August 2014, Atlanta INtown

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Black Girls Run, p. 10

Back To School p. 18-20

1994 

August 2014

20 Years

 2014

AtlantaINtownPaper.com

Volume 20 • Number 8

Pets & their People pages 12-13

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2 August 2014 | INtown

©2014 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. Engel & Völkers and its independent License Partners are Equal Opportunity Employers and fully support the principles of the Fair Housing Act.

A t l a n t a I N t o w n P a p e r. c o m


Contents 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 Editorial Collin Kelley INtown Editor collin@atlantaintownpaper.com (404) 917-2200, ext. 102 Contributors Ann Taylor Boutwell, Benjamin Getz, Melody L. Harclerode, Art Huckabee, Annie Kinnett Nichols, Martha Nodar, Clare S. Richie, Tim Sullivan, Pam Tatum, Dan Whisenhunt Submissions Article queries and calendar submissions should be emailed to collin@atlantaintownpaper.com

IN the Neighborhood

College Football Hall of Fame ......................................... 4 Streetcar Update ............................................................ 5 Peachtree Road revamp ................................................. 6 Cityhood Initiatives ........................................................ 7 BeltLine Grants .............................................................. 8 Making A Difference ........... 10 Pets & Their People .......12-13 Pet Treats ........................... 14 Pet Briefs ........................... 15 Mason Mill Park.................. 16 Neighborhood Snapshot ..... 17 APS Briefing ................................................................ 18 Back To School Planning.............................................. 20 School Briefs............................................................... 21 Living Walls Conference............................................... 22 A Look Back ................................................................ 24 TimmyDaddy ............................................................... 25

Go Green

Urban Forest................................................................ 30 Eco-Briefs ................................................................... 31

The Studio

August Festivals ................. 32 Books By Local Authors...... 33 Cylorama Moving ............... 34 Dad’s Garage ..................... 35 Atlanta Planit ...................... 36

News You Can Eat

Food Festivals ............................................................. 37 Old 4th Distillery .......................................................... 38 Alfredo’s Review ......................................................... 40 Quick Bites .................................................................. 41

Home & Real Estate

Home Sales ............................ 42 Buckhead Condo Alliance........ 43 Perspectives in Architecture .... 44 Real Estate Briefs ................... 45 Parting Shots ......................... 46

IN Business

Langford Barber Shop .......... 26 Business Briefs ...............26-28

Advertising

For information call 404-917-2200 ext 130. Senior Acount Executive Janet Porter Acount Executives Jeff Kremer Susan Lesesne

EDITOR’S LETTER

Sales Consultants David Burleson Linda Howell

Collin Kelley

Circulation/ Subscriptions Each month, 35,000 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. PUBLISHED BY Springs Publishing LLC Atlanta INtown • Reporter Newspapers 6065 Roswell Road, Suite 225 Sandy Springs, GA 30328 Phone: (404) 917-2200 Fax: (404) 917-2201 Steve Levene Founder & Publisher stevelevene@reporternewspapers.net (404) 917-2200, ext. 111 Amy Arno Director of Sales Development amyarno@reporternewspapers.net (404) 917-2200, ext. 112 Chris North Director of Creative & Interactive Media chrisnorth@reporternewspapers.net (404) 917-2200, ext. 117 Isadora Pennington Graphic Designer isadora@reporternewspapers.net (404) 917-2200, ext. 123 Joe Earle Managing Editor joeearle@reporternewspapers.net (404) 917-2200, ext. 122 Deborah Davis Office Manager deborahdavis@reporternewspapers.net (404) 917-2200, ext. 110 © 2014 With 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.

A t l a n t a I N t o w n P a p e r. c o m

collin@atlantaintownpaper.com

Going to the Dogs We asked our readers to submit photos of themselves with their beloved pets and, as you’ve already seen on the cover, they responded with some really cute images. Our new graphic designer and photographer Isadora Pennington also fanned out across Intown to find some cute pets at local parks. You’ll find even more photos on pages 12-13 of this issue. I don’t have a pet right now. I had two sweet Labrador Retrievers growing up (RIP Scooter and Doogie), but with my busy life and general selfishness with my time, I simply don’t have time to take care of a pet. However, when I move into my dotage, I plan to adopt a Pug. I have a soft spot for those little pups and their squishy, drooly, panting faces. Yes, I will be that old man out taking his little dog for a walk. Get off my lawn, you darn kids! Speaking of my busy life, this will be the first year I’ve missed the Decatur Book Festival , which will draw hundreds of authors and thousands of visitors over Labor Day weekend. As literary legend Joyce

Carol Oates takes the podium for the keynote address, I’ll be winging my way across the pond for my own literary and musical adventures in London. As a fan of iconic British singer Kate Bush for 30 years, I managed to snag a ticket to one of her sold out shows at the Hammersmith theatre. That same week, I’ll be heading over to the Young Vic theatre to see Gillian Anderson as Blanche DuBois in A Streetcar Named Desire. Anderson has come a long way since playing Agent Scully on The X-Files. Also on my must see list: the Virginia Woolf exhibition at The National Portrait Gallery. This collection of rare photos, paintings, manuscripts and personal objects is on through September. Before I return to Atlanta, I’ll have the honor of reading my own work at Royal Festival Hall at Southbank Centre as part of the Polari series. I’ll be reading from my recent collection of poetry, Render, and a few new pieces. If you happen to be in London, stop by and say hello. While I’m abroad, AtlantaINtownPaper.com will be regularly updated and I’ll also be planning our October issue. Also just around the corner is our 20th anniversary issue in November. I can’t wait for you to see the stories, photos and goodies we’ve got planned for that. It’s been in the works all summer long and we’re excited to celebrate with you. Enjoy the Decatur Book Festival, Dragon Con and all the other endof-summer events happening around Intown this month. Cheers!

ABOUT THE COVER Clockwise from top left: 1. Sadie with Sue Wilkinson 2. Doug Granville with Willomina, Steven Teal with Apollo 3. Jason Collier with Bertha 4. Hazek with Rachel Mayer 5. Jarrett Hayes and Ebbi 6. Squeaker with Eliza Howard

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August 2014 | IN


IN THE NEIGHBORHOOD FEATURES, NEWS & EVENTS

DOWNTOWN TOUCHDOWN

College Football Hall of Fame to open Aug. 23

This page: Renderings of the exterior and interior of the College Football Hall of Fame.

Chick-fil-A Fan Experience” thanks to a new partnership with the chicken giants. Tickets and memberships will be available beginning Aug. 1 for purchase through the Hall’s newly launched website, cfbhall.com. In addition to housing the national College Football Hall of Fame, previously located in South Bend, Indiana, the attraction will offer museum-quality

By Collin Kelley INtown Editor The new College Football Hall of Fame will officially open its doors on Saturday, Aug. 23, in Downtown Atlanta. The attraction will formally be known as the “College Football Hall of Fame and

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memorabilia with modern, interactive, multimedia exhibits that will invite fans and visitors to engage with their favorite college football team or Hall of Famer. Each of the attraction’s multiple galleries celebrates a unique aspect of college football, including iconic trophies and a large, touch-sensitive, 52-foot media wall filled with dynamic content such as photos and videos of players, fans, cheerleaders and marching bands. A multi-touch system allows for fun interaction with content specific to a fan’s favorite college football team. Coca-Cola Fans’ Game Day will allow visitors to feel the excitement on campus around the big game and highlights tailgating, digital face painting, bands, fight songs, mascots, cheerleading, and countless rich traditions.

Kia Building a Champion will take visitors inside the world of players and coaches, including halftime speeches and a Q&A with current players. Fans are also invited to peruse John Heisman’s 1905 playbook, explore a timeline matching college football history with American history milestones, and learn what it truly takes to be a student athlete. The AT&T Game Time Gallery will explore the rich rivalries of college football and invites visitors to call one of college football’s most memorable plays from the broadcast booth and guide their own college football program to the championship.

The Chick-fil-A Peach Bowl Skill Zone is located on the 45-yard long football field and will allow fans to sharpen their football skills through a variety of physical activities.

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August 2014 | IN


ATLANTA STREETCAR DELAYED UNTIL NOVEMBER The Atlanta Streetcar won’t be open to the public until November. Cost overruns, weather, relocating utilities, mandatory testing and, most recently, issues with the overhead cable system, have continually pushed the opening back from spring to summer and now autumn. Last month, the Atlanta City Council voted to provide $1 million a year in startup, operational and maintenance costs for the Atlanta Streetcar. The council also voted 9-1 to charge riders $1 per one-way trip.

A t l a n t a I N t o w n P a p e r. c o m

The 2.7-mile streetcar, which will ferry riders from Centennial Olympic Park to the King Center and back, broke ground in 2012 and is projected to cost $100 million. Testing of the cars on the tracks, which was supposed to begin in April, was pushed back to later this month and the Federal Transit Administration and Georgia Department of Transportation still have to sign off on the project.

Courtesy Atlanta Streetcar A rendering of what the Atlanta Streetcars will look like once they actually start making their 2.7mile loop.

–Collin Kelley

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August 2014 | IN


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Peachtree Road transformation project to get another look By Collin Kelley INtown Editor Further community meetings on the Peachtree Road transformation project are on hold while the entities involved reevaluate plans for bike lanes, wider sidewalks, new trees, new lighting, buried utilities and left turn signals and lanes. The Buckhead Community Improvement District (CID) says that in response to community comments and traffic forecasts, it is taking a new look at the Peachtree Road project. The redesign is expected to take until the end of the year. “After hearing from our community, our goal is to gather additional information that will help us shape the best transportation facility we can,” Jim Durrett, executive director of the Buckhead CID, said in a press release announcing the delay. The stretch of Peachtree Road from Maple Drive in Buckhead to Deering Road just north of I-85 in Midtown now is under review by Georgia DOT and by consultants hired by the Buckhead CID to determine if a new street design can be developed that would better address the safety for motorists and pedestrians. “We had hoped to hold our next public open house in July to share the latest proposed plans for the corridor,” Durrett said. “However, both Georgia DOT and the Buckhead CID have decided to take additional time to respond to concerns expressed by residents living in neighborhoods adjacent to Peachtree Road.” During the July 10 Buckhead Council of Neighborhoods (BCN) meeting, Nina Schwartz from Neighborhood Planning Unit A expressed her concerns about plans to remove traffic lanes along Peachtree to make room for dedicated bike lanes and turn lanes. “We’re concerned that this road

dieting plan will cause more congestion on Peachtree and divert traffic into the neighborhoods,” Schwartz said. “Peachtree is already at capacity with 64,000 vehicles traveling the road daily.” Schwartz said she and her neighbors were also concerned about cyclists maneuvering along Peachtree Road in such high volume traffic and the number of curb cuts the bike lanes will have to cross. Atlanta City Councilwoman Mary Norwood, who was also in attendance at the BCN meeting, said she believed the plan should be adjusted and that she was opposed to the road diet plan on Peachtree. But Buckhead CID chairman David Allman said the organization’s first priority was addressing existing and future automobile traffic. “If the experts don’t believe that we can make an overall improvement in terms of mobility and safety, then it’s a non-starter as far as we are concerned,” Allman said. Allman said the CID is not considering restriping lanes, as was done on West Paces Ferry between East Andrews Drive and Peachtree Road. The CID plans to pay to redo the road striping in that area, Allman said. “We realize that virtually everybody dislikes what was previously done on West Paces Ferry,” Allman said. “The public should be assured that this is absolutely not being considered for Peachtree.” Durrett said the new plans would make sure Peachtree provides a safe thoroughfare for cars. “Our first priority is to optimize the capacity of Peachtree for safer and more reliable movement of automobiles, Durrett said. “However, if we can accomplish this goal and still make Peachtree Road a better place to navigate on foot or on a bicycle, we absolutely should try to do both.”

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Boutique Approach… Consistent Results

Collin Kelley Briarcliff Initiative spokesman Herman Lorenz, right, talks with members of the Lindbergh-LaVista Corridor Coalition.

Briarcliff and Lakeside cityhood initiatives merge By Collin Kelley When officials from the Briarcliff and Lakeside cityhood initiatives announced at the July 2 meeting of the DeKalb Government Operations Task Force that they were joining forces – “dating” (not married or engaged) in the words of Lakeside Chairwoman Mary Kay Woodworth – there was little detail about how the relationship would unfold. The couple’s first date was an awkward one as representatives from the merged cityhood movements spoke at the July 9 Lindbergh-LaVista Corridor Coalition (LLCC) meeting. The takeaway from the new partnership between Briarcliff and Lakeside is this: those names will disappear and a new one will be chosen to represent the merged north DeKalb County territory. It also means going back to the drawing board and creating a new map. At the end of this year’s Georgia legislative session, the three competing cityhood movements – Briarcliff, Lakeside and Tucker – found their efforts tabled over boundary disputes. A last minute effort to merge the Lakeside and Tucker plans was an arranged marriage that neither side really wanted, but accepted in hopes of getting any kind of action at the capital. With the dust settled, Tucker is now on its own, there have been shifts in the behind-thescenes players for both the Briarcliff and Lakeside movements and there is – at least in this early phase – a willingness to get this couple to the altar. But before there are any wedding bells – or a referendum on the ballot – the combined cityhood initiatives are going to have to convince residents in both territories that the merged groups are viable and inclusive. If the mood of the members of the LLCC, a group comprised of residents from Lindridge/ Martin Manor, LaVista Park and A t l a n t a I N t o w n P a p e r. c o m

Woodland Hills, was any indication, there might be a few bumps in the road. There was lingering bitterness from some residents in the LLCC neighborhoods who felt snubbed by Lakeside, which, as it was finally admitted, didn’t think the communities were essential to the movement. The neighborhoods joined the Briarcliff initiative, which stalled out at the Gold Dome as Lakeside and Tucker limped forward. “What we are trying to do is consolidate two visions,” said Briarcliff spokesman Keith Hanks. “These first meetings are going to be raw things as we figure out how to work together.” Lakeside representative Josh Kahn agreed, calling the cityhood process “messy.” Some of that messiness was the palpable tension between members of the Briarcliff movement as they tried to explain how the process would, essentially, start from scratch again. There was also uncertainty voiced about whether or not a state representative would take the newly merged cityhood movement to the Georgia Legislature for the 2015 session. “We are two groups trying to get to one map,” Kahn said. “We are going to have to talk to people and see which neighborhoods want to be a part of it.” Going forward, there will be some kind of poll or survey taken of residents in both the old Briarcliff and Lakeside cityhood areas to determine if they still want to move forward with creating a new city and what essential services are most important to them. No timeline was set for when the poll might take place. The LLCC members were encouraged to talk to their neighbors and take the temperature of this new movement. Meanwhile, the Tucker initiative has launched Tucker2015.com with an updated map and information about its plans for cityhood.

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BeltLine gets grant funding for Reynoldstown, Westside Trail The Atlanta BeltLine has received a $100,000 grant from the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) to build the Reynoldstown Stage, a permanent stage structure, landscaped exhibit space, and an elevated park connection with some of the best views in the city. The Reynoldstown Stage project site is located on the southeast portion of the BeltLine, and was based on a partnership with Georgia Tech professor Tristan AlHaddad and his students. “This project is a model that demonstrates how public spaces bring people together, strengthen communities, and reflect the personalities of our communities,” said Paul Morris, President and CEO of Atlanta BeltLine, Inc. Along with news of the NEA grant, the Westside Trail project has also reached a major project milestone. Working with the Georgia Department of Transportation (GDOT), the Federal Highway Administration (FHWA), the City of Atlanta and a team of design and engineering consultants led by KimleyHorn & Associates, the BeltLine met the federal deadline of June 30 to complete final design and land acquisition for the multi-use trail in southwest Atlanta. By meeting this deadline, the $18 million TIGER V grant from the U.S. Department of Transportation for the $43 million Westside Trail, is now secure for the project’s implementation. In

just nine months, ABI and its partners executed a complex process of design, land acquisition, environmental clearance and other approvals by the state and federal governments that often exceeds 24 months for projects of this magnitude. In addition to the TIGER V grant and $15 million of other state and local funding, the Atlanta BeltLine Partnership is leading a $10 million private fundraising effort. Upon completion, the 3-mile trail will run from University Avenue in Adair Park north to Lena Street at Washington Park. For a half mile along White Street, the trail will use the existing West End Trail.

The BeltLine received a grant from the National Endowment for the Arts to buid the Reynoldstown Stage. All renderings courtesy Atlanta BeltLine.

A rendering of how the BeltLine Westside Trail will look with transit.

A rendering of the Westside Trail at Ralph David Abernathy Boulevard.

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August 2014 | IN


BACK TO SCHOOL

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MAKING A DIFFERENCE Black Girls RUN! evolves into national fitness movement By Clare S. Richie “Anyone can be a runner,” Toni Carey says. She and her sorority sister/ business partner, Ashley Hicks, both fell in love with running after college graduation less than a decade ago. Since then, the two have transformed a blog, Black Girls RUN! (BGR!), into a national fitness movement headquartered in Atlanta. Early on, the co-founders were surprised by the lack of diversity at road races and motivated to reverse the grim health statistics for minority women. Eighty percent of African American women are overweight and more than half are obese. Carey had seen family and friends deal with chronic health issues like diabetes and hypertension from a sedentary lifestyle. “These problems are not hereditary, you can control them,” Carey said. Carey and Hicks decided to get the word out that black girls can and should run. By providing encouragement, resources and a support system to African-American women, BGR! helps make fitness and healthy living a priority. Today, BGR! boasts 70 running groups with 136,000 members nationwide and growing. The Atlanta running group of 15,000 members is spread among several neighborhoods.

Whether finishing a training run or a race, this sisterhood welcomes members with a cheer tunnel to show they are not alone. Maybe this is why members are always raising the bar, by increasing distances, taking on triathlons, and trying new sports. For many members a full marathon is considered “graduation.” Ready to join the movement? Women of all races and running abilities are welcome to join a running group – sorry, no men. A great place to start will be at the “Sweat With Your Sole Festival” on Sept. 4-7 at the Atlanta Marriott Marquis. The Thursday evening mixer kicks off the festival. The Friday and Saturday conference will feature a lecture series and leading fitness instructors showing attendees new sports like boxing. The weekend culminates with a 5K/15K race Sunday in Centennial Park that is open to women, men and children. Like its members, BGR! keeps raising the bar. Future plans include growing to one million members, extending the brand to BGTRI (run, swim, cycle) and BGOM (yoga), and possibly introducing its own race series. The ultimate goal remains lowering obesity statistics and related chronic diseases for African American women. Found out more about the organization at BlackGirlsRUN.com.

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10 August 2014 | INtown

Black Girls Run group at a recent meet-up. A t l a n t a I N t o w n P a p e r. c o m


Give Yourself Some Latitude.

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August 2014 | IN


Pets & Their People We asked Intown pets to show o their humans for this special pictorial

Leelu Dallas Multipass & FaďŹ La Rue Wigglebottom and Sasha & Justin Hanna

Lupo and Katie Culp

Georgi and Dot Matthews

Sophie & Romeo and Greta Holland

Sadie and Bill Golden

Dikembe Mutombo and Robert Springer 12 August 2014 | INtown

Rocko & Cholula and Nikki Rentz

Bailey and Nisey Woods A t l a n t a I N t o w n P a p e r. c o m


Boss and Phillip Springer

Jasper and Carter Thomas

Colette and Phyllis Colmar

Gomez and Selena Graves

Bella and Leslie White

Popcorn and Wisteria Grace Brady

Big Daddy and Lauren Janis

Trixie and Paolo Zorza

Cha Chi and Owen Miller Sophie and Kevin White

Peepo and Matt McDaniel & Isadora Pennington A t l a n t a I N t o w n P a p e r. c o m

Oona and Jen Kufalk town 13

August 2014 | IN


INDULGE YOUR DOG Fun, eats and treats for your furry friends By Benjamin Getz Yelp Atlanta Community Manager If you’re in the market to take the dog days of summer quite literally and need to shop for your canine companions, or just want to have them chill on the patio with you for drinks, we know just the place. This time, Yelp Atlanta has a few spots where you can pamper the pooch. Park Pet Supply Finding yourself in East Atlanta Village beckons a short trip to this goldmine of a pet store. Peruse the menagerie of natural pet foods and everything else you could possibly need for Fido. Pro Tip: If you don’t see what you need, they’ll happily order it for you. 479 Flat Shoals Ave. SE Atlanta, GA 30316.

trip to the kennel for the pooch. Dining on the patio here is dog-friendly for all. Don’t be a stranger to the Sticky Toffee Pudding. 621 North Ave. NE Atlanta, GA 30308. ParkGrounds This spot is the Holy Grail for those who are looking for a wifi workplace or a place to socialize over a cup of coffee while the dogs play. The great tree in the park casts plenty of shade for those sweltering days, too. 142 Flat Shoals Ave. SE Atlanta, GA 30316 Benjamin Getz is the Community Manager for Yelp in Atlanta. Follow his reviews at benjamingetz.yelp.com and follow all of the Yelp adventures on Instagram at @ YelpAtlanta.

Doguroo This Westside doggy shop is the perfect all-in-one for the busy professional found pet owner. All of your grooming needs, boarding, and vet services. They also provide online cameras to view the pooch while you’re out on business! 1456 Northside Dr. NW Atlanta, GA 30318. Piedmont Dog Park Whilst taking your furry friends on a jog through the park or enjoying a picnic in The Meadow, stop by this built-in dog park to let your furry friend mingle with his/her canine cohorts. Pro Tip: Two separate fenced areas for both small and large pups. Piedmont Park – Midtown. 4th & Swift No need to interrupt your evening walk through Historic Old Fourth Ward Park with a

Piedmont Dog Park (Photo courtesy of Yelp user Cynthia K.)

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Pet Pick

Pet Briefs

Who doesn’t want to wake up to a Rooster every morning? This young, charming and hilarious dog will have everyone in the family up and enjoying their day. He is a playful pup and would love to have a companion dog, but would be just fine without it as long as his people gave him lots of love and attention. He also loves car rides, trail hikes, meeting new people. To adopt Rooster or any of the other dogs and cats, visit pawsatlanta.org or stop by the shelter at 5287 Covington Highway in Decatur.

The Atlanta Humane Society and Atlanta Braves will host Bark in the Park on Aug. 17 at 1:35 p.m. at Turner Field. Fans are invited to bring their pup to enjoy a game, but tickets are limited. Go to braves.com/bark to purchase and get more information about bringing your pooch to the game. For every Budweiser or Bud Light sold at this game, Atlanta Beverage will donate $1 to the Atlanta Humane Society. The 10th annual Bark for Art to benefit Atlanta Lab Rescue will be held Aug. 23 from 7 to 10 p.m. at Westside Foundry/Westside Market, 1530 Ellsworth Industrial Drive. There will be an evening of refreshments and libations and a silent auction featuring art, jewelry, furniture, trips and other surprises. Tickets are $35 at barkforart.org.

Rooster

Esquire Magazine is featuring 17 of the DeKalb County Animal Services shelter dogs in its August issue. The article, called “The State of the American Dog,” discusses how society is treating pit bulls. You can read the feature online at esquire.com/features/american-dog-0814.

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HAPPY LITTLE HAVEN Mason Mill Park attracts young and old By Martha Nodar Located just steps away from the DeKalb County Toco Hills-Avis G. Williams Public Library branch, the Mason Mill Park complex attracts families with children, single adults of all ages and seniors from the community. Lindsey Glover from Echo Hills said she brings her two small children to the park at least twice a month. “I like the park because it is so nice and safe,” she said. With its walking trails, covered picnic areas, fenced playgrounds, and ample free parking, the park is an oasis waiting to be discovered. That was the case with Toco Hills area resident Suellen Kirwan. “I had no idea this park was here,” Kirwan said. “This is a really nice park. I like it because they have small swings for my one-year-old granddaughter, which are hard to find.” Kirwan said she first learned about the park when she came to its recreation center to take aerobic classes. Adjacent to one of the playgrounds, the center hosts classes, meetings and English country dancing. On the third Sunday of every month English Country Dance Atlanta offers dancing in the center from 2 to 5 p.m. No partner is needed. Beginners are

encouraged to arrive at 1:30 p.m. for a dance lesson, which is included in the price of admission ranging from $7 to $10 per person depending on whether the music is recorded or live. Music teacher Mary Ellen Doughty said it was her neighbor who got her interested in English country dancing and she has been a regular at these dances in the center for 11 years. “If you can walk, you can Englishcountry-dance,” she said. “I hope I’ll be dancing in my 80s. Dancing keeps you young.” Doughty said many of the pieces played at these dances are timeless and remind her of the Regency era—the time when early 19th century British novelist Jane Austen was attending dances herself with family and friends. “The music is beautiful and feeds my soul,” Doughty emphasized. Karen Hudlow, Doughty’s friend said she always liked to dance, thus, she jumped at the chance when she heard about these dances at the park. Hudlow said it was by attending these dances that she met and became friends with Doughty. She refers to the English dances as “elegant.” Alice Adler, a fellow senior from the Toco Hills area, said she participated in those dances several years ago. Adler is now the president of Egress, a group for single adults 55

Photo by Martha Nodar

The playground area at Mason Mill Park.

and older and those who are widowed regardless of age. Egress members meet on the second Sunday of every month in the park’s recreation center at 1 p.m. for lunch and fellowship. Mary Jones, Egress’ first vice president said she has been an Egress member for almost 15 years.

“I love it,” she said about the group. “We have experienced some of the same things; it’s a healing process.” A respite to a world saturated with technology, the Mason Mill Park offers a chance to enjoy nature and social contact. “This park is a happy little haven,” Doughty said.

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NEIGHBORHOOD SNAPSHOT: DECATUR

Major Renovation Coming Soon! Founded in 1822, the City of Decatur predates Atlanta by 15 years and could have become the region’s largest city if not for concerned early settlers who did not want the town to become a major terminal on the Western and Atlantic Railroad. Instead, surveyors looked west and created Terminus, the forerunner of Atlanta. Still, Decatur has thrived and is now known for its college town atmosphere, vibrant downtown, leafy neighborhoods and a dining scene to rival Midtown and Buckhead. It’s also home to the AJC Decatur Book Festival, which draws 80,000 literature lovers every Labor Day weekend. Pictured clockwise from above: families enjoy music at the bandstand on the Decatur Square; Brick Store Pub is a favorite downtown hangout; poetry readings at Java Monkey Coffee House draw regular crowds; Agnes Scott College’s beautiful campus; bellying up to the bar at the Kimball House restaurant.

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August 2014 | IN


JUST ADD IMAGINATION.

APS ready for new school year with new leadership annual repayments. The BeltLine has yet to make a payment and there have been threats of lawsuits and plenty of rhetoric from Atlanta Mayor Kasim Reed and With Atlanta Public Schools (APS) former Superintendent Erroll B. Davis. back in session Aug. 4, the Buckhead “We are working to get the deciders Council of Neighborhoods recently heard to the table,” said Brown, who also sits on from two of the system’s recently elected the Atlanta BeltLine board. “We need to board of education members, as well as a get people behaving like reasonable adults. blogger who intensely follows the district. APS doesn’t want to tank the BeltLine. This School Board members Cynthia Briscoe is not about choosing the BeltLine or the Brown (Dist. 8) and Jason Esteves (Dist. 9) children.” spoke about their hopes for APS under the Esteves said he hopes that four years leadership of new Superintendent Meria from now that APS can be mentioned Carstarphen, even as the cheating scandal without being followed by the words that rocked the system continues to make “cheating scandal.” One of his big goals is to headlines. clear up APS’s unfunded pension liability of “APS is building the plane while we’re $550 million. flying it,” Brown said about rebuilding “We are deep in the hole,” Esteves said the reputation, trust and frankly. educational standards for Esteves said 85 percent of the system. “I believe Meria APS’s liability is with retirees, Carstarphen is the right so raising money to fund the person at the right time. We pension plans and fulfill its need her passion, confidence promise is a priority. “This and abilities.” problem started 30 years ago Brown said changes and was ignored for decades. are happening almost daily The can was kicked down at APS headquarters as the road, but we have to deal Carstarphen reorganizes, with it now.” while the school board is Robert Stockwell, a CPA already making efforts to who runs the Financial be more transparent and Deconstruction blog, accessible to the community. Cynthia Briscoe Brown said he’s encouraged by It was Esteves who Carstarphen’s hiring and pushed for live streaming of described her energy as the school board meetings so “non-stop go.” parents and interested parties could watch “I’ve spoken with her several times the meetings from their computers or now and she is very focused on results,” phones, while Brown said board members Stockwell said. are trying to meet teachers, cafeteria Stockwell said a focus on absenteeism workers, school bus drivers and everyone would be one of Carstarphen’s tentpoles who works for APS. just as it was in her previous job as Brown said she’s also encouraged by superintendent in Austin, Texas. “She says the City of Atlanta and APS sitting down the first step in making a better system is to work out the controversy over the $19 getting kids to the classroom,” he said. million debt owed the school district by Carstarphen herself will be the guest the Atlanta BeltLine. APS agreed to give speaker at the next Buckhead Council of up some of its property tax dollars to help Neighborhood’s meeting on Aug. 14. build the BeltLine with a promise of fixed By Collin Kelley INtown Editor

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ST D JU STE LI Tucker: $299,900

Morningside: $839,000

Old Fourth Ward: $518,900

Decatur: $489,900

Midtown: $229,900

Brookhaven: $436,900

3216 Abor Ridge 5BR/3BA FMLS:5307573

1275 Zimmer Drive 4BR/4.5BA FMLS: 5212794

672 Kennesaw Ave NE 3BR/3.5BA FMLS: 5311612

White Oak Hills: 2591 Dusty Lane 5BR/3.5BA

855 Peachtree St, Unit 1104 1BR/1BA FMLS: 5313183

1223 Ivy Brook Lane NE 3BR/2.5BA FMLS: 5213660

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Tom Breeden 404.379.1685

Greg Williamson: 678.570.5033

Jamie Sternlieb 404.518.8384

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I-85 @ Clairmont: $235,000

Underwood Hills: $375,000

Intown - DeFoors: $375,000

Lavista Park: $359,900

Decatur: $700,000’s

731 Wildwood Place, NE 3BR/3BA

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1873 Volberg Street, NW 2BD + 2Rm Office FMLS:5284390

1873 Volberg Street, NW Waterfall Setting FMLS: 5284390

1304 Sheridan Road 3BR/2BA FMLS: 5272758

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Briarcliff: $149,900

LaVista Park: $989,000

Morningside: $444,900

Oak Grove: $424,900

Midtown: $227,000

361 17th St Unit 1807 1BR/1BA FMLS: 5293739

1250 Weatherstone Dr. 2BR/2BA FMLS: 5314811

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1496 Regency Walk 4BD/2.5BA FMLS: 7249875

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the I N TOW N office IS PLEASED TO WELCOME

(404) 975-0717 | (404) 897-5558 chris.hough@harrynorman.com www.ChrisLHough.com

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BACK-TO-SCHOOL PLANNING Make sure to include the younger children By Pam Tatum All over Atlanta it is “back-to-school” time, and parents and children alike are getting ready for a new schedule, new teachers and new experiences. But what about the really young learners – the babies and toddlers – in our midst? In Georgia, more than two-thirds of children under age six spend all or some of their day being cared for by someone other than their parents. Research says that from birth to age three is when 90 percent of brain development occurs, making the experiences during this time crucial for future growth and learning. Just as much thought – if not more – should go into researching and planning where infants and toddlers spend their day as parents do for the schools their older children attend. Young children need a safe and loving environment where they can question, explore and feel confident in their learning. These years set the framework for all of the learning yet to come, so parents need to make sure that their children are in the best care possible. However, finding a high-quality childcare program can be a little harder than one thinks, and even more difficult when you are unsure of what a “quality” program is. Nonprofit Quality Care for Children has made the search process easier with the All Georgia Kids website (AllGaKids.org), 1-877-ALL-GA-KIDS and the All Georgia Kids app that can be downloaded for free on iTunes. It’s a free, searchable resource that helps parents find a quality program that fits their criteria – ranging from cost of care to location.

Additionally, the All Georgia Kids resource includes whether or not a child care program has received a quality rating through Bright from the Start: Georgia Department of Early Care and Learning’s Quality Rated system. Quality Rated, launched in 2013, assigns a one-, twoor three-star rating to a program that meets standards that exceed the licensing requirements so parents can easily identify the quality of the program. More than 1,300 childcare programs in Georgia are participating in Quality Rated. Here are some tips for parents looking for childcare or to make a switch: • Begin your search early. • Visit all programs, and on multiple occasions at different time during the day • Pay attention to how children are responding to care givers. Are they happy, engaged and active? • The care program facility is in good shape and clean. • Does the program have low staff turnover, and are they licensed or Quality Rated? Pam Tatum is CEO of Quality Care for Children, a nonprofit working to ensure that all of Georgia’s young children are nurtured and educated. Find more tips at QualityCareforChildren.org.

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School Briefs Atlanta Public Schools (atlanta. k12.ga.us) and City Schools of Decatur (csdecatur.net) were slated to resume classes for the 2014-15 academic year on Monday, Aug. 4, while Fulton County Schools (fultonschools.org) and DeKalb County Schools (dekalb.k12.ga.us) will begin on Aug. 11. Be sure to check the school’s website for start times, open houses and calendars.

Renfroe Middle School in Decatur has been selected as Georgia Safe Routes to School Resource Center’s Partner of the Year for the Metro Atlanta Area. Winners of this award are chosen based on the progress of their SRTS programs during the past year in getting more students to walk and bike to school and increasing the awareness of SRTS within its community. The Georgia Safe Routes to School Resource Center has recognized outstanding partners with the Partner of the Year Award since 2011.

Sixteen rising seniors from The Lovett School took part in a summer medical program/externship over the summer. The students learned about coordinated care and corporate medicine at Kaiser Permanente, shadowed three specialties, observed surgery, and visited Emory Medical School. The students also observed brain surgery performed on a 12-year-old boy to remove a tumor.

Special Front row (L to R): Olivia Rezek, Caty Lindauer, Emily Medendorp, Isabelle Leonaitis, Chapman Monroe, and Markell Adams. Back row (L to R): McKenzie Richards, Kate Marino, Mary Bryan Pope, Justin Song, Lindsey Watson, and Melissa Houghton.

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Drew Charter School Junior and Senior Academy held a grand opening preview last month at the Charlie Yates Campus in East Lake. The new 200,000 square-foot campus completes the East Lake Foundation’s vision of a cradle-to-college education. The LEEDcertified building includes: flexible learning suites to nurture collaboration, seven project learning labs and seven state-of-the-art science labs, integrated arts studios, 500-seat performing arts center serving the school and community, two gymnasiums and a fullsize track and field.

Noletha High will serve as the new principal of Atlanta Heights Charter School for the 2014-2015 school year. She previously served as a principal of an elementary school in Atlanta, model teacher leader, instructional support specialist, and mathematics consultant. High also has experience teaching at the elementary, high school and college levels. She holds a master’s degree in mathematics education and an educational specialist degree in educational leadership from Albany State University. She also earned a bachelor’s degree in mathematics from Georgia State University.

Brookhaven | $829,000 1288 Chaucer Ln NE

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Milton | $799,900 15630 Birmingham Hwy

Brookhaven 4142 Shawnee Ln.

SOLD Sandy Springs 7075 Canonbury Pl. Morningside | $1,079,900 1843 Rock Springs Lane

Morningside | $1,068,900 1850 Rock Springs Lane

Detail. Charm. Luxury. Stunning custom homes built for your beautiful custom life. 1450 S Johnson Ferry Rd, Atlanta 30319 | 404.801.5770 | KevinAycockHomes.com *This drawing is an artist rendering, conceptual in nature and represents only the general spirit and intent of the design. It is not intended as an exact representation. Prices may not include lot premiums, upgrades and/or options. Floor plans, pricing and current incentives are subject to change without notice.

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Courtesy Living Walls Artist 2501, Stupa, from Living Walls conference in 2013. The annual conference brings many artists from around the world to exhibit street art in Atlanta.

Living Walls 2014 Conference is set for Aug. 13-17 with conversations, exhibits, a bike tour and more. The celebration of street art and collaborative art in public spaces will take place at various venues around Atlanta. The opening night event on Aug. 13, 7 p.m., at C4 on Martin Luther King Jr. Drive will feature a conversation on street art trends between Austin McManus, Photography Director at Juxtapoz Magazine, Rj Vandalog Rushmore, Chief Editor at Vandalog and Communications Manager for the City of Philadelphia Mural Arts Program, and Mónica Campana, Living Walls Co-Founder and Executive Director.

An evening of lectures at the Center for Civil and Human Rights will be held Aug. 15, including a keynote speech by Atlanta BeltLine mastermind Ryan Gravel. The main event will be on Aug. 16 starting at 9 p.m. at The Goat Farm. There will be a gallery exhibit, music and more. Suggested donation of $5 at the door. The bike tour of the city’s murals will take place Aug. 17 from 3:30 to 6:30 p.m. starting at Atlanta BeltLine Bicycle on Sampson Street. For more information on the conference, visit livingwallsatl.com or facebook.com/LivingWallsATL.

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August 2014 | IN


A LOOK BACK This Month in History

Ann Taylor Boutwell

Big Bethel AME

Aug. 9, 1986: Henry James Furlow, also known as “Satan” from 1933 to 1983 in Auburn Avenue’s Big Bethel AME Church’s allegory Heaven Bound, died at Hughes Spalding Medical Center. He was 85. The Atlanta University graduate was a former teacher of social science at the Old Fourth Ward’s David T. Howard High School. Florine Dyer Furlow, his devoted wife, said, “He’s smiling with the other saints of Heaven Bound.” Heaven Bound, the classic story of erring human beings struggling to reach the Pearly Gates, is still performed today. Performance dates for 2014 production are Nov. 7 - 8.

Aug. 12, 1883: The Kimball House Hotel on Pryor Street in Downtown was destroyed by fire. The 13-story, six-story hotel was considered one of the finest in the South. A night watchman spotted flames emerging from an elevator shaft and the fire spread quickly. Guests in the 317 rooms were evacuated, but Robert H. Richards, president of the Kennesaw Mill Company and director of the Atlanta National Bank, insisted on rescuing his personal belongings. While the fire raged around him in his secondstory suite, he tossed furniture, clothing and other valuables through the windows to the sidewalk below, where his wife and spectators moved them to safety. He barely escaped the flames. The fire’s cause was from a cigar carelessly tossed in the hotel basement. Aug. 17, 1908: Second Ward Councilman L. Preston “Press” Huddleston introduced an ordinance concerning the closing of gates at Oakland Cemetery. The ordinance came about after a recent unearthing of an 1876 law requiring all cemetery Oakland Cemetary gates but

one be closed. Huddleston’s ordinance to repeal the old law was referred to the cemetery commission, but in the meantime the 1876 law went into effect. In 1908, Oakland had five gates, but only the main gate at Hunter Street (now Martin Luther King Jr. Drive) was left open. Atlanta’s wives and mothers were indignant over the closure of the gates and threatened to band together and tear them down. The 1876 ordinance was repealed and the gates reopened. Aug. 18, 1939: The first Atlanta screening of The Wizard of Oz starring Judy Garland and directed by Victor Fleming was at 11 a.m. in the Loew’s Grand Theatre on Peachtree Street. Four months later, Fleming’s Gone With the Wind would premiere at Lowe’s on Dec. 15.

by 250,000 civil rights’ supporters. Aug. 30 1987: At 11:15 a.m. hundreds of onlookers watched helicopter pilot Larry Pravecek position the 19-foot high, 7,800-pound, gold-leafed steeple on top of the IBM Tower (now known as One Atlantic Center) at 1201 West Peachtree Street in Midtown. The 50-story, neoGothic tower designed by New York architects Philip Johnson and John Burgee was then the tallest building in Atlanta from 1987 to 1992, when Bank of America Plaza took the crown. Historian Ann Taylor Boutwell is a docent at the Margaret Mitchell House in Atlanta. Contact her at annboutwell@ bellsouth.net.

Aug. 23, 1965: The Atlanta Crackers played their last game in the Atlanta Fulton County Stadium before the Braves franchise arrived from Milwaukee. Aug. 28, 1963: Martin Luther King, Jr. (19291968) gave his historic “I Have a Dream” speech at the Lincoln Memorial during the March on Washington

Original Wizard of Oz poster

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TimmyDaddy By Tim Sullivan

AtlantaGymnasticsCenter.com 2014

A Week Without the Kids In something of a heroic gesture Kristen’s family took our kids to the beach for a week. Right before departing, Elliott lost his front tooth. It had resembled a hanging chad for days so I was happy for the development, but I died a little inside. One moment our son had a pretty significant childhood moment and the next we sent him and his sister off for the longest stretch we have ever been apart. I was nervous about their safety and how long the week would seem but amidst all of that anxiety I had a glimmer of positivity: Tooth fairy detail would be outsourced! I decided that to help other dads cope with the heartache of a week away from the kids I should log a few of the minor bright spots associated with such an occurrence. Say, for example, your buddy Schulzie asks you for help in cleaning out his garage and tempts you with the fact that he has a dumpster. As alluring as it sounds to unload junk into a dumpster your usual reply is, “Sorry, I’ve got two birthday parties, a soccer game and a scheduled kick to the groin,” but not today. Today you will be chucking stuff with gusto. Later you might walk over the neighborhood beer garden fundraiser thing with the Huebners to sample, socialize, smile and repeat. When it is over and they are heading home to responsibly tuck their own kids in to bed, you can take your beer gardening elsewhere and meet the Alexanders out in the village. It’s just that simple. In fact, I think it made my wife giggle. And while everyone’s in a good mood, you might find it worthwhile to explore some of the activities that led to those children in the first place…with nary a worry of midnight wanderers intent on making a crowd in your bed. Just sayin’. After sleeping in (because understandably, you’re depressed), you might watch a mini-marathon of Love It or List It on HGTV. Note the husband whose primary “must have” was space

for his gigantic TV and that he blew the budget renovating a second floor room to accommodate it while changing nothing on the hideous first floor. Pat yourself on the back. You’re more of a catch than that guy. Go to the pool and allow yourself a snicker at the one dad who is getting bonked on the head with a kickboard by his son and the other dad who has run his daughter to the bathroom six times. Really, there is nothing you can do to help. You may contemplate sitting in the “adult swim” section on the far side of the pool where the childless people congregate, but don’t overdo it. Recognize you are only sabbatically cool. Probably best to instead sit in the Switzerland-esque middle area. Then get in the pool and float. Brother, just float. Rent an excellent indie flick, like the kind you used to devour. I suggest Nebraska with Bruce Dern and Will Forte and the most authentic supporting cast since Napolean Dynamite. Appreciate the deftness in writing, the superlative acting and the subtle humor in a film that has nothing to do with Pixar. Baffle economists by contributing to a spike in restaurant receipts while babysitters cite woeful earnings. Okay, this might be a stretch. I’m pretty certain that neither babysitters nor restaurants actually report any earnings but… The gist of this is that while you love your kids dearly and this may or may not have been a difficult week, you love your wife too. There was a time when it was just the two of you, and while not as full and rewarding as the life you now know, it was pretty good and it’s okay to check in with that former self. Don’t worry, your kids will practically hyperventilate detailing their week in full for you but they won’t ask you to do the same. Tim Sullivan grew up in a large family in the Northeast and now lives with his small family in Oakhurst. He can be reached at tim@sullivanfinerugs.com.

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town 25

August 2014 | IN


IN BUSINESS

RETAIL | MONEY & FINANCE | DEVELOPMENT

IT PAYS TO LOOK WELL Kirkwood barbershop marks 50 years

By Dan Whisenhunt Decaturish.com The Langford family was supposed to do this last year. The family planned to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the Langford Barber Shop, located on Hosea L. Williams Drive in Kirkwood. But David, the son of the original owner Willie David Langford Sr., passed away. David Sr.’s picture hangs on the wall. He wears a brown bowler hat on his head and sunglasses. Above his head there’s a quote that says, “It pays to look well.” When David Jr. passed, the family postponed the 50th anniversary celebration and officially celebrated it on June 14. They thanked their long-time customers, serving food and playing music while they reminisced. The store started in Edgewood, but moved to Kirkwood in 1971, where it has remained ever since. LaMichael Langford, David Sr.’s nephew, is the co-owner and has taken over the leadership responsibilities. His sister, Cynthia Hines, is the company’s CEO. “I’m proud to be able to continue the legacy,” Hines said. Langford began working at the shop shining shoes when he was 14. He went to barber college at 16. There are eight employees at the shop, and the client list spans generations. Langford said cutting hair is, “In my blood.” He compared his satisfaction to the smile on a mechanic’s face when he takes a bent up car and makes it look new again. “I love to see the transformation of people,” Langford said. “When they come and leave out, they look different. They have a different aspect about life.” Things in Kirkwood look different now than they did back in the 70s. White people are moving back into the neighborhood. Across the street, customers enjoyed a cool drink on the patio of Elmyriachi, the latest addition to Kirkwood’s increasingly busy business district. Langford sees a more diverse clientele walking through his door. “We’ve picked up a lot of different types, nationality of customers, since whites started moving back into the neighborhood,” he said. “The neighborhood has gotten cleaner, more police presence and a lot of white customers since they moved in. We cater to everybody. Everybody.” The people, his customers, are what Langford likes the most about his job. His counts among his customers Anthony Carter, a retired NBA player who lived in Kirkwood and played for several different teams, and Richard Dent, a retired NFL player who spent most of his career with the Chicago Bears. Barber Stanley Kellam stood by a chair near the shop’s front door and put the finishing touches on Jeff Ardford’s beard. Kellam has been working at the barbershop for 38 years and Ardford has been a customer since he was five years old. “This is all I know,” Ardford said. “It’s the only place I’m going to get it done right.”

Photos by Dan Whisenhunt Top photo: Stanley Kellam puts the finishing touches on the beard of long-time customer Jeff Ardford. Bottom right: LaMichael Langford.

Business Briefs Get your electric motors running: Tesla is coming to Buckhead and Decatur. The automaker plans to open a 3,245 square foot store at Lenox Square as well as store and service center in downtown Decatur at 1580 Church St. Tesla cars range in price from $70,000 to $120,000. San Francisco-based Instacart (instacart.com) is hoping you’ll give up pushing the cart through the supermarket and use your laptop or smartphone instead. Instacart will deliver groceries from Kroger, Whole Foods and Costco and plans to add additional stores in the coming weeks. Unlike some services, perishable goods like produce and dairy will be available for delivery. The delivery area is currently north of I-20, including Old Fourth Ward, Downtown, Virginia-Highland, Decatur, Midtown and Buckhead and Brookhaven. Outside the perimeter service will be added soon. Delivery is free for your first order. After that, it’s $3.99 for two-hour delivery and $5.99 for one hour if you spend $35 or more, and $7.99 for two hours and $9.99 for one hour for under $35. Atlanta has earned an A- grade for its small business friendliness, according to a survey from Thumbtack. In partnership with the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation, the third annual Thumbtack.com Small Business Friendliness Survey draws upon data from over 12,000 small business owners, provides new insights into state and local business environments across the nation.

26 August 2014 | INtown

Southern Airways has announced that DeKalb-Peachtree Airport (PDK) is being upgraded to a Southern Airways “mini-hub.” With Southern’s new non-stop business shuttle now flying weekdays between Memphis and Atlanta, PDK has been raised from a “featured airport” to the more significant level of a mini-hub to compliment the primary hubs in Memphis and Destin. Southern’s overflow passengers flying between Memphis and Destin will now be connecting through PDK when those nonstop flights are sold out. Plans are currently underway for additional non-stops from Atlanta to connecting points in the Southern system. Studio No. 7 (studiono7.com) has open at 393 Marietta St. in Downtown as a gathering place for creatives. The studio houses an art gallery, test kitchen, bar and lounge. During the day, members work and connect with one another. At 5 p.m. the studio opens to the public and transforms into a space for drinks, food and late night events. Caring Transitions (CaringTransitionsNorthATL.com) – a company that specializes in managing senior relocations, downsizing and estate liquidations – has opened in North Atlanta to serve the metro area including Buckhead, Roswell, Sandy Springs and Marietta. Drax Biomass, a manufacturer of wood pellets from biomass, is moving its American headquarters to Sandy Springs. Expected to bring 50 new jobs, the 10,000-square-foot offices will be located in the Concourse building. CONTINUED ON PAGE 28 A t l a n t a I N t o w n P a p e r. c o m


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Mineral Bluff, GA 6BR/6.5BA $899,000 TOCCOA RIVERFRONT MASTERPIECE. 6,898SF home on 1+ acre. Luxurious main floor master, kitchen, dining, office, keeping & living rooms. 4 Fireplaces. Much more. Call Mark Reeves 706.455.2418

Hayesville, NC 5BR/4.5BA $675,000 7,176SF Foreclosure on 25+ acres. Interior with stained glass, marble & more. Two ponds, greenhouse, barn with workshop & loft apartment. Bank will finance. Call Mary Lynn Durfee 706.835.7616

Hayesville, NC 3BR/3BA $625,000 THE PERFECT HOME! 3600+SF on 1.8 acres. Mountain & Lake views. EVERY UPGRADE IMAGINABLE. Hardie plank/TN fieldstone,huge decks. Oversize garage. Call Bruce Olsen 510.388.1346

Blue Ridge, GA 4BR/3.5BA $439,000 MILLION DOLLAR VIEWS! 2800SF Custom mountain retreat on 2 acres between Blue Ridge and Suches. Open plan – year round views at every angle. Call Louise Hudder 770.402.6081

Morganton, GA 3BR/3BA $349,900 Exquisite 3200SF Mtn View lodge on 1.6 acres. Layout perfect for large family & entertaining. Decks/porches galore. Outdoor FP, cathedral ceilings, granite, much more. Call Mark Reeves 706.455.2418

Ellijay, GA 3BR/3BA $329,900 Fabulous Mountain views! Immaculate home in Buckhorn Estates golf course community. Open plan, 2car attached garage, easy access, paved roads. Call Chris Cleberg 706.972.9301

Ellijay, GA 3BR/3BA $309,900 Full time home or mountain retreat! Custom home in Blackberry Mtn, private, gated community. Paved roads, 2 car garage, 3 master suites, river access. Call Mike Miller 706.851.4641

Blue Ridge, GA 3BR/3BA $289,900 Desirable Mountain Tops S/D - 5 minutes from Blue Ridge. 2900SF, huge great room, large windows, full unfinished basement, large loft. Gentle driveway. Call Mike Miller 706.851.4641

Mineral Bluff, GA 3BR/3BA $260,000 Turnkey cabin – totally furnished – great rental history. Year Round Mtn view, pool table, hot tub, outdoor fireplace. What more can you ask? Call Jackie Lumpkin 706.455.1830

Mineral Bluff, GA 3BR/3BA $240,000 Upscale 2800+SF mountain rustic with master on main, huge kitchen, two large porches, year round mtn view, 2nd master, super large family room. Call Mark Reeves 706.455.2418

Mineral Bluff, GA 2BR/2.5BA $219,000 Developers home on 1.8 acres. Phenomenal price. One level living – full length deck, master on main. Basement bedroom and bath being added. Price will go up! Call Mark Reeves 706.455.2418

Blue Ridge, GA 2BR/2BA $189,000 Easy Mountain Living on 2.4 acres. Spacious cabin in excellent condition - close to hiking trails and USFS. End of road setting with long range views. Call Mark Reeves 706.455.2418

Marble, NC 3BR/2BA $187,000 Ranch style home on 1.4 acres – minutes from downtown Murphy and Harrah’s Cherokee Valley River Casino. Split bedroom plan. Large deck. Full appliance pkg. Call Lee/Carol Barbour 828.361.9713

Blue Ridge, GA 3BR/3BA $184,900 Immaculate log sided cabin on 2 acres close to town. 1680 finished SF. Split floor plan, oversize garage, concrete drive, garden spot, hardwoods. Call Donna O’Neal 706.356.9034

Robbinsville, NC 2+ Acre Lot $59,900 Level lot in established Bear Creek Junction. Access from Hwy 129 with paved road to lot. Build your home overlooking spring fed pond and bordering the creek. Call Jack Shingler 321.279.1049

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August 2014 | IN


Business Briefs Continued

Special New Rotary Club officers from left: Secretary, Vee Nelson, V. Nelson Associates, Inc.; Treasurer, Drew Robinson, CBRE, Inc.; Sergeant at Arms, Mark Burnette, Joyner & Burnette, PC; and President, Peter Michelson, Renewal Design Build.

The Rotary Club of Decatur (decaturrotary.org) has named Peter Michelson, CEO of Renewal Design Build, Inc., as its new President to succeed Robert L. Brown, CEO of RL Brown & Associates, whose one-year term just ended. Other newly elected officers include Vice President, Scott Thompson, Scott H. Thompson Insurance Planning; Secretary, Vee Nelson, V. Nelson Associates, Inc.; Treasurer, Drew Robinson, CBRE, Inc.; and Sergeant at Arms, Mark Burnette, Joyner & Burnette, PC. Elected to serve on the Board of Directors are: Susie Brown, NeuroScience Foundation; Dan DeWoskin, DeWoskin Law Firm LLC; Sara Fountain, Retired; Kathy Johnson, Emory Conference Center Hotel; Herb McCoy, Fidelity Bank; John Robinson, Robinson & Blazer LLP; Doug Torbush, Douglas B. Torbush DDS; Kyle Williams, Williams Teusink Attorneys. The Rotary Club of Decatur meets each Friday for luncheon speakers on timely and interesting topics. Topgolf International has broken ground on a new driving range at 1600 Ellsworth Industrial Blvd. The West Midtown facility will be 65,000-square-feet and feature hightech golf training, food and beverages when it opens in spring 2015. Topgolf opened its first metro location in Alpharetta earlier this year. Downtown Atlanta’s Philips Arena is among the top venues in the country, according to industry-leading publication Pollstar Magazine. Philips Arena ranked third in the United States in Pollstar’s 2014 Mid-Year Report of the top 100 arena venues and 21st worldwide. Fifth Third Bank has named Mike Dunlap, a resident of Buckhead, has been named its new president and CEO. Dunlap previously served as senior vice president, commercial executive and investment advisor manager for Fifth Third. Dunlap is board chairman of the Center for Puppetry Arts and a member of the Atlanta Chamber of Commerce Advisory Board. Phase three of Westin Buckhead’s hotel-wide renovation will be completed in August. The $9 million project remodeled 365 guest rooms, hotel lobby and renovations of more than 30,000 square-feet of flexible meeting space.

Mike Dunlap

The Melia Hotel in Midtown will be transformed into a dualbranded Crowne Plaza and eventually Staybridge Suites hotel. AWH Partners acquired the building, which contains 501 rooms. In early 2015, the top six floors will be taken out of inventory and will begin renovations to a 102-room Staybridge Suites hotel. The remaining 360 rooms will also be renovated and will remain a Crowne Plaza hotel. Atlanta natives Blair Wagoner and Sara Lamond have opened an eco-beauty bar and natural skincare boutique in Virginia Highland called Fig & Flower (shopfigandflower. com). The 900 square-foot space at 636 N. Highland Ave. includes two eco-make-up stations, a “soap bar” and the largest selection of natural make-up, hair care, skincare, and beauty products for men, women and children in the Atlanta area. START ING FRO M T HE $700’S | ATL | SEVENTHMIDTOWN.COM 4 0 4 . 2 37. 5 0 0 0 |

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Speciality grocer The Fresh Market has announced plans to open a new location in the summer of 2015 at the shopping center formerly known as Loehmann’s Plaza. With its namesake store now closed, the center at the intersection of North Druid Hills and Briarcliff Roads will be renamed Brighten Park. Castellucci Hospitality Group’s latest restaurant Cooks & Soldiers and lifestyle boutique The Bilt-House will join women’s fashion boutique Kane as the anchors for the new 11,000 square foot retail located at the Elan Westside development on the corner of 14th and Howell Mill Road. A t l a n t a I N t o w n P a p e r. c o m


The best just got better.

Efrain Cerrato

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Jimmy Kirkley

Emily Windham

Susan Bird

Cole O’Connor

Join us in welcoming the newest members of the Engel & Völkers Intown Atlanta family. As part of the Engel & Völkers international brand, these premier professionals add to our team of the very best in real estate. We’re looking for a few more talented and ethical advisors with exceptional personalities, to share in our success and growth. Learn more about how our tools and global connections can enhance your local expertise to help you become more successful in helping your clients. Contact us. Engel & Völkers Fourteen West 1411 N Highland Avenue NE · Atlanta · GA 30306 · +1-404-874-6357 intownatlanta.evusa.com · intownatlanta@evusa.com

©2014 Engel & Völkers. All rights reserved. Each brokerage independently owned and operated. Engel & Völkers and its independent License Partners are Equal Opportunity Employers and fully support the principles of the Fair Housing Act.

A t l a n t a I N t o w n P a p e r. c o m

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August 2014 | IN


GO GREEN

YOUR GUIDE FOR AN ECO-FRIENDLY LIFESTYLE

URBAN FOREST

Atlanta’s tree canopy brings health benefits American Forests, a national nonprofit conservation organization, delivered its extensive analysis of urban forests in Atlanta and is moving forward with the next phase: strategic tree planting and a community outreach and education program. This study, funded by Bank of America and the U.S. Forest Service, focused on the environmental and public health benefits from the urban tree canopy in the Atlanta metropolitan area and is part of American Forests’ Community ReLeaf program, which conducts urban tree canopy assessments in targeted cities around the country to establish a scientific foundation for urban forest management, develop forest restoration projects with local partners and provide educational outreach. American Forests conducted volunteer tree planting events in autumn 2013 and spring 2014, and is providing its local partner Trees Atlanta with Photos courtesy Trees Atlanta a $30,000 grant to educate and work with the public to plant an additional 100 trees in some of the area’s Volunteers of all ages regularly turn out to help plant trees around Intown to help keep the city green. A recent $30,000 grant means more trees will be most canopy-deficient areas. planted around Atlanta. American Forests used satellite imagery and special software to analyze tree canopy coverage as it relates to income, race and age. The study area’s urban tree canopy removes approximately 3.6 million pounds of air pollution annually, equating to almost $12.6 million in health benefits to residents and businesses. “Trees and green spaces have been shown to have surprising benefits for urban kids, from improving health to reducing stress,” said Scott Steen, president & CEO of American Forests. U.S Forest Service Chief Tom Tidwell has called urban trees “the hardest working trees in America.” The Forest Service is active in more than 7,000 communities across the U.S., helping them to better plan and manage their urban forests.

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reveres Left, Amaris Wallace, 11, shows off her artistic talents to brother Amare, 3, Literary as theirsociety father, Rick, novelist Austen concentrates on the task at hand at the Buckhead Branch Library on Nov. 16. Youngsters were encouraged to drop in and create their own autumn craft. More photos COMMUNITY on page 3. 32

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By Dan Whisenhunt

melissaweinman@reporternewspapers.net

Some north DeKalb parents and officials believe the DeKalb County Board of Education’s recent vote to deny a “charter clus- The leader of the Atlanta Police Foundation told neighborter” application for Druid Hills sent a message that the embattledhood groups in Buckhead if they purchase security cameras, Atschool board isn’t open to new ideas. lanta police will monitor them from the department’s integrated Proponents of independent school systems in north DeKalb sayvideo center. the school board’s decision will bolster efforts to start new school Dave Wilkinson, president and CEO of the Atlanta Police systems. Scan here to get Foundation, told representatives of Buckhead neighborhoods at“The school board has a one-size-fi [philosophy],” saidtending the Buckhead Council of Neighborhoods meeting on Nov. Reporterts-all Newspapers Dunwoody City Councilman TerryinNall, has advocated for14 that the Atlanta Police Foundation is hoping to get neighboryourwho inbox a separate Dunwoody school system.or“Th ey’re sign up not @ willing to rec-hoods involved in the effort to reduce property crimes. ReporterNewspapers.net SEE dEKALB, PAgE 26 SEE POLICE, PAGE 26

concentration

danwhisenhunt@reporternewspapers.net

OUT & ABOUT 18,22

PHIL MOSIER

From left, Rep. Wendell Willard (R-Sandy Springs), Rep. Tom Taylor (R-Dunwoody) and Sen. Fran Millar (R-Dunwoody) discuss issues such as ethics reform, an independent school system for Dunwoody, and the state’s budget woes at a legislative forum at Dunwoody United Methodist Church on Jan. 6. More photos on page 31.

Legislators gearing up for return to Gold Dome

For the last 5 1/2 years, Jim King has been the face of Buckhead’s neighborhoods. On Nov. 14, King announced he is stepping aside from his role as Buckhead Council of Neighborhoods chairman. Tom Tidwell, a BY MELISSA WEINMAN melissaweinman@reporternewspapers.net member of the West Paces/Northside Neighborhood Association, will take over that role. King says he will remain as vice chairman, As state legislators head back to the Gold Dome in 2013, they “temporarily.” King said he’d been considering giving up the post for have somea lot to think about. One local issue the state’s lawmakers may be asked to confront time, but some recent developments in his personal life pushed is the controversy surrounding DeKalb County’s school board. SEE JIM KING, PAGE 6 The system was recently placed on accreditation probation by AdvancED, the accrediting agency. Sen. Fran Millar (R-Dunwoody), who chairs the Senate Education Committee, said at a recent forum that DeKalb County schools are his No. 1 priority. “I’m guardedly optimistic we can turn this thing around,” MilScan here to get lar said. Reporter Newspapers A Jan. 17 hearing of the Georgia Board of Education is schedin your inbox “Since 1983” uled to consider suspending the DeKalb school board members. If or sign up @

concentration

gain presence hold your own gain passion love your life! gain gain presence hold your own gain passion love your life! gain sweet! gain performance on top of your game gain AUDIOLOGICAL sweet!hear world! gainthe performance on top of your game gain AUDIOLOGICAL hear the world! A you’re A you’re CONSULTANTS of gain discern differences gain effectiveness CONSULTANTS of gain gain recognition discern differences gain effectiveness the authority gain recognition the authority C C ATLANTA ATLANTA Open House December 9th be – 10th Open House December 9th be – 10th be empowered! gain a part of it be 1983” empowered! gain a part of it Aall gain “Since Aall gain Helena Kadyn Helena See our ad on the back page to learn more! You Could Be Hearing From Us. and See ourWilliams, onAu.D.first the back page to learn more! You Could Be Hearing From Us. ReporterNewspapers.net share ideas and feelings gain relationships joy! gain get itad the Solodar, Au.D. share ideas feelings gain relationships joy! gain getWilliams, it Kadyn theAu.D. first Solodar, Au.D. perception what a colorful world gain sit back and just listen gain perception what a colorful world gain sit back and just listen gain SEE SETBAcK, PAgE 28

LISTEN TO YOUR HEARING connection

discovery LISTEN TO YOUR HEARING freedom communication connection

understanding

relaxation

discovery freedom communication

understanding

relaxation

Volume 20 • Number 1

phil mosier

Number one

Police chief named King steps down ‘Citizen of the Year’ COMMUNITY 38 from BCN post

AtlantaINtownPaper.com

Churches putting on holiday concerts

COMMENTARY 11

Unplain Jane phil mosier

deKalb school board Police hope to monitor ‘isn’t open to new ideas’ neighborhood cameras

Angry Ashford Park neighbors told City Council that the handling of permits for a new home in their neighborhood has them questioning their confidence in the new city’s government. On Nov. 22, residents addressed the City Council before a special called private meeting. They are concerned about a home being built at 2802 Ashford Road that they say is being built far closer to the street than it should be under city zoning regulations. According to the DeKalb County zoning code adopted by

Joyful noise

Gun control discussion needed now

PUBLIC SAFETY 30

Paige durand, 10, gets a jump on the holiday baking season by decorating some cookies at the Brookhaven Branch Library on Nov. 25. More photos on page 5.

Setback provision delays Ashford Park house

Scan here to get Reporter Newspapers in your inbox or sign up @ ReporterNewspapers.net

Warning shot

Local police, firefighters brighten childrens’ holiday

PuBLIc SAfETY 30

 2014

PHIL MOSIER

Group brings warmth, love to homeless

Tons of toys

20 Years

Tessa Rider, 11, carefully handles an ornament at the third annual Elegant Elf Marketplace at Lake Forest Elementary School on Nov. 16. The two-day holiday event, presented by The Sandy Springs Society, raises funds for local community services. Rider, part of a multigenerational family selling hand-painted ornaments at the market, personalized the decorations with a buyer’s name while he or she shopped, having it ready when the customer was finished. Additional photos on page 3.

Chopped up

MAKING A DIFFERENCE 8

Tons of toys

1994 

PERIMET ER BUSINES2014 January pages 10-15 S

Ready when you are

Redevelopment plans upset Spalding Woods’ residents

Party on

OUT & ABOUT 18, 22

STANDOUT STUDENT 24

JAN. 11 — JAN. 24, 2013 • VOL. 4 — NO. 1

TURNER FIELD TASK FORCE P, 18

$ 69 Inside 1 Sandy Springs Retiring mayor, councilwoman celebrated

Going to be a busy year

COMMUNITY 3

Petition circulating to remove school board

Options open

Churches showcasing seasonal tunes

s

Hot stuff

Three ongoing issues fire up residents

Out the door?

churches showcasing seasonal tunes

coMMENTARY 8-9

Joyful noise

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Look what I can do

Ga. 400 toll plaza comes down

COMMENTARY 8-9

Joyful noise

ouT & ABouT 18, 22

Dunwoody Reporter

Education Guide

www.ReporterNewspapers.net

S

Hushed money

Creating a sweet treat

Hushed money

Inside

Buckhead Reporter

Walk off Government shutdown, regulations delay bridge

SEE LEGISLATORS, PAGE 34

Court extends order halting Brook Run trail

Contract awarded for Lake Forrest fix

Councilwoman makes last stand for trees

BY DAN WHISENHUNT

BY DAN WHISENHUNT

danwhisenhunt@reporternewspapers.net

danwhisenhunt@reporternewspapers.net

City Council awarded a $717,689 contract to C.W. Matthews Contracting to fix a portion of Lake Forrest Drive that’s been closed since June. The city’s current timetable estimates the portion of Lake Forrest between Lake Summit and Chevaux Court will be reopened by A court order halting construction a controversial multi-useFeb. 28, 2014. Scanofhere to get trail through Brook Run Park was extended after a boisterous Fri- The city closed the road after multiple rock slides. Reporter Newspapers day afternoon hearing in DeKalb County Superior in your inbox Court attended The initial quote from C.W. Matthews was $1.5 million. City by city officials and dozens of opponents of the city’s plan. or sign up @ officials revised their plans for the fix, deciding to use a net to catch Judge Tangela M. Barrie said her temporary restraining order ReporterNewspapers.net SEE CITY COUNCIL, PAGE 27 against the trail will remain in effect until she holds a full hearing on the matter. Barrie said homeowners who oppose the city’s plan for the trail must convince her that its construction through the forest in Brook Run Park should be permanently stopped. Critics are upset the planned 12-foot-wide concrete trail will require removal of more than 300 trees. City officials say an equal number of trees will be replanted. The judge’s decision to extend her temporary order capped a two-hour hearing before a packed courtroom. Chairs were add-

BY TOM ODER

Before she exits Sandy Springs City Council in January, District 6 City Councilwoman Karen Meinzen McEnerny is working to secure her legacy as the city’s lead tree preservationist. McEnerny, a firm believer in term limits, didn’t seek a third term in this year’s municipal election. She’s also a firm believer in tree protection, and has spent the last few months trying to get the council to correct what she believes are glaring flaws in the city’s tree ordinance. City Council on Nov. 19 discussed McEnerny’s suggested fixes

These six students — and 14 others — are making a difference in our community

concentration

gain presence hold your own gain passion love your life! gain sweet! gain performance on top of your game gain AUDIOLOGICAL hear the world! A you’re CONSULTANTS of gain gain recognition discern differences gain effectiveness the authority C ATLANTA Open House December 9th be – 10th be empowered! gain a part of it Aall gain “Since 1983” Helena See ad on the back page to learn more! You Could Be Hearing From Us. BROOK RUN, PAGEour 35 share ideasSEEand feelings gain relationships joy! gain getWilliams, it Kadyn theAu.D. first Solodar, Au.D. perception what a colorful world gain sit back and just listen gain

LISTEN TO YOUR HEARING connection

SEE COUNCILWOMAN, PAGE 6

discovery freedom communication

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relaxation

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Eco-Briefs Specializing in the Detection and Treatment of Pediatric Digestive Disorders

As a Board Certified pediatric gastroenterologist, Dr. Nirav Patel brings the experience and personal care every parent values when their child is suffering from digestive issues. At Atlanta Gastroenterology’s Pediatric and Adolescent Division, infants, children, ‘tweens and teens can be treated for every type of digestive and liver condition, including: • Abdominal Pain • Lactose Intolerance • Constipation/Diarrhea • Eosinophilic Esophagitis • Irritable Bowel Syndrome • Hepatitis/Liver Disease

• Feeding Difficulties • Celiac Disease • Crohn’s Disease • Ulcerative Colitis • Acid Reflux • Colic

5445 Meridian Mark Road NE Suite 490 Atlanta, Georgia 30342 Midtown Alliance, in partnership with Jones Day, the American Legion and ELV Associates, has completed renovations to Pershing Point Park, located at the junction of Peachtree Street and West Peachtree Street. The renovation project includes enhancements to this existing public park through beautification, structural restoration and improved safety. The park was originally commissioned in 1918 and named in honor of World War I hero John J. Pershing. The park features a memorial dedicated to World War I casualties from Fulton County in 1920. Strummin’ on the Porch will be held Aug. 28 from 6-8 p.m. at Rhodes Hall in Midtown, 1516 Peachtree St. The free concert is a collaboration between the Georgia Trust for Historic Preservation with the Atlanta History Center. The concert features award-winning indie folk/Americana band She N She. There will be a cash bar and food for purchase from Jamaican food truck, One Love. For more information, visit georgiatrust.org.

Conveniently located next to Children's Healthcare of Atlanta at Scottish Rite

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U-Haul and The Conservation Fund have promised $375,000 to help create Lindsay Street Park in the English Avenue neighborhood. Located near the headwaters of Proctor Creek, the English Avenue neighborhood is one of the most challenged in Atlanta; it has high crime, many vacant homes, water pollution and periodic flooding. To help address these challenges, the Fund has guided a community-led coalition to acquire six adjacent lots on behalf of the City of Atlanta, and continues to work with the community, the City, Park Pride, Arthur M. Blank Foundation and Waterfall Foundation to complete Lindsay Street Park. Their vision includes workforce training, temporary jobs, educational opportunities and a creek that no longer spills sewage into nearby streets. Piedmont Park Conservancy has named Mark Banta as its new president and CEO. The former general manager of Centennial Olympic Park, Banta will focus on support for new amenities, strengthening the Conservancy’s relationship with the city and improving the experience of park users. The City of Atlanta has joined the U.S. Department of Energy’s Workplace Charging Challenge which aims to increase the number of American employers offering workplace charging for plug-in electric vehicles (PEVs) by tenfold in the next five years. The Workplace Charging Challenge asks its partners to commit to assessing employee demand for PEV charging at the workplace and developing and executing a plan to provide PEV charging access for employees. Currently, Mark Banta the city’s Government Center Parking deck, assessable by Washington Street and Central Avenue, houses six chargers. The chargers, available on a first come first served basis, are also available to the public free of charge and convenient to the City of Atlanta Municipal Court, Atlanta Public Schools, City Hall, and the State of Georgia. Tickets are on sale now for The Picnic for Parks on Sept. 18 at Historic Fourth Ward Park. Hosted by Park Pride, the event will commemorate all the corporate partners, volunteers, funders, and community members that have been allies to both Park Pride and to Atlanta’s greenspace since 1989. Get tickets at parkpride.org. A t l a n t a I N t o w n P a p e r. c o m

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August 2014 | IN


THE STUDIO ARTS & CULTURE

AUGUST FESTIVAL GUIDE End of summer festivals plentiful around Intown

By Collin Kelley INtown Editor School may be back in session, but there’s still more festival fun to be had before summer ends. From arts and crafts to music and sci-fi fantasy, there’s something in August for everyone.

Piedmont Park Summer Arts & Crafts Festival This year’s festival is Aug. 16-18 and will feature more than 150 painters, photographers, sculptors, leather and metalwork, glass blowers, jewelers and crafters. The festival will also offer artist demonstrations, live acoustic music, a street market, children’s play area and food and beverages. Admission to the festival is free. Hours will be 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. on Saturday and 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. on Sunday. Parking will be available in the Piedmont Park deck, but organizers encourage visitors to take MARTA, walk or bike to the festival. A VIP preview party benefitting the Piedmont Park Conservancy will be held Aug. 15 from 8 to 10 p.m. at the historic Greystone Bath House. Early admission at 7 p.m. allows visitors to attend a quick sale fundraiser of small, limited editions that will also benefit the conservancy. Tickets are $50 for early admission, $35 for general admission. For more details, visit piedmontparkartsfestival.com.

Clockwise from top left: Mary McDonnell as President Roslin in Battlestar Galactica will be at Dragon Con; Captain Jean-Luc Picard himself (that’s Patrick Stewart) will beam down to Dragon Con; literary icon Joyce Carol Oates will give give the keynote address at the 2014 AJC Decatur Book Festival; crowds will be flocking to the Piedmont Park Summer Arts & Crafts Festival.

The Gant Park Summer Shade Festival This year’s event is Aug. 23 and 24 and kicks off on Saturday morning with the Adams Realtors 5K Run for the Park. An artist market, live music and a kids’ zone featuring games, activities and performances is also on tap. Festival hours are 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. on Saturday and 11 a.m. to 7:30 p.m. on Sunday. Also part of this year’s event will be Taquerias & Tequila. Visit summershadfestival.org for more details and full schedule of events.

Festival Peachtree Latino The multicultural festival will be held in Piedmont Park on Aug. 24 from 11 a.m. to 7:30 p.m. featuring exhibitions, children’s activities, arts and crafts, food and live music. Performing live on stage will be Nickie Jon, Fernanda Tapia, Henry Santos, J. King Maximan, Pedro Capo, Oro Solido, Melina Leon and more. For more details, visit festivalpeachtreelatino. com.

AJC Decatur Book Festival Award-winning writer Joyce Carol Oates will be the keynote speaker at this year’s Decatur Book Festival during Labor Day weekend. Oates will launch her new short story collection with a talk on Aug. 29, 8 p.m., at the Schwartz Center at Emory University. On Aug. 30-31, more than 300 authors will descend on downtown Decatur for the festival, which will feature readings, workshops, a children’s parade and much more. Other notable authors scheduled to appear include Ron Rash, Emily Giffin, Karin Slaughter, Wiley Cash, Ann Hood, Karen Abbott, Natasha Trethewey, Alan Gurganus and Pat Conroy. For a full line-up of events and authors, visit decaturbookfestival.com.

Dragon Con Sci-fi, fantasy and gaming fans will descend on Downtown Aug. 29 to Sept. 1 for this annual convention that draws thousands of attendees and the chance to meet favorite actors, artists and authors. This year’s guests include Patrick Stewart, Mary McDonnell and Peter Weller among a galaxy of others. The annual parade of costumed characters down Peachtree Street will be held on Aug. 30 at 10 a.m. For a detailed schedule and to register, visit dragoncon.org.

32 August 2014 | INtown

A t l a n t a I N t o w n P a p e r. c o m


Books By Local Authors With the Decatur Book Festival coming up Labor Day weekend, we rounded up a trove of new fiction, poetry and nonfiction by local authors for you to sample. House Proud: A Social History of Atlanta’s Interiors, 1880-1919 by Lori Eriksen Rush (Mercer University Press) Filled with photographs and illustrations, Eriksen explores Atlanta’s past through its rich collection of homes – from middle-class cottages to Gilded Age mansions.

Wicked Atlanta: The Sordid Side of Peach City History by LaurelAnn Dooley (The History Press) Dooley navigates the underworld of Atlanta’s colorful past with kidnappings, bribery, hit men and all sorts of criminal debauchery in this collection of historical snapshots you probably won’t find on the tourist brochures.

Man Done Gone: Poems by Lynn Alexander (Finishing Line Press) Atlanta Review editor Dan Veach describe’s Alexander’s debut like this: “Here the everyday objects of our lives are invested with the power to say what is ‘left unsaid.’ There is such a gentle kindness in the way these poems touch the world that we long to be touched ourselves – and find our wish is granted.”

Things I Should Have Told My Daughter: Lies, Lessons & Love Affairs by Pearl Cleage (Atria Books) The bestselling Atlanta author mines her diaries from the 1970s and 80s to find a writer and woman discovering her talents as the world changes around her.

A t l a n t a I N t o w n P a p e r. c o m

The Red Chameleon by Erica Wright (Pegasus Books) Kathleen Stone’s ability to blend in makes her an ace private investigator, but when a cheating spouse she is tailing ends up dead she fears that someone from her past has seen through her disguises.

Woodhall Stories by R. Cary Bynum (Saint Johann Press) These stories are based on life in an Atlanta neighborhood in the 1940s and ‘50s. Strange and unusual events happen to some not-so-ordinary neighbors!

The Meaning of Maggie by Megan Jean Sovern (Chronicle Books) After a young girl’s father is diagnosed with multiple sclerosis, she vows to find a cure with her science fair project in this funny and poignant tale of growing up.

A Bird on Water Street by Elizabeth O. Dulemba (Little Pickle Press) a coming of age story about Jack, a boy growing up in a Southern Appalachian town environmentally devastated by a century of poor copper-mining practices and pollution.

No Longer Confined: One Man’s Triumphant Pursuit of Truth, Wholeness and Freedom by Christopher D. Coleman (iUniverse) Diagnosed with cerebral palsy at birth and confined to a wheelchair, Coleman chronicles his struggles and triumphs to become a life coach and motivational speaker.

Legendary Locals of Intown Atlanta by Janice McDonald (Arcadia Publishing) Profiles of some of the city’s most well-known citizens and unsung heroes including Gladys Knight, Asa Candler, Pat Conroy, Carrie Steele Logan, Billy Payne, Samuel Inman, Hardy Ivy and many more. A Pathway to Profit: Culture Impacts Performance by Anita Pugh, Caroline Hipple, Chris Matthies and Dixon Bartlett (Friesen Press) The authors’ step-by-step pathway provides a strategic overview, describes a recommended architecture on which to build an organization’s culture, and presents a plan for developing leaders to ensure associate participation in achieving results. The Chattahoochee River User’s Guide by Joe Cook (University of Georgia Press) With more than 200 photos, 32 maps and a fishing primer, this guide brings the Chattahoochee to life in an immersive and engaging manner that will inspire users to help protect their local waterways.

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August 2014 | IN


Cyclorama to move from Grant Park to Buckhead By Collin Kelley INtown Editor The famed Cyclorama painting depicting the Battle of Atlanta will move from Grant Park to a brand new facility on the campus of the Atlanta History Center. The Atlanta History Center will begin construction on a new 23,000 square foot building next summer and the attraction is expected to re-open in 2016. The estimated $32 million project will be completed with funds already raised by the History Center and a $10 million charitable donation. The History Center intends to restore the painting to its full size and overall height, and to re-create the 128-year-old painting’s original visual perspective – both of which have been lost for nearly 100 years. The new display method will return the painting to its original presentation as a 3-D experience. Along with the painting the History Center will also move the locomotive “Texas,” and other Civil War artifacts to the new state-of-the-art facility. “We are honored for this opportunity, and believe the Atlanta History Center is the best long-term solution for the Cyclorama. Sharing history is our passion, and we are excited about incorporating these artifacts into our comprehensive Civil War collection,” said Sheffield Hale, President and CEO of the Atlanta History Center. “We will preserve the Cyclorama in a museum-quality environment that will ensure its availability and accessibility for generations to come. Our resources and expertise uniquely position us to interpret the painting and diorama in their historic context.” The Battle of Atlanta was painted in Milwaukee between 1885 and 1886 in the studios of the American Panorama Company. The completed painting was 50

feet high, 400 feet long, and weighed more than 9,000 pounds. The painting toured to a number of cities, was bought and sold numerous times, before being purchased by Atlantan George V. Gress in 1893. Gress asked the city to find space for the painting, which offered Grant Park. A wooden, drum-like structure was built for the Special painting and Gress gave the painting to the City of Above: Detail of the Cyclorama paintAtlanta in 1898. The Grant Park building was dedicated ing of The Battle of Atlanta. in 1921 and the threedimensional diorama was Right: A rendering of added in 1936. the new Cyclorama After the relocation to building planned for the Atlanta History Center the Atlanta History Center campus in is complete, the Grant Buckhead. Park Cyclorama building will be transferred to Zoo Atlanta. The building will be developed into an event and community space that will include an overlook of the Zoo’s African savanna exhibit. Renovations to the building will preserve the historic character and aesthetic appeal of the original facility. Once the renovation is complete, the Zoo will feature a new entryway plaza, an enhanced African elephant exhibit and renovated workspace for administrative

staff. The Zoo’s redevelopment plan also calls for an environmentally sound underground parking solution to alleviate parking in the neighborhoods and accommodate attendance growth at the Zoo. The City of Atlanta has been discussing the move of the Cyclorama for years. While the city will still own the painting, the History Center stewardship will save Atlanta about $1 million a year in operating costs.

Open 24-Hours for Your Pet’s Routine & Urgent Care Needs Briarcliff Animal Clinic is now a 24 Hour Routine and Urgent Care Facility! We have a doctor here day and night to help care for your furry loved ones: • 24 hour emergency care • 24 hour routine care services • Afterhours boarding drop-off and pick-up • 24 hour pharmacy After hour care is walk in only. Call our hospital for more information about appointment hours and overnight services.

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Allen Snow Showcase of Homes Leading Atlanta in Real Estate

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After a long and exhaustive search, Dad’s Garage Theatre Company has finally found what they hope will be their new home. The 19-year-old theatre company is under contract on a church at 569 Ezzard St. in the Old Fourth Ward, roughly a mile away from its old stomping grounds in Inman Park. Dad’s Garage marketing director Linnea Frye said there’s still a lot of work to do, including raising the funds needed to purchase the building, but Dad’s Garage’s plan is to close on the property by the end of the year. Dad’s Garage artistic director, Kevin Gillese publicly announced a capital campaign last week. “Any bit you can give helps, but a lot of bits help even more.” Details on the campaign are forthcoming, but in the meantime folks are encouraged to contribute to the theatre at dadsgarage.com. Founded in 1995, Dad’s Garage Theatre Company called Inman Park home until it was forced to move to make way for a mixed-use development. The company is still going strong at its temporary home at 7 Stages Theatre in Little Five Points.

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20 Years

 2014

Celebrating 20 Years Intown 94

sue 19

First is

20th anniversary issue November 2014

Commemorating the growth of the city’s dynamic Intown community and the only publication that has covered it since 1994 This issue will be packed with stories, photos and profiles of Intown people and places. Expanded editorial sections will feature Neighborhoods, Businesses, Arts & Entertainment, Restaurants, Homes and Real Estate. For advertising information, call 404-917-2200, ext. 112 A t l a n t a I N t o w n P a p e r. c o m

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August 2014 | IN


TORI AMOS

A guide for arts and cultural entertainment for the entire family Visual Arts Piedmont Park Arts Festival: Head to Piedmont Park for a weekend of visual arts with nearly 250 painters, photographers, sculptors and glass blowers. There will also be live acoustic music and children’s activities. August 16 and August 17. Free. affps.com A Visual History of AIGA: 19142014: Andy Warhol, Paul Rand, Saul Bass and Michael Vanderbyl are just a few of the famous talents responsible for the American Institute of Graphic Arts’ groundbreaking designs over the last century. Opens August 17. $5 to $10. museumofdesign.org

Dream Cars: Innovative Design, Visionary Ideas: Don’t miss the last full month of the High’s innovative exhibit that features 19 concept cars from 1930s Europe to 21st century U.S. that push the limits of imagination. Daily. $12 to $19.50. high. org

Whales: Giants of the Deep: Plunge into the mysterious world of whales at Fernbank Museum of Natural History. Meet two massive whale skeletons longer than a school bus, climb through a replica of a whale heart the size of a VW Beetle, and design your own dolphin. Closes August 24. $16 to $18. fernbankmuseum.org

Extreme Dinosaurs: Discover dinosaurs from the “Golden Age” of paleontology with life-size animatronic models, skeletons and fossils at Atlantic Station. Daily. $11 to $18. premierexhibitions. com

Be Here Now: Atlanta sculptors Mike Black and Andrew Boatright challenge gravity and beauty with their site-specific installations at this Atlanta Contemporary Art Center exhibit that also features Wisconsin’s Sandra Erbacher. Closes August 30. $5 to $8. thecontemporary.org

Kongo Across the Waters: This exhibit, the anchor for Africa Atlanta 2014, explores connections between AfricanAmerican art and Africa’s Kongo peoples through artifacts from the Royal Museum of Central Africa in Belgium. Daily. $6 to $8. jimmycarterlibrary.gov

Vivian Maier: Summer: Vivian Maier was a professional nanny in the 1950s, but her secret passion was street photography. Her 100,000 negatives were discovered in 2007, and this exhibit highlights some of her summer-themed photos. Closes August 30. Free. jacksonfineart.com

Scott Ingram: Blue Collar Modernism: Scott Ingram’s minimalist paintings, sculpture and photography at Museum of Contemporary Art of Georgia was selected as one of MOCA’s 2013-2014 Working Artist Projects. Tuesday through Saturday. $1 to $5. mocaga.org

Mid Century Modern: Works on Paper: Oglethorpe University Museum of Art displays works by mid-20th century artists, including Alexander Calder, at this new exhibit featuring OUMA’s permanent collection and pieces on loan from Emory’s Woodruff Library. Closes August 31. $5. oglethorpe.edu

Performing Arts Bare Essentials Play Readings: The Essential Theatre annual festival continues with readings of new plays, including “Miss Adelia’s Garden” by Gerry L. Bartholmai on August 5 and “Christ America” by Bill Gibson on August 12 at the West End

ELVIS ROYALE

FERNBANK WHALE

Shreya Ghoshal: One of Bollywood’s top singers, Shreya Ghoshal is best known for her chartbuster hit songs from Indian films sung in Hindi as well as several other languages. August 17. $39 to $129. cobbenergycentre.com

Performing Arts Center. August 5 and August 12. Free! essentialtheatre.com The Very Hungry Caterpillar and other Eric Carle Favorites: Eric Carle’s beloved stories “The Very Hungry Caterpillar,” “Little Cloud” and “The MixedUp Chameleon” are brought to life with black light and fanciful puppets at the Center for Puppetry Arts. August 5 through August 17. $16.50. puppet.org Texas Tenors: From Alabama to Puccini, John Hagen, Marcus Collins and JC Fisher bring their unique blend of country, gospel, classical and Broadway to the Atlanta Symphony Hall stage. August 9. $29 to $69. atlantasymphony.org The Rocky Horror Picture Show: The original horror musical comedy comes to Actor’s Express this summer for a rollicking good time complete with a few exciting midnight performances and of course, the “Time Warp.” Closes August 9. $26 to $47. actors-express.com Gipsy Kings: The Grammy Awardwinning Gipsy Kings consist of two bands of brothers: the Reyes and the Baliardos, families who both grew up roaming the south of France, working harvests and making music. They return to Chastain as part of their 25th anniversary tour. August 15. $35 to $79. classicchastain.com The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee: Six young people in the throes of puberty learn that winning isn’t everything in this musical about the unlikeliest of heroes: a quirky cast of outsiders. Closes August 16. $12 to $23. onstageatlanta.com Big Mike Geier’s Elvis Royale: Big Mike Geier’s Elvis Royale at Variety Playhouse is a Vegas-style extravaganza with a live band and the Dames Aflame Showgirls celebrating the music and culture of Elvis Presley. August 16. $26.50 to $28. variety-playhouse.com

36 August 2014 | INtown

Unplugged in the Park: Park Tavern celebrates more than a decade of free live music with the David Mayfield Parade, an eclectic band led by a songwriter who has collaborated with musicians ranging from The Avett Brothers to country star Dierks Bentley. August 17. Free! parktavern.com Tori Amos: Tori Amos brings her “Unrepentant Geraldines” tour to the Cobb Energy Performing Arts Centre in support of her 14th studio album release. August 19. $42 to $67. cobbenergycentre.com When We Were Seven: Fireflies light the outdoor Skwhirlhaus stage in this combination of personal storytelling through dance and live-music soundscape by Crossover Movement Arts as they invite audiences to remember when they, too, were seven. August 22 through August 24. Free! skwhirlhaus.com The Mentor: The Heath Brothers Quartet with Jeremy Pelt: Join NEA Jazz Master Jimmy Heath and rising star trumpeter Jeremy Pelt at the Rialto Center for the Arts for an evening of classics from the American Songbook, as well as signature compositions by Heath himself as part of the National Black Arts Festival. August 23. $28 to $58. nbaf.org Bob Weir & RatDog: The Grateful Dead founding member and rhythm guitarist Bob Weir performs with his band RatDog at the Fox Theatre. The Chris Robinson Brotherhood opens. August 26. $46.50 to $56.50. foxtheatre.org Rhythm & Brews: Athens’ bluegrass quintet Packway Handle Band closes out Sandy Springs’ summer concert series with this outdoor performance. Blankets, picnics and coolers are allowed; no pets. August 28. $2 to $5. heritagesandysprings.org 2014 National Puppet Slam: Experience the beauty, ingenuity and hilarity of the best puppet slams from across the country at this adult puppet theater show at the Center for Puppetry Arts. August 28 through August 30. $12. puppet.org. A t l a n t a I N t o w n P a p e r. c o m


NEWS

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EATING OUT | EATING IN | FOOD NEWS | WINE

FOODIES DELIGHT Eat up these food festivals and events

By Collin Kelley INtown Editor From beer to barbecue, there’s something for every appetite happening around Intown during the month of August.

Decatur BBQ, Blues and Bluegrass Festival If you want some ‘que and stew mixed with great music, head to the 14th annual Decatur BBQ, Blues and Bluegrass Festival on Aug. 16 in Harmony Park from noon to 8 p.m. General admission tickets are just $10. The barbecue will be provided by local restaurants and this year’s music line-up includes The Georgia Flood, Roxie Watson, Larkin Poe, Kate and Corey, Balsam Range and Michelle Malone. For more information and tickets, visit decaturbbqfestival.com.

Atlanta Downtown Restaurant Week Downtown Restaurant Week returns for its 12th year Saturday, Aug. 9, through Sunday, Aug. 17. During this nine-day culinary event, top chefs offer diners signature prix-fixe menus ranging from $15 to $35 per person for lunch, brunch dinner options. Presented by Central Atlanta Progress (CAP), the annual Restaurant Week will feature nearly 40 dining hot spots to choose from. To see the full list, visit atlantadowntown.com.

German Bierfest The German Bierfest at Woodruff Park in Downtown returns for its 11th year on Aug. 23 from 2 to 7 p.m. Tickets are $40 online until Aug. 15 then rise to $45. Attendees can drink all the beer they can safely consume and designated drivers get in for just $10. There will also be food and music. For a complete line-up of beers and music, visit germanbierfest.com.

Savor Sandy Springs

Atlanta BAR-B-Q Festival The 6th annual event returns to Atlantic Station Aug. 15-16. More than 50 teams from across the region will fire up their grills to compete in annual barbecue cook-off event to win cash prizes, coveted trophies and the ultimate reward bragging rights. Attendees will also be ale to enjoy barbecue from some of Atlanta’s favorite restaurants. There will also be a cooking stage, live music, children’s activities and a market. Event admission is $6 in advance and $10 day of show. Kids 12 and under receive free admission when accompanied by an adult. For more, visit atlbbqfest.com.

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August 2014 | IN


THE ONLY LEGAL STILL IN GEORGIA Old Fourth Distillery sets up shop Intown By Annie Kinnett Nichols Like many great ideas, Old Fourth Distillery started out as a simple question posed at a party: Why can’t we make our own liquor? That’s what brothers Jeff and Craig Moore thought when they opened up a little clubhouse in East Atlanta. Locally brewed beer? No problem. Legally distilled liquor? Not in Georgia boys – no way, no how. The Moores – along with partners Justin Gray, Andy Duvall and Gabe Pilato– decided they weren’t going to take no for answer. Everyone told them that making liquor was illegal in Georgia, so they decided to hire lawyers and find out exactly what could stop them. Law firm Sard & Leff went to Photo by Annie Kinnet Nichols work and soon the first legally operating still, or distillery, was Above: Jeff Moore stands outside the distillery building on born. Edgewood Avenue. Located at 487 Edgewood Ave. in the booming Old Below: The copper stills were imported from Germany. Fourth Ward district, the partners set up shop. You can stop by anytime to visit, but the doors won’t officially open until late August. The guys run an IT business across the street, which gave them funding to create their dream. A dream that wraps up all their passions in one: something uniquely theirs, creating from scratch, using local only, zero imprint on the environment, marketing, design, architecture, adventure, building relationships with tons of people and making something they can hang their hat on. Right now it seems that and the other 5 percent will be water. they are the only liquor distillery in You can actually drive your car with Georgia and the smallest legal distillery sugarcane alcohol. Conversely, it takes in the country – 1,000 square feet. They 40 pounds of potatoes to make a bottle brought in a world famous German of vodka – that’s a lot of potato parts manufacturer, Carl, the oldest continuous leftover. manufacture of stills on the planet. The founders also want everything Gorgeous copper and shiny metal, the to be local, local, local. Case in point, a still arrived in a box that looked like Ikea kuduz vodka is in the works. “We have had gone mad. Thankfully, an expert tons of kudzu in this state and we want came with the box, installed the still to see if we can make it drinkable, Moore in 24 hours and promptly flew back to said.” They’re not even sure it will taste Germany. good, but they don’t care. That’s half the Now the boys are to putting it to fun. work, with plans to have vodka in one Just to be clear, Old Fourth Distillery year, gin in two and bourbon in 10. The is not a bar, since that’s still illegal in bourbon will sit in barrels for a decade Georgia. The still’s creations will be before they sell it. No hurry here. sold through United Distributors, All the different liquors will be which recently took them on as a client. sugarcane-based, meaning no potatoes However, there will be free tours and and no wheat. Sugarcane is the only tastings coming very soon. starter that has 0 percent waste. 95 Keep up with the still at old4th.com percent sugarcane will turn into alcohol and at facebook.com/old4thdistillery.

38 August 2014 | INtown

A t l a n t a I N t o w n P a p e r. c o m


Alpharetta. $169,900 23202 Plantation Drive, No. 202 2BR/2BA FMLS: 5310772 Mary Jane Egan 678.521.1501

Ansley Park. $859,000 151 The Prado NE 4BR/3BA FMLS: 5299611 Jim Getzinger 404.991.7700

Benteen. $209,900 877 Custer Avenue 3BR/2BA FMLS: 5314793 Stephen Beckwith 404.664.4565

Big Canoe. $130,000 5096 S Sanderlin Mountain Drive 1+/- Acres FMLS: 5104551 Babs Price 404.697.2008

Brookhaven. $1,647,500 800 Loridans Drive 5BR/5.5BA FMLS: 5294215 Bonnie Majher 678.575.4439

Buckhead. $2,999,999 2511 W Wesley Road 5BR/8Full 2half BA FMLS: 5136477 Yetty Arp 404.863.2116

Buckhead. $1,685,000 3630 Peachtree Road NE, No. 3107 3BR/3.5BA FMLS: 5299243 Burma Weller 404.735.6666 Cheri Riley 404.944.9992

Buckhead. $179,900 250 Pharr Road NE, No. 307 1BR/1BA FMLS: 5308514 Shira Cohen 678.523.0757

Cabbagetown. $249,000 185 Pearl Street SE Duplex FMLS: 5304057 Chrissie Kallio 404.295.2068

Candler Park. $384,900 368 Josephine Street NE 2BR/1.5BA FMLS: 5288358 Chase Mizell 404.835.9595

Decatur. $780,000 2838 Laurelgate Drive 4BR/4.5BA FMLS: 5288463 Chase Horner 404.754.4133

Dunwoody. $535,000 5098 Shadow Glen Court 5BR/3.5BA FMLS: 5305421 Carmen Pope 404.625.4134

East Atlanta. $300,000 1581 Eastland Road SE 4BR/4.5BA FMLS: 5296107 Charles Gerrick 404.218.8993

East Atlanta. $364,500 2979 Silver Hill Terrace SE 3BR/2Full 2half BA FMLS: 5307555 Jim Getzinger 404.991.7700 Adam Morrison 404.981.7249

East Atlanta. $280,000 1587 Eastland Road SE 4BR/3.5BA FMLS: 5295172 Charles Gerrick 404.218.8993

Glenwood Park. $539,900 498 Brasfield Square, No. 2 3BR/3.5BA FMLS: 5306535 Jim Getzinger 404.991.7700 Adam Morrison 404.981.7249

Jasper. $425,000 412 Indian Trail Drive 3BR/3.5BA FMLS: 5226354 Lisa Hughley 678.923.5152

Milton. $799,000 14005 Triple Crown Drive 4BR/4.5BA FMLS: 5275541 Robin Henderson 770.331.7438

Midtown. $269,900 952 Peachtree Street, No. 6 2BR/1BA FMLS: 5306451 Paul Donahue 404.218.0272

Midtown. $330,000 855 Peachtree Street NE, No. 1107 2BR/2.5BA FMLS: 5302246 Adam Ellis 770.355.0549 Patti Ellis 770.366.4658

Morningside. $886,000 1634 Lenox Road NE 4BR/3.5 BA FMLS: 5310956 Jim Getzinger 404.991.7700

Morningside. $1,249,000 1385 Greenland Drive NE 5BR/3.5BA FMLS: 5306089 Jim Getzinger 404.991.7700

Morningside. $559,000 765 Yorkshire Road NE 4BR/2BA FMLS: 5290395 Chase Mizell 404.835.9595

Ormewood. $689,900 507 Hamilton Street SE 5BR/4BA FMLS: 5299912 Adam Ellis 770.355.0549 Patti Ellis 770.366.4658

Pine Grove. $169,000 4208 Pine Heights, No. 4208 2BR/2BA FMLS: 5303942 Mary Jane Egan 678.521.1501

Sandy Springs. $1,500,000 10 Quarry Lake Court 4BR/5.5BA FMLS: 5289500 Wendy Zoller 404.277.0747

Serenbe. $399,000 10632 Serenbe Lane 2BR/2BA FMLS: 5308656 Sandra Storrar 404.310.3558

Suwanee. $1,949,000 4864 Kettle River Point 5BR/5.5BA FMLS: 5252825 Anne Stone 404.307.6416 Kathy Rice 678.697.4984

Tucker. $659,000 3702 Lakeview Drive 5BR/4.5BA FMLS: 5277409 Randy Walters 404.432.6162

Vinings. $819,000 3528 Paces Ferry Circle SE 5BR/5.5BA FMLS: 5285995 Maryanne Winchester 678.520.9922 Robin Ives 770.870.4009

V I S I T U S O N L I N E AT W W W. AT L A N TA F I N E H O M E S . C O M Buckhead ~ 404.237.5000 Intown ~ 404.874.0300 North Atlanta ~ 770.442.7300 © MMXIV Sotheby’s International Realty Affiliates, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Artwork by Jill Steenhuis, used with permission. Equal Housing Opportunity. Each Office Is Independently Owned And Operated.

A t l a n t a I N t o w n P a p e r. c o m

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When I think of Italian food, I think of red sauce simmering in a big pot on the stove or Sunday gravy as real Italians call it. I also think of the warmth and comfort and feelings of family that are so evocative in Italian food and culture. I am not Italian nor was I raised in an Italian household. Growing up, my exposure to Italian cuisine was a thin meat sauce made from a packet of McCormick’s spaghetti sauce mix served over spaghetti. My father despised the dish, and now I know why. I fell in love with real Italian food when I was a young Navy pilot deployed to Italy in the mid-1980s. When we weren’t tracking Soviet submarines in the Mediterranean, we were tearing around the Italian countryside in a beat-up Fiat 124 looking for our next fix of pasta and vino. While the food was great, the welcoming environs and that feeling of family were even greater. Nowadays, when I want to feel like I’m part of an Italian family and get my fix of Sunday gravy, I travel to Alfredo’s on Cheshire Bridge Road. You feel right at home when you walk in this place: the dark wood, the white tablecloths, the dim lighting, the doting host, the brigade of red vest clad waiters. There’s always a crowd and on most weekend nights there’s a line out the door. Alfredo’s

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By Art Huckabee

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TASTING INTOWN: Alfredo’s

does take reservations and easily accommodated our party of nine, out for a special birthday party. Our waiter immediately descended upon our table serving surprisingly good garlic bread and an assortment of pickled vegetables. You want to know the specials? You want some wine? You want some appetizers? The man in the red vest is at your disposal and will not leave until someone gives him guidance as to how he can begin making you happy. We ordered a couple of carafe’s of the house Chianti and several appetizers for the table. They have a decent-sized Italian wine list and also offer several Italian beers and a full bar as well. The appetizers arrived quickly. The mussels in white wine were perfectly done with lots of fresh garlic and Italian parsley. The fried calamari was light and crispy with a spicy Fra Diavolo sauce. The fried mozzarella was a hit; it’s a large gooey wedge served with a good Sunday gravy. The breast of chicken Cacciatore was pure comfort food. It was what my Italian grandmother would make if I had an Italian grandmother. The chicken was surprisingly juicy to be just breast meat, and the Sunday gravy was rich with plum tomatoes, mushrooms, red peppers, onions and herbs The half portion of eggplant

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Photo by Art Huckabee Fried calamari was the perfect starter for a meal at Alfredo’s on Cheshire Bridge Road. For more photos, read the review online at AtlantaINtownPaper.com.

Parmigiana hung off the plate. The delicately fried vegetable was not swimming in sauce and cheese, but rather had the right balance of ingredients as to highlight the delicate yet hearty dish. The breast of chicken al pesto was excellent, sautéed in pounded basil, pine nuts and butter and served in a creamy garlic sauce. The Snapper Casalinga was a large portion of fresh fish. It was broiled and served with a tart lemon butter and white wine sauce that slightly overpowered the fish. The accompanying sautéed spinach was garlicky with a hint of smokiness. The veal dishes were very good. The Padrino, or Godfather, is a trio of three veal preparations, Francese, Marsala and Parmigian. All were faithful representations of these classic dishes. The veal Saltimbocca was supposed to be prepared with white wine but tasted

of Marsala wine instead, which made the dish a bit cloying. An assortment of Italian desserts was served in honor of the “birthday boy” and the waiters and several adjoining tables serenaded with “Happy Birthday.” The desserts were all authentic with the cannoli being the star. Alfredo’s serves good Italian food, but it excels at providing exceptional service, a welcoming atmosphere and those feelings of warmth and comfort that are at the heart of what Italian really means. Alfredo’s is located at 1989 Cheshire Bridge Road. For more information, call (404)876-1380 or visit alfredosatlanta. com. Art Huckabee is one of Yelp’s Elite Reviewers, as well as a pilot, gourmet cook and food lover. Send feedback to tastingintown@atlantaintownpaper.com.

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A t l a n t a I N t o w n P a p e r. c o m


Quick Bites Spice to Table (spicetotable.com), a long-awaited, new dining concept by Chef Asha Gomez, was set to open on Aug. 1 at Studioplex in the Old Fourth Ward. Open for breakfast and lunch daily excluding Mondays, Gomez describes the new restaurant as an “Indian patisserie” with menu items like spiced oatmeal, samosa pockets, caramelized onion and spiced cashew crostatas and quiche for breakfast. While lunch will feature tomato pies, vegetable rice pulao, pork vindaloo sandwiches, curried chicken stuffed bread, soup of the day and a salad of the day. As INtown was going to press, Gomez announced that she was closing her lauded Cardamom Hill restaurant on Northside Drive to focus on Spice to Table. Petite Auberge (petiteauberge.com) turns 40th this summer and is celebrating by adding Sunday brunch to its menu. Located at 2935 North Druid Hills Road, brunch will be served from 11:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. Former NFL quarterback Nate Hybl will open Gusto Wood Fire Grill in at Brookwood Village, 1935 Peachtree Road, later this summer. The space was formerly Saigon Café. The menu had not been made available at press time. Burger 21 (burger21.com), a new franchise founded by the owners of The Melting Pot, has signed a multi-unit franchise agreement to develop three restaurants in the Atlanta area: Buckhead, Cumberland Mall and the North Druid Hills areas. The Buckhead location is expected to open sometime in 2015. Mali Hu of One Sushi Plus in Brookhaven will open a Japanese steakhouse called Katana in late summer across from Lenox Square at 3345 Lenox Road in Buckhead. Fadó Irish Pub will open in Shops at Metropolis during the first quarter of 2015. Fadó Midtown will occupy the former La Tagliatella space at 919 Peachtree St. A Gaelic word meaning ‘long ago,’ Fadó will offer an Irish menu, local beers and cocktails.

Spice To Table

Special

Doc Chey’s Dragon Bowl (dragonbowlatl.com) is now open in Emory Village at 1556 N. Decatur Road. Owner Rich Chey converted the location of Doc Chey’s Noodle House to focus on customer-created bowls with grilled meats, healthy grains and a variety of locally grown/seasonal ingredients. Tin Drum Asiacafe (tindrumcafe.com) is offering up fresh noodles and Asian street food cuisine in its new location at 2566 Briarcliff Road in North Druid Hills. Kula Project (KulaProject.org), a local non-profit focused on creating sustainable farming communities in developing nations will host the second annual #FORTHEFARMER campaign on Aug. 14 in partnership with several of Atlanta’s top restaurants. Each participating restaurant will donate 20 percent of sales from the evening to be invested in small-scale farmers in Rwanda. Participating restaurants include: 1920 Tavern at Opulent, Buttermilk Kitchen, Etris Kitchen & Bar, Foundation Social Eatery, Harbour Bar and Fishhouse, MAX’s Wine Dive, Murphy’s, Osteria Mattone, Real Fix Pizzeria, Salt Factory, Serpas True Food, Table & Main, The Optimist and more.

Read all of our editions online

Terminus City, Kevin Gillespie’s long-awaited second restaurant, has opened in the Gunshow space at 924 Garrett St., Suite C. in Glenwood Park. The “takeover” of Gunshow will continue until Gilliespie finalizes the location for Terminus City. The menu is a hybrid barbecue joint meets meat and three family-style restaurant. Find out more at gunshowatl.com. MAX’s Wine Dive (maxswinedive.com) is now open in the 12th & Midtown development at 77 12th St., Suite 6B offering “gourmet comfort food” (Southern fried chicken, oysters, mac ‘n cheese) with a selection of wines from around the world.

The 4th annual Great Atlanta Beer Fest will be held at Turner Field on Sept. 6. This event will feature 150-plus beers, ciders, and a small selection of wines. There will be live music with the Geeks Band, college football on big TVs, fun and games on Scout’s Alley and around the event. Advance tickets are $35, $40 after Aug. 29, and $50 day of event. Get tickets and more information at greatatlantabeerfest.com.

TRACE (traceatlanta.com) is now open at the W AtlantaMidtown offering a “farm-to-hotel” menu for breakfast, lunch or dinner with a healthy take on classic Southern dishes and cocktails. Virginia-Highland’s Bar Meatball (barmeatball.com) now has its own food truck. The mobile menu includes meatballs with sauce, meatball sliders with fries, and true ItalianAmerican pasta topped with meatballs.

Michael Lo, George Yu and Damiano Pak have opened Makan (makanatl.com), the Indonesian or Malay word for eat, in downtown Decatur, 130 Clairemont Ave. The menu is inspired by Asian street food and traditional Asian comfort food that you might find in market stalls in cities like Hong Kong, Taiwan or Seoul.

The historic Midtown home known as The Castle at the corner of Peachree and 15th streets is getting a new lease on life as a restaurant. The renovated space will launch with a big party hosted by Maxim magazine on Aug. 29 starting at 9 p.m. For tickets and more information, visit http://evrd.us/c50Eb. Details on the menu and chef were unavailable at press time.

Willy’s Mexicana Grill’s signature, hand-rolled Californiastyle burritos, tortilla chips, salsas and more are now available in a new location at 2566 Briarcliff Road.

Breakfast spot J. Christopher’s on Ponce de Leon Avenue closed Aug. 3 and is searching for a new space in VirginiaHighland.

A t l a n t a I N t o w n P a p e r. c o m

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August 2014 | IN


Home & Real Estate City Living | Neighborhoods | Development

HOME SALES SIZZLE

The market rebound continues around Intown By Collin Kelley INtown Editor Home sales remain strong around Atlanta this summer, while foreclosures are on a downward trend. Southeast Mortgage CEO Cal Haupt, who puts out a monthly housing report called The Cal-Culator, said Atlanta’s residential real estate index for June was a 6.2 out of 10 with across the board improvements in home sales, builder confidence, home prices, increased inventory and less foreclosures. The monthly report for June from the Atlanta Board of Realtors showed the median sales price for single-family homes was $230,000 – up 10.6 percent from June of last year. Haupt said looking back at May, there was a sharp rise in sales at 6.1 percent, the largest increase since April 2010 when first-time homebuyers scrambled to sign contracts before a lucrative popular tax credit ended. “New-home sales posted an even stronger rebound with a nearly 19 percent increase from last month, the

highest rate since May 2008,” Haupt said, citing data released by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban

Development with the U.S. Census Bureau. “These numbers are in line with our recent builder surveys, which indicate that more consumers are getting off the fence and coming back into the marketplace,” said Kevin Kelly, chairman of the National Association of Home Builders (NAHB). RealtyTrac, the online real estate information site and marketplace for foreclosures, reported that the median sales price of distressed and non-distressed U.S. residential properties rose 6 percent in May from the previous month and 13 percent from a year ago, the second consecutive

month in a row with a double-digit annual increase and the biggest annual increase since prices bottomed out in March 2012. New data from the NAHB and Wells Fargo Housing Market Index showed that builder confidence for new singlefamily homes rose to only one point shy of the threshold of what’s considered good building conditions. The index rose four points to a level of 49. Any number over 50 indicates the majority of homebuilders view conditions as “good” rather than “poor.” “After several months of little fluctuation, a four-point uptick in builder sentiment is a welcome sign and shows some renewed confidence in the industry,” said Kelly. Foreclosure levels in Atlanta have continued the downward trend that has permeated the real estate industry in 2014. Foreclosures in June dropped to levels not seen since 2002. The Atlanta Journal-Constitution reported that 2,054 foreclosures were reported in June across 13 Atlanta counties, compared to 11,016 during the height of the housing crisis.

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Buckhead Condo Alliance to represent vertical communities By Collin Kelley INtown Editor The newly formed Buckhead Condo Alliance (BCA) has filed incorporation papers with the Georgia Secretary of State’s office and has been officially admitted to the Buckhead Council of Neighborhoods (BCN). The alliance currently has seven buildings along Peachtree Road on its roster: 2828 Peachtree, Alhambra, The Carlyle, Concorde, Crestwood, Gallery and Peachtree Residences. During the recent BCN meeting, spokesman Robert Bush, vice-president of the new condo alliance, said the BCA currently represents around 800 owners in the seven buildings. “We’ve been meeting for a year and the condos along Peachtree Road have a lot of common issues,” said Bush, who lives at The Carlyle. He said residents were concerned about noise, development and traffic along the corridor and wanted to have a voice in decision-making and planning issues. However, Bush said the City of Atlanta might not recognize the BCA since the member condos are located in two different Neighborhood Planning Units (NPU) and city council districts. Dist. 8 City Councilwoman Yolanda

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– Yolanda Adrean Dist. 8 City Councilwoman

Service Center

Adrean said she believed the BCA was worth exploring, since there are more and more “vertical communities” being built. “The Buckhead Condo Alliance is treading new ground here, but I say go for it,” Adrean said at the BCN meeting. Bush said the group originally wanted to form as an NPU, but that was denied by the city.

People Drive Us. www.facebook.com/mercedesofbuckhead mercedesofbuckhead.com | 404-846-3500 2799 Piedmont Road | Atlanta, GA 30305

SOLD!

Everything We Touch Turns To D

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Virginia HigHlands 1176 Rosedale Road • 6BR/5BA $1,299,000 • Erin Yabroudy

LD

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sHERwood FoREst 1761 Friar tuck Road • 4Bd/4BA $1,185,000 • Erin Yabroudy & Kevin McGlynn

D OL

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drUid Hills 909 oakdale Road • 3BR/2BA/1HBA $1,150,000 • Erin Yabroudy

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Virginia HigHlands 1131 Los Angeles Avenue • 4BR/3BA $719,000 • Erin Yabroudy & Kevin McGlynn

LD

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MoRninGsidE 1267 Edmund Park drive • 4BR/4BA/1HBA $600,000 • Erin Yabroudy & Kevin McGlynn

AnsLEY PARK 90 Montgomery Ferry • 3BR/2BA/1HBA $1,095,000 • Erin Yabroudy

Kevin McGlynn

404.285.5674 Cell | 404.352.2010 Office kevin@erinyabroudy.com dorseyalston.com One Hundred West Paces Ferry Road • Atlanta, Georgia 30305 A t l a n t a I N t o w n P a p e r. c o m

L SO

Midtown 486 Ansley way • 3BR/3BA/1HBA $484,900 • Kevin McGlynn

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sHERwood FoREst 347 Robin Hood Road • 3BR/ 2BA/1HBA $1,250,000 • Erin Yabroudy E!

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MoRninGsidE 702 Hillpine drive • 3BR/3BA $625,000 • Erin Yabroudy

LD

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MoRninGsidE 1658 west sussex Road • 4BR/3BA $1,100,000 • Erin Yabroudy & Kevin McGlynn

CoMinG soon!

AnsLEY PARK 120 17th street • 5BR/3BA/1HBA $1,349,000 • Erin Yabroudy

nEw ListinGs sherwood Road and Cumberland Road Call for details

Erin Yabroudy

404.316.2203 Cell | 404.352.2010 Office erinyabroudy@dorseyalston.com erinyabroudy.com Information believed accurate but not warranted. Equal Housing Opportunity.

town 43

August 2014 | IN


Perspectives in Architecture

Real Estate in Georgia’s Blue Ridge Mountains

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Twitter.com/ATLINtownPaper

On Aug. 23 from 1 to 5 p.m., volunteers with the Atlanta chapter of the American Institute of Architects (AIA Atlanta) encourage students to experiment with the traditional philosophy of buildings as stationary elements. Elementary, middle and high school students from metropolitan Atlanta explore architecture with movement during this year’s AIA Atlanta Youth Architecture Fair at the High Museum. Inspired by the Dream Car exhibit at the museum, organizers use Architecture in Motion as the theme for the event. Student admission is free. The fair begins with a brief discussion about the Dream Car exhibit from Porsche designers, Paolo Martin and Chris Bangle, and short keynote address by architect and Georgia Tech professor Ann Gerondelis. As students sketch the luxurious cars in the Dream Car exhibit and incorporate motion into their design of a small building model under the guidance of AIA Atlanta volunteers, the young attendees may consider numerous questions. Does all or parts of their building move? What are the actual construction materials if the structure is built? Is the building moveable because it can be easily dismantled as a temporary structure? Does the architecture with the model remain stationary, but serves mobile visitors like the ones for the Varsity drive-in? The fair culminates as the students share their inventive building designs with their family, friends and other attendees in the Atrium of the High Museum. Students leave the AIA Atlanta Youth Architecture Fair energized by the informative speeches and fun design activities. Melody L. Harclerode, AIA, a local architect, promotes the power of architecture and design as the PresidentElect of the Atlanta chapter of the American Institute of Architects and the Principal of Harclerode Architects (harcarch.com). For more information, visit aiaatl.org. A t l a n t a I N t o w n P a p e r. c o m


Real Estate Briefs The former Ironized Yeast Company building (later purchased by cough-syrup makers Creomulsion) at the corner of Glen Iris Drive and Ralph McGill Boulevard might be knocked down to make way for townhomes. According to a report in Curbed Atlanta, developer John Weiland wants to build up to 28 townhomes on the 1.5 acre site. Dating from 1929, the factory building has been empty for years, but has recently been used as a film set. Walton Communities has unveiled its newest Intown apartment project, Walton Westside. The community, located near Westside Provision District at 790 Huff Road, features 254 one- and two-bedroom apartment with 14 different floor plans. The Walton Westside pre-leasing office is now open, and the community’s first residents will begin moving in early June. A Grand Opening event is planned for early October. For more, visit facebook.com/WaltonWestside. Simon Property Group and Columbus Realty Partners Ltd. will build a 319 mid-rise, luxury apartment building called Domain at Phipps Plaza at the Buckhead shopping mall. Construction is expected to begin in September with occupancy slated for fall 2015. Domain will offer amenities such as a yoga court, outdoor pool, health club with fitness on demand, dog park with dog wash stations and rooftop terrace with a resident lounge. Simon is also working on an extensive revamp of the mall.

1109 Berkshire Road

Offered at $2,800,000

• SELLING MORNINGSIDE’S FINEST HOMES •

Invest Atlanta, the city’s economic development authority, has announced that Columbia Ventures will serve as the developer for five acres located next to MARTA’s Edgewood/Candler Park rail station. The property is currently used for parking. The first phase, expected to break ground next year, will include more 200 units of market rate housing and will be built with minimal disruption to existing MARTA operations. The second phase is expected to include an additional 235 units. One of the phases will include commercial opportunities and the full project is expected to be completed by 2019. Four new mixed-use projects are in process for Midtown Atlanta. Related Group is working on 22 Fourteenth Street, a 400 unit high-rise residential tower with 6,500-square feet of ground-floor retail on the southwest corner of 14th Street and West Peachtree. The project, in conjunction with Novare’s proposed 1163 Peachtree, at 14th and West Peachtree streets intersection will anchor the two remaining corners facing One Atlanta Center and Regions Plaza. Hanover Company has proposed 1010 West Peachtree Street with 328 apartment units and 13,000 square feet of retail on 10th Street between West Peachtree and Spring streets. Azure on the Park from Atlantic Realty Partners is proposing a two-building development at Piedmont Avenue between 10th and 11th streets. The project is a five-story building adjacent to a 24-story residential tower that together will total 330 apartment units and 2,100 square feet of retail.

BOB GLASCOCK Multi-Million Dollar Sales Club cell: 404.754.7581 office: 404.814.9000 bob.glascock@harrynorman.com www.bobglascock.com

UNDER CONTRACT 830 Cumberland Road

BUCKHEAD NORTH OFFICE • 3405 Piedmont Rd Suite 150 • 404-814-9000 • Rob Owen, SVP/Managing Broker www.harrynorman.com • The above information is believed to be accurate but is not warranted.

Developer EpiCity has announced plans for Armour Junction, a “bike and brew community” with easy access to shopping, restaurants, the Sweetwater Brewing Company and eventually the Beltline. The mixed-use project near Interstate 85 would include flexible commercial space, restaurants and shops including a bike shop, coffee shop and brewery, as well as residential units and an event space. Euramex Management has purchased 3.3 acres behind Kirkwood Station and wants to buy adjacent properties at 1910 Bixby Street to build a multi-family development, according to a report from Decaturish. Euramex would need the city of Atlanta to rezone the property on Bixby for multifamily, even though it currently has apartments. Those apartments were built before the current zoning code went into effect. According to concept drawings the company has provided to residents, there would be 290 units total. The average size would be 875 square feet. A t l a n t a I N t o w n P a p e r. c o m

COMMUNITY AMENITIES • Resort-style swimming pool • Fire pit with lounge seating • Children’s playground • 24-hour fitness and business center • 24-hour cyber cafe • Bocce ball court • Gated access • Elevator accessible • Bluetooth distributed audio sound systems • Walking distance to restaurants, shops and entertainment

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404.352.4000 reservecollier.com 1185 COLLIER RD, ATLANTA, GA 30318

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August 2014 | IN


Parting Shots

Congratulations to Atlanta Braves (from left) manager Bobby Cox and pitchers Greg Maddux and Tom Glavine on their induction to the Baseball Hall of Fame in Cooperstown, NY last month (Photo courtesy CBS 46). Councilmember Kwanza Hall and members of Operation P.E.A.C.E. visit the Hyatt Regency Atlanta to prepare fresh picnic dinners for attendees of the Year of Boulevard Block Party and Community Cookout. The facade of the office building created by famed architect IM Pei (he’s best known for the Louvre pyramid) is back in place at the corner of Ponce de Leon Avenue and Juniper Street as part of the 131 Ponce apartment project. The frame of the building and the distinctive white tiles under the window were salvaged to create a new entrance for the development.

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Georgia Properties

FEATURED LISTINGS MIDTOWN OFFICE Visit Midtown.BHHSGeorgia.com to view all listings.

819 Belgrade Avenue

2060 Fisher Trail NE

PONCEY-HIGHLAND

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$999,000 Johnny Gonzales 404-226-5888

1020 Rosedale Road VIRGINIA-HIGHLAND

$799,000

$555,000

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Mark Camp 404-786-5400

1073 Colquitt Avenue INMAN PARK

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116 Lansdowne Avenue

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LENOX PLACE

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$525,000

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To Join Our Team, Contact Me For a Confidential Interview! Dale Modica, Managing Broker

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Tamara Emam 770-935-5566

Leslie Erickson 404-642-2227

Ranked #1 In Homes sold! 2014 | 2013 | 2012 | 2011 | 2010

©2014 An independently operated subsidiary of HomeServices of America, Inc., a Berkshire Hathaway affiliate, and a franchisee of BHH Affiliates, LLC. Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices and the Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices symbol are registered service marks of HomeServices of America, Inc.® Equal Housing Opportunity. *Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices Georgia Properties is ranked #1 in homes sold by Trendgraphix and RealValuator for 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013 and YTD 2014. Search results may vary.

A t l a n t a I N t o w n P a p e r. c o m

town 47

August 2014 | IN


Coldwell Banker

®

C O L D W E L L B A N K E R AT L A N TA . C O M

BROOKWOOD HILLS - Stately European contemporary snuggled on a private wooded lot. Newly renovated open first floor w/hrdwd floors, vaulted ceilings & walls of windows. 4Bed/2.5Bath $699,000 FMLS: 5311617 Lisa Barnhart 404-771-1178

GREENWOOD ACRES - Incredible 4 bedroom/3.5 bath home meticulously renovated & upgraded while preserving original integrity. High end finishes & appliances. 4Bed/3.5Bath $584,000 FMLS: 5307102 Cherie Sundy 678-557-7791

MIDTOWN - Exceptionally maintained home just a few blocks from Piedmont Park. Large front porch & private screened porch in rear overlooking tranquil oasis! 3Bed/3Bath $544,900 FMLS: 5291549 Michael Smith 404-786-2057

OLMSTED AT EAST LAKE - Charming Craftsman: plantation shutters, coffered ceilings & fireplace in great room; spacious kitchen; private screened-in porch; fencedin yard. 3Bed/2.5Bath $400,000 FMLS: 5283996 Amber Mason 678-637-3530

KIRKWOOD - Great home with master on main. Two generous BRs upstairs plus laundry & hall full bath. Chef’s kitchen w/built in breakfast bar. Large FR with fireplace & 1/2 bath. 3Bed/2.5Bath $375,000 FMLS: 5287129 Melissa Stratton 404-713-5850

EAST ATLANTA - Semi-custom newer construction priced thousands below current appraisal. Open floor plan and ALL THE BELLS & WHISTLES! 3Bed/3Bath $354,900 FMLS: 5311653 Beth Smith 678-595-4448

MORNINGSIDE - Updated bungalow. 4 parking spaces w/easy turnaround. Formal LR w/fireplace. Separate DR. New kitchen w/ granite counters. 3 Bed/3Bath $449,900 FMLS: 5291303 Mike Kondalski 404-234-9379

BERKELEY PARK - Solid rental income from this irresistible duplex. Top unit vacant completely renovated w/covered front porch; 1930’s home w/ hrdwds, new appliances. 4Bed/3Bath $345,000 FMLS: 5310523 Debbie Heaton 404-434-2262

BUCKHEAD - Featuring eleven, 4-story townhomes designed by award winning architects Smith Dalia & constructed by Cablik Enterprises. 3Bed/3.5Bath $999,900 FMLS: 5182846 Allen Snow 404-931-1176

INTOWN - Top Floor Unit! 04W. Concrete Floors. Stained Cabinets. Granite Countertops. Great Amenities! Convenient to Ponce City Market and Krog Street Market. 1Bed/1Bath $159,900 FMLS:5317107 Tonya Marlatt 404-518-8787

INTOWN - The Stacks. Fantastic unit with Large Storage Room. Concrete Floors, Maple Stained Cabinets. Roof Top Deck w/Amazing Views. Best Pool in town! 1Bed/1Bath $190,000 FMLS: 5303956 Tonya Marlatt 404-518-8787

MIDTOWN - Fabulous location. Hardwood Floors. 10’ Ceilings. Beautiful Kitchen. Custom Paint. Incredible Downtown views. ResortStyle Amenities. 2Bed/1Bath $254,900 FMLS: 5306244 Judy Hollowell 404-441-9681

MIDTOWN - Sleek Urban Top Floor Unit. Polished Concrete Floors. Exposed Brick Wall. Overlooks Greenspace. Gated Garage. Great Amenities. Walkable Neighborhood. 2Bed/1Bath $210,000 FMLS: 5318009 George Miller 404-556-5905

MIDTOWN - Sought after NE facing condo in 1010 Midtown. Spacious and open floor plan. Hardwoods, custom closets, s/s appliances. Amazing views. 2Bed/2Bath $434,900 FMLS: 5281101 Allen Snow 404-931-1176

NORTH BUCKHEAD - Brick and stone French Normandy inspired home. No expense spared! Designer chef’s kitchen w/commercial grade appliances. Flag stone terrace overlooks formal gardens. 6Bed/5.5Bath $1,649,000 FMLS: 5294601 Marc Castillo 404-449-6862

MIDTOWN - Exceptional all brick home. Like new condition. 4 finished levels. Wood floors. 10’ ceilings. Enormous level fenced-in back yard. Walking distance to Noble Park and shopping. 5Bed/6.5Bath $1,099,000 FMLS: 5177482 Marc Castillo 404-449-6862

Yes, you can buy peace of mind! Contact a local Coldwell Banker associate. ®

Create your Intown lifestyle. We can help you buy or sell a home where you live, work, and play.

Intown 404.874.2262 | Midtown 404.705.1570

Administered by American Home Shield

Jason Downey 404.593.5176

The property information herein is derived from various sources that may include, but not be limited to, county records and the Multiple Listing Service and it may include approximations. Although the information is believed to be accurate, it is not warranted and you should not rely upon it without personal verification. ©2013 Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC. All Rights Reserved. Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC fully supports the principles of the Fair Housing Act and the Equal Opportunity Act. Operated by a subsidiary of NRT LLC. Coldwell Banker, the Coldwell Banker Logo, Coldwell Banker Previews International and the Previews logo are registered and unregistered service marks owned by Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC. 6098ATL_B8/13

48 August 2014 | INtown

A t l a n t a I N t o w n P a p e r. c o m


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