Atlanta INtown 20th Anniversary Edition, November 2014

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1994 

November 2014

20 Years

 2014

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Ken Covers 1411 N Highland Avenue NE · Atlanta · GA 30306 Mobile +1 404-664-8280 ©2014 Engel & Völkers. All rights reserved. Each brokerage independently owned and operated. All information providken.covers@evusa.com ed is deemed reliable but is not guaranteed and should be independently verified. Engel & Völkers and its independent kencovers.evusa.com License Partners are Equal Opportunity Employers and fully support the principles of the Fair Housing Act.

2 November 2014 | INtown

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


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

CONTACT US Editorial Collin Kelley INtown Editor collin@atlantaintownpaper.com (404) 917-2200, ext. 102 Contributors Wendy Binns, Ann Taylor Boutwell, Kyle Brooks, Kathy Dean, Benjamin Getz, Art Huckabee, Mary Moore, Annie Kinnett Nichols, Martha Nodar, Clare S. Richie, Chris Schroder, Tim Sullivan, Elizabeth Wilkes Submissions Article queries and calendar submissions should be emailed to collin@atlantaintownpaper.com Advertising

For information call 404-917-2200 ext 130. Senior Account Executives Jeff Kremer Janet Porter Account Executive Susan Lesesne Sales Consultants David Burleson Linda Howell 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

Subscribe to our emails Daily Updates • Breaking News • Latest Digital Edition AtlantaINtownPaper.com click

IN the Neighborhood

Contents

Go Green

In the Beginning............................................... 4 Chris Schroder ................................................ 5 About the Cover............................................... 5 Wendy Binns ................................................... 6 Steve Levene ................................................... 6 A Look Back .................................................8-9 Neighborhood Snapshot ................................ 10 Olympic Memories ........................................ 12 BeltLine Origins ............................................. 13 Cyclorama Redux .......................................... 14 Streetcar Desires ........................................... 15 Pets .............................................................. 16 Pets Are Loving Support ................................ 17 Intown In Photos ...................................... 19-20 Education Briefs ............................................ 22 Health Briefs.................................................. 26 Public Safety ................................................. 28 TimmyDaddy ................................................. 29

Sustainable Intown ........................................ 38 BeltLine Arboretum ........................................ 39 Eco-Briefs ..................................................... 40

The Studio Holiday Events .............................................. 42 Letters Festival .............................................. 43 Oxford Books Remembered............................ 44 Art Visions .................................................... 45 Atlanta Planit ................................................. 46

News You Can Eat 20 Over 20 ............................................... 48-50 Turkey Day Out .............................................. 51 Colonnade Review ......................................... 52 Cook’s Warehouse ........................................ 54 Quick Bites .................................................... 55

Home & Real Estate

IN Business True Originals ........................................... 30-32 Civic Center................................................... 34 Ponce City Market ......................................... 35 Business Briefs ............................................. 36 Tree Elves ..................................................... 37

Reclaimed Neighborhoods ............................. 56 Before & After ............................................... 58 Midtown Appeal ............................................ 59 Real Estate Briefs .......................................... 60

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 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

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November 2014 | IN


IN The Neighborhood FEATURES, NEWS & EVENTS

IN THE BEGINNING THERE WAS 30306 By Collin Kelley INtown Editor

4 November 2014 | INtown

Welcome to the 20th anniversary issue of Atlanta INtown. I’ve had the pleasure of editing this paper for more than half of its existence, coming aboard at a time of transition. My instruction from interim publisher Joe Hiett was to revitalize the papers. Yes, that’s papers plural. When I arrived at INtown in the summer of 2002, Nonami Enterprises had assumed ownership and there were four: INtown, Atlanta Buckhead, Atlanta North and The Studio, which at the time was a standalone publication. No pressure, then. I had been reading INtown since it first hit the streets in 1994 under the name Atlanta 30306, the Morningside zip code of founding publisher Chris Schroder. I had watched over the years as 30306 added more publications: Atlanta 30305, Atlanta Downtown and Atlanta Real Estate. There was even a short-lived Sandy Springs edition. Those papers would eventually morph or combine into the line-up I was facing on my first day on the job. I decided the best way to get a Collin Kelley handle on what made INtown special was to go back to the beginning. I went to the archive and pulled out the first edition of 30306, and went from there. As I started work on the anniversary issue earlier this year, I went back to that first issue once again. My, how things have changed in such a – relatively – short period of time. Flipping through that faded 30306, it’s a snapshot of a community on the cusp of big change. In 1994, people were just starting to figure out how the Internet worked, most people didn’t have cellphones, and the source for neighborhood news were publications like this one. Trendy coffee houses were a new thing then, and the cover of the first 30306 led with a big feature on a dozen that were open in the community. Out of the 12, only four remain: San Francisco Coffee, Aurora, Café Diem and Caribou. Everyone was excited that a new grocery store called Harris Teeter was opening in Sage Hill shopping center and that a new branch of the post office was opening on North Highland. The hip place to buy clothes was Bill Hallman’s shop. Cool Joe and The Funky Soul Symbols were playing at The Dark Horse Tavern and REM had a big hit record called Monster. Art galleries were all the rage, too, with features on Aliya Gallery, koolhipfunkystuff, Modern Primitive Gallery and Form & Function Gallery, owned by Flournoy Holmes (creator of iconic album art for the Allman Brothers, Bruce Springsteen, Aerosmith and Carole King) and Michelle Klein. There were also a handful of advertisers willing to take a chance on a new publication. Since INtown remains advertising driven, the relationships we established with local businesses then remain vital. You can turn to page 30 to see mini-profiles on all those first advertisers who are still thriving today. I never had the pleasure of working with Schroder, but have gotten to know him over the years and he graciously agreed to write something special for this issue. You can read that on page 5.

Our previous publisher, Wendy Binns, has also penned a few thoughts, while our current publisher, Steve Levene, talks about why INtown endures. Those are on page 7. Atlanta’s place on the international stage began with the 1996 Summer Olympics and took off like a rocket: the transformation of Downtown, the revitalization of historic neighborhoods, the creation of the BeltLine, the boom and bust and boom again of the real estate market, the citywide embrace of sustainability, the growth of the film industry, the tech industry, and a world-class art, music and dining scene. The spirit of 30306 and the communities we cover is still embodied in Atlanta INtown. Chris Schroder’s vision endures and continues to transform as we embrace the web and social media. How people absorb the news has changed drastically in 20 years, but our mission to publish hyperlocal news that helps foster a sense of community continues. Here’s to the next 20 years!

Keeping it INtown Top: In September 2002, new editor Collin Kelley profiled award-winning children’s author Carmen Deedy in the revamped INtown. Bottom: The Keep It INtown campaign encouraged readers to buy and support local businesses in September 2011. A t l a n t a I N t o w n P a p e r. c o m


20 years later, Atlanta 30306 thrives enamored of the people and stores we profiled that he packed up and moved to 30306. We were thrilled to see clips of our articles on refrigerators all over town years later. In the first issue, we reported on the 12 new coffee houses opening in the ‘hood and profiled neighbors who had built and lived in their original houses from the 1920s. As the years rolled on, we liked to think we had a small hand in stitching together what has become some of the most popular neighborhoods in the city. Just last month, I took a trip through the early years as we organized a complete collection of the numerous newspapers we printed, and delivered them to the Atlanta History Center to be part of its permanent collection. Many stores and houses have changed names and owners since then, but the sense of community is only getting stronger.

By Chris Schroder Twenty years ago, I quit my job and produced, printed and mailed the first issue of Atlanta 30306 (now INtown) to 10,000 homes and then took a long nap. Two days later, the phone started to ring with calls from appreciative neighbors who agreed it was time for a positive publication that did a deep dive on what was then an under-reported renaissance of close-in communities. Today Atlanta INtown is more secure with its fourth owner, though the monthly has all along remained true to our founding principles that people want to feel connected to and do business with neighbors, even as we were all becoming more global. Hundreds of people joined “the band” to lovingly prepare the 238 issues since then, and each have added their own individual spice to the homegrown recipe. Notables include my sister, some high school buddies, my two children, who wrote columns for years, and Jan (whom I married 10 years ago, a few years after we had both left the papers) and her daughter.

Chris Schroder One of my favorite stories was after we started posting content on the thennew World Wide Web. We received an

email from a new resident who said he started reading our publication online while living in the Northeast and was so

Atlanta native Chris Schroder founded this newspaper from his Morningside home. Today, he owns a PR firm in Midtown and publishes The Atlanta 100 eNewsletter.

About the special anniversary cover

Kyle Brooks In 2012, INtown asked Atlanta artist Kyle Brooks, who works under the name blackcattips, to create a special cover for our September issue featuring art on the Atlanta BeltLine. It turned out to be not only one of our favorite covers, but also a hit with readers and fans of Kyle’s whimsical work. In the spring, I reached out to Kyle about creating a painting for our 20th anniversary issue. I gave him some very basic parameters about size and shape, but told him to just have fun and create a piece that not only celebrated our two decades covering the community, but also included his hallmark characters. Over the summer, Kyle emailed me a rough sketch of the birthday cake, and I knew he was on the A t l a n t a I N t o w n P a p e r. c o m

right path. We could have easily used old covers, graphic fonts or some other hackneyed idea for this issue, but I wanted something bold, fun and original. That’s how I – and Kyle – see the Intown neighborhoods we cover. Since that cover in 2012, Kyle’s work has become iconic around Intown, not only in murals along the BeltLine and in Cabbagetown, but in favorite restaurants and local businesses who have commissioned him to bring some fun and flavor to their establishments. If you’ve been to Fox Bros. BBQ, had a cocktail on the rooftop lounge at the Renaissance Hotel in Midtown, picked up sweet treat at Sublime Doughnuts, or popped in for a beer at the Midway Pub, you’ve seen his work. He’s created the signs and logos for Grant Central Pizza and Atlanta Progressive School, painted murals for kids at WestSide Atlanta Charter School and for parishioners for Village Church in East Atlanta. His work is also sought after by collectors, who buy his pieces or have commissioned him to paint murals in their homes. Recently, he even gave an “automobile tattoo” to someone’s van. We hope you’ll love this month’s cover as much as we do. If you want to find out more about Kyle and his work, visit blackcattips.com.

North by Northwest After the success of Atlanta 30306, a new publication focusing on Buckhead called Atlanta 30305 was launched in 1996. In this July issue, all eyes were on the Summer Olympic Games, which would bring thousands of athletes and millions of visitors to the city for two weeks. There was also a story on new places to party in the club strip that was known as Buckhead Village.

– By Collin Kelley

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November 2014 | IN


Northside Hospital is the Preferred Healthcare Partner of the Atlanta Falcons.

Celebrating Two Decades

And their fans.

Above: The Atlanta City Council honored Atlanta INtown with a special proclamation on Oct. 6 marking its 20th anniversary. City Councilmember Natalyn Archibong, right, presented the proclamation to, from left, Senior Account Executive Jeff Kremer, Director of Sales Amy Arno and editor Collin Kelley. (Photo by Isadora Pennington) Below: The entire Springs Publishing staff recently took a mental health day to go bowling and play laser tag at Stars and Strikes on Roswell Road. Pictured standing, from left, Amy Arno, Collin Kelley, Chris North, Ann Marie Quill, Jeff Kremer, Ellen Eldridge, Curt Cochran, Deborah Davis, Joe Earle, Janet Porter and Steve Levene. Kneeling from left are Susan Lesesne, Jenna Goff, Isadora Pennington and Phil Mosier. (Special)

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Saturday, November 8 Take 20% OFF everything you can fit in our shopping bag.

Artisans have been paid in full. Valid at participating stores only. Not valid with other discounts or purchase of gift cards.

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Use this logo for reductions only, do not print magenta. Do not reduce this logo more than 35%. Magenta indicates the clear area, nothing should print in this space. You may reduce the logo to 30% without the tag and strap lines. Color of Wood Block Motif critical match to Pantone 1805. Letters print Pantone Process Black.

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6 November 2014 | INtown

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


FOREVER YOUR GIRL By Wendy Binns An issue of Atlanta INtown is buried under concrete in the Inman Alley building on Krog Street. It was six years ago when the building association collected items for a time capsule to mark the opening of the redeveloped space in Inman Park. Whoever exhumes it in 100 years will discover a piece of INtown soul – and a part of my soul, actually. This 20th anniversary of INtown sends me down memory lane. I first arrived to the office in 1997 fresh out of college and with so much to learn. Mentors emerged. Special Long-standing friendships formed. Wendy Binns and her son, Daniel. Bonds that would help navigate my way and eventually lead me to ownership of the company. They were years of soul-fulfilling work. But, after a period overcoming breast cancer and then adopting a little boy, I needed a break. It was a good time to sell the business. However, I do have a confession. I miss deadlines. I see story ideas everywhere I go. I long for my old office and connecting with the community on a daily basis. I’ve moved on to new projects and have a new venture brewing, but I’ll always be an INtown girl at heart. Happy Anniversary, INtown. I’m glad to have played a part in your history.

THE SPIRIT OF INTOWN By Steve Levene Publisher I moved here two years after Chris Schroder started Atlanta 30306, the forerunner of Atlanta INtown. While I lived and worked “OTP,” I viewed 30306 as my primer to an undiscovered (for me) part of Atlanta. At the time, I didn’t fully appreciate the lure of the city’s Intown neighborhoods. But I rarely missed an issue of the monthly paper whose mission was to capture the eclectic personality of Intown – and the rapid development that was occurring in and around there. Years later, after launching the Steve Levene Reporter Newspapers, the opportunity arose to purchase INtown from previous owner Wendy Binns. It was a quick and easy decision to add the well-established title to the Springs Publishing family of community papers serving Sandy Springs, Dunwoody, Brookhaven and Buckhead. INtown’s hyperlocal focus on neighborhood news, people and events was a perfect match with our company’s DNA. While our geography has expanded, there are common elements connecting all five of the communities we now cover: a diverse population of engaged residents who care deeply about where they live, and a constant hum of activity. This special issue’s content, crafted by longtime editor Collin Kelley (are you one of his 40,000-plus Twitter followers?) reflects the dynamism and spirit of the Intown community today and over the past two decades. We appreciate the support and feedback from thousands of readers and hundreds of advertisers who have helped INtown reach this milestone. As always, please let me or Collin know how we are doing, and what we can do better in the future. 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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November 2014 | IN


A LOOK BACK:

20 YEARS OF INTOWN HISTORY Ann Taylor Boutwell 1994 Bill Campbell inaugurated city’s 57th mayor on Jan. 3. Buildings along Peachtree Street were illuminated on Jan. 27 as part of “Atlanta in a New Light” to welcome Super Bowl visitors and launch the official countdown to the 1996 Centennial Olympic Games. • Super Bowl XXVIII was played on Jan. 30 at the Georgia Dome. The Cowboys defeated Beverly Harvard the Bills 30–13. • The first Music Midtown is held on property at the corner of Peachtree and 10th streets that will eventually become the Federal Reserve. • Beverly Harvard was named Atlanta’s first female police chief. • Peachtree Road Race celebrated 25th anniversary. • Emory University embarked on $100 million building project to build a school of health and new law library. • Olympic czar Billy Payne has an epiphany for a new Downtown park to mark the Centennial Olympic Games. 1995 In February, J. B. Fuqua honored his wife, Dorothy, on their 50th wedding anniversary by donating $3 million to Piedmont Hospital’s expanding heart The Braves win the World Series. center now known as Fuqua Heart Center of Atlanta. • The historic 1924 Atlanta Municipal Market at 209 Edgewood Ave. was renamed Sweet Auburn Curb Market. • Newt Gingrich was elected U.S. Speaker of the House, becoming the first Republican speaker in 40 years. • Downtown’s busiest intersection at Peachtree Street and International Boulevard shut down for two weeks in August to install a multicolored asphalt map of the world for the Olympics. • The 1995 World Series matched the Atlanta Braves against the Cleveland Indians. The Atlanta Braves won the city’s first world championship, Oct. 28. • Turner Broadcasting System and Time Warner, Inc. announced a $7.5 billion merger. • The U.S. Track and Field Championship was the public’s first official glimpse of the Olympic stadium in June. 1996 Atlanta geared up for the Centennial Olympic Summer Olympic Games—July 19 through Aug. 4. • Centennial Olympic Park opens on July 13. • The new Muhammad Ali with the Olympic Torch. $11 million Martin Luther King, Jr. Visitors Center opened on July 10. • Boxing great Muhammad Ali lights the caldron at Olympic Stadium to open the games on July 19 • On July 27 at 1:19 a.m., a pipe bomb exploded at Centennial Olympic Park, killing two people and injuring 111 others. • During the 17 days of the Olympics, more than two million visitors came to Atlanta, and an estimated 3.5 billion people around the world watched on television. • The Atlanta Braves play their last game at the Atlanta-Fulton County stadium, which is slated for

8 November 2014 | INtown

demolition. 1997 Dr. Albert E. Manley, president of Spelman College, died in March. He shepherded students for 22 years during the tumultuous1960s civil rights issues and the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. • The Atlanta Fulton County Stadium is demolished on Cathy Woolard Aug. 2. • Cathy Woolard became the first openly gay person elected to city office. • The Carnegie Pavilion sculpture, made from the façade of the demolished Carnegie Library, was dedicated at Hardy Ivy Park in Downtown. • Development plans emerged to transform the old Atlantic Steel site along the Downtown Connector into a new development called Atlantic Station. 1998 The National Black Arts Festival celebrated its 10th Anniversary in July. • Eric Robert Rudolph, who bombed Centennial Park during the Olympics and is responsible for many other, is placed on FBI’s Most Wanted list. • Centennial Olympic Park reopened in March, with a redesigned Willie B. landscape for public use. • Atlanta’s favorite primate, Willie B., celebrated his 40th birthday with pears, bananas and watermelon at Zoo Atlanta. • In November, John E. Aderhold’s donated $2.5 million to Georgia State University in honor of his wife to create the new classroom building, the Helen M. Aderhold Learning Center. 1999 Super Bowl XXXIII saw the Broncos defeat the Atlanta Falcons 34–19 to win their second consecutive Super Bowl. • Atlanta Ballet celebrated its 70th anniversary during the 1999-2000 season at the Fox Theatre. • Fire engulfed the under-renovation Fulton Cotton Mill Lofts in Cabbagetown, and the daring helicopter rescue of a worker trapped on a crane made international headlines. • After losing $100,000, day trader Mark Barton kills 12 and injures 13 others on July 29 during a shooting rampage at two Atlanta day trading firms. • The Atlanta Braves’ Chipper Jones won the 1999 National League Most Valuable Player Award. • Zoo Atlanta acquired two giant pandas, Lun Lun and Yang Yang, from China. • Ryan Gravel writes his masters thesis at Georgia Tech about using the city’s 22-mile circle of disused railroad corridors for something called the BeltLine.

the corner of Piedmont and North avenues demolished to make room for Publix and Walgreens. • Turner Broadcasting’s $90 million Techwood campus building opens. • Hundreds attended the memorial service for Atlanta Historian Franklin Garrett at Oakland Cemetery. 2001 Trustees of Woodruff Art Center approved a $100 million-plus expansion, which includes three new buildings for the High Museum of Art along with a new residence hall and sculpture studio for the Atlanta College of Art. • Planes are grounded at Hartsfield Atlanta Airport in the wake of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks in New York and Washington D.C. Interstate road signs display the message “National State of Emergency.” • The Centers for Disease Control (CDC) in Atlanta gets more funding in the wake of anthrax scares. • Shirley Franklin elected as Atlanta’s first female mayor. 2002 Two big projects were announced for Downtown across from Centennial Park: a new aquarium and the relocation of the World of CocaCola museum. Lisa “Left Eye” Lopes • Home Depot founder Arthur Blank bought the Atlanta Falcons. • Atlanta rapper and TLC member Lisa “Left Eye” Lopes is killed in a car accident on April 25 in Honduras. • A fugitive since 1987 and one of America’s Most Wanted criminals, James Sullivan, is arrested for the murder of his wife Lita at a resort in Thailand on July 2. 2003 Maynard Jackson, the first African-American mayor of Atlanta, dies June 23. • Ivan Allen Jr., the 52nd mayor of Atlanta from 1962 to 1970 who led the city through economic prosperity, civil rights civility and brought major league sports to the South, dies July 2. • Imagine It! The Children’s Museum of Atlanta opened Downtown. • The mixed-use Atlantic Station on the former site of the Atlantic Steel Company opens to the public. • Midtown is transformed with opening of Georgia Tech’s Technology Square on Oct. 24. 2004 The world premiere The Color Purple musical opened at the Alliance Theatre. • Piedmont Park celebrated 100 years. • After 137 years, Federated Department Stores closes or rebrands the last of the Rich’s stores. • Former mayor Bill Campbell was indicted on wide-ranging corruption charges. • The Fox Theatre celebrated its 75th birthday. 2005

Rio Mall (Courtesy Shopping Mall Museum 2000 Atlantans party on despite fears that the “Millennium Bug” will cut computers and electricity around the world. • Over 7,000 people said goodbye to Zoo Atlanta’s Willie B. at a special memorial service. • Rio Mall at

Ivy Hall

Shoppers flocked to the new IKEA store at Atlantic Station in June. • The Georgia Aquarium opened Nov. 23. • Woodruff Art’s trustees endorsed the merger of A t l a n t a I N t o w n P a p e r. c o m


Atlanta Art College and SCAD Savannah College of Art and Design. • Former iXL building at 1600 Peachtree St. becomes new home to SCAD, which also acquired historic Ivy Hall on Ponce de Leon. • Architect Renzo Piano’s expansion of High Museum opened to the public in November. • Henry W. Grady High School in Midtown showed off its two-year, $24 million renovation of the Charles Allen Building and the old gym. • In the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, panicked motorists, fearing a gasoline shortage, caused chaos at local pumps. 2006 Coretta Scott King, wife of Martin Luther King, Jr. died on Jan. 30. • Construction began on Buckhead’s tallest building, the 48-story Sovereign. • Ford Motor Co.'s 60-year history of auto making in Atlanta ended after the Hapeville plant is closed. • The FCC approves the buyout of Atlanta-based Bellsouth by AT&T.

Coretta Scott King

2007

2009 The Starlight Six Drive-In Theater on Moreland Avenue celebrated its 60th birthday. • The city of Atlanta is awarded $47.6 million in federal dollars for the Atlanta Streetcar project. • As part of the global recession and The Starlight Six Drive-In. real estate market meltdown, Georgian Bank, Buckhead Community Bank, RockBridge Commercial Bank and others around the state are closed. • The Atlanta JournalConstitution breaks the Atlanta Public Schools cheating scandal. 2010 Atlanta Public Schools Superintendent Beverly Hall appointed a commission to investigate the cheating scandal, which she will later be indicted in. • A zebra escaped from the Ringling Bros. Circus performing at Philips Arena, causing chaos on the Downtown Connector before he was caught on Feb. 19. • Part-time Atlantan Justin Bieber released his hit song “Baby.” • In September, Georgia State University’s opening football game was against the Shorter Hawks, winning the game 41-7.

World of Coca-Cola

Georgia Department of Transportation contractor crews reconstructing the 14th Street Bridge received the go-ahead to close to traffic in May for the next two years. • The new World of Coca-Cola opened beside the Georgia Aquarium at Pemberton Place in Downtown. • Atlanta Falcon Michael Vick is convicted for dog fighting at his home in Richmond, VA, and is suspended from the NFL. • Roberto C. Goizueta, the Coca-Cola Chairman noted for the company’s turnaround, dies on Oct. 18. 2008 A tornado plows through parts of Downtown on March 14, damaging the Westin Peachtree Plaza, Equitable Building, Georgia Dome, Georgia World Congress Center, collapsing parts of the Fulton Cotton Mill Lofts, rips roofs off homes in Cabbagetown and heavily damaging monuments and Oakland Cemetery after the tornado. trees at Oakland Cemetery. • Druid Hill Presbyterian Church celebrated its 125th birthday. • G. Wayne Clough resigned as Georgia Tech’s 10th president to accept the position as 12th Secretary of the Smithsonian Institute. • A bronze statue of Andrew Young, former Congressman and 14th Ambassador to the United Nations, was unveiled in Downtown’s Walton Park. • The under-construction Canopy Skywalk at the Atlanta Botanical Garden collapsed, killing one and injuring 18 others on Dec. 19. A t l a n t a I N t o w n P a p e r. c o m

2011 The Jan. 9 snowstorm and freezing rain brought Atlanta to a halt, closing schools and businesses for days. • The U.S. Federal Court of Appeals in Atlanta heard arguments against the Constitutionality of the Affordable Care Act, known as Obamacare. • Georgian Terrace Hotel celebrated its Margaret Mitchell: American Rebel 100th anniversary in October. • Downtown’s Harris Street is renamed John Portman Boulevard to honor the architect. • Margaret Mitchell: American Rebel, a one-hour original documentary written and directed by Executive Producer Pamela Roberts, premiered June 30 on GPB Television. 2012 The Atlanta Falcons proposed a bigger stadium to replace the Georgia Dome. • The $1.4 billion international terminal at Hartsfield-Jackson International Airport opened on May 16. • The National Trust for Historic Preservation added the “Sweet” Auburn Avenue corridor, which was once the center of African-American civic, social and business life, to its 2012 list of America's Most Endangered Historic Places. • The Eastside Trail of the Atlanta BeltLine opened to the public on Oct. 15. 2013 Bobby Jones Golf Course, located in Buckhead’s Atlanta Memorial Park, received a $30,000 city grant

SkyView Farris Wheel

to develop a new master plan. • Skyview, a giant Ferris Wheel once located in Paris, opened July 14 next to The Tabernacle in Downtown. • Atlanta Streetcar construction began. • Atlantans were stunned when the Braves announced on Nov. 11 that they would leave Turner Field and build a new stadium in Cobb County.

Decatur after the snow storm.

2014 On Jan. 28, a snowstorm cripples the city with thousands of motorists trapped on the interstates and children forced to spend the night in schools. • The 152-year-old Friendship Baptist Church holds its final service before being demolished to make way for the new Falcons stadium on May 26. • Atlanta-based director Kenny Leon nabbs his first Tony Award for best director of the revival of "A Raisin in the Sun." • Decatur's Glennwood Elementary, the city's oldest public school, celebrated its 100th year • The National Center for Civil and Human Rights, and College Football Hall of Fame opened Downtown. • The Atlanta History Center announced it would build a new home for the Battle of Atlanta painting housed in Grant Park’s Cyclorama. • The Atlanta Streetcar began testing with plans to roll out to the public in November.

Historian & Margaret Mitchell House docent Ann Boutwell can be reached at annboutwell@bellsouth. net. Ann is pictured here at the Sweet Auburn Curb Market in 2003.

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November 2014 | IN


Neighborhood Snapshots: 30306

Celebrating 20 Years INTown

Images from from the zip code that birthed Atlanta INtown.

Clockwise from top left: Carol Dickson, has been a clerk at Intown Ace Hardware for more than 16 years. Shelley Sexton with son Andrew, right, and Gina Vono with son Greyson and their dog Sasha on a walk in Virginia-Highland. Highland Tap has been a mainstay in VaHi for 25 years. Video rental store (yes, they still exist) Videodrome and Buddy’s are go-to retail shops in 30306; Majestic Diner on Ponce has been serving generations since 1929. The Plaza Theatre is one of the city’s oldest movie houses, recently marking its 75th anniversary. Alon’s Bakery serves up all the sweet treats you could ever need in Morningside. Fire Station No. 19 has been protecting the community since 1925. Independent shops and restaurants line North Highland in VaHi. Photos By Isadora Pennington

10 November 2014 | INtown

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


JIM GETZINGER

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© MMXIV Sotheby’s International Realty Affiliates, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Equal Housing Opportunity. Each Office Is Independently Owned And Operated. *Represented Buyer

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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November 2014 | IN


OLYMPIC MEMORIES

How the 1996 Summer Games transformed Intown By Collin Kelley INtown Editor When attorney Billy Payne first floated the idea of Atlanta hosting the 1996 Summer Olympic Games way back in 1987, many people had the same reaction: “Dream on, Billy.” Atlanta had everything going against it: insufficient infrastructure, little international standing and a lingering “Old South” mentality despite desegregation. And, of course, there was the exorbitant cost. But Mayor Andrew Young latched onto Payne’s idea. It was the ‘80s, after all, and business was booming, neighborhoods were being reclaimed, the Atlanta airport was growing and even Underground Atlanta was in the process of getting a new lease on life as a shopping destination. Fast forward to Sept. 18, 1990. Atlanta was actually on the shortlist of potential hosts for the Summer Games, but the long shot to get the nod. The favorites were Toronto and Athens (which hosted the first Olympic Games) along with Belgrade, Manchester and Melbourne. Atlantans huddled around TVs and gathered Downtown as International Olympic Committee President Juan Antonio Samaranch made the announcement from Tokyo: “The International Olympic Committee has awarded the 1996 Olympic Games to the city of… Atlanta.” The delegation in Tokyo, which included Payne, Young and a very relieved Mayor Maynard Jackson, erupted into cheers, while there were hugs, tears and dancing at Underground. By the time INtown was launched in its first iteration as Atlanta 30306 in November 1994, the city was in the middle of a massive transformation not seen since Reconstruction. The Olympic Stadium was under construction next door to the Atlanta-Fulton County Stadium, it’s progress a daily reminder of the juggernaut of 10,000 athletes and two millions visitors descending on the city in less than two years. On the west side of Downtown, a former wasteland of abandoned buildings and warehouses, a new gathering spot called Centennial Olympic Park was being built. It was to be the focal point of all the entertainment surrounding the Games. A new natatorium was under construction at Georgia Tech, along with the Olympic Village. The High Museum was planning a historic and mind-blowing exhibition of great art treasures from around the world. There was increased

12 November 2014 | INtown

interest in art in general, with sculpture and installations part of the Olympic transformation. The entire city was getting a facelift to make its big international debut, and some of it was controversial, including attempts to remove the homeless from Downtown and the unveiling of the totally bizarre (and almost universally detested) Olympic mascot, Izzy. To be fair, Izzy started a trend of wacky mascots (London’s one-eyed Wenlock, anyone?) that make Atlanta’s blue bomb look downright cuddly by comparison. All is forgiven, Izzy. But when boxing legend Muhammad Ali lit the torch at the opening ceremonies on July 19, 1996, there was a collective sigh of relief. The Games were off to a good start, with U.S. athletes on the road to collecting 101 medals. Then there was the bomb. On July 27, Eric Robert Rudolph – who wouldn’t be brought to justice until 2003 after a string of other bombings – placed a pipe bomb in the park. It killed two and wounded 111 others. It was a Friday night and the park was packed with people enjoying the music and atmosphere of the Games. Georgia Tech professor and poet Karen Head had been in the park the night before, standing in almost the exact spot where the bomb went off. “It still gives me a little chill to think about it,” she says. Luckily, Head’s lasting memory is attending the medal round of the dressage competition (“even the horses got medals!”) and seeing a visiting Princess Anne in the stands. Eve Hoffman, who sat on the Metro Atlanta Olympic Games Authority, attended the opening ceremonies and remembers the “cacophony of languages” as she walked from Midtown to the Olympic Stadium. “I felt like a hostess welcoming the world,” she said. “I walked a little taller in the heat with my daughter at my side. Later, we went to Centennial Park to see our names inscribed on the paving bricks, including one for my husband who had died a year earlier.” At the end of the Games, there was a collective opinion on the international stage that the Atlanta Olympics had been a bit ho-hum. There was no dazzle or glitz at the opening and closing ceremonies to remember, the bombing had stolen many of the headlines, and many thought the Games were too commercialized. Even Samaranch, who had called each Games before it the “best ever,” simply said, “Well done, Atlanta.” That stung a bit. But Atlanta’s reputation as an international city, a tourist destination

Above: Centennial Olympic Park was a late idea by organizer Billy Payne, but was the catalyst for renovation and regrowth in Downtown Atlanta. (File) Right: The Olympic Cauldron sits near Turner Field, the former Olympic Stadium, on Hank Aarron Drive. (Photo by Isadora Pennington) Top of page: Olympic mascot Izzy was the butt of many jokes, but he’s positvely prosaic compared to later mascots. (File)

and city keen on business was cemented nevertheless. The Games pumped $5.14 billion into the city and the transformation of Downtown would continue with Philips Arena, the Georgia Aquarium, World of Coca-Cola, the Center for Civil and Human Rights, and College Football Hall of Fame. Centennial Park has become Downtown’s “living room” for concerts, holiday celebrations and a gathering spot for workers and city-dwellers, who have returned in droves. The city’s population surged from 3.5 million in 1996 to nearly 5.5 million today, it is home to more than a dozen Fortune 500 companies, and HartsfieldJackson International Airport has a shiny new international terminal and retains its designation as busiest in the world. Jeff Morrison, a history buff and project architect with Collins Cooper Carusi, said that Atlanta had successfully “absorbed” the Olympic venues unlike other host cities. “In some host cities, the venues are abandoned and deteriorating,” Morrison said. “To Atlanta’s credit, it has outgrown the Olympics, repurposed the venues and moved on.” Morrison said he believes Atlanta would have continued to grow even if it had lost the Olympics, but it would have probably been a slower process. Morrison said there are still areas of

Downtown that need more attention. He specifically mentioned Mitchell Street between the city, county federal government complexes and Castleberry Hill. “The area is not without occupants, but it doesn’t add anything to neighborhood,” he said. “People drive there to work, then go home. It’s an area not contributing to the urban neighborhood.” When Morrison moved to Atlanta just after the Games, he said there will still swaths of Downtown up to Midtown that were empty or under-utilized. “I had dinner at the SunDial on top of the Westin Peachtree recently and it is amazing to see how much has filled in,” he commented. Central Atlanta Progress President A.J. Robinson said the physical element of Centennial Park was the catalyst for all the development around it. “The legacy is the constant reminder that Atlanta can meet any challenge when the city puts its mind to it,” Robinson said. “Today, you might not see that in as grandiose fashion as the Olympics, but the spirit remains in the minds of many of us.” In the summer, when the Rings Fountain cools off kids of all ages in the middle of Centennial Park, Billy Payne’s hairbrained idea 27 years ago continues to pay in dividends. A t l a n t a I N t o w n P a p e r. c o m


Ryan Gravel and the Atlanta BeltLine From idea to advocacy to transformation By Clare S. Richie Most of us know the Atlanta BeltLine. It’s where we walk, bike, run a 5K, watch the lantern parade, access parks and other neighborhoods. We’re hungry for this type of sustainable connectivity and community, which started 15 years ago as an idea from then Georgia Tech graduate student, Ryan Gravel. After spending his senior year in Paris, where he walked everywhere, ate fresh foods, and lost 15 pounds, Gravel thought deeply about the role of city infrastructure in how we live our lives. Sidewalks versus highways, for example, encourage different lifestyles. “Atlanta is a railroad town,” Gravel explained, “with compact, mixed-use intown neighborhoods built around streetcars.” Gravel was fascinated by trains as a child growing up in Chamblee. So, when he needed a cityscale design project for his master’s thesis, Gravel knew what infrastructure was missing to revitalize Atlanta – transit. His master’s thesis became the kernel of a vision that would transform a 22-mile loop of old railroads with transit, trails and green space to promote economic growth and quality of life in 45 neighborhoods. Needless to say, Gravel graduated, and his idea was temporarily shelved as he went to work for an architecture firm. It was his master plan for Inman Park Village, deciding whether or not to place the parking

Above and right: The Atlanta BeltLine Eastside Trail before and after.

deck close to the old railroad line, which compelled Gravel to share his idea with his colleagues. That was the spark. In their free time, Gravel and his colleagues mailed out letters and maps detailing the vision. Cathy Woolard, Atlanta City Councilmember at that time, was frustrated by the lack of city transit and embraced the Atlanta BeltLine. “With Cathy’s help, we used the NPU [neighborhood planning unit] system as a framework for sharing the idea all around the city,” Gravel recalled. From 2001 through 2004, Gravel spent countless evenings and weekends talking to NPUs, neighborhood groups, schools, churches, businesses, and anyone else who would listen. The idea grew into a grassroots campaign of local citizens and civic leaders, with Gravel working full time for Friends of the Belt Line. Other groups added to his idea. The Trust for Public Land proposed 1,400 acres of new parks, Trees Atlanta asked to plant an arboretum, Mayor Shirley Franklin suggested an affordable housing initiative, and more. Gravel welcomed these new ideas – they were better for the city and built a broader constituency. In 2005, the 6,500Yes, we actually published a acre Atlanta BeltLine Tax separate edition called Atlanta Allocation District (TAD) Downtown for a short time. The passed with broad-based lead story from November 1997: support and is expected the planned demolition of the to generate approximately Omni Coliseum to make way $1.4 billion, covering close for Philips Arena. There was to one third of the total also a feature on how chess had program cost. The same become popular in Woodruff year, Friends of the Belt Park, with players gathering Line merged with Mayor daily in good weather for Franklin’s Atlanta BeltLine friendly matches. Partnership. Wearing many hats along the way – Friends of BeltLine staff, city planner, Atlanta BeltLine Partnership Board member, and currently

Downtown, where all the lights are bright...

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

Photos courtesy Atlanta BeltLine/Ryan Gravel Below left and right: Ryan Gravel and the Ponce bridge in 2004.

an urban designer at Perkins+Will – Gravel remains dedicated to the BeltLine and proud of all who came together to make it happen. “The BeltLine is already doing what we said it would do,” Gravel said. The first two-mile phase of the trail is a popular city feature with a 3:1 economic impact, turning a $350 million investment into more than $1 billion of new mixed-use redevelopment. His favorite picture is a woman walking on the BeltLine with her groceries. “It is already showing us how Atlanta can revitalize its infrastructure to promote a more sustainable life.” There’s still work to be done. The Eastside Trail design calls for access points to Ponce de Leon, lighting, and water fountains accessing water lines crisscrossing under the trail. “We could see trains in the corridor in the next five years if we push for it. Let’s pass a referendum and collect the funds we need to get it done,” Gravel urged. “The BeltLine will evolve over our lifetime,” he reflected. For Gravel, future phases should include a more robust public art program with permanent exhibits, performance venues, and artist housing and work spaces. It should also include equitable access for all income levels, green standards for building in the corridor, and community food networks. The BeltLine is a model and the world is watching. In fact, Gravel’s passion for revitalizing infrastructure has him traveling the world to research, document and tell the story of how cities like Los Angeles, Toronto, Detroit and Rotterdam can transform degraded rivers, canals, and railroads to renew their cities, health and spirit. November 2014 | INtown 13


Cyclorama building to become restaurant, event space By Collin Kelley INtown Editor Once the Battle of Atlanta painting leaves Grant Park for its new home at the Atlanta History Center, the historic Cyclorama building will undergo a massive interior transformation. Atlanta-based sustainable design firm Epsten Group has been tapped by Zoo Atlanta to transform the circa-1921 building into a new event space and restaurant with a viewing area overlooking the African elephants, zebras, and giraffes in their savanna habitat. Peter Choquette, design and consulting department manager at Epsten Group, said it’s too early to announce a budget for the renovation project, but the wish list for the Cyclorama building is being fleshed out. The completion date is set for 2018, which gives the Atlanta History Center time to construct and build a new home

Special Left and below: Renderings of the interior of the renovated Cyclorama building from a video preview created by Zoo Atlanta. Above: The historic “postcard” facade of the Cyclorama building in Grant Park will be unchanged after the renovation.

for the painting, as well as move the giant Texas locomotive and other Civil War exhibits. Those concerned about what Choquette calls the “postcard image” of the front façade of the Cyclorama can

rest easy: the “original fabric of the building will remain intact. “The front façade will not change,” he said. “From the beginning, we said we don’t want to change that in any way.” The interior and rear of the building will be a different story. A restaurant, kitchen, catering facility

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and event space will require a complex interior renovation, Choquette said. There are also plans to add an outdoor deck to the viewing area over the savanna exhibit, as well as add a conservatory space for additional restaurant seating that will offer views into Grant Park. “The deck and the conservatory will fit very well into the structure and offer fantastic views,” Choquette said. He said there would be renovations to the front plaza once the building is done, and what will happen to the Zoo Atlanta administration building that sits opposite the plaza is still undetermined. Since 2008, Epsten has worked with Zoo Atlanta on several projects, including the parakeet aviary and tiger viewing area. “Epsten Group is focused on regenerative architecture, and we believe in Zoo Atlanta’s conservation efforts,” said Dagmar Epsten, the group’s president and CEO. “We are thrilled to be engaged with them in particular on this Grant Park meeting facility with views of big wildlife of the earth’s savannas, which will give our city’s human occupants the opportunity to connect with our global animal occupants like none other.”

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CLANG, CLANG WENT THE TROLLEY The return of streetcars to Downtown was a decade in the making

By Collin Kelley and Ann Taylor Boutwell INtown first wrote about the potential return of steetcars to Atlanta for the cover story of our October 2003 issue. That’s when former Atlanta City Council President Cathy Woolard was touting a plan created by Georgia Tech graduate student Ryan Gravel called “the belt line.” In line with Gravel’s thesis, she envisioned new trolleys connecting to MARTA via a “network of old train tracks that crisscross the city that are no longer in use.” That plan eventually became the Atlanta BeltLine, a 22-mile loop of abandoned rail circling the city that is slowly being reclaimed as walking and biking paths. Light rail is planned to complement the paths in the BeltLine in the future, but the city’s first real streetcar is expected to begin ferrying passengers around the Downtown core later this month. The Atlanta Streetcar’s 2.7 mile loop from Centennial Olympic Park to the King Center and back is the first installment of a larger vision of bringing trolleys back to a city which abandoned them in 1949. Back then, a network of streetcars connected the city’s neighborhoods and business hubs. You could hop on a streetcar and take it all the way to Decatur, which also had a streetcar system. After 1949, the city utilized the same overhead power lines that ran the streetcars for a system of electric buses. Those were discontinued for gas-powered buses in 1963. Before the “Great Recession” hit at the end of 2008, a number of plans were floating in hopes of recreating Portland, Oregon’s successful re-launch of streetcars to its downtown streets. MARTA floated the idea of a “flex trolley,” essentially trains running on tires in HOV lanes and dedicated paths along city streets. There was also a plan to run a streetcar line down Peachtree from Buckhead to old Fort McPherson. The Peachtree line might eventually come to fruition, but for now, all eyes are on Downtown and the big blue streetcars that are set to begin rolling any day now.

Special Above left: Streetcars traverse Alabama Street in Downtown in the 1920s near the old Atlanta National Bank Building in this historic postcard. Above right: We first reported on the potential for the streetcars’ return along with something nicknamed “the belt line” in the May 2003 edition. Left: The Atlanta Streetcars have been on the 2.7-mile loop through Downtown for testing in October, and opening day is scheduled before the end of this year.

pending properties: 3102 Kingscliff Way 880 Glendale Terrace #11

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sold properties in 2014:

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958 Lindbergh Drive 2304 Strathmore Drive

970 Mount Paran Road 871 Penn Avenue 195 14th Street #TS8 933 E. Rock Springs Road 653 N. Highland Avenue #7 4700 Magnolia Circle 1687 Briarcliff Road #7 905 Juniper Street #320 1382 Sheffield Glen Way 338 W. Hill Street

905 Juniper Street #321 77 Peachtree Place #411 3031 Park Street 2693 Northbrook Drive 3127 Lenox Road #16 375 Ralph McGill Blvd #804 1445 Monroe Drive #C22 471 Pine Tree Drive 1259 Village Run

Harry Norman, REALTORS® The Intown Office | 1531 Piedmont Avenue NE, Suite B | Atlanta, GA 30324 | Mike Wright, Sr.VP/Managing Broker | www.harrynorman.com Information is believed to be accurate, but is not warranted. Offers subject to errors, changes, omissions, prior sales, and withdrawals without notice. 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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November 2014 | IN


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Pet Pick Ivy is a 5-yearold boxer/pit bull mix looking for a best friend. She has so much to offer. She is loyal to a fault and is bursting with love. Ivy is also quite intelligent and enjoys learning. She is as beautiful as she is sweet, and anyone would be lucky to call her family. To adopt Ivy or any of the other available dogs and cats searching for a home, visit pawsatlanta.org or stop by the shelter at 5287 Covington Highway in Decatur. Special

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The Atlanta Humane Society’s annual Pet Parade - A Walk for Animals will be held Nov. 1 along the Chattahoochee River at Garrad Landing Park, 8000 Holcomb Bridge Road. All proceeds from the Pet Parade benefit the Atlanta Humane Society’s homeless animals. For more details and to sign-up, visit atlantapetparade.org. The Atlanta Humane Society offers a Grief Group for Pet Loss at the Howell Mill Campus on the second Saturday of each month from 11 a.m. - noon. Come share your story with group members experiencing similar loss and emotions. The session is led by Linda Ehlers, who holds a master’s degree in community counseling and education from Georgia Sate University. Ehlers is also available for individual counseling. The main objective of the group is to generate mutual support and comfort to one another. No appointment is necessary, and the cost is $5. For more information, visit atlantahumane.org or call the AHS Education Department at 404-974-2899.

Mighty Real... Atlanta Real Estate was another standalone publication that tried to get a handle on the booming building and renovation trends in the city. In this issue from 1999, the focus was on kitchen renovations, how to reclaim dormant space in a small home or condo, a look ahead to styles of the new millennium (Mediterranean never really caught on, did it?), and tips for installing cabinets and faucets.

404-367-0001 www.OrientalDesignerRugs.com 1250-B Menlo Dr. NW, Atlanta 30318 - Howell Mill/Huff Rd. Designer/Warehouse District Mon. thru Sat. 10-6pm | Cleaning. Repair. Restoration. Appraisal

16 November 2014 | INtown

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


Pets Are Loving Support Intown nonprofit nears 25th anniversary of helping people and pets By Kathy Dean As part of our anniversary, we’d like to reflect on another organization that has grown alongside us, one that contributes much to the Intown community – Pets Are Loving Support (P.A.L.S.). As a matter of fact, P.A.L.S. will be celebrating a major anniversary of its own next year. In January 2015, the nonprofit organization will reach the 25-year mark. P.A.L.S.’ mission – to provide ongoing care and support to pets of Atlanta area persons with critical illnesses, disabilities and the elderly – allows pets to stay with their owners at a time when they need each other the most. It’s well known that the powerful human-animal bond brings healing through love and companionship. “We serve 450 animals every month, and we haven’t ever turned anyone away, not even when the economy had its downturn,” said Kevin Bryant, P.A.L.S. executive director. “It can be a challenge, of course, since a lot of the people are facing very tough health and financial issues, but when it comes down to it, we’re there for the pets – and that only makes the owners’ lives better.” Bryant has been heading up P.A.L.S. for a little over eight years. While he’s the only staff member, and does everything from client services to grant writing, he was quick to point out that there’s also a core group of about 250 volunteers who all have their own special niches where they help, from food delivery to fundraising. Speaking of fundraising, P.A.L.S.’ monthly bingo games are a well-known community event. The games are held at Jungle Atlanta and feature tasty food, lively

music and exquisite drag queens who keep the party going strong. Bingo is an important part of the P.A.L.S. heritage, especially since it’s the group’s longest running source of income. Last November, however, saw a new, exciting event—the Manly Miss America Pageant. It got such an overwhelming response, it’s being repeated this year on Nov. 8. Photos are posted online and people vote for their favorites. The top 10 then appear in swimwear and eveningwear competitions – as well as in the delightful

question and answer segment. Last year, Bryant represented Alaska by dressing as Sarah Palin. As convincing as he was, the winner was a manly Dallas Cowboys cheerleader. It’s through these fun events that P.A.L.S. raises money for serious work. “We cover a lot of services for the people and their pets,” Bryant adds. “And we get no state or federal

funding. We survive on donations and the goodwill of the community alone.” The story of P.A.L.S. is a touching one: Two Atlanta businesswomen, veterinarian Dr. Susan Wynn and educator Dr. Margaret Schulte, were both volunteers for Project Open Hand. They met and discovered they shared a love of animals and a commitment to working with AIDS patients. While talking with another volunteer, they learned that there was a nearby AIDS patient who lived alone with his cat. He so loved his cat that he was sharing his one meal a day with it. He was also using the little money he had for vet care instead of his much-needed medications. This predicament touched the women’s hearts. They both understood that while this man was risking his life to care for his pet, the cat was his best friend, his only friend. The human-animal bond was critically important for his well-being. They further realized that this was not likely to be an uncommon issue for AIDS patients, most of whom had lost their jobs, homes and savings once they’d been diagnosed. Drs. Wynn and Schulte decided to take action and began to collect pet food. From this simple act of caring, P.A.L.S. was born. Since it started in 1990, P.A.L.S. has delivered free pet food to more than 1,000 clients and 1,300 companion animals in the metro Atlanta area. Today, the group also transports pets to veterinary clinics and pays for basic care, like exams, annual shots and spaying/neutering. When necessary, the organization can even provide contacts for free foster care and adoption programs. For Bryant, as for the volunteers, working with P.A.L.S. is a labor of love. “I love my job,” he said. “And I love that I’m able to help so many animals in this city.”

R E A L . M E A S U R A B L E . R E S U LT S . TOTAL CLOSED SALES GROWTH IN HOMES SOLD TOP FIVE COMPANIES, 2014 vs. 2013

20.4%

Atlanta Fine Homes Sotheby’s International Realty

7.0%

Keller Williams Realty

-2.4%

Harry Norman, REALTORS®

-3.5%

Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage

-8.3%

Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices Georgia Properties

When it comes to real, measurable results, the facts speak for themselves. Atlanta Fine Homes Sotheby’s International Realty has Metro Atlanta’s most productive agents. Coupling local expertise with the unparalleled global exposure only offered through Sotheby’s International Realty, our agents provide results. Visit AtlantaFineHomes.com to meet one of our 310 dedicated sales associates. Source: TrendGraphix Aggregated Brokers Report,Top Five Firms; January 1, 2014 - August 31, 2014 vs. January 1, 2013 - August 31, 2013.Total Sales Growth (in Units),Year-to-Date vs. Previous Year-to-Date for Cherokee, Cobb, DeKalb, Forsyth, Fulton and Gwinnett Counties. All Property Types; All Price Points.

AtlantaFineHomes.com Buckhead ~ 404.237.5000 Intown ~ 404.874.0300 North Atlanta ~ 770.442.7300 © MMXIV Sotheby’s International Realty Affiliates, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Rose Walk by Neal, 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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November 2014 | IN


Comprehensive Women’s

Nothing stays the same...

Health

Atlanta 30306 announces it will become Atlanta INtown in the October 1998 issue.

Lynley S. Durrett, M.D.

Obiamaka Mora, M.D. State of the art Pelvic & Bladder Surgeries Minimally Invasive Hysterectomy daVinci Robotic Surgery Bio Identical Hormone Therapy Services offered

» Incontinence Testing & Treatment » Abnormal Bleeding Treatment » Annual Exams & Contraception » Nutrient Deficiency Screening & Counseling » Saliva Testing & Pellet Hormone Therapy » Plus Aesthetic Services

Great News!

For the convenience of our patients, we have a new office location at Northside Hospital Campus. Appointments being accepted now! Call to schedule for either office today: 404-352-2850

Hello, Buckhead! Atlanta 30305 eventually morphed into Atlanta Buckhead. In this issue from February 1998, there was a big story on the redevelopment of the Lindbergh area.

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15%

Main Office: Piedmont Hospital Campus 105 Collier Rd NW, Suite 1080 Atlanta, GA 30309 404-352-2850 Satellite Office: Northside Hospital Campus 960 Johnson Ferry Road, Suite 336 Atlanta, GA 30342 404-352-2850

C AT H E D R A L B O O K S T O R E

www.mcdanielanddurrett.com 18 November 2014 | INtown

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e


INtown in Pictures

PEOPLE, PLACES & EVENTS

THAT

SHAPED OUR COMMUNITY

Former publisher Wendy Binns and editor Collin Kelley at Atlanta Botanical Gardens’ Scarecrow in the Garden.

The B-52’s frontwoman Cindy Wilson invited INtown into her North Buckhead home to see where all the band’s memorabilia is kept in 2003.

Children play on the Noguchi Playscape (installed in 1976) before its renovation in 2009.

The Georgia Aquarium under construction in Downtown in 2005.

Then Senator Hilary Rodham Clinton gave the commencement address at Agnes Scott College in Decatur in 2005. Atlanta actors Lauren Ruehring, Mitchell Anderson and Carolyn Cook were profiled in The Studio in 2003 as part of our fall arts preview.

Architect Santiago Calatrava was selected to build a new Symphony Center in Midtown in 2005.

A bit of Paris in Midtown: The Millennium Gate opened at Atlantic Station in 2008.

The bars of Buckhead Village were demolished to make way for a mixed-use development that was to be called Streets of Buckhead in 2008. A t l a n t a I N t o w n P a p e r. c o m

Georgia Tech’s Ramblin’ Wreck was on hand to mark the opening of the new Fifth Street Bridge in 2007.

Georgia Tech President Wayne Clough at the opening of Technology Square in 2000.

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November 2014 | IN


INtown in Pictures

The hit comedy “Peachtree Battle” became the longest running production in Atlanta, running from 2001 to 2013. IKEA opened its first store in the Southeast in 2005 at Atlantic Station, making inexpensive Swedish-designed furniture available to all.

On March 14, 2008 a tornado swept through Downtown and heavily damaged the Fulton Cotton Mill Lofts.

The iconic Alexander Calder sculpture on the front lawn of the High Museum in 2005.

The “Ghetto Burger” at Ann’s Snack Bar on Memorial Drive was named the best burger in America by the Wall Street Journal in 2007. In September 2005, Oglethorpe students helped pack supplies for Hurricane Katrina victims at DeKalb-Peachtree Airport.

local shopportunities all around Decatur this holiday season 20

INtown

November 2014 | 1 decatur-atl-intown-nov.indd

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TERRIFIC THURSDAYS

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Get gifty in November and December. Look for sales, snacks, and extended hours at local shops and restaurants during Terrific Thursdays in Decatur. Learn more at visitdecaturga.com

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

10/20/14 4:59 PM


Blasts from the past... From left: There was a short-lived publication called Atlanta Sandy Springs, which morphed into Atlanta North (covering Sandy Springs, Roswell and Alpharetta). In 1999, Schroder Publishing marked its 5th year in business on the cover of INtown with the motto “Your Neighborhood Newspaper With Universal Appeal.” That still applies 15 years later!

Atlanta’s Exceptional Property Specialists

donna boynton & joy myrick

Donna: 404.323.2012 Joy: 404.408.2331 Office: 404.261.6300 www.boytonandmyrick.com A SAMPLE OF OUR RECENT SALES

1124 Reeder Circle

898 Kings Court 758 Brookridge Drive 5138 Northside Drive 1219 Pasadena Avenue 1510 N. Morningside Drive 719 Elkmont Drive 679 E. Morningside Drive 1362 Lanier Blvd. 884 Highland View 560 Valley Green 523 Chevelle Lane 1397 Rock Springs Circle 1430 Harvard Road

Exclusively offered at $1,199,000

UNDER CONTRACT!

1011 COURTENAY DRIVE $1,125,000 A t l a n t a I N t o w n P a p e r. c o m

725 E. MORNINGSIDE DRIVE $949,000

UNDER CONTRACT!

708 CUMBERLAND ROAD $589,500

$1,059,000 $1,075,000 $1,010,000 $955,000 $842,500 $759,000 $750,000 $710,000 $659,000 $620,000 $633,500 $615,000 $430,000

#1 Selling Office In Atlanta Since 2007* One Buckhead Plaza | 3060 Peachtree Road, Suite 100. Atlanta, GA 30305 Dac Carver, Managing Broker. *Based on dollar volume of listings sold, single family detached only. MLS Areas 13,14,21,22,23,51,52,71,72,121,131,132. The information is believed accurate but is not warranted and is subject to errors. Equal Housing Opportunity.

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November 2014 | IN


School Briefs Cardlytics, an Atlantabased ad tech company, recently tapped into Atlanta’s high-tech talent pool in a unique and innovative way. The company held its third Cardlytics Iron Coder Software Engineering Competition at the Georgia Institute of Technology. Zhiyuan Lin, a Georgia Tech computer software engineering major, won first place and took home a cash prize of $2,000. Lin and the second and third place winners – Albert Shaw and Surenkumar Nihalnni – also secured job interviews with Cardlytics. Offering challenging academics and excellent opportunities in performing and fine arts, sports, technology and community service to students ages 3 through 12th grade.

PLEASE JOIN US: PROSPECTIVE PARENT MEETINGS All meetings start at 7:30 p.m. in the Black Box Theater MONDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 2014 TUESDAY, DECEMBER 2, 2014 WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 7, 2015 WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 21, 2015

Lovett choral student Chip Fankhauser has been selected for membership in the 2014 All-National Honor Choir, presented by the National Association for Music Education. Thousands of students from all 50 states auditioned for this prestigious ensemble. Only two choral students from Georgia were selected.

1509 Ponce de Leon Avenue Atlanta, GA 30307 LEARN MORE AT WWW.PAIDEIASCHOOL.ORG Paideia considers applications without regard to race, religion, ethnic group, or sexual orientation.

Paideia2014-15_INTOWN-NOV.indd 1

Where good kids become great people.

From the 204 taste tests served in Fulton County to the district-wide Children’s Farm Day for all third graders in Tift County, school districts across Georgia are using Farm to School programs to teach core curriculum, support their local economies, fight obesity and other preventable, food-related diseases, and increase the amount of local food they serve to their students. Those schools were recently honored with the Golden Radish Award, which is given to school districts in Georgia who are doing extraordinary work in farm to school. Atlanta Public Schools, City Schools of Decatur, Fulton County Schools and DeKalb County Schools were all recognized.

10/20/14 4:36 PM

Immaculate Heart of Mary Catholic School, 2885 Briarcliff Road, will host an open house on Nov. 16 from 3-5 p.m. IHM invites all prospective K-8 students and their parents to attend the event. A special presentation at 3:15 p.m. will provide an overview of IHM from both the administrative and student perspective. For more information, visit ihmschool.org.

Welcome to Modern Dental|Dentistry That Makes You Smile

Modern Dental is a dental facility designed with patients in mind. Adult Dentistry, Child Dentistry, Dental Implants, Cosmetic Dentistry, Extractions, FASTBRACES, Invisible braces, and much more!

Holy Innocents’ Episcopal School develops in students a love of learning, respect for self and others, faith in God, and a sense of service to the world community.

Complimentary take home whitening kit for all new patients!*

- Mission Statement

www.hies.org 404-255-4026

Dr. Eric Lawton

All-School Open House A community of 1,360 students, ages 3-years-old through 12th Grade. 22

INtown

Dr. Danielle Greene

www.ModernDentalAtlanta.com www.Facebook.com/ModernDentalGA

Saturday, Dec. 6, 11:00 a.m.

November 2014 | Fall_2014_HIES_Reporter.indd 1

* After initial visit of cleaning, x-rays & exam. In absence of gum disease.

8/25/14 4:18 PM

545 Edgewood Avenue Atlanta, GA 30312 (404) 589-0900

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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ATLANTAFINEHOMES.COM

Ansley Park. $769,000 50 Avery Drive NE 3BR/2BA FMLS: 5350102 Jared Sapp 404.668.7233

Ball Ground. $1,575,000 200 Woodhaven Lane 6BR/6Full 2half BA FMLS: 5303024 Allie Burks 678.772.8915

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

Brookhaven. $309,900 1970 Cobblestone Circle 3BR/3.5BA FMLS: 5352739 Bedel Thome 404.213.8035

Buckhead. $349,000 250 Pharr Road NE, No. 1913 2BR/2BA FMLS: 5343695 Erika Eaton 404.246.9330

Buckhead. $484,500 533 Hascall Road NW 4BR/2.5BA FMLS: 5351077 Betsy Meagher 404.414.8440

Druid Hills. $1,499,000 620 Pinetree Drive 4BR/4.5BA FMLS: 5348712 Betsy Akers 404.372.8144 Jim Getzinger 404.991.7700

Dunwoody. $222,000 54 Basswood Circle 4BR/3.5BA FMLS: 5337518 Randy Walters 404.432.6162

East Atlanta. $309,000 2113 Marshalls Lane SE 3BR/2.5BA FMLS: 5325450 Jim Getzinger 404.991.7700 Adam Morrison 404.981.7249

Edgewood. $219,000 1321 Hosea L Williams Drive SE 2BR/1BA FMLS: 5342954 Chrissie Kallio 404.295.2068

Garden Hills. $1,189,000 383 Peachtree Avenue NE 6BR/5.5BA FMLS: 5345738 Jim Getzinger 404.991.7700

Intown. $189,900 307 Cherokee Avenue SE, No. 9 1BR/1.5BA FMLS: 5336625 Robin Elliott 404.314.9777

Intown. $590,000 1772 Emory Ridge Drive NE 4BR/4BA FMLS: 5351706 Chase Horner 404.754.4133

Intown. $69,900 375 Ralph McGill Boulevard, No. 1404 Loft FMLS: 5346225 Jeff Riebesell 205.305.8008

Midtown. $2,900,000 229 Bradberry Street SW 3BR/3Full 2half BA FMLS: 5320025 Eydie Koonin 404.697.8215

Midtown. $549,000 805 Peachtree Street, No. 312 2BR/2.5BA FMLS: 5320128 Eydie Koonin 404.697.8215

Morningside. $1,375,000 1865 Wellbourne Drive NE 5BR/5BA FMLS: 5347428 Jim Getzinger 404.991.7700

Morningside. $899,900 545 Montgomery Ferry Drive 4BR/3.5BA FMLS: 5337366 Jack Truett 404.625.7626

Toccoa. $899,000 2018 Hwy 184 S 6BR/5.5BA FMLS: 5343174 Randy Walters 404.432.6162

Sandy Springs. $4,495,000 1295 Heards Ferry Road 6BR/6Full 3half BA FMLS: 5250291 Jared Sapp 404.668.7233

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. Summer Landscape by Van Gogh 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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November 2014 | IN


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To kick off the new millennium, a new editorial direction saw INtown the paper arranged like rooms of a house (Front Porch, Dining Room, etc).

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INtown Remembers In the October 2001 issue, the dead of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks were remembered on the cover.

ATLANTA MEDICAL CENTER INMAN PARK

NOW OFFERING EXTENDED HOURS Dr. Summers is a family medicine practitioner and her office sees children and adults. She has extended hours for flu shots and walk-ins (7:15-8:15 a.m. on Tuesday)

AERICA SUMMERS, MD, MPH

www.atlantamedcenter.com

24 November 2014 | INtown

New Hours:

Location:

Monday & Wednesday 8 a.m.-5 p.m. Tuesday 7:15 a.m.-5 p.m. Thursday 8 a.m.-6 p.m. Friday 8 a.m.-12 p.m.

240 North Highland Avenue Suite E Atlanta, GA 30307 404.524.2424

Flu vaccinations available.

Most major insurance plans accepted.

Call 404.524.2424 to schedule an appointment.

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


BRAND NEW TWO-STORY PENTHOUSES

INCLUDES HELICOPTER TRANSPORTS FOR 1 YR* FROM $1.4 MILLION 3 BEDROOMS + DEN 3.5 BATHROOMS

DESIGN YOUR OWN PENTHOUSE FROM $1.2 MILLION 404.524.4092 WATLANTARESIDENCES.COM WELCOME CENTER OPEN DAILY 45 IVAN ALLEN JR. BLVD. ATLANTA, GA 30308

A Downtown Atlanta Hotel LLC project. The Residences at W Atlanta - Downtown are not owned, developed or sold by Starwood Hotels & Resorts Worldwide, Inc., or their affiliates. Downtown Atlanta Hotel LLC uses the W速 trademarks and trade names under a license from Starwood Hotels & Resorts Worldwide, Inc. This is not an offer to sell or solicitation of offers to buy, nor is any offer or solicitation made where prohibited by law. The statements set forth herein are summary in nature and should not be relied upon. A prospective purchaser should refer to the entire set of documents provided by Downtown Atlanta Hotel LLC and should seek competent legal advice in connection therewith. EXCLUSIVE SALES AND MARKETING BY

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

The design concepts for the model residences at The Residences at W Atlanta - Downtown including all loose furnishings and certain fixtures and finishes, were entirely conceived by the participating designers. Starwood Hotels & Resorts Worldwide, Inc., The Residences at W Atlanta - Downtown and their affiliates were not involved in developing the design concepts or selecting such furnishings, fixtures and finishes for the unit and make no representations that they are consistent with the image, quality, design standards and expectations of the W Hotels速 Brand. * See agent for details.

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November 2014 | IN


Health Briefs

Atlanta INtown! BEST WISHES TO YOU AS YOU CELEBRATE YOUR 20TH ANNIVERSARY! The residents and staff of Canterbury Court appreciate all that you do to represent our city’s neighborhoods. As Atlanta’s first continuing care retirement community, our roots run deep, too. In 2015, just a few months from now, we will begin celebrating our own anniversary – our 50th! We’re proud to serve generations of Atlantans and invite our neighbors to visit.

Inviting Gardens Await You Our gardens span more than 10 acres, beckoning residents and guests to relax and reflect, walk with friends, walk the dog, spot a rare bird or two, or cultivate a bit of garden.

Surprisingly Affordable Living Our graciously detailed, up-to-date apartments for independent living come in many styles and sizes, from the most affordable in Buckhead to among the most luxurious. All with a full complement of amenities, services, activities and entertainment included. The ease of affordable living at Canterbury Court is often a pleasant surprise. We invite you to take a closer look.

CALL (404) 365-3163 TODAY TO SCHEDULE A PERSONAL VISIT AND COMMUNITY TOUR.

The Georgia Trust for Historic Preservation's sixth annual Uptown Rhodes Race 5K, presented by the Dewberry Foundation, will take place on Nov. 8 at 9 a.m. starting at Rhodes Hall, 1516 Peachtree St. The race will circle around the manicured landscape of Ansley Park golf course before returning to Rhodes Hall for the finish. "Pet pit stops" will be located along the route to provide dogs with drinking water and treats. After the race, participants will enjoy a post-race party featuring barbecue sandwiches from LowCountry Barbecue, treats, drinks and music. Participants will receive race t-shirts and goodie bags from Big Peach Running Co. Awards will be given to the top three overall finishers, the top three male and female racers in each age group, as well as the first stroller and first canine finisher. Registration is available at active. com. The Susan G. Komen Foundation has given $16.5 million in new grants to more than 50 early-career breast cancer researchers nationwide. The grants include $450,000 in new funding for research at Emory University, bringing Komen’s total research investment in Georgia to $2.8 million since 1982. Mylin Torres, MD, Winship Cancer Institute of Emory University, will use the funds to research ways to improve quality of life among breast cancer patients, specifically as it relates to inflammation caused by treatment and cancer-related fatigue. For more information about Komen Atlanta, visit KomenAtlanta.org. Kroger’s Atlanta Division customers donated more than $112,000 during the Great American Milk Drive supporting Feeding America in September. All proceeds from the fundraiser will be donated to local food pantries that provide essential food items to the more than 12.5 million families facing hunger and malnutrition in America. Fifth Third Bank Broadway in Atlanta kicked off the engagement of the hit musical Mamma Mia! with a special charity check presentation at the Fox Theatre. The donation was made to the The Leukemia & Lymphoma Society Georgia Chapter, a nonprofit health organization dedicated to funding blood cancer research, and providing education and patient services. A total of $9,450 was raised for the nonprofit organization. Dr. Mark Sweatman, an amputee who lost his leg in 2010, will lead a 140-mile walk around and through Atlanta from November 8-16 to raise funds and awareness for Lost-n-Found Youth. Mark will post during the walk to wmarksweatman.org where all the maps are included, and welcomes volunteers who want to walk with him. Lostn-Found Youth Inc. is the only nonprofit agency that assists homeless LGBTQ youth in Atlanta. This is the second annual Mark Sweatman Inspirational Walk for charity. Last year Mark walked 120 miles from Atlanta to Birmingham to raise funds for Limbs for Life, a national nonprofit that provides prosthetic limbs for amputees who cannot afford them. The Georgia Center for Nonprofits (GCN) announces the third annual Georgia Gives Day will take place on Nov. 13. This online fundraiser will drive awareness and donations for participating nonprofits across the state, as Georgians come together for a 24-hour day of giving. Since the inaugural event in 2012, Georgia Gives Day has brought more than 1,700 participating nonprofits together with nearly 19,000 donors to raise more than $2.5 million that directly benefited these nonprofits. Donors can give directly via the Georgia Gives Day website or through their mobile device. Learn more by visiting GAgivesday.org.

ANNOUNCING THE

3750 Peachtree Road, N.E. Atlanta, Georgia 30319

canterburycourt.org Canterbury Court is Atlanta’s first and foremost continuing care retirement community, non-profit, and committed to welcoming all people.

26 November 2014 | INtown

Reed & Barton Baby’s First Stocking #82412 $129 *Ribbon is dated with 2014

GORHAM SNOWFLAKE 45 TH EDITION #82422 $109

Wallace Grande Baroque Cross 19th Edition

Towle Star 18th Edition #82429 $109

#82436 $109

The premiere source for fine sterling silver

3164 Peachtree Road, Atlanta GA 30305 404.261.4009 • 800.270.4009 www.beverlybremer.com A t l a n t a I N t o w n P a p e r. c o m


John Eder The Go-Getter 678.984.9523

Decatur: $137,900 2277 Cresta Drive 3BR/2BA FMLS: 5352183

Kensington: $219,000 459 Kensington Parc Way 3BR/2.5BA FMLS: 5353651

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Atlanta: $129,900 5644 Laurel Ridge Drive 4BR/2.5BA FMLS: 5353745

Rebecca Feldstein 404.433.2120

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LaVista Park: $515,000 1097 Longwood Trace 3BR/2.5BA FMLS: 5351048

Woodland Hills: $329,900 2081 Arliington Ave 3BR/2BA FMLS: 5344982

Milton: $899,900 3041 Lower Birmingham Rd 4BR/3.5BA FMLS: 5348035

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Lavista Park: $579,900 1152 Chantilly Commons Dr, NE 5BR/4BA FMLS: 5352160

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Greta Holland 404.861.6335

Dunwoody: $525,000 1440 Dunwoody Club Drive 6BR/3.5BA FMLS: 5253383

Jamie Sternleib 404.518.8384

Midtown: $299,900 Plaza Midtown Condominiums 2BR/2BA Approx. 1091 sq. ft.

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Brookhaven: $240,000 1427 North Druid Hills 2BR/2BA FMLS: 5284999

Tom Sands 404.626.6579

Greg Williamson 678.570.5033

Sagamore Hills: $500,000 2080 Pine Forest 5BR/3BA FMLS: 5347932

Morningside: $510,000 731 Wildwood Place 3BR/3.5BA FMLS: 5323048

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Vinings 30339 Exceptional “Lake Lot” John Willis, Builder Linda D’Orazio, Architect Approx. 7,500 sq. ft. Century Center: $250,000 Clairmont @ I-85 3BR/2BA/All Brick Ranch

Full Blue Prints Available for Review 6BR/5.5BA

Sutherland Place: $295,000 1876 Gordon Manor 2BR/2BA FMLS: 5344967

Decatur: $489,900 2591 Dusty Lane 5BR/3.5BA FMLS: 5323089

Old 4th Ward: $134,900 95 Hogue Street Lot Size Approx. 134 x 42

Vinings: $174,900 Vinings Main Condominiums 1BR/1BA Approx 897 sq. ft.

404.844.4977 • www.AtlantaCommunities.net • 1801 Peachtree Street, Atlanta GA 30309 Mike Doebler, Managing Broker | MikeDoebler@AtlantaCommunities.net

Natashia Bush, Mortgage Loan Originator, NMLS #658819, GARML #42564

Cell: 770.241.5029

Office: 678.738.0516

natashiabush@silvertonmortgage.com

www.SilvertonMortgage.com 1201 Peachtree St, NE, Ste 2050, Atlanta, GA 30361 404.815.0291 Silverton Mortgage Specialists, Inc. (NMLS 109600) is an Equal Housing Lender, Silverton Mortgage Specialists, Inc is a licensed mortgage lender. AL: 20528, GA: 14123, NC: L-111493, SC: BFIMLS-109600, TN: 109243, FL: MLD353. Equal Housing Opportunity Lender

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

1801 Peachtree Street, Suite 150, Atlanta, GA 30309 404.812.9555

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November 2014 | IN


Enjoy retirement by living your way at Saint Anne’s Terrace in the heart of Buckhead! After I moved to Atlanta from North Carolina, Saint Anne’s Terrace quickly became home. I love the gardens, the exceptional staff, and my new friends. - Ginny Fick

404-238-9200

3100 Northside Parkway, NW Atlanta 30327

www.saintannesterrace.org

Escape to...

North GeorgiaTheMountains Views are Endless!

Sizzling Mountain Home - MLS 236930 - $449,500 4 Bedroom, 3.5 Bathroom Panoramic Views Creek Frontage 4.0 Wooded Acres Finished Basement Screened “Party Porch”

A View From The Top - MLS 241424 - $224,900 3 Bedroom, 3 Bathroom Cherry Log Mountain All Wood Interior Soaring Rock Fireplace Oversized Porches Spacious Floorplan

Public Safety Briefs The Buckhead Coalition, Midtown Alliance and Central Atlanta Progress are trying a pilot program to provide field trauma kits to Atlanta Police Department officers patrolling those zones. The Trauma Plate Pack contains hemostatic gauze, tourniquet, compression dressing, gloves and more. The initial distribution will provide 30 kits for each zone. Buckhead Alliance President Sam Massell led the effort after finding out about the field kits through its sister community relationship with the British Island of Bermuda. Police Chief George Turner has signed new policies aimed at establishing Atlanta Police Department procedures for interactions with transgender, intersex and gender non-conforming individuals. “This important policy is a formal recognition that this community will be entitled to the same level of respect, Buckhead Coalition President Sam Massell shows courtesy and professionalism extended off the field trauma kits that will be given to Atlanta to all citizens with whom our officers Police officers in Zone 2. interact,” Chief Turner said. “We live in a diverse, major metropolitan city, and our policies must reflect the need to embrace, and work cooperatively with, every citizen we serve within that broad community.” All department personnel will receive training on the new standard operating procedure, which was developed in compliance with standards of the Commission on Accreditation for Law Enforcement Agencies (CALEA). The training will be held with the assistance of APD’s LGBT Liaison Officers, Senior Police Officer Brian Sharp and Officer Eric King.

AtlantaGymnasticsCenter.com 2014

Fall Registration Information Now Available!

View Va Licious - MLS 242257 - $398,000 3 Bedroom, 3 Bathroom Rich MTN Wilderness True Log Lodge Master En-Suite Gourmet Kitchen Successful Rental

NathanFitts 706-455-9968

www.NathanFitts.com 28 November 2014 | INtown

2617-B Talley Street Decatur, GA 30030 Phone: 404.687.9911 Fax: 404.687.9177 A t l a n t a I N t o w n P a p e r. c o m


TimmyDaddy By Tim Sullivan

From left, friends Brian McCarty, Tim Sullivan and Kent Schneider shared a pad at Gables of Buckhead in 1994.

From Boston to Buckhead In something of a fun coincidence, the 20th anniversary of Atlanta INtown perfectly marks my own arrival in town. Like many transplants, my wife Kristen still thinks of where she grew up in New Jersey as “home,” which is understandable, but for me it’s solidly A-town. If a new grey hair sprouts every time I utter the phrase 20 years ago, then so be it. I need a quick trip down memory lane! Twenty years ago, I graduated from Boston College and moved to Atlanta with a bunch of friends because the Boston winters were wearing us out. I suppose I could have moved back to New York where I grew up, but the Olympics were coming to Atlanta and there was this magical neighborhood called Buckhead where every night was a street party. My buddy McCarty and I arrived on a Saturday night and it felt like we somehow magically drove to Rio in a 1991 Toyota Camry wagon. Twenty years ago, the Gables of Buckhead apartments were newly built and the paint had barely dried when we moved in. My share of the rent was $455, which was about $55 over my budget so we couldn’t afford much furniture, but the proximity to CJ’s Landing, The Lodge and Three Dollar Café were hard to argue with. Out of my bedroom window, I could peer up Pharr Road to Taco Mac on one side and Oxford books on the other. Who needs furniture, right? Twenty years ago, I needed a job so I worked as a rug porter at Rugs by Robinson in ADAC. It was fun to learn a new trade while looking for a real job, whatever that was. I relied on Creative Loafing heavily to introduce me to the city, so I figured why not pop in the office and see if there was a job opening at the paper itself. It turns out there was. I thought this will be a smooth “Tim Sullivan, English Major, pleased to meet you. I love writing words! Where’s my office?” But the guy was only interested in my computer skills and how many A t l a n t a I N t o w n P a p e r. c o m

words per minute I could type, and he didn’t mean while being clever. In college I finger-tapped papers on a Smith Corona word processor that sounded like a machine gun when printing. They did not need my services. Twenty years ago, I went on a series of interviews with UPS for an overnight shift job that had something to do with package security. The interviewer said he really liked that I had lifeguarding experience. I was informed I would need to get a haircut and invest in more white shirts. With each successive interview I tried to reshuffle the deck “Tim Sullivan, English Major – can I drive one of the brown trucks?” Despite assurances that the benefits were great and that upward mobility could be swift, I declined the offer. I couldn’t bring myself to care enough whether a package was lost or delivered on time. Plus, I would have been dearly missed at CJ’s. Twenty years on and perhaps not surprisingly, I’m still in the rug business. I rely on UPS every day and care deeply about the security and timeliness of my packages. So it goes. And the good people at Atlanta INtown don’t judge how quickly I type my words. I’ve lived in Buckhead, VirginiaHighland, Midtown, Cabbagetown and Decatur, and morphed from a bemused outsider to someone who gets goose bumps when Samuel L. Jackson beckons “Rise up Atlanta!” So cheers to INtown on the 20th anniversary! And cheers to my fellow transplants and the lifers who have welcomed us. I think since I’ve outlasted Turner Field and my daughter pronounces certain words with a southern twang I’ve achieved native status, no? Readers do tell – what were you doing 20 years ago? Best story gets a fishbowl at LuLu’s Bait Shack on me. 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.

Park Springs Member Geri Houpt

“I love my new home at Park Springs. I have everything I need and the freedom to travel without worry of security or maintenance. Plus I have many new friends, wonderful activities and onsite healthcare!” When Geri Houpt moved to Park Springs, she customized her new home to match her active lifestyle and gave her family and herself peace of mind about her future.

Call or click to schedule a private tour

678-684-3300

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November 2014 | IN


IN BUSINESS

RETAIL | MONEY & FINANCE | DEVELOPMENT

TRUE ORIGINALS

The businesses that helped INtown grow By Elizabeth Wilkes From the very beginning, Atlanta INtown has relied on the advertising dollars from local businesses to publish each issue. As we celebrate our 20th anniversary, we profile the local businesses that appeared in our very first issue back in 1994. We’re pleased to see so many of them still going strong.

Atkins Park Restaurant and Bar

794 N. Highland Ave., Atlanta, 30306 atkinspark.com From humble beginnings as a deli in 1922, Atkins Park has since transformed into a neighborhood favorite with full dining and a bar, and is Atlanta’s oldest continuously operating tavern. “There is something here for families, the young, the late night workers, and visitors of our historic neighborhood,” said Sandra Spoon, who started as a server in 1985 and worked her way to her current position as Chief Financial Officer of Atkins, which now includes an additional Smyrna location and Ormsby’s. “If you know the old TV series Cheers, I think that gives the best visual of who we are.” The classic menu offers tried-and-true Southern fare, while increasing offerings of new craft beers and regular menu updates from the executive chef keep Atkins current as a popular and comfortable spot to relax and enjoy a meal.

Briarcliff Animal Clinic

1850 Johnson Road, NE, Atlanta, 30306 briarcliffanimal.com When Briarcliff Animal Clinic was founded in 1959, Dr. Peter J. Muller II. lived on the premises with his wife, Peggy. As the hospital grew, his son, Dr. Peter J. Muller III, joined the practice, and still heads it today. The practice also expanded to locations in Sandy Springs and College Park. “Our doctors are constantly educating themselves on the latest in veterinary medicine,” said Catherine Muller, grandaughter of the founder. “We have always been on the cutting edge with technology that you typically only see in human medical facilities.” Accredited by the American Animal Hospital Association, the clinic is open 24/7 for emergencies in addition to providing regular veterinary care, with several vets certified by the American Board of Veterinary Practitioners.

Aurora Coffee

468 Moreland Ave., NE, Atlanta, 30307 auroracoffee.com Seattle native Betsy Buckley founded Aurora Coffee in 1992 in VirginiaHighland. While that location has since closed, Aurora lives on just down the street in Little Five Points. After starting as a cashier in August 2005, managing partner Mathis Hunter completed a rigorous barista training program, which ensures that the shop continues to maintain its standards for good coffee as the industry continuously changes. Hunter describes Aurora as a totally independent coffee shop run by some of Atlanta’s finest baristas, many of which double as artists, craftsmen and musicians. “We are the city’s first specialty coffee shop and have been a true neighborhood gathering place since the ‘90s.”

Flora Dora HammerSmith, Inc.

807 Church St., Decatur, 30030 hammersmith.net Since 1991, Druid Hills native Warner McConaughey and his team have been providing Atlantans with premier design-build service. From the beginning, HammerSmith, Inc. has been about designing to please the client. Every job is different for the architecture and renovation firm, taking into account each homeowner’s unique needs and interests – there isn’t a ‘HammerSmith house.’ “We’ve never had a showroom, because our business is not about products,” McConaughey said. “The first thing we talk about with clients is their lifestyle – what problems they are facing, and how we can fix them.” HammerSmith continues to work on homes in neighborhoods around Atlanta, ranging in style from traditional to contemporary.

30 November 2014 | INtown

1830 Cheshire Bridge Road, Atlanta, 30324 myfloradoraonline.com Thirty-five years ago, Anthony Pernice moved from New York City to Atlanta in hopes of starting a business. Flora Dora began in a flea market, which led to a retail spot on Amsterdam Avenue before moving to its current home on Cheshire Bridge Road. “As the city grew, my business grew,” said Pernice. “We are the top silk floral company in Atlanta, with a unique store offering accessories, home décor and original art from local artists.” Flora Dora customizes every flower, shrub, and tree for its broad range of clients: interior designers, businesses like Macy’s and Crate & Barrel, to Agnes Scott College and City Hall, and increasingly, the film industry.

Camera Bug

1799 Briarcliff Road NE, Atlanta, 30306 camerabug.com Larry Fruhwirth established Camera Bug in 1980, and it soon became a staple for cameras and photo development. After he passed away, longtime friend Tim Nix gained ownership, and has operated the store since 2004. In the midst of the digital camera revolution, Nix opted to shift the focus from film cameras to a new niche: telescopes. Camera Bug carries on today with a wide-ranging inventory of telescopes, binoculars and telescope accessories. “I’m one of the only stocking dealers of telescopes in the Southeast,” said Nix. “I have a whole lot of inventory that is not so neatly arranged, but I can usually find exactly what you need.”

George’s Restaurant

1041 N. Highland Ave., NE, Atlanta, 30306 georgesbarandrestaurant.com George’s Restaurant is famous for its burgers, but it wasn’t always that way. George Najour established a deli and grocery in his name in 1961. His son, G.G. Najour, started working at George’s part time in college, and he’s been there ever since, taking over as owner-operator in 1991 so his father could retire. “In the early 1980s, I changed the place from a deli to a full restaurant,” said G.G. “From the beginning, we wanted to have excellent burgers.” While the menu has expanded over the years, the most popular item is still burgers – traditional beef, and now turkey, veggie, black bean and lamb burgers, too. A t l a n t a I N t o w n P a p e r. c o m


Home ReBuilders

2120 Plaster Bridge Road, Atlanta, 30324 homerebuilders.com Bill Bartlett purchased the small home remodeling company founded by Diane Stephenson in 1989. Over the past 25 years, it has grown to be one of Atlanta’s largest renovation firms building a reputation for quality remodeling with its in-house architects, designers and construction team. In the early years, the business primarily helped Intown homeowners who were desperate for reliable help in preserving their older homes. “Today we work with people who tend to be more focused on design, are more savvy about trends and have an increased interest in their home’s value,” Bartlett said. “We have tried to stay true to our original mantra, generating creative projects with quality construction while having fun.” In 2002, the company opened its handyman division, DogGoneHandy, to meet the demands of previous clients looking for help with home maintenance.

Murphy’s Restaurant

Mellow Mushroom

Multiple locations around Atlanta mellowmushroom.com Thirty years ago, two Georgia Tech students started what is now the iconic Mellow Mushroom pizza. The first store opened in 1974 out of an old liquor store on Spring Street. Their attempt at perfecting pizza became so popular that they opened up new locations around Atlanta, and began franchising in the 1980s to employees and customers. Atlanta artist Buddy Finethy is responsible for creating the colorful mushroom characters that adorn restaurant menus and décor. The visuals remained largely unchanged since its inception until 2011, when Finethy himself redesigned the logo with “Mel O. Mushroom” holding a slice of pizza. While the restaurant continues to open new franchises annually, Atlanta is still Mellow Mushroom’s hometown, with locations in Buckhead and Midtown, and nearly a dozen others in the metro Atlanta area.

San Francisco Coffee Roasting Co.

997 Virginia Ave., NE, Atlanta, 30306 murphys-atlanta-restaurant.com Tom Murphy opened Murphy’s on Dec.1, 1980, modeled on his favorite New York City delicatessens. A deli counter used to stand where the bar is today, as Murphy’s became a Virginia-Highland cornerstone for American comfort food. “We have always been committed to offering the freshest food available, at a value,” said Murphy. “Purchasing from local produce vendors, rather than big suppliers, made the most sense as far as value and quality were concerned.” Murphy’s has become a supporter of community endeavors like Project Open Hand and the school garden at Morningside Elementary School. Murphy’s continues to offer its popular weekend brunch, along with a bakery and wine shop.

1192 N. Highland Ave., Atlanta, 30306 sanfranciscocoffeeroastingco.com Doug Bond opened San Francisco Coffee Roasting Company in 1994 in VirginiaHighland when coffee in Atlanta was in its infancy. Getting your morning cup of joe or latte was not so convenient then. He brought the classic neighborhood coffeehouse, with its casual San Francisco style, to the city. There are now three locations around Intown. With their onsite coffee roaster in VirginiaHighland, you can literally smell the coffee in the air if you happen to be in the neighborhood. While there have been many changes in the coffee industry over the years, the coffeehouse remains a neighborhood fixture. Bond said: “We have been told many times over the years, ‘don’t change a thing!’” A t l a n t a I N t o w n P a p e r. c o m

Intown Ace Hardware

854 N. Highland Ave., NE, Atlanta, 30306 intownace.com After buying the store with their combined life savings, Intown Hardware was founded in 1979 by brothers Doug and Joe Eifrid. Upon seeing initial success, the brothers moved to the N. Highland Avenue location in August 1981, and decided to call it “Intown Hardware,” since at the time the area was not considered Downtown, Midtown or Uptown. As the “Intown” name stuck and the area grew, so did the store – its sales more than doubling for several years. Joe decided to build a new store from the ground up in Decatur in 1984, splitting the company in the process. To this day, the ownership remains in the family. Doug still operates the Highland store along with his sister. Both stores use the Ace Hardware buying cooperative while maintaining their established place in the community for over 30 years.

Oriental Designer Rugs

1250-B Menlo Drive, NW, Atlanta, 30318 orientaldesignerrugs.com A family affair from the beginning, the Golchha family started producing handmade rugs in India in 1973. Oriental Designer Rugs was established in New York City in 1984, with the Golchha’s importing rugs from their home country. Ten years later, the company set up a showroom in Atlanta and permanently relocated to Amsterdam Avenue when the Olympics came to town. This year marks the family’s 30th in business, and founder Benny Golchha, at nearly 70, is still active in operations along with his son, Vineet, who joined the company in 1998, and Renu Giri, who joined in 1990. The team continues to cover all aspects of handmade oriental rugs, from design and production to import and retail, at their new location in the West Midtown design district.

Re/Max “The Intowners”

1189 S. Ponce de Leon Ave., NE, Atlanta, 30306 theintowners.com Peter Bade moved from New York to Atlanta for college more than 30 years ago and has never considered leaving since. “Intown is an awesome, easy place to live, with everything at your fingertips,” said Bade, who has loved the community since purchasing a 1920s home near Piedmont Park in 1979. He obtained his real estate license soon after, graduating from Georgia State with a master’s in historic preservation. Along with developing his real estate reputation, Bade has been continually involved in preserving the history and green spaces of Atlanta. Today, Bade is based in Midtown and merged with Julie Sadlier and Sandy D’Aprile to collectively form “The Intowners” team of award-winning realtors with Re/Max Metro Atlanta Cityside.

Highland Pet Supply

1186 N. Highland Ave., Atlanta, GA 30306 highlandpet.com For 20 years, Highland Pet Supply has been providing food, toys, dog washing and more for the community from its retail store in Virginia-Highland. Dog training was originally taught in the parking lot, but moved to its own facility in the mid-90s at Amsterdam Walk before moving into a brand new training center on Rankin Street. Owners Ian Awbrey and Toni Barry said dogs and their humans can be taught leash control and basic commands in private training sessions, including a “puppy primer.”

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November 2014 | IN


ATKINS PARK

TRUE ORIGINALS Engel & Volkers

ATKINSPARK.COM 794 N. HIGHLAND AVE 404-876-7249

1411 N. Highland Ave., Atlanta, 30306 engelvoelkers.com Engel & Volkers was originally know as Fourteen West when it started in 1973. Scott Askew acquired the real estate company in 1995, and he sought to maintain Fourteen West as the “neighborhood shop” for those looking to buy and sell homes in the area. Askew said as Intown’s neighborhoods began to diversify, he noticed more of his clients were Dutch, British, Chinese and German. When he was approached by Engel & Volkers, Askew jumped at the opportunity to become “part of a true international real estate company,” which has more than 500 offices outside the U.S. Askew’s firm was the first from Georgia to join Engel & Volkers this past April. “It’s been very good for us,” Askew said. “We’re seeing more people wanting to buy Intown because of amenities like restaurants, shops, the BeltLine and wanting to park their cars and be able to walk. It’s very exciting.”

Ten Thousand Villages

1056 St. Charles Ave., Atlanta, 30306 atlanta.tenthousandvillages.com Back in 1994, Ten Thousand Villages was called Windows on the World, but the Virginia-Highland fair trade retailer’s mission remains the same: establishing long-term buying relationships where skilled artisans from around the globe lack opportunities for stable income. Two friends, Marg Lambert and Karen Gross, started the Virginia-Highland store in 1993. Gross, a nurse practitioner, and Lambert, a grade school teacher, were moved to take action after learning about children living in the Guatemala City Dump. The duo’s creative energy continues to operate the store today, along with a very active board of directors. The store hosts Nonprofit Shopping Nights in November and December which give sales to artisans, but also gives a small percentage back to local nonprofits in Atlanta.

Worthmore Jewelers

500 Amsterdam Ave., Atlanta, 30306 worthmorejewelers.com Worthmore has been a passion project for its owners Harris and Gerri Botnick for 20 years. The first shop opened on Amsterdam Walk in 1994 and a second in Decatur in 2008. The Botnicks said their clientele started out purchasing simple silver bands and return whenever there is another occasion – an engagement, commitment ceremony, marriage birthday or holiday. The shop also does repairs and offers appraisals.

Tell them you saw it in Atlanta INtown 32 November 2014 | INtown

Additional reporting for this article provided by Collin Kelley, Sydia Bell and David Burleson. 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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1411 North Highland Avenue Atlanta, GA 30306 404-874-6357 http://intownatlanta.evusa.com 2014 Engel & Volkers. All rights reserved. Each brokerage independently owned and operated. All information provided is deemed reliable but its not guaranteed and should be independently verified. Engel & Volkers and its independent License Partners are Equal 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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By Collin Kelley INtown Editor Invest Atlanta, the city’s economic development authority, has announced a request for proposals for the redevelopment of the Boisfeuillet Jones Atlanta Civic Center on the cusp of Downtown and the Old Fourth Ward. The nearly 20-acre site, which sits at 295 Piedmont Avenue between Pine Street and Ralph McGill Boulevard, is currently owned by the city’s Department of Parks and Recreation and is one of the largest assemblages of land in Downtown. “The redevelopment of the Boisfeuillet Jones Atlanta Civic Center will bring renewed economic and cultural vibrancy to the surrounding neighborhoods,” said Mayor Kasim Reed. “I have great confidence that the deliberate, open process being put forward by Invest Atlanta will allow us find a partner capable of transforming this asset into a destination that will attract people to the heart of Atlanta for many years to come.” Along with speaking to primary and secondary redevelopment objectives, submitted proposals must also conform to city of Atlanta zoning restrictions, as

well as align with community interests. Around 100 people were in attendance last month for a meeting with community leaders about the future of the Civic Center property. According to Tim Hollis, president of the Fourth Ward West Neighborhood Association, the majority of residents at the meeting wanted a mixeduse development including retail, restaurants, office and residential. He said walkability and the development being easily accessible to residents was important. Invest Atlanta said “innovative public/private partnerships in support of the technology and the bio-sciencesectors, as well as the growing film and entertainment industry” are also possibilities for the site. Proposals are due Dec. 10 and finalists will be asked to provide their firm’s offers at the beginning of the year. Once a recommended developer is selected, their proposal will be evaluated and reviewed by the Invest Atlanta Board of Directors. The Civic Center, which was built in 1967 on former slum land known as Buttermilk Bottom, seats 4,600 and has hosted concerts, theater and, more recently, has become home to taping shows like Family Feud.

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34 November 2014 | INtown

A t l a n t a I N t o w n P a p e r. c o m Atlanta Intown_4.94x6.185_ATC.indd 1

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THE NEXT BIG THING Ponce City Market is transforming the O4W By Collin Kelley INtown Editor “Amazing” was the word I could not stop uttering when I was given a tour of Ponce City Market back in September 2012. Construction was just getting under way to transform the former Sears, Roebuck & Co. catalog distribution center and, later, City Hill East, into a giant, mixed-use development in the Old Fourth Ward. City leaders have heralded the transformation of the building as another big leap forward in Atlanta’s draw as a tourist destination, and the potential for similar historic properties like Underground Atlanta. PCM has also spurred more residential in its shadow, including apartments and condos that want to be near the action. It’s more than two years later, and the first clutch of retailers and businesses have opened their doors, while residents are also moving into The Flats, the 259 loft-style apartments now available for lease. Dancing Goats Coffee, Binders Art Supply and Frames, General Assembly, The Suzuki School and athenahealth are up and running in the 2 million square feet of space and its 16-acre campus between Ponce de Leon and North Avenues. More tenants are expected to be announced this month. Since my first tour, the soaring ceiling held up by massive mushroomcapped columns has been transformed into the Market Hall, which will be like Manhattan’s Chelsea Market, Pike Place Market in Seattle or Pier 39 in San Francisco. Chai Pani, Simply Seoul Kitchen, H&F Burger and Honeysuckle Gelato are on the way. The 4.5 acres of open rooftop with commanding views of Downtown, Midtown and Buckhead will pay tribute to the PCM site, which before Sears was once the Ponce de Leon Amusement Park. This will be the “fun level” with a putt-putt

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golf course, carnival games and a bar and restaurant for residents of The Flats and visitors. The old railroad trestle that used to bring boxcars into the building for easy loading when it was Sears’ regional catalog warehouse is being transformed into a mezzanine, which will feature a food and drinks. This level will also offer direct bike and walking access from the Atlanta BeltLine, which runs directly along the east side of PCM. For a building that is 86 years old (with additions built in the ‘40s and ‘60s), developer Jamestown said the entire structure was built like a tank and in remarkably good condition. As work on the building continues into the new year, artifacts from the early 20th century have been found and preserved for future use to keep the building’s character or as sculptural pieces. There are light fixtures, scales, wooden file cabinets, clocks and a massive mail-sorting machine from Sears. With Atlanta’s long history of tearing down its historic buildings, the fact that PCM is still standing is a miracle in itself.

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Business & Retail Briefs This month, Mason Murer Fine Art will move to a new space and transform into Mason Fine Art and Events. The new location will open Nov. 14 at 1386 Mayson St., a mile from the current location on Armour Drive in Buckhead. The new 21,000-square-foot facility’s opening exhibition will feature Linda Mitchell, Abbey Ryan, Keiko Gonzalez, Larry Walker, Otto Lange, Terri Dilling, Pam Moxley, Heather Hilton, Carl Holzman, Joe Remillard, Karen O’Neil, Jan Lukens, Allison Shockley, Erik Gonzales, Christine Hayman, Robert Marchessault, and an outsider art exhibition, Religion and Spirituality in Southern Vernacular Art. Check out masonmurer.com/moving for updates. Women in Film & Television Atlanta (WIFTA) will celebrate its 40th anniversary with an event on Nov. 8 starting at 6:30 p.m. at The Wimbish House on Peachtree Street in Midtown. There will be hors d'oeuvres, drinks, music and remarks by special guests from Georgia's film and television community. “We are excited to reminisce about the influence WIFTA has had on Atlanta's TV/film community over the last 40 years and are extremely proud of strides the industry made as it relates to women in general,” stated WIFTA Vice President of Communications Tanisha Coffey. “But we also know there is so much more we can accomplish. The journey continues. We're looking forward to spearheading another 40 years of progress.” For tickets and information, visit WIFTA.org. Kamileon’s Kloset, an Atlanta-based nonprofit whose mission is to transform lives by promoting the economic independence of men and women seeking employment, will host its annual Sip ‘N Shop for Charity event on Nov. 7 from 4 to 9 p.m. and Nov. from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. The event features designer samples and overstock merchandise from top retailers. New clothes, shoes and cosmetics from brands such as Ralph Lauren, Chanel, Anne Klein, Calvin Klein, Sean John and Bobbi Brown, to name a few, are available at up to 80 percent below retail value. The event will be held at Kamileon’s Closet, 3110 Sports Ave. in Smyrna. For more information, visit thekloset.org. Simon and Noble Investment Group have announced a joint venture to bring the AC Hotels by Marriott brand to Phipps Plaza in Buckhead. Located at the intersection of Peachtree and Wieuca roads and adjacent to Nordstrom at Phipps Plaza, the AC by Marriott Buckhead will be the brand's first hotel in Atlanta. It is scheduled to open in January 2016. The hotel will feature 166 rooms and suites, a lounge, 2,500 feet of flexible meeting space, a library, indoor pool and more. www.shared-vision.net

Kroger has opened its 2,000th Fuel Center in Decatur at 2385 Wesley Chapel Road. The new Fuel Center will offer a total of 18 fueling pumps, including 9 diesel fuel pumps. It will be open daily from 6 a.m. – 11 p.m. Georgia Commerce Bank has named Cassie Smith as senior vice president of finance and Chuck Shaw as senior vice president of compliance and risk management. Locally, the Atlanta-based bank has locations in Brookhaven and Buckhead. Tongue & Groove nightclub turns 20 this month. The 8,600-square-foot nightclub, lounge Cassie Smith Chuck Shaw and event venue located in the Lindbergh area of Atlanta at 2420 Piedmont Road will celebrate with a huge birthday event on Nov. 20. For more details visit tandgonline.com. Columbia Property Trust announced that it has completed the sale of a fivebuilding, 1 million-square-foot, Class-A office campus in Atlanta for $290 million. Fully leased to AT&T Services, the property is located at 1025, 1055, 1057 and 1277 Lenox Park Boulevard, and 2180 Lake Boulevard in the Lenox Park office complex in Buckhead. Krog Street Market’s first retail tenant, The Collective, is now open. The Collective is housed in “The Cottage,” a 1920s historic home that Paces Properties has relocated, renovated and renewed. Now located at the corner of Lake Avenue and Waddell Street, The Collective anchors the Krog Street Market parking lot on Lake Avenue. The gift shop will offer home and garden décor, jewelry and art – all curated by local vendors. Owner Greg Ansley said locally-crafted goods from vendors Southeast Succulents, Those Barrett Twins, Porterhouse Interiors and Nancy Zahn Antiques are also featured. “We could not be happier to be back in Inman Park,” said Ansley. “As the first retail tenant to open at Krog Street Market, we are eager to see our old friends and welcome new customers to our cottage location.”

36 November 2014 | INtown

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By Clare S. Richie With the winter holidays approaching, it’s time for the King of Pops’ staff to fold up their trademark rainbow umbrellas and put on elf booties. This winter marks the third year for Nick and Steven Carse’s Christmas tree delivery side venture, Tree Elves. Costumed elves deliver Frazier Fir trees in three different sizes – small (45’), medium (6-7’), and large (8-9’) along with an assortment of holiday-flavored pops like eggnog, white chocolate peppermint and fruitcake. The trees come from the Cheeks Brothers Tree Farm near Boone, NC to your Intown home, apartment or business. This year, the trees will be fresh cut instead of potted, a change made in response to customer demand for larger trees that required pots weighing in excess of 300 pounds. “Once the elves collect your tree, they’ll bring them to our farm. There we’ll grind the trees up for compost to enrich the soil we use to grow fruit for our pops,” explained Nick Carse. And, for each Christmas tree sold, the ecoconscious brothers will plant a Georgia native tree (such as eastern red cedar) at their farm. Last May, Nick and Steven Carse

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

purchased a 68-acre property that included a commercial nursery located about 15 minutes west of Six Flags Over Georgia in Douglas County. “Our nursery, Turtle Brook Nursery, is already growing and selling Georgia natives under the guidance of Peter Calabrese and Cooper Starr, formerly with Trees Atlanta,” Nick shared. Unfortunately, Georgia’s climate isn’t conducive for growing Christmas trees. Luckily, many of the ingredients of your favorite pops do thrive here. So, the brothers are in the process of cultivating a farm on the property to grow berries, melons and herbs for their frozen treats. Last month, they planted 10,000 strawberry plants. They will also experiment with raising figs, pomegranate and kiwi. The Carse brothers keep finding green ways to operate and expand. They compost King of Pops fruit waste from their Inman Park kitchen on the farm and long-term envision community gardens and children’s programs. This holiday season – if you want the convenience of a Christmas tree delivery and pick up, environmentally friendly reuse of your tree, and crave holiday pops – Nick and Steven Carse hope you’ll choose Tree Elves. For more, visit treeelves.net.

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November 2014 | IN


Go Green

YOUR GUIDE FOR AN ECO-FRIENDLY LIFESTYLE

SUSTAINABLE INTOWN

From recycling to green building, the city has embraced the eco-movement By Collin Kelley INtown Editor When Atlanta INtown began covering the sustainability movement more than a decade ago, most of our coverage was centered around April’s celebration of Earth Day. But there was also a growing sense of urgency about the city’s air pollution, traffic and the amount of waste going to local landfills. Atlanta and the metro region was already under the gun from as far back as 1998, when the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) brought sanctions against the city for its smog level, meaning the loss of millions of federal dollars for highway projects. In 2004, the EPA still classified Atlanta as a “severe non-attainment” zone for failure to meet ozone standards. It wouldn’t be until 2013 that the EPA declared the city was in compliance, but by then the tide toward sustainability was already in full swing. Six years ago, INtown created a regular monthly section called “Go Green” and earlier this year published our annual “Green Issue” in April. We embraced the eco-friendly movement to chronicle what local leaders, organizations and residents were doing to make the city more sustainable. We reported on homebuyers who had decided to

Courtesy Georgia Tech Students collect recyclables on the Georgia Tech campus.

spend the extra money for green roofs, rain barrels, lowflow fixtures and recycled building materials. Keep Atlanta Beautiful and other organizations

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stepped up efforts to recycle electronics, and the city of Atlanta implemented new recycling guidelines. The local food movement exploded with urban farmers raising their own vegetables and restaurants shifting away from frozen and processed to food grown just hours away. The number of local farmers markets grew from a couple to dozens. Atlanta Recycles, an advocacy group made up governmental, corporate, nonprofit and environmental entities, helped shape the city’s move toward larger recycling bins for residents, and expanded collection of recyclables at city buildings, recreation centers, and police and fire stations. Atlanta Recycles was also instrumental in the development of the Downtown Zero Waste Zone. Focused on the foodservice industry, members pledge to recycle paper, plastic, metal and glass, compost food scraps and reuse old grease from their kitchens. In 2010, Mayor Kasim Reed announced his goal of making Atlanta one of the top 10 sustainable cities in the country. Four years later, there have been significant strides in making the city green and there are more, exciting changes to come. The city’s Office of Sustainability, led by Denise Quarles, said the greening of Atlanta has been possible through the unprecedented collaboration between

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stakeholders citywide. The most notable collaboration has been with the business community, which has signed on as part of the Better Building Challenge to make 20 percent of Atlanta’s commercial buildings energy and water efficient by the year 2020. “We have 200 buildings now participating in the challenge,” Quarles said, “and 76 of those are municipal buildings.” Midtown created its own EcoDistrict, and has made substantial moves in recycling, energy, and promoting sustainability among its residents and businesses. Last month, the Midtown Alliance announced its inaugural EcoDistrict Luminaries, comprised of 19 businesses and buildings that have made a significant commitment to sustainability practices. Buildings and busineses include:1180 Peachtree, Federal Reserve

Bank of Atlanta, Fifth Group’s Ecco and Lure restaurants, One Atlantic Station, Perkins+Will, Working Buildings, Heery International, Invesco, Jamestown, Lord Aeck & Sargent, Triage Consulting Group, 1075 Peachtree, Bank of America Plaza, Promenade, Centergy One, Lowes Atlanta Hotel, Viewpoint and South City Kitchen. Dan Hourigan, Director of Transportation and Sustainability for Midtown Alliance, said Atlanta’s air quality issues were a wake up call to the city to make better decisions and face environmental issues head on. “We’ve made great strides in the last decade or more,” Hourigan said. “Climate change is now in the news and people are learning how they can make differences in their own communities. There’s a much broader desire for a healthier place to live and work.”

JUST ADD IMAGINATION.

Special Georgia’s Own Credit Union president and CEO David A. Preter, right, worked with other company volunteers to plant trees along the BeltLine Arboretum.

Company plants 80 trees to help create BeltLine Arboretum Georgia’s Own Credit Union commemorated its 80th anniversary by endowing 80 trees to Trees Atlanta. The donated trees were planted to create the first stretch of the Atlanta BeltLine Arboretum. David A. Preter, Georgia’s Own president and CEO, was joined by city, state and community leaders for a ceremonial first tree planting event along the BeltLine Arboretum. Following the ceremony, over 80 Georgia’s Own volunteers continued A t l a n t a I N t o w n P a p e r. c o m

planting the donated 80 trees – performing more than 240 service hours – to complete the initial phase of the Arboretum. Ultimately, the BeltLine Arboretum will be a curated collection of trees providing countless environmental benefits like cleaner air, storm water collection and much-needed shade for those enjoying the trail and its surrounding greenspace. It will be a 22mile linear tree museum – the longest in the world.

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To mark the recent National Drive Electric Week, the oldest drive-in met the newest cars when Georgia Power EV drivers took over The Varsity in Midtown for the first ever EV Cruise In. The event was designed help educate and inspire customers to purchase electric vehicles. National Drive Electric Week, formerly National Plug In Day, has grown with the popularity of EVs into a full week of events.

The Atlanta Community ToolBank is hosting its annual Tool Rush Sale on Nov. 8 from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the ToolBank warehouse, 410 Edgewood Ave. The general public is invited to shop thousands of new, and some gently used, tools and supplies – all priced 50 percent off retail. There will be a special “early bird” event from 8 to 9 a.m. with a donation of $10. Every dollar spent immediately and directly benefits Atlanta Community ToolBank. Atlanta Mayor Kasim Reed has been presented with Southface Energy Institute’s highest honor, the Argon Award, for his commitment to sustainability. Under Reed’s leadership, Atlanta, which is ranked among the top 10 U.S. cities with the highest percentage of green commercial real estate, has earned national credibility for its stewardship to foundation and federal awards aimed at advancements in sustainability. As a result, Atlanta was selected as one of three cities to pilot the national Better Buildings Challenge, a presidential initiative that challenges cities to reduce energy consumption by 20 percent by 2020. Past Argon Award recipients include Ray Anderson, Ted Turner, Arthur Blank, TOTO USA and The Coca Cola Company. Atlanta Habitat for Humanity installed 20 recycling bins designed specifically for placement at Atlanta Habitat’s different building sites, for their main offices and ReStore, as part of a national recycling bin grant program made possible by Keep America Beautiful (KAB) and The Coca-Cola Foundation. In its ninth year, the Coca-Cola/KAB Recycling Bin Grant Program is providing nearly 4,500 recycling bins to colleges and universities, nonprofits and local governments, with more than 65 percent of the total designed specifically for permanent, ongoing use in heavily-trafficked public spaces and events. “Having the recycling bins at our build sites mirrors our mission of building green homes for working families,” said Geneva Hall-Shelton, Atlanta Habitat’s senior sponsorship manager. “We are proud to report that since we received the bins in July, we have collected more than 500 pounds of reusable materials.” Hall-Shelton also mentions how the volunteers who come out and build appreciate the recycling bins. A full list of the spring 2014 Recycling Bin Grant recipients and further information about the grant program is available at bingrant.org. The Atlanta Department of Planning and Community Development (DPCD) has been awarded a $2.5 million grant from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) for the city’s lead hazard control program, Lead Safe Atlanta. The program, which launched in 2011, is designed to identify housing built before 1978 where lead-based paint is present and reducing a child’s exposure to it. In children under age six, lead has been linked to several behavioral and health risks, including aggressive behavior, hearing loss, hyperactivity and learning disabilities. 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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THE STUDIO ARTS & CULTURE

HOLIDAY DELIGHTS

A guide to Intown events, festivals and tree lightings By Collin Kelley INtown Editor

ATLANTIC STATION

The holiday season officially begins in November with tree lightings, shopping, theatre and much more. Check out our guide and get in the spirit. There’s something here for everyone.

Chastain Park Arts Festival Find a unique gift or piece of art for the holidays at the annual festival set for Nov. 1 and 2 in the park. Nearly 200 artists will be on hand along with a children’s area, live music, food from local food trucks and more. For more, visit chastainparkartsfestival.com.

Garden Lights, Holiday Nights The Atlanta Botanical Garden in Midtown will transform into a glowing wonderland with millions of lights from Nov. 15 to Jan. 3, from 5 to 10 p.m. each evening. The trees, Imaginary Worlds topiary (including new giant butterflies, frogs and a unicorn) and more will be wrapped in special LED lights for this nightly display. For ticket information and more details, visit atlantabotanicalgarden.org.

Rudolph the RedNosed Reindeer The faithful recreation of the classic animated TV special Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer returns to the Center for Puppetry Arts for a fifth year from Nov. 11 to Dec. 28 (there are preview shows on Nov. 11 and 12, too). There will also be create-a-puppet workshops. The shows always sell out quickly, so reserve your tickets now at puppet.org.

RUDOLPH

Tree will draw thousands to Lenox Square. The evening will begin at 6 p.m. with entertainment and music. Find more details at simon.com/mall/lenox-square.

Indie Craft Experience Holiday Shopping Spectacular Local artisans will be on hand Nov. 22-23 at the Georgia Freight Depot in Downtown, 65 Martin Luther King, Jr. Blvd. If you’re looking for original, one-of-akind art, gifts and more, this event is not to be missed. For more information, visit ice-atlanta.com.

A Christmas Carol The Alliance Theatre will present its 25th annual staging of the Charles Dickens’ classic about a visit from the ghosts of Past, Present and Future to mean old Scrooge from Nov. 21 to Dec. 24. Visit alliancetheatre.org for information and tickets.

Pink Pig & Lighting of the Great Tree It’s not the holiday season in Atlanta until The Great Tree is blazing atop Macy’s and the Pink Pig is taking kids on a ride through a winter wonderland. This year, the Pink Pig (located on top of the Lenox Square parking deck in Buckhead) will be open Nov. 1 to Jan. 4 (closed Thanksgiving Day and Christmas Day). On Thanksgiving night, the annual Lighting of Macy’s Great

42 November 2014 | INtown

Santaland Diaries and Madeline’s Christmas David Sedaris’ tale of working as a department store elf over the holidays has become a staple for the season, and it’s back at Horizon Theatre Nov. 21 through Dec. 31. Visit horizontheatre.org for tickets.

Lighting of Atlantic Station The west Midtown development will be hosting all kinds of activities during the holiday months, starting with the Lighting of Atlantic Station on Nov. 22. The family friendly events feature music and entertainment. The gigantic decorated tree will light up the night just after sunset, and the evening culminates with Santa’s parade and arrival. You can also ice skate on a unique track-style rink, check out Cirque du Soleil’s Amaluna (through Nov. 30), have your photo take with Santa, and enjoy regular “Snow Shows,” where fresh snow falls on visitors at Central Park.

ATLANTA BOTANICAL GARDEN

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INDIE LIT Letters Festival returns to The Goat Farm Lostintheletters, an Atlanta-based literary organization, will host The Letters Festival 2014 on Nov. 6 8.The festival will feature writing workshops, conversations, discussion panel, a book market and live readings. The line-up includes poets Jason Koo, CA Conrad, Morgan Parker, Jason McCall, Esther Lee, Gina Abelkop and Amy McDaniel; nonfiction writer Kate Sweeney; and fiction writers Lauren Watel, Jamie Iredell, Lindsay Hunt, Leesa Cross Smith, Aaron Burch and Adam Robinson. The festival kicks off Nov. 6 at the office of BurnAway, while the rest of the festival will be held at The Goat Farm Arts Center. OOMPH! Press of Buenos Aires will host a live-webcast reading featuring exciting Argentinian writers and American writers on Nov. 7.

Esther Lee

Amy McDaniel

There will be a mixture of free and ticketed events for the weekend, so be sure to visit thelettersfestival.org for a complete schedule.

Jason McCall

Kate Sweeney

CLAYTON STATE UNIVERSITY MORROW, GEORGIA

Freddy Cole: Home for the Holidays Saturday, December 13, 2014 | 8:15PM | $40

Legendary jazz singer, pianist, recording artist Freddy Cole heads home to Atlanta to make the season bright with Christmas favorites, signature standards, and more. “Freddy has an impeccable sense of swing…he is, overall, the most maturely expressive male jazz singer of his generation, if not the best alive” (The New York Times). Friends of Spivey Hall Concert Sponsors: Arne Troelstra & Kate Troelstra TICKETS ON SALE NOW:

(678) 466-4200

Visit www.SpiveyHall.org to purchase tickets and for 2014-2015 concert information.

This program is supported in part by the Georgia Council for the Arts through the appropriations of the Georgia General Assembly. GCA also receives support from its partner agency – the National Endowment for the Arts.

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THE BEST BOOKSTORE EVER Remembering the gone, but not forgotten Oxford Books monthlies, to underground literary zines to international newspapers. The store’s video rental section was a go-to for foreign film fans. For many years, Oxford had the distinction of being the largest independent bookstore in the Southeast. The stores attracted some of the biggest authors of the time for book signings. Since it was open 365 days a year, you could wander in after Thanksgiving dinner or spend your holiday cash on Christmas Day. Oxford closed its doors in 1997, killed by a combination of a poorly set up loan, unsuccessful expansions and the onslaught of chain bookstores. Seventeen years later, bookstores in general teeter on the brink because of the rise of Amazon, big box retailers slashing prices and the popularity of eBooks. Former employee Gabrielle Smith has set up a Facebook page for Oxford, which contains pages of memories from former employees and shoppers as well as photos. Special Jennifer Eve Bonder worked at the Chris Morris and Gabrielle Smith at Pharr Peachtree Battle store and recalls chasing Road. actor Kevin Kline around the store and By Collin Kelley bumping into Elton John, who was wearing and Annie Kinnett Nichols a trench coat in July. Oxford was a favorite stop for Atlanta natives and longtime residents novelist Anne Rice, who would arrive still mourn the loss of their favorite for signings in a hearse or dressed as retail spots: great department stores like Cleopatra. INtown’s historian Ann Boutwell Rich’s and Davison’s, bying vinyl records remembers meeting the late Atlanta at Peaches or finding a great old film at Journal-Constitution columnist Lewis Movies Worth Seeing. But for literature Grizzard at the Peachtree Battle store when lovers, the one that truly got away is Oxford he was signing Don’t Bend Over in the Books. Garden, Granny, You Know Them Taters Opened in 1970 by Rupert LeCraw in Got Eyes. Peachtree Battle Shopping Center, Oxford Dan Goldgeir, a writer at AdPulp. instantly became a mecca for readers. com, said he spent hours in The Cup Upstairs was the city’s first real coffee house and Chaucer working on ads and doing – The Cup and Chaucer – you could have a research, while insurance underwriter Jack pastry with your cup of joe while reading a Hammond misses “the different levels on book or newspaper. Pharr and the groovy ‘60s architecture Oxford would expand to include a vibe.” massive second location on Pharr Road, a Donna Bowling, COO at MindPower, used bookstore called Oxford, Too, Oxford said each store had its own special Comics and short-lived locations on West characteristics. “At Peachtree Battle, there Paces Ferry and in Sandy Springs. was the aroma of coffee brewing, spiral The Pharr Road store in Buckhead staircases and library ladders. At Pharr, (where Allure apartments are now there was the octagonal-shaped buildings located) became the flagship Oxford in and the dueling smells of old, musty books 1992. Housed in a former Mercedes-Benz versus freshly printed publications. Ahhh… dealership built in 1966 by Bruce Goff, the the memories!” modern, space-agey feel of the two-story Writer and artist Alicia Griswold circular buildings was like no other space in worked at Oxford, Too, which had used the city. Along with the miles of books, the books and magazines from floor to ceiling. Oxford on Pharr also had one of the largest “I worked in Oxford, Too from its opening magazine selections – from UK music and for about a year after saving for grad school,” Griswold said. “I remember the long literature test we had to take to get hired. It made the GRE look like a Cosmo quiz.” The Oxford, Too building is now home to Peachtree Battle Antiques and Interiors. Oxford also Special employed some Gabrielle Smith’s collection of coffee mugs from Oxford Books. notable folks you might have heard 44 November 2014 | INtown

The fromer Mercedes dealership on Pharr Road was transformed into Oxford’s flagship store.

of, including radio deejay Melissa Carter, noted artist Kara Walker, and Bobby Mort, who recently won an Emmy for his writing on The Colbert Report. Many future Atlanta authors visited Oxford and dreamed of writing their own books. Crime author Grant Jerkins (A Very Simple Crime and the forthcoming Done in One with Jan Thomas) vividly remembers Thom Wolfe’s signing for A Man In Full at the Pharr store. “Not only was that his follow-up to Bonfire of the Vanities, but it was also set in Atlanta—so there was a massive crowd,” he said. “They had him up on this makeshift elevated stage, complete in his sparkling white ice cream suit. When you finally got to the head of the line, there was no interaction with Mr. Wolfe. He was several yards away, just sort of looking down at you, and an intermediary would take your book up to him to have it signed.” Jerkins said Oxford, Too was his favorite store. “I would spend the entire day rambling around that place. It was rickety and creaky and sprawling. They also had a store-within-the-store just for book collectors. It was run by a guy named Grover and his assistant, Alek. That was my first exposure to the world of signed copies, Brodart dust jacket protectors, ephemera, first editions and limited editions. I’ve been a collector ever since.” Jerkins also met legendary sci-fi author Ray Bradbury at Oxford, Too in 1996. “Not only did I shake his hand and chat with him, I went through the signing line three times (at his suggestion), and got my entire Bradbury collection autographed.”

And while Oxford is no more, one vestige survives: Oxford Comics at 2855 Piedmont Road. Originally part of the Pharr Road store, the comics and games purveyor continues to carry on the legacy and stir up fond memories of what many Atlantans remember as the best book store ever. For more memories and photos, check out the facebook.com/groups/ OxfordBooksAtlanta.

Special Former employee David Johnson checks out the selection at the Pharr Road store.

The Last Indies For the March 2012 edition, guest contributor Osayi Endolyn wrote our cover story about Intown’s independent bookstores adapting to face the onslaught of online retailer Amazon and the rise in popularity of eBooks. Outwrite Books in Midtown had just closed, sending a shockwave through the literature community. Luckily, indies like Charis Books, A Cappella, Eagle Eye, Tall Tales, Atlanta Vintage Books and Bound to Be Read are still providing readers a chance to shop and buy their books Intown.

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Paideia School welcomes community to 32nd anniversary of Art Visions By Martha Nodar More than 30 years ago, a passion for art and a knack for fundraising motivated a parent from the Paideia School in mapping out a vision to raise money for the school while highlighting and supporting local artists. Art Visions, the brainchild of the late Dottie McRae, has passed the test of time and it is celebrating its 32nd season this fall as a parent-run fine art and craft sale on the Paideia campus. “Paideia is known for having parents who are very involved,” said Judy Schwarz, director of parent involvement.

“Dottie was both an involved parent and a promoter of the arts. She was an art collector and had many friends who were artists.” Every November, the school’s practice gym is converted into an indoor art gallery where artists from both the Paideia community and the community at large exhibit their work on consignment. Geared toward kicking off the holiday-shopping season, the two-day annual event takes place before Thanksgiving, either the second or the third weekend in November. This year it will be open to the public on Nov. 15 from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Nov. 16 from

Some of the arts and crafts available during last year’s Art Visions event.

Special

noon to 5 p.m. A kids’ corner has been designed for children ages 5 and older to do collages and print cards as a way to keep them occupied while their parents may be browsing or shopping, Schwarz said. Shondra Thomas, Paideia’s art teacher, said she frequently recognizes familiar faces every year. “People in the community find out about the event through word-of-mouth,” Special she said. An eclectic selection of art will be available this year. Thomas is also a volunteer Paideia parent Green, a Midtown resident, said and one of the local she and her co-chair Robin Critz, a artists who sell their work at the annual fellow volunteer Paideia parent, visit show. She said she loves making jewelry area galleries, festivals and art events and answering the patrons’ questions especially in the summer looking for new about her craft. A percentage from all talent and contacting artists. the proceeds benefits the school’s art “I am the mastermind organizer program. planner, and Robin is the artsy creative Schwarz said that what began decades genius,” Green said. ago with just 20 local artists exhibiting Green said this year patrons may their pieces has grown over the years to expect to find homemade aprons, approximately 100 participants whose children’s accessories, homemade candles, work may include paintings, drawings, organic products and much more. jewelry, pottery, photography, collages “It is very exciting to provide the and mixed media. community with such a fun shopping “Our event is an amazing forum spree,” Green said. for local artists to come together,” said The Paideia School is located at Meghan Green, Art Visions’ co-chair. 1509 Ponce de Leon Ave. For more “We welcome the community to this information, visit paideiaschool.org. unique creative outlet.”

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404-252-6991 reward card andreserved. mailedAllwithin weeks of rebate claim receipt. Fundslimitations do notapply. expire. Subject toforapplicable law, a ©$2.00 monthly trademarks used are property of Hunter Douglas. HOL14MB2 7 months6after card herein issuance andthe each month thereafter. Additional Ask participating dealer details and rebate form. 2014 Hunter Douglas.fee will be assessed against card b All rights reserved. All trademarks used herein are the property of Hunter Douglas. SPG14MB3 41522 UsandAtrebate Facebook or Twitter 7 months after card issuance and each month thereafter. Additional limitations apply. Ask participating dealerFollow for details form. © 2014 Hunter Douglas. www.gablinds.com All rights reserved. All trademarks used herein are the property of Hunter Douglas. SPG14MB3 | November 2014 IN * Manufacturer’s mail-in rebate offer valid for purchases made 4/1/14 – 6/13/14 from participating dealers in the U.S. only. Rebate will be issued in the form of a prepaid

town 45

reward card and mailed within 6 weeks of rebate claim receipt. Funds do not expire. Subject to applicable law, a $2.00 monthly fee will be assessed against card balance 7 months after card issuance and each month thereafter. Additional limitations apply. Ask participating dealer for details and rebate form. © 2014 Hunter Douglas.


Your family’s most comprehensive online guide to arts and cultural entertainment Visit AtlantaPlanIt.com for more upcoming events. Modigliani. Tuesday through Sunday. $12 to $19.50. high.org Goose Bumps! The Science of Fear: Fernbank Museum of Natural History examines the physiological, neurological and sociological aspects of this often misunderstood emotion in an enjoyable environment. Monday through Sunday. $16 to $18. fernbankmuseum.org Inspiring Beauty - 50 Years of Ebony Fashion Fair: MODA honors the fashion show that brought European couture to the African-American community. Tuesday through Saturday. $5 to $10. museumofdesign.org

Performing Arts

DIRTY DANCING Visual Arts Interiors: The works of award-winning photographers Claire Rosen, Guillermo Srodek-Hart and Steve Aishman examine the affective power of sheer presence and the inscription of cultural history at Hagedorn Foundation Gallery. Closes November 8. Free. hfgallery.org Leaves of Grass: Photographers Steven L. Anderson and Susan Hable Smith both explore their relationship to the natural world in this first two-person exhibit at Poem 88. Closes November 8. Free. poem88.net

Birth of a Red Planet: Pater Bahouth reworks Florence Thomas’ earlier miniature diorama photography into a ‘50s era View Master science-fiction tale at Hagedorn Foundation Gallery. Tuesday through Saturday. Free. hfgallery.org Cézanne and the Modern Masterpieces of European Art from the Pearlman Collection: The High presents an outstanding selection of Impressionist, Post-Impressionist and modern art with masterworks from Degas, van Gogh and

Murder Ballad: In this rock and roll musical, a sultry singer spins a lurid tale of lust and murder that unfolds when a New York love triangle goes wrong. Opens November 5. $20 to $32. actors-express.com The New Pornographers: The Vancouver indie rock group known for their unique take on pop music returns to Atlanta on the heels of a new album release. November 6. $29. thebuckheadtheatre.com Twelfth Night: A shipwreck, separated identical twins, mistaken identities, romance and one pair of yellow stockings — welcome to Orsino’s court

INSPIRING BEAUTY and the zany world of Shakespeare. November 6 through November 30. $15 to $39. shakespearetavern.com Il barbiere di Siviglia: Georgia State University’s Opera Theater stages a production of Rossini’s treasured opera “The Barber of Seville.” Free! Opens November 7. music.gsu.edu Preservation Hall Jazz Band with Allen Toussaint: This group has traveled worldwide spreading their mission to nurture the art form of New Orleans jazz. $35 to $60. November 7. ferstcenter. gatech.edu Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer: Center for Puppetry Arts’ beloved holiday adaptation is soaring back into town once again this holiday season. Opens November 11. $16.50 to $20.50. puppet.org Morgan Freeman Presents The Magic Negro and Other Blackness: Using improv and character pieces, this one-man show examines the representation of black males in the media, as told by the character of Morgan

Builder Levy - Photography: Arnika Dawkins Gallery presents this stunning retrospective of the award-winning artists’ work over the past 50 years to the present. Closes November 22. Free. adawkinsgallery.com Creole World: This Whitespace exhibit is a complex, multi-layered photo essay linking New Orleans, which is frequently referred to as “the northernmost Caribbean city,” with its cultural kin further south. Free. Closes November 22. whitespace814.com Not My Enemy - People From Pakistan, Cambodia and East Ukraine: John E. Ramspott ‘s photos depict the lives of people from Pakistan, Cambodia and Ukraine, showing that life goes on despite current or past upheavals. Closes November 22. Free. stanmccollumgallery.com Ruud van Empel - New Work: Dutch photographer Ruud van Empel’s collages and digital manipulations show the possibilities of infusing art and technology at Jackson Fine Art. Closes November 29. Free. jacksonfineart.com

46 November 2014 | INtown

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


Freeman. Opens November 13. $10.50 to $27.50 dadsgarage.com

MADAME BUTTERFLY

Madama Butterfly: This new coproduction from The Atlanta Opera presents a fresh look at Puccini’s timeless tragedy of innocence lost. November 8 through November 16. $26 to $140. atlantaopera.org A Pinter Kaleidoscope: Audiences encounter playwright Harold Pinter’s dystopian nirvana by moving through various locations within the theater space at this show. Closes November 9. $10 to $20. theater.emory.edu Chamber Music in Sacred Spaces — NEW VOICES: Atlanta Chamber Players return to Ahavath Achim Synagogue with new work by composer Adam Schoenberg honoring Jewish composers Erich Korngold and Srul Irving Glick November 9. $10 to $20 atlantachamberplayers.com One More For The Fans! Celebrating The Songs & Music of Lynyrd Skynyrd: This musical tribute to the Southern rock band honors the band’s role in the 1976 “Save the Fox” campaign. November 12. $72 to $222. foxtheatre.org Kyle Abraham - Abraham.In.Motion: Award-winner choreographer Kyle Abraham’s “Pavement” transforms the stage into an abstract metaphor of a basketball court to look at AfricanAmerican history and culture. November 14. $30. ferstcenter.gatech.edu

White Rabbit Red Rabbit: Iran’s Nassim Soleimanpour dissects the experience of a whole generation in this original play in which each performance features a different actor. Closes November 22. $20 to $25. outofhandtheater.com

Milton Nascimento: This iconic Brazilian singer-songwriter’ s early work fused Africanized jazz with Latin-American folk, an alternative to generations of bossa nova. November 23. $42 to $68. rialto.gsu.edu

Dirty Dancing -The Classic Story on Stage: This unprecedented live experience at the Fox Theatre brings the classic film to the stage with heart-pounding music and sensational dancing. November 25 through November 30. $30 to $85. broadwayinatlanta. com

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Quintessential Virginia-Highland 1332 Briarwood Drive NE, $1,285,000 5 Bedrooms, 5.5 Bathrooms 2007 “New,” Two Master Suites, Chef ’s Kitchen, Huge Finished Terrace Level, 4 Car Garage, Grand Screened Porch Overlooking Flat Backyard. Becky Tokich, Listing Agent, 404.931.4783

Please call to learn about our plan for marketing your home or condo! Tom Ellicott

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2911 Piedmont Rd. NE - 404.876.4901 - PalmerHouseProperties.com 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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November 2014 | IN


NEWS

YOU CAN

EAT

EATING OUT | EATING IN | FOOD NEWS | WINE

20 OVER 20

Yelp’s list of local dining institutions with 20+ years in business

5.

By Benjamin Getz Yelp Atlanta Community Manager Twenty years. That’s quite a milestone for any restaurant, but Atlanta’s rich history of Southern culture and love of food means there are some eateries that have endured for decades. In celebration of Atlanta INtown’s big 2-0, we’ve brought you a list of 20 institutions with 20-plus years in the biz – replete with Yelper-approved items you won’t want to miss. The first five on the list defined the way Atlantans were eating before the 1950s had even rolled around. These historical, and now famous, spots could grace the front of any postcard as they all say “Atlanta,” in their own way. Hats off to these oldies but goodies.

1. The Colonnade

(1927)

1879 Cheshire Bridge Road – Morningside/Lenox Park The obvious choice here is fried chicken. They run a tight, southern ship with all the fixin’s and no ifs, ands or buts – it’s cash only, friends. (See our review on page 52.)

2.

The Varsity (1928)

61 North Ave. – Downtown “What’ll Ya Have?” Well, if you say anything that doesn’t include a chili dog, a Frosted Orange, a fried peach pie, and a neatly creased paper hat, you’re doing it all wrong.

3.

Busy Bee (1947)

810 Martin Luther King, Jr. Drive – Downtown Busy Bee’s motto says it all – “Prepared with Love, Seasoned with Soul.” Yelpers go nuts for their candied yams. Get some.

6. George’s

Restaurant & Bar (1961)

1041 N. Highland Ave NE - Virginia-Highland George’s has become a go-to for those who want a big, juicy handmade burger and a fun night of trivia. Make note of the Jalapeño Dijon Burger – it’s worth the burn.

7. The Silver Skillet (1956)

200 14th St. - Midtown Not just a breakfast spot reserved for Tech students. You’ll take step back into the ‘50s as you take a seat at the counter for a good ole-fashioned breakfast.

The Majestic Diner (1929)

1031 Ponce De Leon Ave. – Poncey-Highland Open 364 days a year at 24-hour increments is the name of the game at the Majestic. Those neon lights will lure you in like a moth to flame. At least there are hash browns afterward.

4.

Mary Mac’s (1945)

224 Ponce de Leon Ave. – Midtown Because starting your meal off with pot likker, cornbread and cinnamon rolls is the way it’s done at this Atlanta mainstay. It’s more of a right of passage and something worth touting to your Yankee friends.

48 November 2014 | INtown

8.

Manuel’s Tavern (1956)

602 N. Highland Ave. – Poncey-Highland Everyone’s favorite neighborhood bar. You can’t miss this Poncey centerpiece – one of the coolest, old-timey murals in the city. A t l a n t a I N t o w n P a p e r. c o m


9. Pittypat’s Porch (1967) 25 Andrew Young International Blvd. - Downtown Make like Scarlett O’Hara and sip on a mint julep as you soak up at this mustvisit on many a tourist’s radar. Make ready your favorite lines from “Gone With the Wind.”

10. Polaris

(1967)

265 Peachtree St. – Downtown It closed down for a few years, but now it’s back and better than ever. The only thing more fun than a dinner date under the blue dome with views of Downtown is the ridiculously fun elevator ride to the top.

11.

McKinnon’s Lousiane Restaurant (1972)

3209 Maple Drive - Buckhead Louisiana cuisine reigns supreme at McKinnon’s – gumbo, bouillabaisse and fish prepared any way you like. The owner, Aziz, is a great guy. Make sure you give him a good, Southern handshake.

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

12.

The Sun Dial (1976)

13.

Petite Auberge (1974)

14.

Nikolai’s Roof (1976)

210 Peachtree St. - Downtown Let’s be honest: Dinner on the 72nd floor is going to be awesome. Every. Single. Time.

2935 N. Druid Hills Road – North Druid Hills Holding down French cuisine in the ATL for over 30 years with timeless favorites like Beef Wellington and Coq Au Vin.

255 Courtland St. - Downtown Yet another place to dine with a view. Rachel C notes the bar’s “lush and romantic” appeal. Exactly what you’d like to see for a night out Downtown.

15. La Grotta (1978)

2637 Peachtree Road - Buckhead Quite literally meaning “The Cave,” you’ll find this spot tucked neatly under a condominium building. The traditional menu will comfort your soul like a warm blanket. CONTINUED ON PAGE 50

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November 2014 | IN


16.

Great food for the savage in you.

$3.00 OFF

20 OVER 20 Bones Restaurant (1979)

3130 Piedmont Road – Buckhead Lee C’s definition of “heaven in a bowl – the truffle mashed potatoes.” Yep. She hit the nail right on the head. Paired with their legendary French onion soup, you’ve got a surefire win for dinner.

ANY MEDIUM OR LARGE SPECIALITY PIZZA Not Valid with any other coupons

17.

OPEN DAILY FOR LUNCH & DINNER dine in, pick up or delivery $12 minimum/limited area

Little Five Points

484 Moreland Ave. (next to L5P Pharmacy)

404-523-0500

Avondale Estates 115 Laredo Dr.

(corner of Clarendon)

404-299-5799

18.

Murphy’s (1980)

997 Virginia Ave. – VirginiaHighland Murphy’s could write the book on “brunch dining.” All of the favorites under one roof. Take one look at their Yelp page and you’ll see one thing Yelpers say you can’t miss – grits.

American Roadhouse (1989)

842 N. Highland Ave. – Virginia-Highland Stellar pancakes for over 23 years in the Highlands. They’re definitely doing something right. One word: ‘Merica.

see our menu at SAVAGEPIZZA.COM

19. Ann’s Snack Bar (1971)

1615 Memorial Drive – Kirkwood Ann Price set the burger bar high with her infamous “Ghetto Burger” (the Wall Street Journal called it the best in America). It’s the most ugly-beautiful burger you’ll ever experience.

20.

Bacchanalia (1993)

1198 Howell Mill Road – Westside “The” spot for special occasions. The price tag isn’t the only thing that has given these guys over 20 years of business in Atlanta. The food is darn worth its salt. Especially when someone else is paying. Follow Ben Getz’s reviews at benjamingetz.yelp.com and all the Yelp adventures on Instagram and Twitter @YelpAtlanta.

~ HAPPY THANKSGIVING ~ Savor Sandy Springs THE PERFECT PLACE FOR ALL YOUR HOLIDAY NEEDS!

APPLE GLAZED TURKEY BREAST WITH CRANBERRY ORANGE RELISH CANDIED SWEET POTATO SOUFFLÉ

Originality is our nationality! Inspiration can come from anywhere – Greek islands, Mediterranean markets, mom’s kitchen. And that’s exactly where we’ve discovered some of our most innovative dishes yet. Our recipe for creating the deliciously unexpected is simple: wholesome ingredients with a dash of inspiration, served up by friendly folks right around the corner. Welcome to Taziki’s.

PIES • COOKIES CHOCOLATES Rachael Cory & Michael Hoffman Jr.

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Virginia-Highland 1394 N. Highland Ave | Atlanta, GA 30306 | 404.872.6000 Dunwoody 4505 Ashford Dunwoody Rd NE | Atlanta, GA 30346 | 678.397.1781

For full menus

&

to place an order, visit www.alons.com

50 November 2014 | INtown

Taziki’s Mediterranean Cafe 5610 Glenridge Dr NE www.TazikisCafe.com

There are more than 100 full-service fine dining restaurants in Sandy Springs. Reserve a table and enjoy a delicious meal in our community! For more information about dining in Sandy Springs, please visit:

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


TURKEY DAY OUT

Local restaurants prepare Thanksgiving feasts By Collin Kelley INtown Editor If you’d rather spend time with family and friends instead of standing over a hot stove this Thanksgiving, many Intown restaurants will be serving up feasts for the whole family. Here’s at look at some of the restaurants open on Nov. 27. You can find more at OpenTable.com. 103 West Executive Chef Jeff Riedel will be cooking up turkey and all the trimmings for this special Thanksgiving feast in Buckhead. 103 West Paces Ferry. buckheadrestaurants.com/103-west. Fogo de Chao If you want something more exotic for your holiday meal, enjoy 16 cuts of delectable fire-roasted meats, Brazilian side dishes and more. $51.50 per person. 3101 Piedmont Road. fogodechao.com. The Capitol Grille A menu of favorite Thanksgiving dishes is in the works as well as the restaurant’s a la carte menu. $36 per adult or $15 per child. 255 East Paces Ferry. thecapitalgrille.com. BLT Steak The Downtown restaurant will have a special Thanksgiving Day menu and will

also offer complete family dinners for order and pick up the day before. 45 Ivan Allen Blvd. e2hospitality.com/blt-steakatlanta. 10th & Piedmont This Midtown spot will be offering a casual Turkey Day lunch and dinner buffet from 10 a.m. to 11 p.m. 991 Piedmont Ave. communitashospitality.com/10th-andpiedmont South City Kitchen Midtown Known for its modern take on southern cuisine, South City Kitchen will be offering a three-course, prix fixe menu of holiday favorites. $45 per person, $22.50 for children under 12. 1144 Crescent Ave. midtown.southcitykitchen.com. Seasons 52 The Buckhead restaurant will be serving a traditional Thanksgiving dinner all day, with special portions just for kids. The regular menu is available, too. $26.95 per person, $12.95 for child portions. 3050 Peachtree Road. seasons52.com. Maggiano’s Italian favorites such as spaghetti and lasagna will be offered as well as traditional Thanksgiving dishes at the Buckhead restaurant. 3368 Peachtree Road. maggianos.com.

The Colonnade It doesn’t get any more southern or traditional than The Colonnade’s fourcourse Thanksgiving meal. $25 per person.1879 Cheshire Bridge Road. colonnadeatl.com Rosebud Head over to Virginia-Highland for a traditional dinner of turkey, ham and all the fixin’s served family-style. $45 per person, $20 for children. 1397 N. Highland Ave. rosebudatlanta.com Murphy’s The Virginia-Highland mainstay has been offering Thanksgiving To-Go for 25 years. A limited number of orders are being taken, so hurry if you want to be on the pick-up list. The cost is $135 for four prepared dinners. Call 404- 872-0904 to order your feast. Legal Sea Foods If you’d rather have surf and turf for your holiday meal, the seafood eatery in Downtown has you covered. There will be everything from stuffed turkey to stuffed lobster on the menu. 275 Baker St. legalseafoods.com/restaurants/atlantadowntown. Petite Auberge A four-course, gourmet Thanksgiving Day meal with turkey, chicken, fish, steak, lamb and veal selections will be available. Prices range from $29.95 to $39.95, and there’s also a kids’ menu with soup or salad, choice of entree and dessert for $9.95. 2935 North Druid Hills Road. petiteauberge. com.

Your Authentic Italian Neighborhood Grocery

Start Your Holiday Shopping Now! Bring a little bit of Italy to your gift recipients this coming holiday season. We will have all the traditional Italian holiday items including panettone, pandoro, torrone, panforte and an expanded selection of our regular Italian Specialties, wine and tableware including: Meats • Cheeses • Olive Oils Pastas • Sauces • Antipasti Sweets • Wine • Baking Items Prepared Meals/Salads Stop by for lunch or on your way Home We’re Open 7 Days a Week!

A little corner of Italy… In the Heart of Virginia-Highland

1050 North Highland Avenue 404.815.8383

www.ToscanoandSons.com

Atlanta’s Only Option for Creative Southwestern Fusion

Now Serving Lunch Buffet Monday-Friday

“Top 100 Neighborhood Gem Restaurants in America”- OpenTable

Best Deals in the ATL! Join our email list at: agaverestaurant.com

Happy Hour 4-6 Discover why Agave is consistently rated one of Atlanta’s most excellent eateries for the last 13 years. An Eclectic Southwestern Eatery & Tequila Bar

242 Boulevard SE in Cabbagetown, Atlanta For reservations call 404.588.0006 or visit agaverestaurant.com A t l a n t a I N t o w n P a p e r. c o m

$

2 off

Buy one entree, get one free*

Lunch Buffet

*Dine in only, Coupons cannot be combined, valid at Midtown location only. Japanese Dinner Only (menu pg. 4). Expires November 30.

*Dine in only, Coupons cannot be combined, valid at Midtown location only. Japanese Dinner Only (menu pg. 4). Expires November 30.

with coupon

RuSan’s Midtown

1529 Piedmont Ave., Atlanta, GA 30324 404-875-7042

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November 2014 | IN


I’m a bit embarrassed to admit that after living in Atlanta for close to 25 years, there are a lot of local landmarks that I have never visited. I have never been to the World of Coca-Cola or to the Atlanta Cyclorama or to the Margaret Mitchell House. I have also never hiked to the top of Stone Mountain nor seen the laser light show there. Most surprising to me, particularly with my penchant for Southern food, I had not eaten at The Colonnade until last month. The Colonnade has been in business since 1927. Judging by the crowded parking lot on a recent weeknight, lots of people continue to like this place. It’s a sprawling space with a big sign at the entrance that alerts you to the fact that they don’t take credit cards; heck MasterCard and Visa didn’t exist 87 years ago, so why start now? Despite the crowd, we were quickly seated in the busy dining room. Our waiter brought us each a small plate with a pack of Saltine crackers and two little tubs of butter; it was a curious “amuse-bouche.” The menu is large without being overthe-top “diner” large. There is no bar menu, but they claim to make any cocktail you’d want and offer bottled beer and wine of the red and white varietals. You get the sense that most people don’t even look at the

ew

rant Re

vi

au

t

By Art Huckabee

Res

TASTING INTOWN: The Colonnade

menu. They know what they want and the wait staff does too. There are lots of regulars in this place. The house specialties are the fried chicken and the fried shrimp, so we ordered both. We also ordered the seafood platter with fried shrimp, fried tilapia and fried scallops, and the nightly special, prime rib. The fried chicken was good, rivaling any Southern kitchen’s. The skin was crispy and the meat was moist and tender. You get your choice of two breasts and two wings or two thighs and two drums. The portions here are not small. The fried scallops and the fried tilapia were also very good but it was the shrimp, those 18 large, plump, lightly battered shrimp; they rivaled any found at any seafood shack in coastal Georgia or Florida. Everyone in our party agreed that we would return for the shrimp alone. The prime rib was a large Mastodonsized cut. It was ordered medium but came definitely more on the rare side. Our waiter quickly remedied the error. Each entrée came with a choice of two sides or a side and salad. There was a large assortment to choose from. It’s not every day that you see tomato aspic or rutabagas on a menu. The hits were the cole slaw, the macaroni and cheese and the cucumber salad. The slaw was crisp, rough-chopped cabbage with a tangy sweet and sour dressing. The mac ‘n cheese was not as

“A big thumbs up from Da Coach!” Mike Ditka, Winning Coach & Nancy’s Pizza Fan

MONDAY - FRIDAY SPECIALS 11AM - 4PM • DINE-IN ONLY

BUY 1 PIZZA SLICE AT REGULAR PRICE, GET 2ND CHEESE PIZZA SLICE*

FREE!

*LIMIT ONE FREE PIZZA SLICE PER COUPON Additional ingredients sold at regular price. Not valid with any other offer. Must present at time of order. Dine-in only. Valid thru 11/30/14

BUY 1 PERSONAL DEEP DISH AT REGULAR PRICE, GET 2ND* AT

50

% OFF

*OFFER FOR CHEESE DEEP DISH ONLY. LIMIT ONE 50% OFF PIZZA PER COUPON

Cheese only, additional ingredients sold at regular price. Not valid with any other offer. Must present at time of order. Dine-in only. Valid thru 11/30/14

ATLANTA • MIDTOWN 265 PONCE DE LEON 404-254-5103 52 November 2014 | INtown

Watch Your Favorite college & Pro teams on

our manY Flat screen tvs coldest Beer in toWn sundaY-mondaY: Wing sPecial tuesdaYs trivia 8Pm named “Best trivia” BY ATLANTA MAGAZINE

cheesy as some found on other menus but it was a nice balance of noodle and cheddar. The cucumber salad was cool, vinegary tart, and sweet as if lightly pickled. The chunked cucumber, tomato and red onion paired well together. The misses were the fried okra and the fluffy whipped potatoes. The okra was a bowl of cold nuggets, too long removed from their fryer bath. The potatoes were dense, missing their “fluff ” and begging for some gravy or a pad of butter. The sweet tooths in our party dug into a large slice of coconut ice box pie. It was very good with lots of toasted coconut, egg custard and whipped cream. It won’t be another 25 years before I visit The Colonnade again, but if I did wait that long, I get the sense that it will still be there. Now, where’s this place they call The Varsity? The Colonnade is located at 1879 Cheshire Bridge Road. For more information, call 404-874-5642 or visit colonnadeatl.com.

The fried shrimp is a favorite among diners.

The coconut ice box pie has plenty of egg custard and whipped cream.

Art Huckabee is one of Yelp’s Elite Reviewers, as well as a pilot, gourmet cook and food lover. Send feedback to atlantafoodwriter@gmail.com.

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Classes start December 8th.

1140 Hammond Drive Suite A-1150, Atlanta GA 30328 Sanford-Brown cannot guarantee employment or salary. Credits earned are unlikely to transfer. Find employment rates, financial obligations and disclosures at www.sanfordbrown.edu/ disclosures. Financial Aid is available for those who qualify. Transferability of credits is at the sole discretion of the receiving institution. 792663 14-SB-046 09/14 A t l a n t a I N t o w n P a p e r. c o m


Luxury experience at every price. sold

under contract

880 GLENDALE TERRACE #11

LOFTS OF BELEVEDERE

1BR/1BA only two blocks to Piedmont Park. $129,500 Rodney Hinote ● (404) 786-9562

Easy access to Piedmont Park and Midtown. $190,000-$219,900 Sherry Hoger ● (404) 921-9510

613 IRWIN STREET Charleston-style 3BR/3BA townhome near The Beltline. $390,000 Leslie Body ● (678) 570-7412

PLAZA MIDTOWN 1BR & 2BR units avail. Pool, concierge, & gym. $212,000-$384,900 Todd Hale ● (404) 822-0230

under contract

77 PEACHTREE PLACE #511 Two story 2BR/2.5BA penthouse with four balconies. $525,000 Rob Vogel ● (404) 281-7295

2255 PEACHTREE ROAD #826 Penthouse 1BR/1BA in the heart of Buckhead. $189,000 Christine O’Neill ● (404) 857-7058

130 E. PARKWOOD ROAD

Spacious 5BR/4.5.5BA with renovated kitchen. $525,000 Carter & Associates ● (404) 944-6577

BUCKHEAD ATLANTA

3334 PEACHTREE ROAD #302

Rare two story penthouse. Spectacular 1,000 sq ft terrace. $1,650,000 Monique Reller ● (404) 310-2200

under contract

779 CLIFTON ROAD 1915 updated Neel Reid classic 4BR/3.5BA. $2,250,000 Hilson Hudson ● (404) 217-6004

1078 ALTA AVENUE

3150 ST. IVES CC PKWY

4BR/3.5BA newer build in the City of Decatur. $699,900 Carter & Associates ● (404) 944-6577

1BR/1BA condo with fabulous Buckhead views. $199,000 Gemma Taylor ● (404) 310-8582

Renovated 3BR/2BA Inman Park cottage. $430,000 Bill McMurry ● (404) 610-6532

3360 CHARLOTTE CIRCLE Spacious 3BR/2BA in Smyrna with detached garage/workshop. $185,000 Barbara Giardina ● (404) 969-6737

under contract

1434 HILLPINE LANE

METROPOLIS

Fee simple 2BR/2.5BA townhome in Morningside School District. $325,000 Rogers Barry ● (404) 754-0500

Amenities include city views, pool, concierge, & gym. $142,900-$209,900 Ashley J. Webb ● (770) 653-6517

955 JUNIPER STREET #4321 Renovated 1BR/1BA top floor corner unit with covered terrace. $170,000 Jeff Masarek ● (404) 314-1104

H A R RY N O R M A N , R E A LTO R S ®

the in town of f ice Mike Wright, Sr. VP/Managing Broker 1531 Piedmont Avenue NE • Suite B Atlanta, GA 30324

Information is believed to be accurate, but is not warranted. Offers subject to errors, changes, omissions, prior sales, and withdrawals without notice.

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

town 53

November 2014 | IN


THE COOK’S WAREHOUSE From an “a-ha” moment to 20 years of success By Mary Moore

PRESERVATION HALL JAZZ BAND and ALLEN TOUSSAINT Friday, November 7, 8 p.m.

KYLE ABRAHAM / ABRAHAM.IN.MOTION Friday, November 14, 8 p.m.

DAVID BENOIT

CHRISTMAS TRIBUTE TO CHARLIE BROWN Friday, December 5, 8 p.m.

A ROCKAPELLA CHRISTMAS Friday, December 12, 8 p.m. sponsored by

CALL NOW FOR TICKETS!

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I grew up on a farm west of Atlanta. My great aunt and great uncle lived off the same driveway as me and my family, and my grandmother and great aunt one driveway over. We lived on a farm raising broiler chickens, cows and pigs, and grew many of our own vegetables. My mom, grandmother and great aunts loved to cook – and from an early age, so did I! While putting myself through college at Georgia State University, I determined that I needed to make the most amount of money in the least amount of time – waiting tables of course. I quickly determined that the “front of the house” wasn’t my forte. I was at Shipfeifer’s on Peachtree and lucky enough that the owners liked me and wanted me to stay. I said, “I want to work Monday through Friday during the day, in the kitchen, so I can go to school part time.” They said “OK,” beginning my next culinary journey. I worked my way to assistant manager after about a year, and knew that what I really wanted to do was serious food. I interviewed at Indigo Coastal Grill and started as a day prep cook shucking oysters and peeling carrots. I worked my way through the kitchen and onto the night shift as garde (salad) manager, then grill, then saute and eventually kitchen manager and expeditor. I also worked the same for a sister restaurant next door, Partners Morningside Café, as well as day chef. After graduating from college, I went on to work at Harry’s Farmers Market in research and development soon after Harry’s went public. After about six months I became the director of research and development at Harry’s. On a trip to New York in November 1993 with my friend and colleague, the renowned chef Scott Peacock, to cook in the Green Market on behalf of Harry’s, we discovered Scott had forgotten the crepe pan. We toured many Manhattan cookware shops to no avail, but Scott said, “I know where we can get one,” and the cab took us to Bridge Kitchenware. Bridge Kitchenware was a cross between a store, a warehouse and a wholesale cooking supply store. I was dumbfounded by the range of cooking implements carried by Fred Bridge in his store, which was a favorite of Julia Child, Jacques Pépin, Andre Soltner and every professional chef in Manhattan.

Mary Moore

I walked out, crepe pan in hand, and had my epiphany: “This is it, I’m going to have a store like this in Atlanta!” And so began The Cook’s Warehouse. Still at Harry’s, I got serious in early September 1994 about opening my store, wrote a business plan and was turned down by eight banks. I called my friend Cici Coffee, of Natural Body, for advice. We went to see Cici’s banker at Bank Atlanta, and with my grandmother Mimi co-signing my SBA loan and personal loans from three friends who believed in me, I began my business. I opened the first The Cook’s Warehouse in the Amsterdam Walk Shopping Center on Amsterdam Avenue in Midtown Atlanta on March 14, 1995. The first few years were incredibly lean, but with Mimi’s house on the line, I could not fail. Luckily, I knew how to make great macaroni and cheese, and ate a lot of it. I partnered with Doug Bryant, founder of Sherlock’s Wine Merchant, to open hybrid stores in Decatur in 2005 and Merchant’s Walk in East Cobb in 2006, which is when the online store at cookswarehouse.com also opened for business. We have now grown from two employees in one store to 80+ associates in four retail locations, and have a rapidly growing online business. We’ve also grown the largest avocational cooking school in the Southeast with more than 800 cooking classes each year. We’re also proud to have raised more than $400,000 for the Atlanta Community Food Bank, and have made donations to 1,700 other local organizations and nonprofits. The Cook’s Warehouse has held an astonishing 6,500 cooking classes and taught more than 75,000 students. And Mimi kept her house!

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Atlanta was a little late to the food truck craze, but once it caught on, you couldn’t turn a corner without running into a line of hungry folks waiting for barbecue, curry, Thai or a popsicle from the King of Pops. Foodie Thom Volarath wrote our cover feature about “Street Eats” in September 2010 issue.

© MMXIV Sotheby’s International Realty Affiliates, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Equal Housing Opportunity. Each Office Is Independently Owned And Operated.

54 November 2014 | INtown

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


Quick Bites French bistro Le Bilboquet is expected to open soon in the Buckhead Atlanta development serving lunch and dinner. The bistro and bar, which opened its first outpost in New York City in 1986, will be the only freestanding restaurant on the property. Signature dishes include Cajun chicken, steak au poivre, salmon tartare and chocolate mousse.

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The Atlanta Lobster Festival will be held in Candler Park on Nov. 2 from 1 to 6 p.m. The inaugural outdoor festival will include an afternoon of live music, arts and crafts, light bites from a selection of the city’s top restaurants, as well as a variety of craft beer and wine options. Proceeds from the culinary event will benefit Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta, a not-for-profit organization dedicated to making kids better today and healthier tomorrow through specialized care programs. For more, visit atlantalobsterfestival.com. SweetWater Brewery will hold its fifth annual Brew Your Cask Off festival on Nov. 8, featuring more than 110 specially-made beers made from guest brewers from around the Southeast including chefs, restaurants, bars, beer retailers, charities and local media. The event will be held from 6:30 to 10:30 p.m. at the brewery at 195 Ottley Drive in Buckhead. Tickets are $35 in advance at brewyourcaskoff.com or $40 at the door. A portion of event proceeds go to benefit the Georgia Conservancy. The Atlanta Chapter of Les Dames d’ Escoffier International (LDEI), a worldwide society of women in the culinary, beverage and hospitality industries, will host the 14th annual Afternoon in the Country at Serenbe on Nov. 9 from 1 to 4 p.m. Rooted in philanthropy, the annual fundraiser event will benefit the LDEI Atlanta scholarship fund. A percentage of proceeds will also go to the Atlanta Community Food Bank, Georgia Organics, Global Growers Network, The Giving Kitchen, The Wylde Center and Wholesome Wave. Tickets are $125 for adults 21 and older, $50 for guests 16 to 20 and $35 for guests ages 13 to 15. Children 12 and under will be free. Guests may purchase tickets at ldeiatlanta.org. Advance purchase is recommended, as the event sells out each year. Twin Smokers Barbecue & Bourbon (twinsmokersbbq. com) is now open in the Luckie Marietta District in Downtown Atlanta. The 4,000-square-foot space located at 300 Marietta St. will offer smoked meats, fresh sides, craft beer and cocktails to match. Lobby Bar and Bistro at Twelve in Atlantic Station has announced that Justin Kurtz has been named executive chef. Kurtz hails from multiple Ritz-Carlton locations and most recently from Chateau Elan Winery and Resort.

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Butter & Cream Ice Cream Shop is now open at 416 Church Street in Decatur. The small batch shop features flavors like Cashew Crème Brule, Bourbon Toffee, Butterscotch Brownie and Lemon Sorbet. Be sure to find their Facebook page for more information. Bishops Coffee and Tea (bishopscoffeeandtea. com) has opened in Midtown at 1540 Monroe Drive. The shop offers gourmet roasted coffee, a wide selection of loose-leaf teas, and desserts. World of Beer (worldofbeer.com/Midtown-Atlanta) has a new tavern at 855 Peachtree St. in Midtown. The roughly 4,000-square-foot tavern features an outdoor patio space and over 500 bottles and 53 rotating taps featuring craft beer to satisfy every beer lover in town. There’s also a menu of comfort food and traditional bar offerings such as pretzels, burgers, desserts and more. 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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November 2014 | IN


Home & Real Estate City Living | Neighborhoods | Development

RECLAIMED NEIGHBORHOODS Celebrating 20 years of community renewal

By Kathy Dean Since the first issue of Atlanta INtown hit the streets 20 years ago, the paper has gone through some notable changes. And so have the streets where we deliver those papers. The last two decades have seen growth and regeneration in many Intown neighborhoods, particularly Downtown, East Atlanta, the Old Fourth Ward, Cabbagetown, West Midtown and Castleberry Hill. Each community has its own special flavors and textures, and each has seen its renewal play out in specific ways. All these neighborhoods, however, share a similar history that’s led to their current popularity among homebuyers. And they are popular! “Well-priced homes in good condition and in good locations often receive multiple offers,” said Anne Miller, associate managing broker, Midtown Office of Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices|Georgia Properties. “I suggest that Intown buyers be prequalified by a reputable lender before they begin their home searches. That way they’ll be ready to move quickly with a strong offer and win the deal when they find the right home.” Miller said that a number of factors have affected the regeneration of communities like East Atlanta and Castleberry Hill, including high gas prices and the stress of fighting rushhour traffic twice a day. “Intown neighborhoods that gained popularity in the 1970s, 1980s and 1990s – Virginia-Highland, Morningside, Peachtree Hills, Garden Hills – have become too pricey for most first or even second-time homebuyers to consider, so these buyers have reached out into surrounding, less ‘gentrified’ areas for more affordable, yet convenient, places to live,” explained Miller. The neighborhood regenerations have generally been successful. Businesses have opened to serve new residents and are thriving. Area schools have dramatically improved as young parents move into the neighborhoods and take active roles volunteering in and supporting the schools.

Old Fourth Ward

56 November 2014 | INtown

Isadora Pennington Councilman Kwanza Hall spoke at the opening of the BeltLine Gateway in the O4W.

Grant Park

Adams Reltors

As these communities have revitalized, bars, restaurants and shops have opened, increasing the neighborhoods’ walkability and further increasing their popularity. Buyers can live close to galleries, theaters, and music and sports venues. The Atlanta Beltline development, and its proximity to the Intown neighborhoods, has also greatly added to the business and home sale boom in these areas, Miller added. Melissa Wakamo, broker/owner of Red Robin Group Real Estate said that just like people, each Intown neighborhood has its own personality. When purchasing a home, it’s not just the house, but also the community that a buyer is purchasing, so homebuyers should do their research and work with an agent who understands the neighborhoods. “Before making a decision, spend a little time shopping, dining or walking in the community,” Wakamo advised. “Go to a neighborhood association meeting. Get to know a few people in the area and ask them what they like about it. Most buyers can get a really good feel for the community before making a home purchase.” She pointed out that while the regenerating Intown neighborhoods are attractive to homeowners, it’s important to recognize that some homebuyers have a more pioneering spirit Berkshire Hathaway than others. Some people are

East Atlanta

Adams Realtors

comfortable in a neighborhood that is revitalizing and feel exhilarated as they watch their community grow. “Others, however, desire a community that’s a little more stable, where much of the neighborhood’s personality and amenities are already established,” Wakamo said. “I believe one of the most important services that an agent can provide is knowing their client and knowing each neighborhood to find a great fit. It’s sort of like being a matchmaker.” Bill Adams, president of Adams Realtors in Grant Park, listed reasons Intown communities are so popular, including the impressive housing stock and impossible-to-beat location – in the center of the Atlanta metro area with quick access to the airport and shopping. “But the people are the most interesting and exciting aspect of living here,” he stressed. Adams was one of the early Atlanta urban pioneers, and he shared what it took to lay the groundwork for the more recent resurgence. “The neighborhood renovations actually began in the late 1960s and early 1970s,” he said. “At that time, people were moving into an area that spanned all the way from where Freedom Parkway is now to where Ga. 400 ends at I-85, including VirginiaHighland and Morningside.” Residents in those communities came together

Grant Park

to actively fight the highways cutting through, he explained, and that activism led to the preservation movement that grew to include Inman Park and Grant Park. There were lots of obstacles, though. Intown housing was hard to finance since banks wouldn’t loan money to homebuyers in neighborhoods like Grant Park. Adams mentioned a specific savings and loan association that wouldn’t lend money to buyers in Virginia-Highland and surrounding areas, even though two of its top branches were located there. “We had to work to convince the banks that we were worth their while. They’d written off the Intown neighborhoods,” he said. Still, many of the homebuyers bought with financing from the sellers or using the “Bank of Mom & Dad.” They’d move in and renovate one room at a time, or they’d run up charges on their credit cards, sell the house, pay off the cards and start all over again. This meant that the renovation of the neighborhoods happened in a piecemeal fashion. Financing wasn’t the only problem. There were zoning issues, too, especially in Grant Park and Midtown, which were zoned then for apartments. “Apartments aren’t good for the fabric of those neighborhoods,” Adams said. “The area couldn’t revitalize unless the zoning changed, and in 1975 and 1976, we orchestrated a large rezoning for the area from apartments to family housing – and that laid the groundwork.” Adams recalled that, in the mid1960s, he saw beautiful two- and threestory grand Victorian houses in Inman Park and Grant Park that were divided up and used as rooming houses. The lawns were patches of dirt and the front porches had six to eight mailboxes, Coke machines and couches with men sleeping on them. The houses still retained a lot of their charm, though. Adams said, “When a person from the suburbs who grew up in 1950s and 1960s ranches went into these older homes, they saw high ceilings, stained glass windows, huge rooms and potentially beautiful pine floors.” It’s not surprising that the houses in those sections of Atlanta were very

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


affordable back then. In the last decades of the 20th century, houses in VirginiaHighland were available for around $25,000, and in Grant Park for $5,000. Adams found a nice corner lot with a 1,800-square-foot house that had been boarded up for 10 years, and was able to buy it for $7,500. In comparison, his friends who were buying homes in the suburbs were paying $80,000 to $100,000. “The Intown homes were fixer-uppers, of course, but West Midtown they were attractive to the baby boomers largely because of the prices, but also because they weren’t so conformist,” Adams said. “A lot of the boomers grew up in the suburbs and they were tired of all the houses and people looking like one another.” There were drawbacks to Intown living in the 1970s; the schools were rather poor and there was very little choice in retail or dining. Residents had to drive a while just to buy groceries. While it was challenging, Adams said that the diversity made it a lot of fun. “On your block, neighbors could include a lawyer, plumber, GSU professor and social worker,” he said. “On Saturday afternoon, everyone would be outside fixing up their houses, and they’d all work together – it was kind of like an old-time barn-raising. I helped neighbors and friends by putting roofs on their homes. It was not only building, it was community building.” Over the last 20 years, Adams has seen a lot of neighborhoods bloom, from Reynoldstown and Grant Park to the Old

After a brief absence, I am back in the game, proudly joining Atlanta Fine Homes Sotheby’s International Realty. Berkshire Hathaway

Fourth Ward and Castleberry Hill. It’s mostly singles and young marrieds who move into the areas. In the past, they’d head to the suburbs, like Alpharetta, once they had kids to take advantage of the better school systems. Now, Morningside and Inman Park boast good elementary and middle schools. Two charter schools have sprung up in Grant Park, and Maynard Jackson High School just had a $30,000,000 renovation. Adams credited activist parents for the changes, and said that the improvements are bringing in even more families. “Atlanta’s not unique in the urban revitalization movement,” Adams said. “It was happening all over the nation. But it’s a slow process. It happens house-byhouse, neighborhood-by-neighborhood, until it reaches a tipping point. A lot of dedication and hard work went into the neighborhoods to bring them to that point, and there were times we didn’t know if we’d succeed.”

Please feel free to contact me with any of your real estate needs. I am happy and eager to help!

BARTOW RAINEY c. 404.394.4477 o. 404.874.0300 bartowrainey@atlantafinehomes.com bartowrainey.atlantafinehomes.com

AtlantaFineHomes.com

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© 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.

Y R O T S I H E CREATIV Red Robin

East Atlanta Strut

SCAD Takeover The students in Christopher Bundy’s graduate writing class at Savannah College of Art & Design created all the content for our memorable July 2011 issue. The students worked with the INtown staff for months planning the issue, which also featured the striking cover art by Caleb Morris.

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BEFORE & AFTER Transforming the Ansley Forest Apartments Atlanta-based TSW, an architecture, landscape architecture and planning firm, was hired by Madison Property Management to re-design Ansley Forest Apartments, a 1970s era, 269-unit apartment complex in Midtown Atlanta near Piedmont Park. Now, after nearly two years of work, the project has moved from design to construction, with the renovation expected to be completed by Buckhaven Construction early next year. “Making Ansley Forest more energyefficient and attractive to today’s renters was an exciting challenge for us at TSW,” said Jerry Spangler, founding principal of TSW. “The complex appeared frozen in time. While the surrounding neighborhood has practically exploded with office, retail and multi-family development, Ansley Forest sat unchanged for decades. Because of this, the complex presented both positives and negatives in terms of re-design, and the

Special

TSW’s Jerry Spangler

owners wisely decided on a renovation rather than tearing down the buildings and starting over.” On the plus side, according to Spangler, were the solid building materials used in the original construction, the variety of apartment floorplans and the generous ratio of greenspace to buildings, more common decades ago when land was less expensive. The buildings are two and three stories tall, and are surrounded by curved drives and walking paths accented by mature trees and shrubs. “As the cliché goes, ‘They don’t build them like that anymore’,” said Spangler. “Every apartment unit has a private entrance, so there are no shared hallways. The buildings feature brick construction and are attractively spaced throughout the property. Residents enjoy private outdoor patios and garden spaces, if they live on the ground level, and balconies with skyline views above the trees, if they live in one of the two-level townhomes above the apartment flats.” Because the owners and architects agreed there should be minimal changes to the buildings’ exterior structure, all interior improvements had to be designed within the footprint of each apartment unit. TSW began by creating open floorplans. They removed walls and opened up the closed-off kitchens, creating airy living spaces. Kitchens and bathrooms were outfitted with new fixtures that are not only more efficient, but more attractive

and better scaled to fit the spaces. One of will be torn down, TSW has been able to the most dramatic improvements came design an attractive and energy-efficient structure featuring such innovations as from replacing and enlarging all of the old photovoltaic solar panels on the roof. windows in the complex. This final phase began last month. Cosmetic changes included removing the old curved balcony awnings and replacing them with colorful flat awnings. Juliette balconies were added to some of the units, while the existing balconies received new wrought iron railings, complimenting the new exterior wrought iron light fixtures. As the project progressed, Special the management Ansley Forest Apartments is getting a big interior and exterior renovation company brought that keeps the unique charm of the 1970s era buildings, while giving them a new, modern appeal. in landscapers to remove overgrown vegetation and relandscape around the existing mature trees and shrubs. The final phase of the project calls for TSW to design a brand new free-standing leasing office and fitness center overlooking the outdoor pool. Because the existing building

We couldn’t have said it better ourselves! Thank you, Atlanta City Council, for recognizing Atlanta INtown’s “20 years of news coverage that fosters a sense of community.” Since 1994, Atlanta INtown’s mission has been to provide hyperlocal news and information to our readers who live, work and play in a dynamic urban setting. We cover everything—in print, online and through social media—that makes our city your home.

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58 November 2014 | INtown

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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


MIDTOWN APPEAL More new mixed-use projects get underway The influx of new mixed-use development over this past year continues to demonstrate Midtown’s appeal as a live-work-play location of choice. In addition to the 20-plus announced development projects this year, seven projects are currently under construction and another has recently been completed. Here’s a report from Midtown Alliance: New Construction JLB partners broke ground late last month on 782 Peachtree Street, a

mixed-use project that will contain 294 apartments and 6,300 SF of retail. Also in construction is the project located at 33 Peachtree Place, a mixed-use development by Wood Partners that will include 343 apartments and 19,000 SF of retail. University House Midtown, a student housing project with 267 units and 10,000 SF of retail, on track for delivery next summer. Just down the street is a second student housing development, Tech Square Tower, with 230 residential units, 14,000 SF of office and 4,700 SF of retail. South City Partners and Gateway Development are partnering on the project, which will also be completed summer 2015.

Modera: Mill Creek returned to present updates on their mixed-use project, a 29-story apartment tower with roughly 450 units and 12,300 square feet of retail at the corner of 8th Street and Williams Street. The development team incorporated several key changes requested by the DRC, including the addition of retail space on Peachtree Place. They received a recommendation of support from the committee on their SAP application.

The Emory Proton Therapy Center, a $200 million+ state-of-the-art cancer treatment facility, began construction in 2013. The project contains 115,000 SF medical space and 4,000 SF of retail, and is anticipated to open in 2016.

Broadstone Terraces: Alliance Residential presented a more refined concept for Broadstone Terraces, a new 8-story apartment building with approximately 218 units proposed on the southeastern corner of Juniper at 6th Street. Given its proximity to the singlefamily neighborhood immediately east of Piedmont Avenue, the project was reviewed by both the Midtown Neighbors Association and NPU-E. It received strong support from the neighborhood as well as from the DRC.

Midtown Development Review Committee Recap

Broadstone Terrace

Special

Modera

The Midtown Development Review Committee (DRC) met Oct. 14 for follow-up presentations on four projects presented previously and one new application.

Azure on the Park: Atlantic Realty Partners provided an update on the first phase of their proposed development at

Special

Piedmont and 11th Street. The proposal includes a 24-story residential tower with 283 units, and an adjacent 5-story building with roughly 47 residential units and 2,100 SF of retail space that will wrap structured parking. The DRC recommended support for the project. Kapture: The committee revisited a renovation project proposed at 75 Peachtree Place that will convert an existing single-story office building into a restaurant/lounge. The committee recommended support for the project and the associated variation request to encroach into the supplemental zone in order to provide a lift for ADA access. 717 Piedmont: A new application was presented for extensive renovations to a home on Piedmont Avenue, near 4th Street. The scope of work includes renovations to the main and upper floor as a single family residence, renovation of the existing basement to add two one-bedroom apartments, and the addition of a threecar garage accessible from the alley. The committee recommended support for the SAP application.

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November 2014 | IN


Real Estate Briefs

CONGRATULATIONS ATLANTA INTOWN ON TWENTY GREAT YEARS! HERE’S TO MANY MORE!

Fuqua Development has unveiled plans for a high-density, mixeduse development on property near the Atlanta Waterworks that was once earmarked for a new transit hub by Amtrak and Greyhound. According to reports, the nearly 14acre site is at the southeast corner of 17th Street and Northside Drive. The project would include approximately 350 multifamily units, 100 detached Special townhomes, and more than 35,000 square feet in An early rendering of the Fuqua development in West Midtown. retail space. Buckhead’s rapid growth is reflected in the rise of new apartments, according to the Buckhead Coalition. The increase shows why residents should support the city’s proposed infrastructure bond issue, Coalition President Sam Massell said last month. The coalition said 300 new Buckhead apartment units were announced recently by Regent Partners and 351 more were announced by Hanover, bringing the list to 30 different projects totaling 9,422 units. “It certainly represents a healthy economic condition,” Massell said, while admitting not all of the projects may come to fruition. “Apparently, it’s a direct response to the population growth of 25- to 35-year-olds who presently prefer the flexibility of renting, rather than owning,” Massell said.

MANAGING BROKER susan@homesteadatlanta.com

michael@homesteadatlanta.com

Georgia Tech has retained Stevens & Wilkinson to provide architectural, engineering and interior design services for a comprehensive renovation of the Glenn and Towers Residence Halls. A new 8,400-square-foot addition will connect the two residences, fulfilling the original 1940 master plan, and features a fitness center, multipurpose meeting room, classroom and small group study rooms. Exterior grounds will also be redesigned to create new outdoor spaces for recreation and entertainment as well as a new accessible route through the sector of campus where the residences are located. The threeThe Buckhead Council of year, 125,000-square-foot project is on track Neighborhoods heard an update on to achieve LEED Gold certification from the the North Buckhead master plan U.S. Green Building Council. during its October meeting. Caleb Racicot, from planning Sales of newly built, single-family homes and architectural firm TSW, said have been at the highest level in six years, preliminary recommendations for according to The Cal-Culator index from the master plan were made in late Southeast Mortgage. Sales of new, singleSeptember, including protecting the family homes in August rose 18 percent single-family home nature of the nationally from July and 33 percent above community, creating more parks and 2013 levels, according to the latest data greenspace, and creating more walking released jointly by the U.S. Census Bureau and biking options. and the Department of Housing and Urban Racicot said preserving the current Development on September 24. The South land use pattern and not allowing posted a 7.8 percent change month-to-month, multi-family housing to encroach and a 27.2 percent increase from 2013. into single-family neighborhoods The data also reflected a slight increase in was a top priority. He also said there inventory, which now stands at a 4.8-month were opportunities for low-density, supply. Unfortunately, after four consecutive mixed-use developments in areas months of gains, existing-home sales fell 1.8 zoned for commercial, and that a percent nationally and 4.2 percent in the recommendation would be made to South in August, according to The National the city of Atlanta about rezoning Association of Realtors. changes. TSW has also been exploring Engel & Völkers Buckhead Atlanta has unbuilt lots and open areas that announced the appointment of Valerie Levin, might create more greenspace for the senior vice president, Business Development community. Racicot said there’s also and Operations, and Joe Gary, builder potential to use some of the old Ga. account manager, to the management team. 400 toll area for recreational space. New sidewalks, lighting, Four Atlanta Realtors have been landscaping and bike lanes are also in recognized among the top 1 percent of the plan, along with traffic calming on sales associates affiliated with Coldwell West Wieuca and Old Ivy Road. Banker Residential Brokerage in Atlanta North Buckhead Civic Association for 2013. Debbie Sonenshine, Robin Blass, President Gordon Certain said, Marc Castillo and Bradford Smith were unfortunately, the master plan was too recognized at a gala event in West Palm late to figure into the infrastructure Beach, Florida, to honor the top regional bond referendum proposed by the city associates from NRT LLC, the largest of Atlanta. residential brokerage in the country.

An update on the North Buckhead master plan

60 November 2014 | INtown

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set your sights higher

own atlantic We know you'll love the view. But don't take our word for it, see our luxury condos for yourself. Bring this postcard on your first visit and we'll sweeten the deal with

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#OWNATLANTIC *HOA fees incentive for new buyers only. Must visit before 12/31/14 and mention this ad to qualify. Not valid for buyers who already have a contract in process. ORAL REPRESENTATIONS CANNOT BE RELIED UPON AS CORRECTLY STATING REPRESENTATIONS OF THE SELLER. FOR CORRECT REPRESENTATIONS, REFERENCE SHOULD BE MADE TO THIS BROCHURE AND TO THE DOCUMENTS REQUIRED BY CODE § 44-3-111 OF THE GEORGIA CONDOMINIUM ACT TO BE FURNISHED BY THE SELLER TO A BUYER. Crescent Heights® is a service mark for a group of limited liability companies and partnerships. The Atlantic is being developed by Midtown Residences, LLC, a separate, single purpose entity that is solely responsible for its development, sales, obligations and liabilities. Midtown Residences, LLC reserves the right to change features and amenities without notice. Pricing is subject to change at the owner’s sole discretion, without notice. Financing is not guaranteed. Terms may vary based on your individual situation.

EXCLUSIVE SALES & MARKETING BY:

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town 61

November 2014 | IN


INtown HOME SERVICES Directory To advertise, call Deborah at (404) 917-2200 x 110 n utpomoer co us 0 c r 5 $ ne pe O

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CALL BECKY PERSONAL ORGANIZER 404-982-7128

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thegaragedude.com

www.BeckyWhetzell.com

(404) 274-5176

Universal Services LLC

We do quality work at reasonable prices.

Window Cleaning

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• Tub and shower caulking • Carpentry • Plumbing • Electrical • Painting

770-285-7017

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Voted Best of 2012 & 2013

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since 1968

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John Salvesen • 404-453-3438

www.WindowCleanAtl.com

thehandymancanatlanta@gmail.com

Your home. Our help.

Get help around the house by calling one of our INtown Directory advertisers. Tell them you saw their ad in Atlanta INtown! 4738 BDB intown ad_f.pdf

INtown Pet Services Directory Feline & Canine Wellness Packages Starting At

$75

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1

9/21/14

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SANDY WEIDER PET SITTING SERVICE HANDLING & ADMINISTERING INSULIN TO DOGS & CATS

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62 November 2014 | INtown

MY

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2:


Georgia Properties

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

114 Flora Avenue EDGEWOOD

$399,000 Leslie Erickson 404-642-2227

1130 Piedmont Ave, #601 1010 Heatherbrook Lane ANSLEY ABOVE THE PARK

HEATHERBROOKE

$389,000

$374,000

Rich Cohen 404-217-2926

Emilie Hass 678-232-9585

347 Grant Park Pklace SW GRANT PARK

$349,000 Johnny Gonzales 404-226-5888

2149 Rugby Avenue

2170 Parkview Lane

361 17th Street, #801

6 Brittany Way

HISTORIC COLLEGE PARK

PARKVIEW

TWELVE ATLANTIC STATION

WALDEN ON LENOX

$319,000

$264,900

$264,900

$180,000

Eric Bender 404-266-8100

Brian Woodworth 404-583-1437

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

404-266-8100 Dale.Modica@BHHSGeorgia.com Midtown.BHHSGeorgia.com

Beverly Jones 404-550-2198

Mark Camp 404-786-5400

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.

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town 63

November 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

MORNINGSIDE - 1933 tudor recently renovated. Master Suite plus 2BR’s, hall BA & laundry rm up. 4 public rms & guest BR on main. Porch, 2 car gar, level yard with pool. 4Bed/4Bath $849,000 FMLS:5348963 Sally Westmoreland 404-354-4845

MORNINGSIDE - Renovated 4 sided brick on quiet cul-de-sac. Gourment kitchen w/Subzero/Thermodor/Bosch plus huge sunroom addition. Upstairs owner’s suite with new spa bath. 4Bed/2.5Bath $650,000 FMLS:5346138 Michael JW Smith 404-786-2057

KIRKWOOD - Incredible value for this newer Craftsman Home. Convenient to Oakhurst. Spacious Living Areas. Fabulous Finishes. Amazing Master Suite. 5Bed/3.5Bath $549,900 FMLS:5344022 Amber Mason 678-637-3530 Patrick Peyer 404-784-7936

PIEDMONT HEIGHTS - Amazing renovated/

BROOKHAVEN VILLAGE - Spacious 3 level

Brookhaven traditional in a cul-de-sac neighborhood. Vaulted great room with double windows and fireplace. 5Bed/4Bath $460,000 FMLS: 5350656 Mike Kondalski 404-234-9379

DRUID HILLS - Fabulous house in GREAT location near Emory/CDC/Virginia Highlands. Spacious eat-in kitchen with a big island and lots of cabinets/counter-space! 4Bed/2.5Bath $389,000 FMLS: 5339728 Hallie Chasen 404-271-4635

REYNOLDSTOWN – Fantastic newer home in HOT Reynoldstown! Walk to neighborhood Coffee/Cocktail shop, Dog Park, Restaurants and only steps to the Beltline! 3Bed/3.5Bath $359,000 FMLS: 5351467 Erin Fye 404-771-9822

SHILOH RIDGE - This is the home you have been waiting for! Gorgeous Estate Swim Community Home in the best school district, sitting on over 1.5 acres. 5Bed/4.5Bath $549,900 FMLS: 5337141 Matt Schwartz 404-874-2262

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 - Refinished Hardwood Floors. Freshly Painted. New Carpet. Large Kitchen w/Stained Cabinets & Granite Ctops. Quaint Front Porch. Convenient to Edgewood Retail. 4Bed/3.5Bath+Loft $364,900 FMLS:5304016 Tonya Marlatt 404-518-8787

INTOWN - Panoramic Skyline Views. 2 Master Suites. 2 Private Terraces. 14’+ Ceilings. Brazillian Hardwoods. Huge Tax Abatement thru 2022. 3 Assigned Parking Spaces. 2Bed/2.5Bath $864,264 FMLS: 5184357 Rea Kelly 404-428-9929

BUCKHEAD - Sophisticated City Home. Turn-Key Opportunity. Completely Furnished! Walls of Windows. Hotel Amenities w/ Unrivaled Finishes Throughout. 2Bed/2.5Bath $599,000 FMLS: 5327908 Marc Castillo 404-449-6862

MIDTOWN - Steps From Atlantic Station. Immaculate Condition. Hardwood Floors. Romeo & Juliet Balcony. Quick Access to GT & Downtown. 1Bed/1Bath $122,850 FMLS: 5331314 Patrick Jones 404-680-9534/Rea Kelly 404-428-9929

MIDTOWN - Large Penthouse Unit w/2 Master Suites. Midtown Views Through 20’ Floor-to-Ceiling Windows. 2 Balconies. Gourmet Kitchen. Storage Unit. 3Bed/3Bath $739,900 FMLS: 5335472 Allen Snow 404-931-1176

INTOWN - Rare Top Floor Unit w/Great City Views. Huge Laundry/Storage Room. Gated community. Lots of visitor parking. Great amenities. 2Bed/2Bath $285,000 FMLS: 5345672 Tonya Marlatt 404-518-8787

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

expanded traditional intown home with all the bells & whistles. Master suite that leads to multiple indoor/outdoor living spaces. 3Bed/2Bath $475,000 FMLS:5348789 Bradford Smith 404-210-4141

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

64 November 2014 | INtown

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