relatively new plantings. And “we have a senior who is helping us write and communicate our strategic plan,” said Levine. Then there’s the advocacy piece. Richardson is a member of the Atlanta Tree Conservation Commission, whose website outlines a role in assisting in “the protection, maintenance and regeneration of the trees and other forest resources of Atlanta.” The group also oversees educational and other programs and hears and decides appeals of administrative officials’ decisions. With a rewrite of the city’s tree ordinance pending, he has firm ideas on what he’d like to see done, calling “disjointed” the current process for appeals from city decisions on how new and existing trees should be handled in the course of residential and commercial construction. “By the time the city arborist gets involved on whether trees should be removed, plans often have already been approved,” he said, adding he’d like to see a more “team-focused” effort. He said he understands that the city has recently gotten the arborist division involved earlier

2046 N Ponce de Leon Avenue 5BR | 3BA | 1HB | $2,150,000

Spectacular Lewis Crook designed home on 1.1 acre estate lot.

4BR | 3BA | $1,195,000

The ache for home lives in all of us, the safe place where we can go as we are and not be questioned. — Maya Angelou

100 West Paces Ferry Road | Atlanta, Georgia 30305 | dorseyalston.com Information believed accurate but not warranted. Equal Housing Opportunity.

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April 2020 | IN


Earth Day Connections Due to the coronavirus pandemic, many of this year’s Earth Day events are likely to be cancelled. However, there are many area organizations dedicated to preserving and protecting our natural landscapes and resources that still need your support. Please visit the links below for updated event information and to make a donation.

Chattahoochee Nature Center chattnaturecenter.org

Park Pride parkpride.org

Chattahoochee Riverkeeper chattahoochee.org

Piedmont Park Conservancy piedmontpark.org

EarthShare Georgia earthsharega.org

Wylde Center wyldecenter.org

Hands On Atlanta handsonatlanta.org

Keep Atlanta Beautiful keepatlantabeautiful.org

Green Oasis

Aluma Farm providing fresh fruit and vegetables in food desert

Nature Conservancy in Georgia nature.org Aluma Famer co-owners Andy Friedberg and Anna Ness.

By Clare S. Richie

Georgia Institute of Technology Brain Research Study SEE YOUR BRAIN AT WORK! We are conducting a memory and stress study to examine spatial navigation techniques used during a computerized virtual navigation game. This is a two-day study and eligible participants will perform some of the navigation tasks while receiving magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) brain scans. *Non-MRI option available. We are looking for men and women volunteers who are:

• 65 – 80 years of age • In good physical health

You will be compensated for your participation. If you are interested please contact us at:

maplab@gatech.edu or call our lab at (404) 385-0798.

12 April 2020 |

With the coronavirus (COVID-19) potentially disrupting supply chains, local urban farms may become an even more precious resource. Aluma Farm, located in Southwest Atlanta on 3.8 acres along the Atlanta BeltLine’s Westside Trail, will offer its bounty at a plant sale on Saturday, April 11, weekly Farmstand starting Thursday, April 16, and is exploring a vegetable preorder/pick-up before April 16 (be sure to check alumafarm.com or @alumafarm for updates on these events). “Small urban farms are really providing a service to the community - green space, engage with nature and access to healthy foods/healthy eating,” said Aluma Farm co-owner and farmer Andy Friedberg. Plant sales include starter plants like tomatoes, peppers, melons, and herbs for individual gardens. The Farmstand, which runs Thursdays 4-8 pm through November features vegetables, fruits, cut flowers and honey. Spring crops include greens (kale, arugula, collards, chard), carrots, green onions, green garlic, strawberries and more. About 125 shoppers visit the Farmstand each week. “Over the years, we’ve been able to get a feel for what people want,” said Aluma Farm co-owner and farmer Andrea Ness. Based on a 2018 survey, 85% of the farm’s retail customers live within a two-mile-walking distance. “That was really exciting for us, because that means we are serving the community that’s right here,” Ness said. One that the USDA designated a food dessert with no grocery stores, markets or food co-ops. Aluma Farm also offers Community Supported Agriculture (CSA) options, in which members buy a harvest share before the spring/fall season and then receive weekly produce for 15-weeks. Options include: a full share of six weekly vegetables, a salad share of four weekly vegetables and a new prepaid gift card. For the gift card, “you choose how much to pay, in advance. It’s more flexible if you travel a lot or have busy schedules,” Ness said. The farm still receives an upfront investment and cardholders use as often as desired. To promote greater access, Aluma Farm offers a sliding scale CSA and partners with Wholesome Wave to double EBT dollars for customers receiving SNAP benefits. “Last year 50 households (participated in the CSA). This year hoping to get up to 75,” Ness said. Ness and Friedberg bring more than a decade of farming experience to this work. In California, Ness learned “beyond sustainable” practices of using farming to restore damaged ecosystems. During law school summer breaks, apprenticed at the Serenbe farm and later worked on urban farms in Massachusetts. The co-owners met Bamboo Creek Farm, Global Growers’ 15-acre incubator farm in Stone Mountain, while farming separate plots. Ness sold microgreens and specialty crops to local restaurants. Friedberg sold produce at farmer’s markets. They looked out for each other’s plots. At l a n t a I N t o w n Pa p e r. c o m


accepting a $450,000 federal grant that requires a $150,000 match, to create more urban growing. This program is aligned with the City’s goal of 85% of Atlantans residing within a half-mile of fresh food by 2022. One idea that has been brought up is to make room for both purposes by adding some affordable housing units in conjunction with the farm. As the farm’s future is discussed, spring season crops will be available at the plant sales, Farmstand, CSA pick-ups and restaurant deliveries. And volunteering, group tours and workshops on gardening, pickling and wild fermenting will continue to draw the community in. “We wanted to show that a farm can be a viable business, but we’ve realized – this opportunity in the middle of the neighborhood –we’re capable of a bigger role: a space for job creation, education, and quality of life,” Friedberg said. “We would love the farm continue indefinitely and become a place for young farmers to gain experience to start their own farms,” Ness added.

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Their “natural partnership” led them to respond to the Atlanta BeltLine’s RFP to cultivate an urban farm on land the BeltLine had purchased, removed pavement, concrete and pollutants and conducted a full soil remediation. “The soil had been so damaged and degraded from the clean up process and its former industrial uses. Our first year, we planted 10 beds of the heartiest crops. Everything sprouted, grew four inches tall then just died immediately. Our second year, we started bringing in compost and adding that to the soil. As of now, we have brought in 700 cubic yards of compost.” Ness said. “Last year we grew 22,000 lbs. of vegetables from about an acre of land.” Ness and Friedberg just started their fifth year of production and are in discussion with the BeltLine about renewing their lease beyond February 2021. This BeltLine and City are focused on increasing affordable housing but the City also supports more urban farms and gardens. On March 2, the Atlanta City Council extended the Aglanta Grows-A lot program, by

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April 2020 | IN


Celebrate – and save – the US Environmental Protection Agency Science, data collection and rigorous analysis leading to informed decision-making to protect public health, safety and welfare are the hallmarks of an advanced and responsible society. In the midst of the coronavirus pandemic, we are learning the hard, deadly lesson that ideological undermining of the role of government in our lives and, more recently, the outright rejection By Sally Bethea of facts and science have put all of us in Sally Bethea is the retired executive director harm’s way. In “Letters of Chattahoochee from an American,” Riverkeeper. She political historian continues her advocacy for the environment and Heather Cox Richardson recently won the Georgia Press observed that in Association Award for the post-World War opinion writing for her II years, there was monthly column a commitment to in INtown. using government to promote stability by fostering equality of opportunity and a rising standard of living for all. This was an extension, she says, of the government regulations, social safety net and infrastructure development established by President Franklin Delano Roosevelt and the Democrats in the 1930s and continued by Republican President Dwight Eisenhower in

ABOVE THE WATER LINE

14 April 2020 |

the 1950s. In the decade after World War II, a young woman born on a farm outside Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania used her scientific training and powerful writing skills to educate the general public about the inextricable connections between humans and the natural world: the life support systems upon which we all depend. Her name was Rachel Carson. As a biologist and editor with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, she was privy to early studies that showed how chemicals, developed during wartime then transformed into domestic products, were poisoning birds and wildlife – while contaminating our air, land and water. Carson embarked on a relentless, and often lonely, crusade to bring science, data and rigorous analysis to the attention of the public and elected officials in language that was understandable and compelling. In 1962, she published Silent Spring, which warned of the dangers to

natural systems from the misuse of chemical pesticides and helped launch the modern environmental movement. A private person and unlikely revolutionary, Carson literally changed the world by creating among the public an “ecological conscience” and revealing the critical role of science and data in protecting all of us from man-made poisons. In 1970 – eight years after the publication of her seminal book and six years after her death from cancer – Congress created the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, which, this year, celebrates its golden anniversary. It has been said that EPA is the “extended shadow of Rachel Carson.” People across America were sick and tired of burning rivers, oil spills, toxic air pollution and stinking waterways; they were alarmed when a nationwide survey revealed, in 1969, that more than half of all drinking water treatment systems had major deficiencies. With strong public and bipartisan political pressure, they demanded and secured change. I was in college and only generally aware of the first Earth Day on April 22, 1970 and the creation of EPA that December – when a variety of federal research, monitoring, standard-setting and enforcement activities were consolidated into one agency. Its mission: to protect public health and the environment by conducting research and implementing federal environmental statutes, most of which were passed during that transformative decade. After completing a masters in environmental planning at Georgia Tech, I began working at EPA in 1980, as a management intern. Six months later, Ronald Reagan was elected president; in his inaugural address, he proclaimed: “Government is not the solution to our problem, government is the problem.” With the advent of the Reagan Administration and its laser focus on tax cuts, the unraveling of federal natural resource agencies, such as EPA, began. Experts were silenced, investigations shut down and research and monitoring projects de-funded. While I worked on several interesting water-related projects, I had way too much time on my hands with nothing meaningful to do – the apparent intention of political appointees. Those years did provide me with an important lesson in how budgets, politics and ideology can stymie and even destroy the science, data collection and

policy-making that keep our communities safe. Over the past four decades, support for EPA has waxed and waned, but hardworking, committed people at the agency have secured an impressive list of successes that have made our lives better and longer. Blood lead levels in children have been dramatically reduced; toxic air emissions significantly lowered; bans of dangerous chemicals enacted; and, here in Atlanta, EPA worked closely with Chattahoochee Riverkeeper to stop chronic sewage spills in the river that supplies our drinking water; its role was critical to the successful outcome. This year’s 50th anniversary celebration should appropriately recognize all of these accomplishments and many more. The celebrations will be overshadowed, however, by the fact that EPA and other federal agencies whose missions depend on science are being relentlessly and systematically destroyed by the Trump Administration. Almost 700 employees have left the EPA in the past three years and 95 environmental regulations have been overturned. Across the federal government, 1,600 scientists have left their positions and most have not been replaced. It’s now open season for polluters and their lawyers and lobbyists who have whined since the Reagan Administration about “burdensome” regulations, while making huge profits. The regulatory rollbacks that they have achieved, including calculated limits on public input in some areas, now threaten our health and communities. It’s going to take a long time for scientific expertise to return to the EPA, Centers for Disease Control, Health and Human Services and others government agencies – even when we act now by electing candidates who embrace science and fact-driven policies. As we are learning with the ongoing publichealth crisis, our lives and economic futures depend on a strong, funded and informed government.

Biologist and conservationist Rachel Carson At l a n t a I N t o w n Pa p e r. c o m


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We are proud to recognize the top-performing Coldwell Banker® independent sales associates in your community. Their exceptional knowledge, skills and commitment to truly remarkable service ensure you receive the best possible real estate experience, every time. Intown 1370 North Highland Avenue | 404.874.2262 | ColdwellBankerHomes.com Real estate agents affiliated with Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage are independent contractor sales associates, not employees. ©2020 Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage. All Rights Reserved. Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage fully supports the principles of the Fair Housing Act and the 20U08B_ATL_2/20 Equal Opportunity Act. Owned by a subsidiary of NRT LLC. Coldwell Banker and the Coldwell Banker Logo are registered service marks owned by Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC.

At l a n t a I N t o w n Pa p e r. c o m

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April 2020 | IN


H I G H

HIGH MUSEUM OF ART ATLANTA | HIGH.ORG

For The Birds

Atlanta Audubon receives grant money for two local projects Enjoy free admission and special programs on the second Sunday of each month.

April 12 – May 10 Designed for little kids, big kids, and the whole family, Second Sundays are for everyone. Visit us each month and experience new interactive, innovative family activities inspired by our collections and rotating exhibitions. Generous support for Second Sundays is provided by the Lettie Pate Evans Foundation.

LISTEN on 16 April 2020 |

By INtown Staff Atlanta Audubon has received two big grants to complete projects designed to create bird-friendly habitats. The organization received a $3,000 grant through the Georgia Department of Natural Resources’ Wildlife Viewing Grants program to construct and install a 12-foot-tall Chimney Swift tower at Freedom Park. The Chimney Swift tower at Freedom Park will complement existing bird- and pollinator-friendly habitat work completed by the Freedom Park Conservancy and their partners at the Freedom Park Big Creek Greenway (above Bird and Wildflower Garden. and below) will see its bird Certified as an Atlanta habitat restored by Atlanta Audubon Wildlife Sanctuary Audubon, which also plans in 2018 and located in to build a Chimney Swift Freedom Park at the corner of Tower in Freedom Park (center). North Avenue and Candler Park Drive, the garden is a site for the reintroduction of native plants and shrubs for bird and pollinator habitat. Since the 1950s, Chimney Swifts and other aerial insectivores have experienced drastic population declines due to several factors, such as the increased use of pesticides that harms their main prey, flying insects, and the loss of swifts’ nesting and roosting habitat (formerly hollow trees and more recently, man- made chimneys). Chimney Swifts, now listed as vulnerable by the IUCN

Red List of Threatened Species, have responded to these challenges by increasingly flocking to urban areas that offer abandoned factory smokestacks or historical home chimneys that have been left uncapped and which mimic their natural breeding and roosting sites. Atlanta Audubon was also recently awarded a $20,900 grant from the Georgia Ornithological Society’s (GOS) Bill Terrell Avian Conservation Grants fund to implement a second phase of bird-friendly habitat restoration at Big Creek Greenway. Atlanta Audubon will restore ten additional acres of bird-friendly habitat, building on the 12 acres restored during phase one of this project in 2019. Atlanta Audubon will be partnering with the City of Alpharetta, Georgia Native Plant Society, and the Ed Isakson/Alpharetta Family YMCA to complete this work. Big Creek Greenway is a linear park extending approximately eight miles from its northernmost point near Windward Parkway in Alpharetta to its southernmost point near Old Alabama Road in Roswell. This park has proven to be an important greenspace for resident and migratory birds in Fulton County, with more than 190 bird observations recorded on eBird, a real-time, online database that has revolutionized the way the birding community reports and accesses information about birds. The focus of this restoration project will be to create bird-friendly habitat by removing invasive and exotic plant species such as Chinese privet and English Ivy and installing native plants as appropriate that will assist resident and migratory birds to use the area as nesting, foraging, and stopover habitat. At l a n t a I N t o w n Pa p e r. c o m


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LIFETIME SALES

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NEW LISTING 1821 Meadowdale Avenue ◆ Morningside

PENDING 1017 Kentucky Avenue ◆ Virginia Highland

PENDING 1074 E Rock Springs ◆ Morningside

SOLD 201 Peachtree Circle ◆ Ansley Park

SOLD 29 Walker Terrace ◆ Ansley Park

SOLD 572 Edgewood Avenue #305 ◆ O4W

CONNECT WITH US!

$65+M SOLD IN 2019

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SOLD 170 Boulevard SE Unit #D101 ◆ Edgewood

ERIN YABROUDY D: 404.504.7955 O: 404.233.4142 Erin.Yabroudy@HarryNorman.com

SOLD 238 15th Street #14 ◆ Ansley Park

ErinYabroudy.com

FOR INFORMATION ON OUR CURRENT ACTIVE LISTINGS!

KEVIN MCGLYNN D: 404.285.5674 O: 404.233.4142 Kevin.McGlynn@HarryNorman.com

BUCKHEAD OFFICE-532 EAST PACES FERRY ROAD, ATLANTA, GA 30305, 404.233.4142. HARRYNORMAN.COM The above information is believed to be accurate but not warranted. Offer subject to errors, changes, omissions, prior sales and withdrawals without notice. Equal Housing Opportunity. At l a n t a I N t o w n Pa p e r. c o m

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April 2020 | IN


The Neighborhood News & Features

Bigs and Littles

Big Brothers Big Sisters of Metro Atlanta honor top volunteers By Kelci Sleeper

B

ig Brothers Big Sisters of Metro Atlanta (BBBSMA) honored two “Big” volunteers who have made a significant difference in the lives of their “Littles.” The 2020 Bigs of the Year were chosen from over 1,400 volunteers across the metro in recognition of their extraordinary commitment to their Little Brothers and Sisters (“Littles”). Littles and their families nominate their Big Brothers or Sisters for the honor and BBBSMA staff select a male and female winner. The Bigs of the Year were recently announced at yhr annual Big Appreciation event and will have an opportunity to be named as Big Brothers Big Sisters of America’s National Big Brother or Sister of the Year. Meet this year’s “Bigs.”

Big Sister of the Year: Paola Juárez Castillo Paola Juárez Castillo has been matched with her Little Sister Yadhira since December 2015 and in that time, the two have become quite inseparable. When speaking about her favorite memory with her Big Sister, Yadhira said, “All my outings with Paola are great, but I have to say that participating in our Mexican tradition

for her

of ‘Dia de Los Muertos’ was an eye opener – we try to participate every year in this celebration and [it] makes me feel closer to my family and to my culture.” Paola has worked to help Yadhira with a speech disorder, something she too struggled with as a girl. Together, the pair have presented an award in front of hundreds at BBBSMA’s annual Legacy Awards Gala. “No matter what, Paola is there to support Yadhira in anything,” said Yadhira’s mother, Zoila. “Every time she goes [with Paola], Yadhira comes back with her mind full of positive stuff. The level of commitment that Paola has with our family can’t be described or imitated.” “For me, it’s been huge to realize how small things have a huge impact Yadhira with on them,” Paola explained. “When Paola Juarez Castillo I ask her, ‘what do you want to do with me today? What is your favorite thing to do?’ she says, ‘watch a movie with you and make cupcakes together.’ We all try to do these big things for our Littles, but one thing I have learned over the years is that the smallest things have the biggest impact.”

Big Brother of the Year: Glenn Noronha

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Glenn Noronha and Little Brother Alen have been matched for over five years. Alen’s mother believes Glenn has taught Alen important life skills during their time together. “Honestly, he’s taught him about leadership and having character – that he needs to be an honest and standup person, and a leader as well,” she said. “Glenn has really taught him that you can be cool and not necessarily have to go along with the trends that are popular.” When Alen left for military school, the pair had no trouble keeping in touch and Glenn was sure to be there, cheering him on as he graduated. Alen’s mother attributes his performance at military school, reaching the highest possible ranks, to “the caliber of leadership he saw in Glenn.” “Glenn has helped me through some of the hardest parts of my life and consistently been there for me. He is my family now and will be Glenn Noronha with Alen in my life forever,” said Alen. A story they both love to tell centers around one of Alen’s favorite outings: the time he got to go to work with Glenn, an ophthalmologist, and dissect a pig’s eye. “Alen has had a tremendous impact on me, which is something that I’ve realized over time. He has become family and a part of the fabric of who I am,” Glenn explained. “When we met, it was never for a couple of hours, but instead for the better part of a Saturday afternoon and it became a way of life.” At l a n t a I N t o w n Pa p e r. c o m


No. 1 Intown Brokerage, 2019 TOTAL HOME SALES & TOTAL SALES VOLUME BRO OKHAVEN 1640 Canopy Chase Offered for $4,000/Month Karyn Watkins 404.309.9018

BRO O K H AV EN 2145 Millennium Way Offered for $379,900 Ryan Johnston 404.430.8204

BU C K H E A D 20 Cherokee Road Offered for $3,100,000 Casey Keesee 678.618.1995

B U C K HE A D 21 Ivy Square Offered for $309,900 Maria Stewart 770.361.3564

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BUCKHE AD 2233 Peachtree Road, No. 1405 Offered for $699,000 Robin Elliott 404.314.9777

BU C K H E AD 250 Pharr Road, No. 903 Offered for $245,000 Chase Horner 404.754.4133

BU C K H E A D 31 Honour Circle Offered for $1,100,000 Neal Heery 404.974.4388 George Heery 404.974.4378

B U C K HE A D 3180 Mathieson Drive, No. 502 Offered for $625,000 Annie Boland 404.449.1179

BUCKHE AD 3286 Northside Parkway, No. 904 Offered for $619,000 Cathy Davis Hall 404.915.0922

CABBAGETOW N 266 Berean Avenue Offered for $589,900 Adam Ellis 770.355.0549 Patti Ellis 770.366.4658

CAPI TO L V I E W 1449 Allene Avenue Offered for $425,000 Lisa Bennett 678.531.2996

CASCA D E 0A Niskey Lake Road Offered for $340,000 DeShawn Snow 678.805.2686

C H AMB LEE 5404 Peachtree Road, No. 9 Offered for $739,900 Allen Snow 404.931.1176

DECATU R 149 McClean Street Offered for $1,299,000 Michael Redwine 404.394.4071

M C DONOUGH MI DTOW N 1495 E. Lake Road 1074 Peachtree Walk, No. B102 Offered for $1,450,000 Offered for $309,900 Clay Henderson 770.652.1890 Jared Sapp Haden Henderson 678.787.9226 404.668.7233

O RM E WOOD PARK 1065 United Avenue, No. 101 Offered for $222,900 Allen Snow 404.931.1176

PO N C EY- H I GH L AN D 548 Woodall Avenue, Unit A Offered for $995,000 Chase Mizell 770.289.2780

CASCA D E 1114 Elysian Park Offered for $78,000 DeShawn Snow 678.805.2686

CASCADE 1123 Elysian Park Offered for $78,000 DeShawn Snow 678.805.2686

DRU I D H I LLS E AST AT L A N TA E AST AT L A N TA FORSY T H 1200 Ponce de Leon Ave., No. A18 839 Flat Shoals Avenue, No. 102 839 Flat Shoals Avenue, No. 107 345 W. Johnston Street Offered for $845,900 Offered for $440,000 Offered for $475,000 Offered for $469,000 Allen Snow Allen Snow Allen Snow Clay Henderson 770.652.1890 404.931.1176 404.931.1176 404.931.1176 Haden Henderson 678.787.9226

CASCADE 1127 Elysian Park Offered for $78,000 DeShawn Snow 678.805.2686

CASCADE 1116 Elysian Park Offered for $78,000 DeShawn Snow 678.805.2686

K IRK WO O D 1145 Kirkwood Avenue, No. 1 Offered for $649,900 Allen Snow 404.931.1176

L AK E WO O D H E IGH TS 357 Saint Johns Avenue Offered for $239,000 Michael Redwine 404.394.4071

MI DTOW N 861 Vedado Way Offered for $1,295,000 Chase Mizell 770.289.2780

M I DTOW N 905 Juniper Street, No. 108 Offered for $1,179,000 Jeff Olsen 404.352.2010

M I DTOW N 905 Juniper Street, No. 404 Offered for $339,900 Adam Ellis 770.355.0549 Patti Ellis 770.366.4658

OLD FOU RTH WARD 225 Corley Street Offered for $4,995/Month Robert Blaha 404.402.9741

O L D FO URT H WARD 687 Angier Avenue, No. 9 Offered for $2,695,000 Allen Snow 404.931.1176

O L D FO URT H WARD 660 Glen Iris Drive, No. 309 Offered for $525,000 Chase Horner 404.754.4133

ROSW ELL 240 Vickery Falls Drive Offered for $799,000 Tricia Leuallen 678.699.3955

R OSW E L L 350 Vickery Falls Drive Offered for $540,000 Tricia Leuallen 678.699.3955

SERENBE 9048 Selborne Lane Offered for $725,000 Sandra Storrar 404.310.3558 Evan McKinney 770.527.0128

TOC COA 110 Timber Ridge Drive Offered for $385,000 Emily Tate 404.547.1797

WEST MIDTOWN 1585 Abner Terrace Offered for $159,000 Neal Heery 404.974.4388 George Heery 404.974.4378

WEST VIE W 1736 Emerald Avenue Offered for $450,000 Lisa Bennett 678.531.2996

Sotheby’s International Realty® and the Sotheby’s International Realty Logo are service marks licensed to Sotheby’s International Realty Affiliates LLC and used with permission. Atlanta Fine Homes, LLC fully supports the principles of the Fair Housing Act and the Equal Opportunity Act. Each franchise is independently owned and operated. Any services or products provided by independently owned and operated franchisees are not provided by, affiliated with or related to Sotheby’s International Realty Affiliates LLC nor any of its affiliated companies. Source:TrendGraphix, Top 10 Firms, January 1 – December 31, 2019. Zip codes 30306, 30307, 30308, 30309, 30324. All Property Types; All Price Points.

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April 2020 | IN


Mayor Bottoms says coronavirus will have ‘huge’ impact on local economy

up

N

s w e Rou n d

The presidential primary has been rescheduled to May 19 due to the coronavirus pandemic. Atlanta special’s election seeking to renew a 1 percent sales tax for water and sewer projects was also put off until May 19. MARTA embarked on a $133.5 million track renovation project in March with work on the Green Line and some service interruption at the Inman Park/ Reynoldstown and Edgewood/Candler Park stations. Restoring the heavy rail lines is part of the MARTA’s ongoing “State of Good Repair” work and systemwide upgrades. The Atlanta City Council approved legislation in March establishing a building and rezoning moratorium near Westside Park on the heels of Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms’ executive order on the matter. The ordinance is aimed at assessing how development trends are impacting neighborhoods near the site, which will be Atlanta’s largest greenspace once completed. Around 250 surveillance cameras in the Atlanta Police Department’s “Operation Shield” crime-fighting network were dead for months starting last fall, with some still down in early February, after a maintenance contract blunder.

Five Points, which was offering curbside pick-up. The city’s arts and culture community Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms has is also reeling from COVID-19, with acknowledged that the economic impact theatres, museums, concert venues and of the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic tourist attractions all shuttering to aid in will be significant in Atlanta. social distancing. “We are asking our corporate At Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta community to combine compassion with International Airport, Bottoms said the commerce,” Bottoms said, encouraging travel bans and reduction in domestic businesses to keep paying hourly employees and international flights will have a “huge if possible. She noted that Mercedes Benzimpact” economically on the world’s Stadium has committed to paying its busiest airport. The airport is one of the hourly employees despite cancelled events. Empty shelves at Publix on Ponce. city’s largest job centers with more than “Our hospitality industry will take a 26,000 employees. huge hit,” Bottoms said. “We are asking “We are looking at legislation on how residents and visitors to dig into their to help concessionaires at the airport,” Bottoms said. pocket and tip a little more if you can. We are looking for ways to tap The City of Atlanta moved to mitigate some of the economic stress into the city’s reserves and extend resources.” on residents by suspending water service termination and evictions Most restaurants and fast food restaurants – including Chick-fil-A for 60 days, and Georgia Power and Atlanta Gas Light agreed not to and The Varsity – closed their dining rooms and moved to take-out or terminate service for unpaid bills during the crisis. delivery options only as a ban on gatherings was put into place. Some Bottoms also issued an executive order creating a $7 million restaurants closed completely. emergency fund to provide assistance to those impacted by Supermarkets scrambled to keep essentials like toilet paper, coronavirus. soap, fresh meat and water on the shelves. Publix supermarkets and The resources are designated to fund emergency assistance to food Walmart stores started closing early for cleaning and restocking, while programs for children and seniors, homeless preparedness, support Kroger supermarkets advertised for extra help to keep shelves stocked to small businesses, assistance to hourly wage earners and other areas overnight. adversely impacted by COVID-19. Many businesses – including shopping mecca Ponce City Market “Our communities are in need of help and we are listening,” – also decided to close as the gathering ban went into effect and Bottoms said in a statement. “This is one step to provide relief and we customers were staying home. Some got creative, including A Cappella are going to continue to look for opportunities to help those in need as Books in Little Five Points and Charis Books and More in Decatur, we go through this together.” which offering free or $1 shipping, and Criminal Records in Little By Collin Kelley

CSX reopening Hulsey Yard this month

The City of Atlanta has a website at atlcounts2020.org to provide information about how to participate in the 2020 Census. Residents started receiving their questionnaire packets in mid-March.

By Collin Kelley

Courtney Brooks has been named the first Curator-in-Residence for Art on the Atlanta BeltLine. Her public art installation “Journey of a Black Girl” has been installed on the Southside Trail.

20 April 2020 |

CSX will reactivate Hulsey Yard terminal this month, but not as a busy intermodal facility. The 70-acre site will now be used as a TRANSFLO facility for the offloading of goods and materials from railcars to trucks and vice-versa. Rather than the constant stream of 18-wheelers up and down Boulevard from I-20, CSX officials said there would only be 20 to 25 per day and work at Husley Yard would take place weekdays between 5 a.m. and 5 p.m. Located along DeKalb Avenue, Hulsey Yard was shuttered last spring when CSX moved operations to its Fairburn depot. Neighborhoods that touch Hulsey Yard – Old Fourth Ward,

Cabbagetown, Inman Park and Reynoldstown – worked to create a mixed-use community master plan for the train yard expecting CSX to sell the property. CSX told Curbed Atlanta that it still has no plans to sell Hulsey Yard, despite the fact that the Atlanta City Council floated an ordinance at its Feb. 17 meeting to encourage CSX to “consider the future needs of the City of Atlanta, the Atlanta BeltLine, and the surrounding community as they begin the process for the sale of Hulsey Yard.” The reactivation of Hulsey Yard put a simmering internet rumor to rest after it began circulating on neighborhood message boards that Amtrak was negotiating to buy the yard as a terminal for its proposed commuter line from Nashville to Atlanta. At l a n t a I N t o w n Pa p e r. c o m


Looking for silver linings I never actively seek out adverse conditions for the sake of a good column but sometimes that’s how it works out. Like that time we took the kids to Ruby Falls and I endured a subterranean panic attack whilst fending off a credible bathroom emergency. Writing about it a month later was good for a chuckle, but I’m By Tim Sullivan not so dedicated to the craft to declare it was all worth it. Tim Sullivan grew up In February, the kids had winter break and lacking any other in a large family in the Northeast and now lives plans we were boxed in to taking them to the Great Wolf Lodge with his small family down in Albany, GA for a night. I readied myself for another in Oakhurst. He can be reached at tim@ exercise in parental torture. The featured activity is an indoor sullivanfinerugs.com. water park. Indoor! Take all the assumptions one might have about a water park—teeming crowds, long lines, screaming kids, hyper-chlorinated pools and greasy food. Put it all indoors and this is a positively suffocating environment. My hope was that the excursion might at least be fodder enough for a funny column. Never did I expect to have a good time, but curiously, I did. It could be that expectations were so low that when they upgraded us to a two-bedroom suite at check-in, I was pleasantly surprised. The sheer size of the Lodge was a bit of a comfort, too. Yes, we were about to spend an unnatural amount of time indoors like it was kid Vegas, but at least there was room to roam. Then I realized they sold beer at various locations throughout the complex and I gave Kristen a nod as if to say, we got this. Elliott Fun in the pool at Great Wolf Lodge brought a friend and they disappeared into the fracas. Were it a sprawling, outdoor park I’d feel the need to keep eyes on them but since it was a contained area I just let it roll and joined Margo to take on the wave pool, the basketball pool and the lazy river. Kristen even joined us for the rides. Later in the evening, we rode the good vibes to pop-a-shot dominance in the arcade. And I stood corrected. It. Was. Fun. This has been happening to me some lately. Last season, Margo’s softball games seemed to pack nine innings of boredom into a three-inning game. This season, there is honestly nothing I’d rather do on a Saturday morning than watch her play. I can’t even credibly complain about that Post Malone song that will invariably be played on Margo’s station both to and fro the softball field. It’s kind of catchy and of all the singers that sound like robots, he is pretty top notch. But now we are facing an honest-to-goodness challenge of a lifetime with the coronavirus/COVID-19 and a humorous angle is tough to summon. The kids’ schools have only been closed a week as of this writing and we’re doing our part to be good citizens. I give myself an A+ in social distancing and hand washing so far, but a D- in face touching. Why, why, why, do I need to touch my face so much? My sincere hope is that when I sit down to write next month there will at least be some silver lining to extract from this ordeal. I’ve already witnessed truly generous and humane gestures and I hope that carries us all through. I cannot wait to get back to writing about the funny and/or tedious details of whatever a particular month may bring our way. What a luxury that will be! Until then, let’s lean on each other (figuratively) and lift each other up as best we can. Hang in there, folks, and be well.

TIMMY DADDY

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U.S. Olympic Marathon Team Trials The Olympic Torch was relit for the first time in 24 years to celebrate the 2020 Olympic Marathon Trials held on Feb. 29. Photos by Asep Mawardi

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town 23

April 2020 | IN


Business Retail � Projects � Profiles

Renovations set to begin at AmericasMart in Downtown By Collin Kelley

J

LL’s Adaptive Reuse Unit has been tapped to manage the renovations of AmericasMart buildings in Downtown. Restoration of AmericasMart Building 1, which originally opened in 1961 as the Atlanta Market Center, will include a series of dramatic interior improvements such as an expansive lobby entry and opening off Peachtree Street, terrazzo flooring, custom lighting, state-of-theart digital signage and the addition of a second floor amenity space and a buyers lounge with panoramic views off climate-controlled balconies opening over Peachtree Street. Exterior improvements include the replacement of existing precast concrete panels with floor to ceiling curtain wall glass and storefront, upgraded column finishes along both Peachtree and John Portman Boulevard, and a state-of-the-art digital signage platform that provides full ribbon tickers and display boards along Peachtree, Portman Boulevard, and Ted Turner/Andrew Young International Drive. Renovations will be underway throughout 2020 and are expected to be completed before the 2021 Winter Market, which is held at AmericasMart each year in January. Designed in 1957 by Atlanta architect John Portman, AmericasMart spans three buildings and seven million square feet. As one of the largest wholesale trade centers in the world, AmericasMart is the nation’s leading gift, home furnishings, area rug and apparel marketplace. The restoration team is made up of Vice President Rainey Shane, Senior Project Manager Carson Mathis and Project Managers Jessica Walburn and Melissa Ward will manage construction on behalf of the owner, International Market Centers (IMC).

24 April 2020 |

At l a n t a I N t o w n Pa p e r. c o m


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By C. Cleo Creech Many of us remember grandmothers who fussed over a rag-tag collection of houseplants in a sunny corner of their home. Most of these were probably grown from cuttings and divisions shared between close neighbors and friends. Though that community spirit lives on today, the new wave of houseplant collectors have a whole new set of tools and community resources to pull from. Social media plays a huge role in this new wave of houseplant culture. On Instagram, plant influencers post carefully styled shots of the various plants in their collection with a whole litany of special hashtags like #houseplantsofinstagram and #plantsmakemehappy. A well shot and shared Instagram post can make a given plant Instagram famous overnight and drive up crazy demand and prices. An example of that is currently the Monstera Thai Constellation, a plant that’s been around for ages, but thanks to social media the demand has been driven up of late. A cutting can be hundreds of dollars. Full grown A Monstera Thai Constellation at Flora/Fauna large plants, thousands. Yet there are stories of old Florida nurseries just a few years ago ripping out their mother plants, since they couldn’t give the things away. What a difference a few thousand likes and shares make. Fame can be fickle too, if something is popular and pricey, believe me someone is out there growing as many as they can to meet demand. You may pay big bucks for a plant only to find it in six-months for $20 at Home Depot. The popular trendy plant now might end up “so last season” a year later. Along with this growth in houseplant culture has arisen a new batch of specialty plant shops to cater to these new demanding plant enthusiasts. Visiting these stores can be an event in itself. The Victorian in Ponce City Market (thevictorianatlanta.com) and Flora/Fauna in Cabbagetown (@florafaunaatl) are recent examples. It’s not unusual to see customers taking selfies under the signage or by a particular specimen plant. Plant shopping can be an event in itself. This hasn’t gone unnoticed by the big boxes either. Both Lowes and Home Depot now carry lines of “trending” houseplants. The Houseplant department at Atlanta staple Pike Nursery has grown and is often busting at the seams with new offerings. Intown shops like GardenHood in Grant Park or Intown Ace have great offerings as well. And watch for these blockbuster plants to become more common in the future. Remember how orchids used to be so rare and expensive, and now they’re in every grocery store for just a few dollars? That was in large part to advances in plant cloning. Continued on page 26 At l a n t a I N t o w n Pa p e r. c o m

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April 2020 | IN


Continued from page 25

41 AWARDS FOR EDITORIAL EXCELLENCE We’re honored that Reporter Newspapers and Atlanta INtown have won 41 awards in the Georgia Press Association’s Better Newspaper Competition over the past three years. For 2019, the Reporter’s honors include eight first place awards in its category.

YouTube houseplant guru Ashley Anita

The annual competition is judged by newspaper professionals from around the country and represent the highest journalism standards. Thank you to our readers, advertisers and peers who support our mission of providing trusted, hyperlocal community journalism. Houseplants at The Victorian

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EVELYN ANDREWS BYLeft, John Beach, president of the Buckhead

holds what is said to be the of same lanes in an undated photo. (John Ruch/Special) tollfirearm As neighborhood impacts I-285 become planned along Ga. 400 and officials are clearer, city and state elected the process with seeking ways to influence say they’ll varying tactics. Some officials aim for smallfight the project, while others community-wide er tweaks. Some call for behind the meetings, while some work Check out our podcasts scenes. Check out our podcasts for a long at ReporterNewspapers.net “I know it’s been on the books as at ReporterNewspapers.netwho we need to mitigate it as much but BYtime, JOHN RUCH potentially influential, series of meetings Affordable housing advocates Silcox (R-Sandy End Revital- johnruch@reporternewspapers.net we can,” said Rep. Deborah co-chaired the city’s North to arrange and surveys that aims to have reform recSprings), who says she’s trying an initiative for the 45-year-old The Brookhaven lo- ommendations Reporter system ization Task Force launched of state engineers, meetingPlanning The Neighborhood Unit sysa large-scale The Buckhead Reporter final report 2020. is mail general public. on the table by March delivered to opposing the task force’s possibly thezoning and planning, officials that reviews and Feb. 28. temcal is mail delivered toonhomes “There are things about NPU syshomes on [the selected with a community meeting very upsetting.” “This bigisissues for Atlanta city governon selected carrier end res- other northroutes things carrierand called “express lanes” or tem] that are amazing, routes lanes, in that At that meeting, several toll The a review of its by own. in ZIPs 30305, Geor- we need to have a lotZIP recommen- ment is getting the A the 30327 more conversation 30319 idents said they feared “managed lanes,” are proposed and 30342 about,” said CCI Executive Director Rohit displacement of downtown nonprofit called the Center for dations would lead to page 22 For information: on but Civic Innovation has See begun a quiet, OFFICIALS ForSee information: delivery@reporternewspapers TWO on page 14 See AFTER on page .net 14

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BY DYANA BAGBY

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The DeKalb County Board of Commissioners is expected next month to consider countywide transit master plan designed a improve current to rail and bus service and determine where to build new transit over the next 30 years. As part of that consideration, commissioners will also have to decide if they believe voters are motivated enough to vote for a sales tax increase to pay for the proposed improvements, The proposed which include light P10 full-penny DeKalb rail, bus rapid transit and arterial rapid transit County transit north and south in DeKalb. master plan DYANA BAGBY DeKalb County, The dirt path on Buford Highway in WORTH front of KNOWING the Atlanta Regional the Orchard scenario would at Brookhaven that is the subject of a dispute about Commission and a new sidewalk and landscape strip. MARTA worked include four light with local municipalitie rapid transit routes; s and gathered public BY JOHN RUCH over the past year input four bus rapid transit routes on a including along johnruch@reporternewspapers.net ter plan with three proposed transit masthe top end of I-285; BY DYANA BAGBY and eight arterial broad goals: address rapid transit routes. county’s mobility the dyanabagby@reporternewspapers.net expansions would challenges, foster The wooden stock is beige and battered cover 180 project These economic development miles. and improve quality with age. The metal plate above the trigger is of life. Consultants with P29 The Orchard at Brookhaven, an VHB recently decorated with a pair of birds. The barrel is asDeKalb cities and toured sisted living facility that specializes in June made long, heavy and octagonal. presentain tions on proposed and conceptual It’s an old muzzleloading firearm, for caring for those with dementia, recently master plans to transit the Brookhaven sure. It might even be the one that killed the opened on Buford Highway, a large, and Dunwoody City Councils. yeldeer that gave Buckhead its curious name in Both presentations spotlighted two low “pre-leasing” banner still hanging scenarios: a 1 cent 1838. Check out our podcasts sales increase tax over its front entrance. that would raise and John Beach, president of the Buckhead $3.65 billion over Facebook Live Streams 30 years and fund Just yards from that front entrance Heritage Society, is still 16 projects, and BY DYANA is penny increase BAGBY a halfFor more on that would raise a dirt path that runs along Buford trying to figure that BY DYANA AND BAGBY $1.85 billion EVELYN ANDREWS Highover 30 years and Kevin Abel of Sandy en has residents living in nearThesome fund 15 projects. Dunwoody out, partly by tracking John Beach, see Springs, a member way, created over many years by dyanabagby@reporternewspapers Reporter people of the State Transportatio Increasing the .net Town, by neighborhoods the tales surrounding Around sales tax requires worried about cutElected is mail delivered n Board which walkingofficials along theinbusy page 20. DeKalb’s current a vote. thoroughfare de- oversees the Georgia to homes Dunwoody through traffic another sales tax little-known and Department of more congestion on Doraville Emory University’s on and selected portation, however, spite aare proposal to build Translackspeaking Going to a referendumis 8 percent. carrier routes of sidewalks. out against That dirt of area history – an 1842 log cabin planned I-285 that took thepath task such roads as Sheridan, Briarcliff is a major deciapiece “top end” toll lanes $1 billion “health innovation district” sion, Grady Smith, and in ZIP 30338 and said he supports those officials to is supposed become a 10-foot andsidewalk quietly survived destruction signed by being moved have VHB project manager, a petition to the toll lanes projNorth Druid Hills. opposing the estimated ects planned on over the next 15 years on approximately told the Brookhaven andproject a 5-foot landscape to a Buckhead back yard. In the meantime, I-285 and Ga. 400 billion strip, a condition council at its June $5 expected Emory officials say they are workbecause they promise to meeting. He said 60 acres of Executive begin construcPark Beach gave the Reporter an exclusive bring bus rapid closein Brookhavthe2023. tion in he is hearing DeKalb 10 city put on thetodeveloper For information: when the the area. transit to ing delivery@rep ership is wanting to alleviate those leadconcerns by conmore time to consider property was rezoned two years orternewspap proposals and is ago to ers.net the seeking input from See DUNWOODY See IS on page 22 the citSee TRAFFIC on page 22 on page 31 See SIDEWALK on page 23 See DEKALB on page 30

COMMENTARY

Reporter Honored as wins a newspaper 15 Georgi of a General Excellence Press awards 2018

P18

Mother’s Words of Wisdom to launch

building of Transportation is considering The Georgia Department Northridge Road overpass. flyover toll lanes atop the

BY JOHN

P. 36

johnruch@reporternewspapers.net

Offer expires

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PHIL MOSIER

retail still works

After 20 years of a population increasingly boom, jammed highways scraper-sprouting and skymega-developments, it may sound quaint that about Perimeter people worried Mall traffic 1999. way back in But the Perimeter provement Community Districts, the Imself-taxing of business groups property owners out of those that formed concerns, are among sons the local the reawhy the traffic boom has happened and to Perimeter isn’t even worse. If you go Center today, get there you may via one of the big projects well PCIDs pushed the – like the Hammond ramps on Ga. Drive woody Road 400 or the Ashford-Dundiverging change at diamond I-285 intertouches they’re – and you’ll see smaller responsible scaping and for, like landrush-hour traffic cops. “They had one, cleaning a reputation for, number things up, providing those cosmetic some of used to,” said amenities we’ve all become Ann Hanlon, the CIDs form who watched resident and as a longtime Dunwoody now serves director. “At as the time, that their executive lutionary, was pretty that revoto pay for thosea private group was willing amenities.” Back in 1999, the three day cover cities that Perimeter toCenter – Brookhaven, Dunwoody not yet exist. and Sandy Springs – did As the PCIDs its next 20 looks ahead years, it has to refocused sion on transportation, its misproposals leaving previous such as park-building ies. Transportation to the citthese days erything from means evtrail networks helping to build multiuse toll lanes and to shaping the future transit on of Ga. 400 and That’s in addition I-285. to some PCIDs currently of the basics the like sidewalks provides or coordinates, shuttles, trafficand crosswalks, commuter signal timing rimeter Connects and the Pecommuter vice. advice serAn increasingly part of Perimeter residential sector is Center’s future, with

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COMMENTARY

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United Methodists struggle with church’s LGBTQ decision P18

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Business

The PCIDs of shaping marks 20 years Perimeter Center

PBS to air Is our this the gun that Presenting Sidewalk local singer’s local high killed school Buckhead’s dispute could documentary valedictorians and P5 namesake deer? set Buford salutatorians

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Naturalist keeps his eye on water and wildlife P12

Perimeter

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Artfully arranged plants at Flora/Fauna

Watch for the same to happen to some of these hard-to-find houseplants. Yes, some of this is pricy but the demand is definitely there. And there are other ways to get your hands on the hottest new plants. Etsy does a thriving business in cuttings and starter plants sold by people often propagating popular plants out of their own jungle apartments. There are ever more facebook pages dedicated to local plant groups. Then there are also local organized plant swaps put on by neighborhood groups or individuals where hobbyists bring cuttings and potted divisions from their collection to hopefully trade for a coveted wish list item. You can’t ignore one of the big factors driving all this is plant YouTubers who often sit in front of shelves of plants and grow lights gushing effusively about their latest finds and their top dream plants. Popular videos can include a number of things. There’s plant tours showing off one’s collection and talking about one’s personal connection to each plant. There are also videos opening plant mail (the latest mail order plants from specialty nurseries or even other countries). There are plant-buying trips to big box and local plant stores, going to Goodwill to find planters, and let’s not forget popular plant hacks and dollar store finds. Some channels often throw some “what’s going on in my life” b-roll footage as well, and in the end you feel as if you’ve got a new friend you can sit around and talk houseplants with. One or those YouTubers is Ashley Anita of the popular YouTube plant channel “Life with Ashley Anita.” She often divides her time between Charlotte and Atlanta. In her videos you get to spend lots of time plant shopping with Anita in various box stores, smaller nurseries and visiting botanical gardens. She’s often rattling through plant names as she scans the shelves and shares plant tips. She’s typical of many plant YoutTubers. She’s not a horticulturist but she’s obviously a keen hobbyist. She knows a lot about plants but part of the charm is following her on her journey as she continues to learn more. Katelynn Corley, one of the owners at Flora/Fauna, and Cary Smith and Libby Hockenberry, owners of The Victorian, shared how they got into plants. It’s one I heard quite often. So you leave home where your parents have a couple of old reliable houseplants and move into your first dorm or apartment. For the first time you’re in charge of your own place, and of course want a couple of well placed plants. But you don’t want the same old snake plants and umbrella trees your parents had, so you look around

and discover something entirely new. Thanks to the internet, new shops and online ordering, there’s an entire world of plants to discover and learn about. Once you grow that first gateway plant, some people are hooked. It’s no small sense of accomplishment growing something from a one-leaf cutting to a huge floor plant. Its addictive. Now just imagine your whole place full of your favorite plants, each with it’s own story to tell. In the end, though, it’s just fun to grow stuff.

At l a n t a I N t o w n Pa p e r. c o m


BUSINESS BRIEFS

Kraig Torres

▲Kraig Torres, founder and president of Hop City Beer and Wine, has been selected as the 2020 SBA Georgia Small Business Person of the Year. A 20-year Atlanta resident and avid beer enthusiast, Torres opened Hop City Beer and Wine’s first location in 2009 with four employees. Over the past decade, the business, offering over 1,900 different ales and lagers and more than 1,100 wines, has continued to grow. The brand now has two locations in Atlanta and one in Birmingham. Torres has also ventured into the restaurant industry with the opening of Barleygarden Kitchen and Craft Bar in Alpharetta and BoxCar near the Westside BeltLine. Banyan Street Capital has announced it will add spec suites and vertical

improvements at Marquis Towers and Towers 233 and 229 at Peachtree Center. The move-in ready spaces will feature open-office environments designed for optimal collaboration. Along with the spec suites, Banyan Street is bringing its focus on art-infused public spaces to Towers 229 and Tower 233’s elevator banks, which will feature murals that pull inspiration from Hopare’s “Symphony,” the southeast’s largest public art mural found on the building’s Peachtree Center Avenue façade. For more information on Peachtree Center, visit peachtreecenter. com.

mixed-use development, 670 DeKalb Ave., Suite 106. The office offers health care for all ages, diagnostic imaging, and laboratory services by appointment and on a walk-in basis. Dr. Randolph Taylor II will serve as the primary care physician at Wellstar Primary Care and Terrica Rumph, DNP, as nurse practitioner.

A new 16-story Hyatt Centric hotel is coming to Buckhead at 3301 Lenox Square Parkway, adjacent to the mall. The hotel will have 218 guestrooms, 4,500 square feet of meeting space, a pool and a fitness center. It will also feature a 16th floor rooftop terrace, bar and restaurant, and a lobby bar and restaurant. Wellstar Health System has opened a primary care office on the Atlanta BeltLine’s Eastside Trail at The Edge

LaToya Tucciarone

For more information or to schedule an appointment, call (470) 267-0570 for primary care and (678) 581-5900 for imaging. Cushman & Wakefield has arranged the sale of lilli Midtown, the 147-unit luxury apartment building on Peachtree Street in Midtown. Robert Stickel, Alex Brown and Chris Spain of Cushman & Wakefield represented the sellers, JPX Works, Mariner Group and ELV Associates, in the transaction. Oxford Properties Group acquired the property, which also includes 3,965 square feet of retail space. ◄SustainAble, the Atlanta-based retailer offering fair and ethically made artisan goods, hand-picked decor and accessories founded by LaToya Tucciarone, will expand from its former retail kiosk to a new permanent space at Ponce City Market. The shop will be housed on the second floor of Ponce City Market’s buzzing Central Food Hall between Citizen Supply and Modern Mystic Shop. During the buildout, the brand is popping up at a larger temporary space across from Topstitch. SustainAble offers a curated selection of socially and ethically crafted products from local and global makers.

JUST LISTED

FOR SALE

85 Beverly Road

34 Park Lane

offered for: $1,995,000

offered for: $1,795,000

UNDER CONTRACT

# 1 Agent - Intown Office 2019

Jason Cook REALTOR®

FOR LEASE

1758 Warren Court

149 17th Street

offered for: $639,000

offered for: $6400/month (furnished)

UNDER CONTRACT

SOLD

c: 404.431.1384 o: 404.480.HOME JASONCOOK@ANSLEYATLANTA.COM ANSLEYATLANTA.COM | 404.480.HOME 952 PEACHTREE STREET NE, SUITE 100, ATLANTA, GA 30309 Christopher Burell, Principal Broker | Equal Housing Opportunitiy. All information contained herein is deemed reliable but not guaranteed.

At l a n t a I N t o w n Pa p e r. c o m

67 17th Street

51 Lafayette Drive

offered for: $1,550,000

offered for: $2,350,000

town 27

April 2020 | IN


Home & Real Estate

Trends � Development � City Living

Micro-units proposed for two Midtown residential projects By INtown Staff

T

wo new residential projects that include micro-units were presented to the Midtown Development Review Committee at its March 10 meeting. First on the agenda was a new parking structure proposed by the development team at Tenth Street Ventures near the NW corner of 13th Street and Crescent Avenue. What sets the project apart are 40 residential/hotel units made from shipping containers distributed in a colorful grid across the front of the 13th Street façade. The units are only 160 square feet each and intended to provide a unique option in the short-term rental market. The six-story parking structure provides spaces for 111 cars and includes a street level lobby/office space and a rooftop amenity deck that could be leased for events. Vehicular access to the garage is provided on 13th Street, along with pedestrian access to the street level lobby. Overall the DRC was supportive of this novel concept, which would provide much needed public parking in an area of the district known for restaurants and nightlife. The committee’s questions and feedback focused on site design and operational issues related to service and accessibility. Additional information was requested about the screening of the trash compactor, which will serve the new parking structure and microunits as well as all three existing buildings on the 0.68 acre site. The buildings facing Crescent Avenue, including Veranda, South City Kitchen and the 14 apartment units above it, are not part of the SAP application. The second project was a new 34-story residential

13th Street at Crescent

1382 Peachtree

tower located at 1382 Peachtree Street. Formerly the site of Big Brothers Big Sisters of Metro Atlanta, the site is only 0.62 acres on the southwest corner of Peachtree and 17th Streets. The program includes 284 multifamily units (up to 50 of which would be micro units of approximately 410 square feet each), just over 6,000 square feet of sidewalk level commercial space fronting on Peachtree Street, and 319 parking spaces. The residential lobby entrance is located on 17th Street along with all vehicular access and loading. The property includes a driveway/alley at the rear of the site, which also provides vehicular access to the property to the south (Midtown Plaza). The proposed vehicular access for the new tower will expand and utilize the existing alley. The façade of the tower is distinctive in its use of a metal panel system that incorporates a green finish and a screening system for the podium parking deck that introduces a copper tone into the material palette. The parking podium is eight levels, with a solid masonry wall on the south façade of the building and a screened elevation on the north façade of the building. Early concepts show a mural treatment on the south façade and the committee asked for additional information on how that mass could be further articulated to reduce its scale relative to the tower. The committee also suggested that the vertical elements of the tower could be extended through the parking deck screening to carry that expression all the way to the base of the building on the north façade. Additional feedback focused on access and storage of bikes as well as access and short-term parking for rideshare services and deliveries.

Sales begin for high-profile 550 North Highland townhomes One of Intown’s most-watched projects is nearing completion: the 550 North Highland townhomes next door to Manuel’s Tavern in Poncey-Highland. Engel & Völkers Atlanta is marketing the townhomes developed by Selig Homes located on the former main parking lot of Manuel’s. The homes, which will be available for move-in starting this summer, will be priced from the high $700s to the mid $800s With construction led by Monte Hewett Homes, the townhomes at 550 North Highland will feature three and four bedroom plans averaging around 2,400 square feet. Rising three-stories high, the homes will each be fronted by their own private courtyard and will feature indoor/ outdoor rooftop terraces that offer places to entertain with built-in wet bars, views of neighborhood landmarks, and the city’s tree canopy. For more information on Engel & Völkers Atlanta, visit evatlanta.com. — Collin Kelley

28 April 2020 |

At l a n t a I N t o w n Pa p e r. c o m


REAL ESTATE BRIEFS ►Select Fulton, in partnership with the City of Atlanta, has announced that the Fulton County Board of Commissioners approved the City Views at Rosa Burney Park AcquisitionPreservation Project on March 4 establishing the City Views Urban Enterprise Zone. Jonathan Rose Companies, in conjunction with Columbia Residential, its local partner, will invest $49,433,983 to acquire and rehabilitate the City Views at Rosa Burney Park, a 181-unit affordable housing complex. The project consists of a 112-unit tower and 69 units of townhouses, across a mix of one-, two-, three-, four-, and five-bedroom family unit types which 85% of units are currently affordable and subsidized under a HUD project-based rental assistance. This designation of the urban enterprise zone will create affordable housing units for families earning no more than 60 percent

Street and 7th Street. Please check midtownatlanta.org closer to the event date for cancellation or postponement due to coronavirus concerns.

Druid Hills

POOL POOL

Darlene Gillespy 404.932.3006 404.668.6621

160 Rockyford Road | Coming Soon

POOL SOLD

SOLD

411 Cottonwood Circle | $600,000

Virginia-Highland

Martin Manor

UNDER CONTRACT (BUYER)

COMING SOON

873 Los Angeles Avenue | $659,000

1010 Peachtree Road | $645,000

Peachtree City

Lee Gillespy 404.932.3003 404.668.6621

Kirkwood

578 Ridgecrest Road | $1,150,000 COMPLETE RENOVATION

COMING SOON

2304 Pembrook Place | $574,900

Hill Street Lofts | $209,900

Ken Covers

1237 Reeder Circle | $1,149,000

Morningside

Mandi Robertson 404.644.4457 404.668.6621

UNDER CONTRACT

UNDER CONTRACT

805 Ponce de Leon Terrace | $1,800,000

Midtown

Michael Gaddy 404.917.7725 404.668.6621

Grant Park

1745 Coventry Road | $974,900

$2,000 for the cause and the event raised over $90,000. The Polar Plunge is the largest fundraising event for the Special Olympics.

►Ken Covers, advisor with Engel & Völkers Atlanta, recently braved the icy water of Acworth Beach in the middle of winter in support of the Special Olympics Georgia athletes. Covers raised over

COMING SOLD SOLD SOON

742 Courtenay Court | $2,500,000

Your New Home

NEW LISTING

Virginia-Highland

Druid Hills

The 7th annual Midtown Garden Stroll is set for Sunday, May 17, from noon until 5 p.m. The free event offers a self-guided tour of some of Midtown’s most impressive private gardens. New for 2020 is the Garden Stroll Market featuring a variety of plant and garden-related vendors, plus food and drink options for attendees to enjoy before heading out on the Stroll. The Garden Stroll Market will be centrally located in the Historic Midtown Garden District on Penn Avenue between 6th

Morningside

of the area median income.

►Homebuilder Empire Communities has announced that it plans to break ground on five new Intown residential communities. With homes starting in the mid-$300Ks to low-$400Ks+, the five communities under development are in Old Fourth Ward, Kirkwood, East Atlanta, Buckhead and West Midtown. Empire Communities entered the Atlanta market in 2019 when it formed a partnership with Edward Andrews Homes. With sales beginning as early as this summer, Empire is expected to open a temporary sales center in Ponce City Market in May. For more details, visit empireatlanta.com.

SOLD CUSTOM BUILD

Call the L&D Team | 404.932.3006

Compass is a licensed real estate broker and abides by Equal Housing Opportunity laws. All material presented herein is intended for informational purposes only. Information is compiled from sources deemed reliable but is subject to errors, omissions, changes in price, condition, sale, or withdrawal without notice. No statement is made as to the accuracy of any description. All measurements and square footages are approximate. This is not intended to solicit property already listed. Nothing herein shall be construed as legal, accounting or other professional advice outside the realm of real estate brokerage. Rules & Exclusions apply. Compass offers no guarantee or warranty of results. Subject to additional terms and conditions.

At l a n t a I N t o w n Pa p e r. c o m

town 29

April 2020 | IN


News You Can Eat Restaurants � Reviews � Events

Building for the Future Atlanta Community Food Bank moves into new home, meets coronavirus challenge

By Collin Kelley

J

ust as the coronavirus pandemic was starting to ramp up, the Atlanta Community Food Bank (acfb.org) moved into its brand new, 345,000 square foot building in East Point. The new space, the largest food bank facility in the nation, was immediately pressed into service to help students, their families and those left hungry by school and business closures. ACFB and its network of 700 partners began delivering 10,000 pounds of food each week to 20 different sites across five school districts, including Atlanta Public Schools, to feed those in need. The nonprofit also launched Text For Help, a food assistance program where people can simply text “findfood” in English or “comida” in Spanish to 888-976-2232. The system will then automatically request a zip code or address in order to provide addresses

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of the three closest food pantries as well as contact information for each. ACFB President and CEO Kyle Waide said ACFB first moved to protect its employees and the new facility by suspending outside volunteers. However, that meant many long nights and staff from other departments working round the clock to keep the facility clean and food sorted and processed for shipping to its partners. “We got into the new facility then had to hit the gas pedal in a big way,” Waide said. “We had to work aggressively to get the food to those who need it.” ACFB will weather the public health crisis, but the economic crisis caused by COVID-19 will be more of a challenge, Waide said. “We are going to be serving more food to more people for an undetermined amount of time,” he said. “We’ll need more volunteers and food donations, but what we will need most is monetary donations. We can buy more and stretch those dollars. For every $1 donated, we can buy four meals for the community.” As ACFB prepares to meet the challenge ahead, Waide said the new facility is the perfect hub for it. The organization looked at more than 50 sites around the city before it found the 60-acres of land (most of which will be left as greenspace) on North Desert Drive in East Point not far from Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport. The organization had been its former home on the Westside since 2004, which Waide described as a great run and opportunity to grow the organization. “We liked that building, but we knew it would not support our aspirations for the future.”

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At l a n t a I N t o w n Pa p e r. c o m


Eat Fresh

Intown farmer’s markets reopen for the season By Jacob Nguyen If you’re looking for fresh food, Intown’s famer’s markets are reopening for the season with fruits, vegetables, and other goods. Here is a guide to the local markets and what you’ll find there.

Freedom Farmers’ Market

The market is open every Saturday from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. (noon in the winter months) year round at the Carter Center in Poncey-Highland. You will find resh produce, grass fed meats, dairy including cheeses, yogurt, butter, milk, farm fresh eggs, handmade pasta and preserves, baked goods, coffee and more. Information: freedomfarmersmkt.com.

Green Market at Piedmont Park

The annual Green Market at Piedmont Market continues every Saturday through November from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. near the 12th Street and Piedmont Avenue gate. Dozens of vendors offer fresh produce, tasty prepared foods, chef demonstrations, and live music. Information: piedmontpark.org/green-market.

East Atlanta Village Farmers Market

The market reopens April 16 on Thursdays from 4 to 8 p.m. at 572 Stokeswood Ave., across from Midway Pub. There will be fresh produce, locally-made food and products, chef demonstrations and more throughout the season. Information: cfmatl.org/eav.

Morningside Farmers’ Market

Open year-round, this neighborhood market at 1393 N. Highland Ave. has been a Saturday morning tradition since the 1990s. All produce sold at the market is certified organic and you’ll also find freshly prepared foods, baked goods, artisan crafts, flowers and more. Market hours are 8 to 11:30 a.m. Information: morningsidemarket.com.

at l a n t a | c i t y s i d e

Grant Park Farmers Market

The market will be open on Sundays beginning April 5 from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the corner of Cherokee and Milledge avenues (600 Cherokee Ave.). There will be locally grown fruits, vegetables, artisan produced breads, cheeses, and chef demonstrations. Information: grantparkmarket.org.

Peachtree Road Farmers Market

Located in the parking lot at Cathedral of St. Phillip, 2744 Peachtree Road in Buckhead, the market is open from 8:30 a.m. to noon every Saturday through mid-December. Fresh produce, artisan crafts and more are on offer. Information: peachtreeroadfarmersmarket. com.

Decatur Farmers Market

Held on the front lawn of the First Baptist Church of Decatur at the corner of Commerce and Clairemont (308 Clairemont Ave.) the market reopens on April 15 and will be held every Wednesday from 4 to 7 p.m. Information: cfmatl.org/Decatur.

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Oakhurst Farmers Market

This new market makes its debut on April 18 and will be held on Saturdays from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. at Sceptre Brewing Arts, 630 East Lake Drive. There will be fresh produce, baked goods, live music, chef demonstrations, seasonal beer collaborations and more. Information: cfmatl.org/Oakhurst.

Ponce City Farmers Market

Opening day is April 14 for the market located directly on the Beltline’s Eastside Trail at The Shed at PCM. The market is held on Tuesday evenings from 4 to 8 p.m. hosting urban farmers, artisanal food makers and guest chefs. Information: cfmatl.org/ poncecity.

At l a n t a I N t o w n Pa p e r. c o m

Happily serving the Intown community for almost 20 years!

town 31

April 2020 | IN


History in the Making

Inman Park properties plans to transform Rufus Rose House into restaurant space By Collin Kelley Inman Park Properties has purchased the historic Rufus M. Rose House with plans to renovate and repurpose the last standing Victorian home on Peachtree Street into a restaurant space. The 119-year-old Queen Anne-style home at 573 Peachtree Street has been vacant and crumbling since the Atlanta Preservation Center moved out in 2001. “We’re thrilled to have the opportunity to preserve and restore this historic jewel box in the heart of the city to serve the community and contribute to the local economy,” said Inman Park Properties, Inc. President Jeff Notrica said i a statement. “We will meticulously honor its architectural integrity while we bring it back to service.” The Urban Design Commission recently permitted a simple Type I Certificate of Appropriateness to “re-roof ” the building using charcoal-colored architectural shingles with a black drip edge, which maintains the original design of the building. For the future of the building, Notrica envisions a savvy operator repurposing the historic Rufus Rose House into a restaurant. He cites the Olde Pink House in Savannah, which is housed in a former 18th century mansion, and the James Beard House in New York City, which was the former townhome of its namesake and also houses a restaurant, as examples of similar adaptive reuses of historic buildings. Originally built in 1901 for Dr. Rufus Mathewson Rose by architect Emil Charles Seiz, the Rufus M. Rose House is a rare example of a nineteenth-century town house built for one of Atlanta’s wealthy citizens

32 April 2020 |

and is one of the last historic houses remaining on Peachtree Street. The home still retains most of its original exterior and interior features, which reveal its architectural and cultural significance. Since the Rose family moved out in 1921, the house has functioned as a rooming house, government offices, an antique store and museum. The Rufus Rose renovation comes in tandem with the repurposing of the 1920s Medical Arts Building – just blocks away – into a boutique hotel. In addition, Emory University recently announced plans to build the Winship at Midtown, a state-ofthe-art new facility located on the campus of Emory University Hospital Midtown – directly across from Rufus Rose. “We are extremely grateful that Mr. Notrica – a former Atlanta Preservation Center board member – is now the steward of this amazing home,” said David Mitchell, director of operations for the Atlanta Preservation Center. “It takes courage and vision to see a project like this come to a successful outcome.” Notrica has restored and repurposed dozens of historic buildings throughout the southeast for the past 26 years, including some of Atlanta’s most iconic buildings in Inman Park, Midtown and Little Five Points. The developer has received awards from the Historic Savannah Foundation and the Urban Design Commission for such important buildings as Fire Station #11 on North Avenue and The Castle at 87 Fifteenth Street in Midtown, and 13-17 West Bay Street in Savannah.

At l a n t a I N t o w n Pa p e r. c o m


Mountain Living A SPECIAL SECTION

The Hills are Alive Atlanta residents are among the homebuyers drawn to the North Georgia & North Carolina mountains

By Kathy Dean We’re all looking for a little peace and relaxation. Many Atlanta residents have found it in the mountains of north Georgia and North Carolina. Places like Ellijay, Ga. and Highlands, N.C. offer small-town vibes with big city amenities and a variety of recreation, shopping and dining experiences. Annie Boland, North Georgia Real Estate Specialist, Atlanta Fine Homes Sotheby’s, said that she sees “tons of interest” in the area. “Every year, our area seems to become more and more popular... and the increasing values represent that.” She noted that Blue Ridge is continually ranked among the top towns in the U.S. for retirement. “This brings lots of baby boomers looking to secure their retirement home in the mountains, even if they aren’t ready to retire right now,” Boland said. “They enjoy the home as a vacation property and move in full-time after retirement.” In addition, younger At l a n t a I N t o w n Pa p e r. c o m

Karyn Woody

Kim Knutzen

generation buyers purchase mountain homes to generate income and as an alternative or complementary investment to their stock holdings. “They usually buy fully furnished, turnkey cabins and put them into the vacation rental program right away,” said Boland, adding that they enjoy their mountain homes when their schedules permit and eventually see a nice return on their investment. Bill Gilmore, Broker Associate, Highlands Cove Realty at Old Edwards Club, said he has sold to couples from Atlanta who want a diverse community and enjoy the small town feel of Highlands. “There are also folks who love golf, some of them from Florida, and are looking for cooler summers to extend their golf games into the summer.” He added that while he has sold to all ages, his typical homebuyer’s age is between 50 and Continued on page 34

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town, slower pace of life while having easy access to healthcare, volunteer opportunities and active lifestyle options like golfing and 68. hiking. At the same time, millennials are According to Karyn Woody, Realtor, finding a place to explore, kick-back, meet Harry Norman Realtors, Blairsville, she their friends and gather together for lasting expects the interest in the memories. “At any given north Georgia and Blue Ridge moment, you’ll find families mountains region to increase. and extended families that “Many people still want an make this area their meeting escape—a place to relax and point to enjoy time together,” recharge—and the mountain Knutzen said. areas certainly provide that Boland noted that environment,” she said. “Right mountain homebuyers look now, the very low interest rates to find the setting they want, help to make mortgages more whether it be near a lake, affordable and even make river or panoramic mountain it more attractive for those view, with a cabin that suits who don’t want to hold on their needs, all in their price to their cash.” Homes in the range. For Atlanta area area are still very affordable, weekenders seeking an escape she continued, especially from the city, “Blue Ridge is when compared to other a no-brainer, being such a Annie Boland “destination” areas. short drive from the city, yet “Retirees are drawn to worlds away,” she said. the area because of the golf, Retirees like being close boating and relaxation,” to the hospitals located on Woody said. “I’ve worked the I-575 corridor while with several millennials who staying in near proximity to aren’t tied to where they live Atlanta’s big hospitals and for their job and have sought Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta out this area looking for a International Airport. They slower pace, kind of a backalso look for a relaxed pace to-nature thing,” she added. with low crime, low taxes “They want to raise their and low cost of living. kids and have animals and Woody said that the gardens.” lakes—Lake Blue Ridge, Also, families are drawn Lake Nottely and Lake to the mountains as a Chatuge—are a big draw. gathering place. “It’s so easy Bill Gilmore “They offer lots of outdoor to get here from so many adventures, waterfalls, hiking places that many families trails and beautiful scenery.” have vacation homes here to enjoy the lakes, Other homebuyers want the great mountains and scenery,” Woody said. shopping and restaurants. “From the Kim Knutzen, Associate Broker, Ansley mountain tops to the creeks and rivers to Mountain & Lake, Blue Ridge said that Blue lakefront and golf course properties, there are Ridge and the surrounding towns have shown communities that fit every lifestyle,” Woody a steady increase in home sales over the last said. five years, “and our median sales prices have Knutzen also has seen an increase in increased across the board. I see it continuing people flocking to the Blue Ridge area for as more exciting architecture comes to our its availability of outdoor pursuits, including area.” People from all ages enjoy the area, she Continued on page 36 explained. Retirees see the value in the small-

Continued from page 33

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Continued from page 34 mountain biking, road biking, kayaking, fishing and boating. “Shopping in downtown Blue Ridge offers many boutiques and specialty shops,” she said, “and dining in the area offers something for everyone with a variety of foods, including

organic and clean eating options.” There’s also a fantastic arts community—galleries, the Blue Ridge Mountain Art Association and the Blue Ridge Community—that features great local talent. New and exciting architecture that focuses on both rustic and modern accents is popping up all over the area on rivers, creeks and mountains, Knutzen said. “One of our newest communities is Old Toccoa Farm, a guardgated residential community that offers a mile of trout fishing on the Toccoa River, 18-hole golf course, driving range and other planned amenities.” These days, there’s plenty to do in Highlands year-round, Gilmore noted.

No longer does everything shut down once the season is over. He said that four new restaurants opened last season: Tugs Proper, MidPoint Highlands, Bridge at Mill Creek and Four65 Wood Fire Bistro + Bar. These added to the many mainstays in the Highlands restaurant scene that include Lakeside Restaurant, The Ugly Dog Public House and The Log Cabin. According to Gilmore, one of the exciting new developments in the Highlands area is GlenCove by Old Edwards, a multi-generational community that highlights adventure and wellness. The tight-knit community will have 31 cottage homes and 17 five-acre estate lots. Planned features at GlenCove include an organic garden and farm, a fitness and wellness center with spa services, and a lighted 12-hole, par 3 golf course. There are mountain trails for hiking in the adjacent national forest. Gilmore, an Intown agent with a North Carolina brokerage license, lives in the heart of Virginia-Highland and also owns a home in Cashiers, N.C. “One of the real benefits about looking for a home in the mountains is that you can often rent one first so you can try before you buy,” he said. Some clubs offer trial memberships, allowing potential residents to get a good feel for where they’d like to live.” “It’s amazingly beautiful and there are four true seasons, but they aren’t extreme,” Woody said. “The spring flowers and the fall color changes are my favorite times.” There’s also a strong sense of community, she said, fostered by the many festivals and community events. “It’s a place where people still wave when they pass you on the road.”

Welcoming Visitors

Georgia’s State Parks remain open during coronavirus outbreak By Collin Kelley With the stress and panic over the coronavirus pandemic, one solution might be getting away to the solitude of the North Georgia mountains. Officials with the Georgia Department of Natural Resources are reminding citizens that all state parks and historic sites are open and welcoming visitors. With many Georgians avoiding crowds and canceling travel plans, parks provide nearby places to enjoy nature. Amenities such as campsites, cabins, hiking trails, picnic areas and golf courses remain open. Amicalola Falls State Park Northeast of Dawsonville, on the cusp of the North Georgia Mountains, sits Amicalola Falls State Park & Lodge. A nature lover’s wonderland, it’s only eight miles from the Appalachian Trail and within the Chattahoochee National Forest. The park is named after its most treasured feature, Amicalola Falls – a magnificent 729foot waterfall that’s the third-highest cascading waterfall east of the Mississippi River. AT Amicalola Falls Lodge every room, literally, has a view. It’s the perfect place for a weekend getaway, corporate meeting, family reunion, or a romantic rendezvous. Black Rock Mountain Georgia’s highest state park encompasses some of the most outstanding scenery in Georgia’s Blue Ridge Mountains. Roadside overlooks provide spectacular 80-mile vistas, and four hiking trails lead visitors past wildflowers, streams, small waterfalls and lush forests. Visitors enjoy the summit visitor center for its views, gift shop and picnic tables. Mountaintop cottages surround a small playground, while campsites are nestled under rhododendron and gnarled oaks. Tent campers will appreciate the walk-in sites that allow extra privacy. The park’s small lake is popular with anglers and circled by an easy walking trail. At an altitude of 3,640 feet, Black Rock Mountain is often cooler than other Georgia parks and may close during icy weather. RVers should be comfortable driving on steep, winding roads. Tallulah Gorge One of the most spectacular canyons in the eastern U.S., Tallulah Gorge is two miles long and nearly 1,000 feet deep. Visitors can hike rim trails to several overlooks, or they can obtain a permit to hike to the gorge floor (100 per day, not available during water releases). A suspension bridge sways 80 feet above the rocky bottom, providing spectacular views of the river and waterfalls. Tightrope walkers have twice crossed the gorge, and visitors can still see towers used by Karl Wallenda. A paved path follows an on old railroad bed, perfect for strollers and bicycles, while mountain bikers can test their skills on a challenging 10 mile trail.

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36 April 2020 |

Smithgall Woods Smithgall Woods is an angler’s paradise. One of north Georgia’s premier trout streams, Dukes Creek, runs through this spectacular mountain property and is a favorite for catch and release fishing. To ensure a quality experience, the number of anglers is limited and fishing is offered only on certain days. As a result, anglers should call ahead for reservations. Five miles of trails and 18 miles of roads allow hikers and bicyclists to explore hardwoods, streams and wildlife. Cloudland Canyon Located on the western edge of Lookout Mountain, Cloudland Canyon is one of the largest and most scenic parks in the state. Home to thousand-foot deep canyons, sandstone cliffs, wild caves, waterfalls, cascading creeks, dense woodland and abundant wildlife, the park offers ample outdoor recreation opportunities. Hiking and mountain biking trails abound. The most popular hiking paths include the short Overlook Trail, strenuous Waterfalls Trail and moderate West Rim Loop Trail. Mountain biking is available at the newly developed Five Points Recreation Area and along the Cloudland Connector Trail. The park also includes an 18-hole disc golf course, wild caves available for touring during select months of the year, a fishing pond, trails for horseback riding, picnicking grounds and numerous interpretive programs, especially on weekends. For details and more information about all of Georgia’s state parks, visit gastateparks. org. At l a n t a I N t o w n Pa p e r. c o m


A N SL EY MOU N TA I N & L A K E

Your Trusted Advisor In Blue Ridge

474 STEWART CAMP ROAD offered for $4,900,000

318 WILMOT FABUS MTN. ROAD offered for: $499,000

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52 BUENA VISTA offered for: $599,000

93 KATAHDIN DRIVE offered for: $599,000

155 BAREFOOT TRAIL offered for: $299,000

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c: 770.402.1908 o: 404.480.HOME KIMKNUTZEN@ANSLEYATLANTA.COM GUIDETOBLUERIDGE.COM

404.480.HOME | ANSLEYMOUNTAINS.COM | 116 WEST MAIN ST. UNIT 1C, BLUE RIDGE, GA 30513 Equal Housing Opportunity | Christopher Burell, Principal Broker and Chief Motivation Officer | All information believed accurate but not guaranteed. If your home is currently listed, this is not a solicitation. At l a n t a I N t o w n Pa p e r. c o m

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Make a Splash

Georgia State Parks offer water activities for summer

SWIMMING Nothing says summer like a trip to the lake. Georgia State Parks’ sandy swimming beaches serve up all the amenities of a trip to the coast without the expense. Check out the beaches at parks like Red Top Mountain, Hard Labor Creek or Tugaloo. If swimming pools are more your style, head to F.D. Roosevelt, High Falls, Little Ocmulgee or Victoria Bryant state parks. Kids will find fun ways to play in the water with splash pads at Magnolia Springs, Little Ocmulgee and Gordonia-Alatamaha. Find a lake, pool or splash pad at GaStateParks.org/Swimming. Tugaloo

Summer is calling, and outdoor lovers will soon be on the hunt for the perfect destinations to enjoy water activities. Lucky for locals and visitors, Georgia State Parks offer a plethora of ways to get wet, including paddling, boating, fishing and kayaking just to name a few. And whether you’re heading for the hills or to some other part of the state for your summer vacation, there’s some great scenery, too. PADDLING The Park Paddlers Club offers an abundance of scenic waterways to explore, for both seasoned paddlers and beginners. Whether paddling in a kayak, in a canoe or on a stand-up paddleboard (SUP), paddle the 24 miles of water trails at the six participating state parks and earn a Park Paddlers t-shirt and bragging rights. In addition to the six state parks in the Park Paddlers Club, visitors can rent kayaks, canoes and SUPs to explore a variety of mountain lakes, coastal waters and winding rivers, all located within Georgia state parks. Find a complete list of parks with paddling at GaStateParks.org/Paddling.

Red Top Mountain Beach

FISHING Georgia State Parks are an angler’s paradise with reservoirs, streams and rivers, lakes of all sizes and saltwater fishing. Many bass fishermen equate “The Bass Capital of the World” to George T. Bagby’s Lake Walter F. George. In fact, the size and variety of fish are rivaled only by the varieties of unspoiled environments, from bass at Tugaloo and Hart Outdoor Recreation Area, to crappie at Seminole, Red Top Mountain and Richard B. Russell. Several of the parks have created programs that allow you to borrow equipment for little or no charge. Find a fishing spot at GaStateParks.org/Fishing.

High Falls SUP

38 April 2020 |

BOATING In addition to lakeside beaches, dozens of Georgia State Parks provide public boat ramps and docks, a few with their own docks adjacent to campgrounds and cabins. Boat rentals are available at more than 20 state parks. Larger lakes even allow boaters to partake in water skiing, sailing and other personal watercraft activities, however, some parks on smaller lakes have horsepower restrictions to preserve the tranquil setting and wildlife. See a full list of boat ramps at GaStateParks.org/Boating. At l a n t a I N t o w n Pa p e r. c o m


At l a n t a I N t o w n Pa p e r. c o m

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SUMMER ACADEMY AT UGA ®

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After-care available. Satellite locations: Alpharetta Arts Center • The Galloway School Kennesaw State University • Lovett School The Museum School • Oglethorpe University First Presbyterian Church of Atlanta Tapestry Public Charter School

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Atlanta Botanical GardenGainesville Opens Expansion

By Collin Kelley

SUMMER CAMP MAY 27-AUGUST 7 Have a Blast! with us this summer.

Our professional staff has prepared another exciting summer of fitness and educational fun. We will encourage each child to express his or her own creativity as well as explore and discover new activities.

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Space is limited. Register today!!

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Five years ago, the Atlanta Botanical Garden opened its Gainesville Garden, just an hour north of the city, to much acclaim. The outpost has become a favorite spot for locals and visitors alike, and now its growing with the addition of a children’s garden. Located on land donated by Charles and Lessie Smithgall, phase one of the project was five acres, but the new Ada Mae Pass Ivester’s Children’s Garden adds an additional 2.5 acres. With its whimsical fairy houses, places to crawl and climb and tooting miniature trains, the new garden is sure to delight children of all ages. The Gainesville Garden will eventually grow to 168 acres and is destined to be one of the largest and most diverse woodland gardens in the country, including the largest conservation nursery in the Southeast. The Gainesville garden makes for a perfect day trip, or perhaps a stop on leisurely longer one to Lake Lanier or the mountains. The garden is divided into sections, all easily accessible up gently rolling paved pathways. Just behind the sleek visitors center is the Forest Pond where flowering water lilies and other aquatic plants float and surround the surface. Also just beyond the visitors center is the Ivester Amphitheater, which plays host to concerts and events on a regular basis. The curving, grassy terraces can seat 2,200 people with ample room to spread out a picnic. Head up the pathway into the Overlook Garden, which features perennials, shrubs and ornamental trees. Butterflies seemed to particularly enjoy this part of the garden. There’s also comfortable seating along the paths to rest and observe the flora and fauna. Perhaps the most beautiful section is the Stream Garden, a woodland hillside with a dramatic, cascading waterfall surrounded by wildflowers and hydrangeas. The curving path and series of wooden bridges offer amply places to stop and snap photos. For those who want a longer walk, the half-mile Sourwood Trail and Holly Ridge Trail take visitors into the woods surrounding the garden. Native hollies, rhododendrons, witch hazel and shade trees make for good scenery along the hilly terrain. Visit atlantabg.org and click on Gainesville for more details and directions. Because of the coronavirus pandemic opening times and events might have changed.

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PARTING SHOTS

A day after Atlanta hosted the finest marathoners in the country at the U.S. Olympic Marathon Team Trials on Feb. 29, runners filled the streets of this city once again on March 1 as more than 13,000 participated in the Publix Atlanta Marathon, Half Marathon & 5K. Wrapping up a celebration billed as America’s Marathon Weekend, the race attracted runners from across the country on a running tour of Atlanta on a picture-perfect day. (Photos courtesy Atlanta Track Club)

42 April 2020 |

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2020 © An independently operated subsidary of HomeServices of America, Inc., a Berkeshire Hathaway affiliate, and a franchisee of BHHS Affiliates, LLC. Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices and the Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices symbol are registered service marks of HomeServices of America, INC.® Equal Housing Opportunity.

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The industry’s best tools. The nation’s best agents.

Compass is a licensed real estate broker and abides by Equal Housing Opportunity laws. All material presented herein is intended for informational purposes only. Information is compiled from sources deemed reliable but is subject to errors, omissions, changes in price, condition, sale, or withdrawal without notice. No statement is made as to the accuracy of any description. All measurements and square footages are approximate. This is not intended to solicit property already listed. Nothing herein shall be construed as legal, accounting or other professional advice outside the realm of real estate brokerage. 404.668.6621.

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