CrossRoadsNews, January 28, 2017

Page 1

YOUTH

WELLNESS

Booking male readers

Seeing red for a cause

Toney Elementary is looking for men to share their love of books with students at the school’s annual read-in on Feb. 10. 4

DeKalb Board of Health employees want to raise awareness about heart disease prevention on Feb. 3, National Wear Red Day. 6

Let’s Keep DeKalb Peachy Clean Please Don’t Litter Our Streets and Highways

EAST ATLANTA • DECATUR • STONE MOUNTAIN • LITHONIA • AVONDALE ESTATES • CLARKSTON • ELLENWOOD • PINE LAKE • REDAN • SCOTTDALE • TUCKER

January 28, 2017

Copyright © 2017 CrossRoadsNews, Inc.

Volume 22, Number 40

www.crossroadsnews.com

DeKalb chips in $180 million to redevelop GM site By Rosie Manins

DeKalb County is putting $180 million into public infrastructure at the old General Motors plant site in Doraville. The Board of Commissioners voted unanimously on Jan. 24 on an intergovernmental agreement with the city of Doraville, in which it will allocate up to $180 million various infrastructure improvements including roads and utilities. The funding will come from the anticipated tax revenue in a tax allocation district (TAD) which encompasses the former GM production facility which closed in 2008. The commissioners vote means the proposed $60 million mixed-use development

causing the county and city of Doraville governments to move ahead without its “We can hopefully create a model, not just for backing. DeKalb, but throughout this state to ensure The BOC was moved up Feb. 14 because that all our residents have the ability and equal Integral Groupneeded approval to close on opportunity to live and work and play in the another deal in the next few weeks. Before the commissioners voted, DeKalb developments that are being created.” CEO Michael Thurmond said the proposed DeKalb CEO Michael Thurmond development has the full support of his administration, as long as it includes an afdaily MARTA ridership by 30,000. can finally proceed. fordable housing component. Developer Integral Group and its busiThe project near Spaghetti Junction at the “We believe that the Assembly project intersection of I-285 and I-85 in Doraville, ness partners bought the 165-acre property is one that will have a tremendously posinow called Assembly, is expected to generate for $50 million in 2014, six years after it tive impact not just for DeKalb County but 500 jobs in the near future, and up to 8,000 closed. throughout the metropolitan Atlanta region,” The DeKalb School Board refused to eventually. It also is expected to attract $1.5 billion in private investment and increase participate in the Tax Allocation District, Please see ASSEMBLY, page 3

Pedestrians can now walk on art in Decatur Multimillion-dollar makeover push in city By Rosie Manins

Downtown Decatur has gone all artsy with colorful designs covering traffic control boxes and some pedestrian crosswalks. The addition of crosswalk artwork is part of the city’s Extreme Makeover: The Downtown Decatur Edition – a multimillion-dollar push to enhance the downtown with art, new mixed-use developments, infrastructure upgrades, townhouses, and streetscape improvements. The murals on the traffic boxes were started by Decatur artist Larry Holland, who has enlisted other artists to help him transform the boxes into eye-catching art. For the creative crosswalk project, brightly colored flowers; geometric patterns; multicolored forks, knives and spoons; and footprints and paw prints have been installed on six crosswalks along a half-mile strip of Ponce de Leon Avenue between Fairview Avenue and North Candler. The seventh colorful creation is a short walk away in the 100 block of East Trinity Place. To put down the durable artwork on the pavement, crews glued vibrantly patterned thermoplastic tiles to the road. Hugh Saxon, Decatur’s deputy city manager, said the $250,000 creative crosswalk project is definitely a standout. “I’m sure there are other communities with decorative crosswalks, but I believe the city of Decatur’s are more expressive and certainly unique for our region,” he said. Saxon said that about $150,000 of the creative crosswalk budget was spent on materials and installation, and $100,000 covered items such as asphalt repairs, raised concrete speed tables, accessible ramps, and speed control barriers. Other makeover work, totaling more than $7.2 million, also is underway in the city. It includes $1.7 million for Phase Two of storm drainage upgrades; $2.9 million for North McDonough streetscape improvements; and $2.6 million for railroad crossing enhancements at Candler and McDonough. Contractors began working on crosswalks on Jan. 12 and finished 10 days later at the intersection of Ponce and Clairmont Avenue. The installation near the historic Decatur courthouse is the largest, covering three of the square’s four crosswalks with large, brightly colored flowers on an

Colorful crosswalks and murals on traffic control boxes are part of the city’s Extreme Makeover: The Downtown Decatur Edition.

Walk on the wild side Creative crosswalks are located at: n Ponce de Leon Avenue & East Court Square n Ponce de Leon Avenue midblock near Candler Street n Ponce de Leon Avenue & Marshall Street n Ponce de Leon Avenue & Fairview Avenue n Ponce de Leon Avenue & Clairmont Avenue n Ponce de Leon Avenue midblock near Jimmy John’s n East Trinity Place near Chick-fil-A

orange background. Audra Cooper, CEO of Autaco Development, which was involved in the crosswalk project, said its goal is twofold. “We are helping increase traffic calming for the city of Decatur as well as adding a layer to the eclectic expression in the downtown business district,” she said. The murals covering the traffic control boxes include abstract art, cartoon creatures, lifelike animals, adults, and

children. More than 20 have been painted so far around the city, with sponsorship from the Decatur Downtown Development Authority, Decatur Arts Alliance, local businesses and a crowdfunding campaign. Some of the city’s makeover projects are privately funded by developers. They include a seven-story, 90,729square-foot Hampton Inn and Suites hotel under construction on Clairmont between Ponce and Commerce Drive. The hotel with 145 guest rooms, scheduled for completion in June, will have an adjacent parking deck and an outdoor swimming pool. Two mixed-use developments also are planned. A residential over retail is planned for Church Street between Ponce and Commerce, and residential over office and retail is planned for West Trinity between Commerce and McDonough. A 22-townhouse project also is being built at 432 E. Howard Ave. Through this week, five units were sold and another five are under contract. Ongoing expansion of Decatur High School on McDonough, to satisfy rising enrollment, also is part of the makeover initiative.


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