FEB. 5 - FEB.18, 2016 • VOL. 10 — NO. 3
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►NPU-B backs Peachtree Hills tower p. 4 ►Residents resist Brookhaven/Oglethorpe MARTA development plans p. 16
MILESTONES TEST RESULTS | P20
Chastain construction projects soon will give parts of park a new look
BY JOE EARLE joeearle@reporternewspapers.net
Stephen Derks, with the Astra Group, installs safety netting around the new “tree house” structure at Chastain Park on Jan. 28. See additional photos on page 18.►
MAKING A DIFFERENCE A mother and her two daughters share their breast cancer journeys BY DYANA BAGBY dyanabagby@reporternewspapers.net
Fourteen years ago, Maxx Schube was in the carpool lane at Davis Academy in Sandy Springs waiting to pick up her children when she felt a lump in her breast and another one on her chest. See FAMILY on page 6
“Tra�fic is already horrible. It’s going to get worse [in the Perimeter Center area]. ... It’ll just mean I’ll avoid that whole area. It’ll change where I shop, where I go. Right now you have to plan when you’re going to do stu�f because tra�fic is just horrible.” SUSAN CLARKE
See more reaction to proposed highrises in the Perimeter area in Commentary, page 12.
JOE EARLE
OUT & ABOUT Celebrate Black History Month Page 8
Construction projects now underway are giving new looks to several familiar features around Chastain Park. The park’s playground reopens this month after a $2.5 million makeover by the Chastain Park Conservancy that expands the play area fourfold to 40,000 square feet. A formal opening for the playground is scheduled for March. Meanwhile, separate projects underway in other parts of the park will extend the jogging path along Powers Ferry Road and make the Chastain Park pool available for year-round swimming. The expanded amenities add new swings and three ground-level slides, a “tree house” structure, a musical play area, bathrooms and open areas. “We have a variety of modes of play,” said Rosa McHugh, executive director of the conservancy, as she visited the playSee CHASTAIN on page 18
2 | Community
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Building a little library in Peachtree Hills Park
Friends gathered at Peachtree Hills Park on Jan. 31 to help Eagle Scout candidate Colin Forsyth create a “Little Free Library.” Top left, Miles Jackson, left, and Teddy Porter dig a hole. Top center, Colin Forsyth, front left, with Miles’ help, right, is joined by Bradley Reeves, back left, and Sterling Spiegl in preparing the spot to drop in the post. Top right, Colin and Miles check their work. Center left, the four boys, accompanied by Colin’s father Ian, back, bending down, place the library box on its post. Center right, four proud young men. Left, Colin and his father Ian tidy up the grounds around the library. Right, the two admire their work.
PHOTOS BY PHIL MOSIER
FEB. 5 - FEB. 18, 2016
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Community | 3
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Community Briefs
the city said in its release. “I want to thank Mayor Reed for his efforts in reaching a compromise, which I believe is in the best interest of Atlanta Public Schools, our city and the BeltLine,” Atlanta Board of Education Chair Courtney English said. “This new agreement provides financial certainty for APS that will be used to further our turnaround efforts and protects the future success of the BeltLine.”
VOLUNTEERS SOUGHT TO HELP WITH ATLANTA MEMORIAL PARK PLANTINGS
CITY TO EXAMINE BUCKHEAD TRAFFIC CONGESTION
A resolution calling for the city to examine the extent and effects of Buckhead’s notorious traffic congestion was approved by Atlanta City Council. The legislation asks for a determination of just how heavy traffic really is on the Peachtree Road corridor, and how the congestion impacts the delivery of key city services. The resolution also aims to project future congestion levels should the area grow to the maximum density envisioned by Atlanta’s Comprehensive Development Plan. The legislation was introduced by Councilmembers Yolanda Adrean and Howard Shook, whose districts share the densely developed area. “The time has come to meet our traffic problem head-on,” said Adrean. “People need to know if our traffic congestion is merely a nuisance or a legitimate threat to our health, safety and welfare,” said Shook. “Either way, this study will help point a way forward.” The work will be performed by Arcadis/BPA, an on-call firm Atlanta can utilize when engineering or design expertise is needed. The study’s cost and delivery date will be determined by the time the legislation appears in committee next week.
CITY AND SCHOOL OFFICIALS ANNOUNCE AGREEMENT OVER BELTLINE PAYMENTS
Atlanta city and school officials have reached an agreement they say will allow continued development of the BeltLine while providing payments to the Atlanta Public Schools.
“A healthy BeltLine means a healthier, stronger Atlanta Public School system and a stronger city of Atlanta,” Mayor Kasim Reed said in a press release after the agreement was approved by Atlanta City CounBoard of Education Chair cil, the Courtney English school board and boards of Invest Atlanta and Atlanta BeltLine Inc. The original agreement to create and fund the Atlanta BeltLine was designed prior to the Great Recession, the city said. In that agreement, in exchange for APS contributing a portion of its tax revenues to the project, the city of Atlanta, Atlanta BeltLine Inc. and Invest Atlanta pay the school system, “Payments in Lieu of Taxes,” known as PILOTs. The payments were “unsustainable,” the city said in a press release, “and would halt the progress” of the BeltLine. The new agreement restructures the payments and ensures the future development of the Atlanta BeltLine in a way that reflects current economic realities as well as APS’ need for guaranteed revenue,
Mayor Kasim Reed
open field off Howell Mill Road at 9 a.m. Work is scheduled to last until noon.
The Atlanta Memorial Park Conservancy and Trees Atlanta have scheduled a volunteer work day for Feb. 27 to work on erosion control to repair damage done by floods in December. Volunteers are sought to help install plants to shore up eroded banks on Peachtree Creek. Volunteers interested in taking part are asked to meet in the
TWO MORE PARTS OF THE PATH COMPLETED
Livable Buckhead announced recently that two phases of the southern end of the PATH400 greenway have been completed. Portions on Garson Drive between Piedmont Road, Adina and on Morosgo Way were completed, the organization said.
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Civic leaders gather at Buckhead Coalition’s 27th annual meeting BY JOHN RUCH
NPU-B backs Peachtree Hills tower
The keynote speaker was Paulette Brown, president of the American Bar Association, who spoke about the importance of diversity and inclusion in employment as both ethical and good business.
johnruch@reporternewspapers.net
A crowd of the city’s movers and shakers gathered for the 27th annual Buckhead Coalition annual meeting Jan. 27, held at the 103 West event hall on West Paces Ferry Road. Guests were greeted by former Atlanta Mayor Sam Massell, who founded and leads the civic organization, an invitation-only group of 100 CEOs and others active in Buckhead life. Atlanta Mayor Kasim Reed and Fulton County Chairman John Eaves JOHN RUCH were among the many Atlanta Mayor Kasim Reed, left, joins Paulette Brown, elected officials in attenpresident of the American Bar Association, and Buckhead Coalition President Sam Massell at the Buckhead dance. Reed credited MasCoalition’s 27th annual meeting Jan. 27 at 103 West. sell with demonstrating that “there’s no such thing as retirement for mayors” and praised the Buckhead Coalition for She also praised the coalition’s diassistance in getting through his “toughverse membership and said, “It’s good to est summer” in dealing with a spike in loknow that you bring together private and cal crime. “The point is that we hear you,” public concerns, because nothing can be Reed told the coalition membership. done without the other.”
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Lawyer Carl Westmoreland presents Branch Properties’ proposed tower to the board of NPU-B.
BY JOE EARLE
But Peachtree Hills resident Laura Dobson asked that the NPU require the developer to save more of the building, which she said covers more than 16,000 square feet. She asked that the original portion of the 1929 building, which covered more than 6,000 square feet, be preserved. “I’m not asking them not to touch it. I’m asking them to preserve the impor-
joeearle@reporternewspapers.net
Despite a resident’s plea that a developer be required to save more of an 87-year-old building than planned, members of the board of Neighborhood Planning Unit-B sided with a neighborhood association and overwhelmingly approved a proposal for a 15-story residential building on Peachtree Road. The board voted 22-1, with one member abstaining, to approve Branch Properties’ plan for the residential tower at 2395, 2425 and 2451 Peachtree Road. A fast-food restaurant and a 1929 building known as the Bindery occupy portions of the site. Branch Properties representatives said the developer plans to keep about 2,600 square feet of the building as part of the new development, which will feature apartments and street-level shops or restaurants. After extensive negotiations with representatives of the Peachtree Hills neighborhood, the developer won support for the project from 80 percent of the neighborhood’s residents, representatives told the NPU board.
Peachtree Hills resident Laura Dobson asked that the Bindery be saved.
tant part of the buildng,” she said. Richard Lee of Branch Properties said the developer was saving as much of the building as it could. “We’ve spent tens of thousands of dollars to save the 2,600 square feet,” he said. “Do we wish we could save more? Of course we do. But we’re thrilled to save the 2,600 square feet.”
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As MARTA seeks more funds, Fulton officials take a regional approach BY JOHN RUCH johnruch@reporternewspapers.net
The political battle is just beginning over MARTA’s request, filed in the Gold Dome Feb. 1, to seek an additional halfpenny sales tax from DeKalb and Fulton voters on the November ballot. But whatever happens, a new era of regionally-minded transportation planning seems to be dawning in parts of Fulton County. Fulton Chairman John Eaves has been convening a group of Fulton mayors for several months to hash out a possible menu of road and mass transit projects to put before voters. And Sandy Springs Mayor Rusty Paul has said he’s asked City Manager John McDonough to gather staff from various Fulton cities to talk about the nitty-gritty of regional projects. “I think you’re going to see something miraculous this year” as the mayors collaborate on a possible transportation funding package to send to voters, Eaves said at a recent meeting of the Buckhead Coalition. “The Fulton County Commission, I give them credit,” Paul said in an interview last fall, when the meetings were
just beginning. “They’re taking leadership in getting everyone at the table.” Under existing legislation, DeKalb and Fulton can ask voters to approve a special local option sales tax of up to 1 penny on the November ballot for transportation projects. The tax would sunset in five years. The MARTA proposal—filed by state Sen. Brandon Beach (R-Alpharetta)— would devote up to half of that penny to MARTA for more than 40 years, to match the lifetime of the transit agency’s existing 1 penny tax.
Extending the Red Line
MARTA says the additional SPLOST money could fund extension of the Red Line to Alpharetta, including a new Northridge station in Sandy Springs; a light rail connection through the Emory University area between Buckhead’s Lindbergh station and the Blue Line’s Avondale station; and a rail extension along I-20 to Lithonia. Political opinion varies on whether MARTA should get more SPLOST funds and if so, how much. Johns Creek Mayor Mike Bodker has been skeptical. Atlanta
Mayor Kasim Reed backs the half-penny and “will not support any proposal that does not fund transit, which our region needs to grow and prosper,” according to city of Atlanta spokeswoman Jenna Garland. Paul supports the MARTA expansion and has been discussing SPLOST options with other Fulton mayors. He declined to comment on the state of those talks, saying it’s too early for details.
Regional planning
But in previous interviews and reports at City Council meetings, Paul has talked about the importance of regional planning and finding a compromise mix of road and mass transit projects that voters would approve because they would actually use them. “As [poet] John Donne said, we’re not an island among ourselves,” Paul said in an interview last fall. And, he said, elected officials need to bridge the gap between the existing short-term SPLOST vision and MARTA’s long-term plans. “We’ve got to get them both on the same page…[in a] comprehensive, rational plan,” he said.
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Doctors told her not to worry, the lumps were nothing. But she insisted on a biopsy. The biopsy came back positive for cancer. She then also insisted on being tested for the breast cancer susceptibility gene (BRCA) – as an Ashkenazi Jew, she knew she was at a higher risk of having the gene. That test also came back positive for the BRCA 1 gene mutation, meaning she was likely to get either ovarian or breast cancer before age 70. She underwent treatment and is now a 13-year survivor of breast cancer. As a mother with daughters and a son, she wanted them to be tested for the gene as well. Her two daughters, Rochelle and Alana, were positive; her son was negative. Now, her daughter, Alana, 24, is in treatment for a recurrence of breast cancer after undergoing just last year a double mastectomy and chemotherapy. “Never in my wildest dreams did I expect my daughter to have breast cancer in college,” Maxx Schube, 55, said. “This is not an old woman disease anymore.” Rochelle Schube, 29, is a “previvor” who chose to take action after an irregular MRI by having a double mastectomy and reconstructive surgery in June before any diagnosis of cancer.
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When someone tests positive for BRCA, they are encouraged to be tested for cancer every six months. Rochelle said twice a year she would be on an emotional rollercoaster, wondering, “Is this my time?” “It gets emotional. Every six months you’re worried. And especially after my sister was diagnosed … this was not something she was given the chance to do,” Rochelle Schube said. “After they found something with my MRI, I got scared and decided to have surgery to remove all doubt.” Because the Schube women speak openly about BRCA and their journeys with breast cancer, they are being honored at the Greater Atlanta Hadassah’s Breast Strokes – The Big Reveal event on Feb. 20 at The Stave Room at American Spirit Works. The event raises funds for breast cancer research and genetic research programs at the Hadassah Medical Organization in Jerusalem and for breast cancer education, advocacy and prevention in the U.S. “We wanted to be a wake-up call to the younger generation,” Maxx Schube said. “I can be mad this has happened to us or I can believe this is happening to us so we can let other people know [about BRCA], educate other people and be there for others to lean on.” Rochelle Schube also tries to see the
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FEB. 5 - FEB. 18, 2016
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Rochelle Schube now volunteers with Bright Pink, an organization helping young women dealing with breast and ovarian cancer. She facilitates a monthly support group and works individually with women. “When I found out I had [BRCA], I felt very alone. Now I have a comSPECIAL munity,” she said. From left, Rochelle, Maxx and Alana Schube all Rochelle carry the BRCA 1 gene mutation, which significantly Schube stressincreases the risk of breast and ovarian cancer. es that having a positive despite the harrowing journeys preventative doushe and her mother and sister are on. ble mastectomy – a surgery made famous “This happens to whole families. It’s not when actress Angelina Jolie came out pubfun. If I can find a silver lining in all this, licly as having the surgery after she learned it’s that we as a family have come togethshe carries the BRCA 1 gene – is not a decier and support each other. We are empowsion made lightly. ering each other in a powerless situation,” “People have asked, ‘What else are you she said. cutting off your body?’ And that’s not what Maxx Schube praises Alana’s fight this is about,” she said. “I will forever reagainst cancer, saying “she rocked it” durmember when my sister and mom were diing last year’s surgery and chemo. agnosed with cancer, going to chemother“As a mom, to watch your daughter go apy … it’s heartbreaking,” she said. “I didn’t through this is a nightmare. She has an want to be the next one.” amazing attitude,” she said. “She is ready And her decision to speak out about her to fight this.” journey is simply a way to help others. Too Maxx Schube said because she and Almany myths and misconceptions exist that ana discovered their lumps themselves, stigmatize women who decide to have prethey were initially told there was nothing ventative surgeries, she added. People have wrong with them. even asked her if she was just unhappy “More people need to not be afraid to with her breasts. speak up and insist they check it out,” she “Mastectomy is not the same as augsaid. mentation. It’s painful and it’s different,” When Rochelle Schube decided to take she said. preventative care through surgery, her in“Somebody needs to take a stand. And surance company at first denied her claim. what’s the alternative to not speaking out? She took on the insurance company and To internalize this and let others stumble? “went from being scared to fighting for the No.” thing I was scared to do.”
Community | 7
Ultimately, it’s your experience that matters. To be sure, we’re proud of our 27 years of experience in senior living. But, to us, what really matters is your experience at our communities. We do everything with that idea clearly in mind. So, go ahead, enjoy yourself with great social opportunities and amenities. Savor fine dining every day. And feel assured that assisted living services are always available if needed. We invite you to experience The Piedmont for yourself at a complimentary lunch and tour. Please call 404.381.1743 to schedule.
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VISUAL & PERFORMING ARTS HARP & VIOLIN Sunday, Feb. 21, 4-5 p.m. Oglethorpe University Museum of Art’s Skylight Gallery Concert Series presents Lynne Aspnes, harp, and Justin Bruns, assistant concertmaster of the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra, performing works by Bach, Manuel de Falla, Kreisler, Camille Saint-Saens and more. General admission: $10; free for OUMA members or with a Petrel Pass. 4484 Peachtree Rd., Brookhaven, 30319. Email: brunnels@oglethorpe.edu or visit: http://museum.oglethorpe.edu/events/ for details.
KARLA HARRIS Sunday, Feb. 21, 4:30-6:30 p.m. The Heritage Winter Classics series concludes when Karla Harris, accompanied by the Ted Howe Trio, sings the Dave and Iola Brubeck Songbook. $5 for HSS members; $10 non-members. Held indoors. Call 404-851-9111 or email: events@heritagesandysprings.org to learn more. Heritage Hall, 6110 Bluestone Rd., Sandy Springs, 30328. www.heritagesandysprings.org. http://karlaharris.com.
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Take Your Brain Health Into Your Own Hands !! SIMPLE STEPS YOU CAN DO TO MAKE A DIFFERENCE IN YOUR MENTAL SHARPNESS � Engage in light exercise. Research shows that structurally sound white matter in the brain increases with physical activity, allowing regions of the brain to communicate more effectively and also helping diminish the chance of developing cognitive decline. � Practice eating a ‘Mediterranean’ diet. An eating regimen consisting of fruit, vegetables, grains, fish, wine in moderation and mono-unsaturated fats. It can boost overall brain health and prevent cognitive decline. � Keep Stimulating your mind. Learning new skills, engaging in a hobby, or reading and playing games can all stimulate the mind and promote more flexible and adaptable brain connections.
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Thursday, Feb. 11, 6-7:45 p.m. Ebooks have made self-publishing more popular than ever. Topics: the importance of editing and rewriting; building your writer’s platform; ebooks vs. print; marketing; approaching a publisher/agent. Free and open to the public. For beginning adult authors. Reserve a spot by calling: 404-814-3500. Buckhead Branch Library, Small Meeting Room, 269 Buckhead Ave., NE, Atlanta, 30305. Email: comments@ co.fulton.ga.us with questions.
BIRD COUNT Saturday, Feb. 13, 9:30 a.m. The Dunwoody
Nature Center holds classes for adults and children to participate in the Great Backyard Bird Count. Learn species identification, the importance of the bird count, basic observation and how to enter the tally. Computers onsite. Additional classes on Feb. 12, 11 a.m., and Feb. 15, 10 a.m. and 12 p.m. Open to all. Free, reservations recommended. Call 770-394-3322 for details. Visit: www.dunwoodynature.org to sign up. 5343 Roberts Dr., Dunwoody, 30338.
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seeds if you wish. $10, adults; $5 for children; free for those 3 and under. RSVP to 678-315-0836. Register online and see more: www.bhnp.org. Blue Heron Nature Preserve, 4055 Roswell Rd., Atlanta, 30342.
FOR KIDS & FAMILY Celebrate Black History Month ‘SELMA, LORD, SELMA’ Tuesday, Feb. 9, 5:30-7:30 p.m. Bring the
family to see the movie “Selma, Lord, Selma,” about a young girl, in 1965, who becomes a devoted follower of Martin Luther King Jr. Free and open to the community. Rated PG. Snacks provided. Open to the first 20 participants. Brookhaven Branch Library, 1242 North Druid Hills Rd., Brookhaven, 30319. Call 404-848-7140 to find out more.
MOSE TOLLIVER Friday, Feb. 12, 4-4:45 p.m. In
honor of Black History Month, join others for a discussion of Mose T., one of the South’s most famous folk artists. Be inspired, and create a masterpiece of your own! Free. Open to the community. For those ages 7-12. Limited to the first 10 participants. Call 770512-4640 or visit the Dunwoody Branch Library to register. 5339 Chamblee-Dunwoody Rd., Dunwoody, 30338.
COOKIE ART Monday, Feb. 8, 4-5:30 p.m. Create and decorate works of art on cookies. Attendees will take home their masterpieces to share... or not! Free. All are welcome. Suitable for youngsters 7-13. Open to the first 15 participants. Call 770-512-4640 or visit the Dunwoody Branch Library to register. 5339 Chamblee-Dunwoody Rd., Dunwoody, 30338.
GET SWEET! Wednesday, Feb. 10, 3-4:30 p.m. Make delicious chocolates for your valentine or for yourself! Free. All are welcome. Appropriate for those aged 10-17. Open to the first 15 participants. Registration began Jan. 18. Visit the Brookhaven Branch Library or call 404-8487140 to sign up. 1242 North Druid Hills Rd., Brookhaven, 30319.
HOLIDAY CRAFTS create dreams of spring �lowers? Jumpstart your spring planting and learn about winter sowing Saturday, Feb. 13, 10-11 a.m. Explore old techniques—wstarting seeds in recycled plastic and new holiday traditions with “make and containers to produce hardy, strong spring seedlings. SUBMIT YOUR EVENT LISTING WITH US AT Bring one or more plastic containers; calendar@ReporterNewspapers.net supply your own
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take“ crafts and games geared toward Valentine’s Day. Free. For kids aged 5-10. Heritage Sandy Springs Museum, 6075 Sandy Springs Circle, Sandy Springs, 30328. For details, email: curator@heritagesandysprings. org, call 404-851-9111x2 or visit: www.heritagesandysprings.org.
Out & About | 9
day, Feb. 11 for members only, 12-6 p.m. Open to the public Friday, Feb. 12, 12-6; Saturday, Feb. 13, 10-4. 3295 Northside Parkway, Atlanta, 30327. Call 404-814-3508 or email: barbarafrolik@gmail.com with questions.
SAT PREP Sunday, Feb. 21, 2-5 p.m. Get ready for the new SAT at this study session hosted by C2Education. Light snacks and water provided. Advance registration required by calling 404-303-6130. For teens. Sandy Springs Branch Library, 395 Mount Vernon Highway, Sandy Springs, 30328. Questions? Email: comments@co.fulton.ga.us.
FUNDRAISERS BOOK SALE Friday, Feb.12, 12-6 p.m. The Friends of the Northside Branch Library sell donated books. Browse nonfiction, science fiction, health, childraising and much more. Thurs-
TASTE OF DUNWOODY Saturday, Feb. 20, 7 p.m. Come out for
food and drinks while supporting Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta, at the 12th annual Taste of Dunwoody event. Tickets, $100 (includes two drinks). Attendees enjoy dishes provided by more than 25 Dunwoody restaurants, silent auction, cash bar and live music. The Westin Atlanta Perimeter North, 7 Concourse Pkwy., NE, Sandy Springs, 30328. Visit: www.choa.org for additional details and to buy tickets.
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Actors playing actors gives ‘a look behind the curtain’ BY JOE EARLE joeearle@reporternewspapers.net
This theater season, plays really are the things at theaters in Sandy Springs and Dunwoody. At least that’s the idea. The two local theater compaRobert Egizio nies are putting on plays that center on actors. Their stages will fill with actors playing actors and plays within plays. Patrick Hill, director of Act 3 Theater’s version of “Moon Over Buffalo,” which opens in April and closes out the theater’s 2015-2016 season, says it gives his audience a free trip backstage. “Theater patrons like to see the background, what’s going on behind the scenes,” said Hill, whose show folPatrick Hill lows the Feb. 20
conclusion of the run of the theater’s current production, “Dogfight.” “You’re giving the audience exactly what they want. You get a look behind the curtain.” In Dunwoody, the Stage Door Players are presenting “I Hate Hamlet,” a play that puts its theme right there in the R. TODD FLEEMAN title. It’s about a television Dan Ford, left, as Andrew Rally, listens to Robin Bloodworth, actor who resists portrayportraying John Barrymore, as he is given some last-minute ing Shakespeare’s famed secrets, tips and tricks of the trade on opening night. character onstage, only to find he’s being haunted by the ghost of legendary actor John Barrymore, said Robert Egizio, the Players’ proI Hate Hamlet ducing artistic director and the director of Stage Door Players “I Hate Hamlet.” Where: 5339 Chamblee Dunwoody Rd., Dunwoody Plays about plays have been around When: Through Feb. 21; performances on Thursdays, Fridays since at least Shakespeare’s day, but they and Saturdays at 8 p.m. and Sundays at 2:30 p.m. still draw a crowd. Egizio said “I Hate HamTickets: $30 adults; $27 seniors; $22 students; let” packed the theater on its opening $15 patrons younger than 12. For more: 770-396-1726 or http://stagedoorplayers.net/ weekend. Besides, the directors said, staging plays Moon Over Buffalo about plays can be as much fun for the acAct 3 Productions tors as the audience. Where: 6285-R Roswell Rd., Sandy Springs “It definitely appeals to theater people,” When: Performance times and dates: April 15, 16, 22, Egizio said. Part of the appeal comes from 23, 29 and 30 at 8 p.m.; April 24 at 3 p.m. Tickets: $23 for adult reserved; $20 for student/senior the challenge as the actors must portray reserved; $18 for adult general admission; several characters at once – the actor and $15 for student/senior general admission. the character the actor is playing. “You’re For more: 770-241-1905 or act3productions.org playing two characters, in essence,” he said.
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“You get the chance to play the actor and you get to play the actor within the actor. “In essence, my Gemini personality gets split into three. It’s fantastic.” But part of the fun in some of these plays-within-plays, both Hill and Egizio said, comes from watching the characters onstage deal with backstage meltdowns. “The actors love it because they can relate to it,” Egizio said. “We’ve all been through that crap.” Hill’s play at Act 3 is a farce that takes place backstage during a theatrical performance and actually includes bits of two other plays – “Cyrano de Bergerac” and “Private Lives” – that the characters present as part of the story. Some of the humor comes when they mix up the two, Hill said. “It’s funny because it’s almost like an inside joke, like a little love letter to the theater community,” Hill said. Hill, a 33-year-old accountant who lives in Sandy Springs and is a member of the theater’s board of directors, said Act 3 decided to stage the play “because our audience wanted a good comedy.” At the same time, the show seemed like it would be fun to put on. “It’s one of those things, a show about theater people. We know the humor so well, we can execute it. We can find the punch lines and make [the audience] feel like they’re peeking behind the curtain.”
FEB. 5 - FEB. 18, 2016
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Out & About | 11
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D
Steve’s Live Music owner singing a new tune in entertainment
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BY DYANA BAGBY dyanabagby@reporternewspapers.net
Steve Grossman has a passion for the arts, but not the restaurant business. So, after nearly four years of operating Steve’s Live Music in Sandy Springs, a place where musicians and artists have performed to appreciative audiences over hummus or vegetarian quesadillas, the venue itself may soon be closing unless Grossman can find a partner willing to take on the food side of the business. “I’m not going to continue running a restaurant past June,” Grossman said. “Steve’s Live Music could cease to exist in this location if I don’t find a partner. Cultural arts are real important to me and I know one space is not optimal in terms of trying to create music in the community.” His lease expires in July on the building on Hildebrand Drive where Steve’s Live Music has been located since mid-2012. Grossman actively is seeking partners, saying his venue is ripe for a new chef or restaurateur to come in and make a mark while enjoying a built-in fan base of music and dance lovers. At the same time, Grossman said he is exploring ways to broaden his reach by working with area restaurants, dance studios and other venues to bring in live performances, not only in Sandy Springs but in neighboring cities as well. However, Sandy Springs, he believes, is ground zero for a musical awakening. “I see Sandy Springs as fertile ground for becoming the next Nashville or Austin for the music scene,” he said. With the many restaurants and mixeduse developments going up, Grossman has a vision of people strolling the streets and walking past restaurants or theaters where they could step in and listen to live music. City Springs, the new city center and the development surrounding it, is where Grossman believes live performances could really take off. Since he opened, Grossman said more than 1,500 musicians have played Steve’s Live Music. From folk to bluegrass to a Beatles cover band to Gypsy Opera and Celtic
dancing, Grossman serves a niche in metro Atlanta. “I probably get emails from five or six people a day wanting to play here. That adds up,” he said. With his contacts with artists and venues, Grossman wants to expand to just booking acts. Already he is booking tours for some bands in North America and Europe, he said. “My real passion is music. I want to bring music to the community. I want to bring art to the community. I just want to bring live music to everyone,” he said.
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12 | Commentary
Reporter Newspapers Our mission is to provide our readers with fresh and engaging informa�ion about life in their communi�ies. Published by Springs Publishing LLC 6065 Roswell Road, Suite 225 Sandy Springs, GA 30328 Phone: 404-917-2200 • Fax: 404-917-2201
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Q&A: Perimeter traffic More than a dozen new office or residential projects are being proposed or are underway throughout north Atlanta and the Perimeter area. Do you think local communities will be able to absorb the new development?
Brookhaven Reporter | Buckhead Reporter Dunwoody Reporter | Sandy Springs Reporter www.ReporterNewspapers.net Atlanta INtown www.AtlantaINtownPaper.com
C O NTA C T US Founder & Publisher Steve Levene stevelevene@reporternewspapers.net Editorial Managing Editor Joe Earle joeearle@reporternewspapers.net Associate Editor: John Ruch Intown Editor: Collin Kelley
“My only problem with it is infrastructure…traffic [and similar issues]. I can’t blame people for wanting to live in my neighborhood…I just don’t like the push for density, which seems to be the policy in all these municipalities.” Clinton Horn
Sta�f Writer: Dyana Bagby
“I think it’s all a good idea as long as we can manage our traffic.” Richard Ellis
“We already have streams of traffic going through the neighborhood. I don’t know how they’re going to get there and get home.” Karen Whitehead
“I’m 100 percent opposed to any building above four or five stories simply for the fact I bought in Brookhaven for its maintained tree canopy and beautiful curb appeal. Traffic is going to be a major problem. I live off Peachtree Road and it’s an absolute disaster every day. [More development] means extended rush hours.” Charles Jones
Copy Editor: Diane L. Wynocker Crea�ive and Produc�ion Crea�ive Director: Rico Figliolini Graphic Designer: Harry Pinkney Jr. Adver�ising
“Traffic, traffic, traffic!”
Cheryl Dupree
Director of Sales Development Amy Arno amyarno@reporternewspapers.net Senior Account Execu�ives Jeff Kremer Janet Porter Account Execu�ives Susan Lesesne Jim Speakman O�fice Manager Deborah Davis deborahdavis@reporternewspapers.net Contributors Robin Jean Conte, Julie Herron Carson, Phil Mosier, Clare S. Richie, Megan Volpert
Free Home Delivery 60,000 copies of Reporter Newspapers are delivered by carriers to homes in ZIP codes 30305, 30319, 30326, 30327, 30328, 30338, 30342 and 30350 and to more than 500 business/retail locations. For locations, check “Where To Find Us” at www.ReporterNewspapers.net For delivery requests, please email delivery@reporternewspapers.net. © 2016 with all rights reserved Publisher reserves the right to refuse editorial or advertising for any reason. Publisher assumes no responsibility for information contained in advertising. Any opinions expressed in print or online do not necessarily represent the views of Reporter Newspapers or Springs Publishing, LLC.
“My concern is [there are] already traffic problems around that entire area. I think it’s going to be a huge traffic problem. My concern about develoment around the city is, I see something totally different from when I grew up. Developers used to build around trees…I see huge areas that are being totally wiped out.” Donald Gilner “No. They haven’t taken the steps in the past that are needed to pave the way.” Richard Whitehead
“They always say it’s all there at MARTA, but how many people are going to use MARTA? Traffic is already horrible. It’s going to get worse. ... It’ll just mean I’ll avoid that whole area. It’ll change where I shop, where I go. Right now you have to plan when you’re going to do stuff because traffic is just horrible.” Susan Clarke
“I do feel the wave ... of people moving into public schools and supporting public schools is rising. I’d like to see more parental interest in our public schools and involvement.” Kirsten Neufeld
“A lot of buildings in the Perimeter area are daytime occupancy. Some of these residential developments seem … like there should be more theaters. If we continue to put in these large complexes, I think we should require more entertainment opportunities so we can keep it from being a ghost town like downtown Atlanta was before the Olympics.” Greg Crnkovich
Correc�ion
The story “Mixed-use developments are a hot trend, but they’re not for everyone” in the Jan. 22 - Feb. 4 Perimeter Business section gave an incorrect name for Steve Tart of Genesis Real Estate Advisers and the Sandy Springs Planning Commission.
FEB. 5 - FEB. 18, 2016
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Commentary | 13
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DO OR DIET Robin’s Nest Robin Jean Conte
stant landI’ve tried to diet, but I’m not good at denying myself. For 23 years I haven’t cruise buftaken a shower without someone fet. There knocking at the door with a question might as Robin Conte is a writer that can’t wait another two minutes— well be an and mother of four who so yes, I’m going to eat that cookie. ice sculpture lives in Dunwoody. She My mind and my body have an of a swan on can be contacted at agreement. I dole out positive reinmy kitchrobinjm@earthlink.net. forcement treats to my body throughen counter, out the day, and it gets me out of bed in right beside the morning. the uneaten fries and the container of There are so many theories, so many Boy Scout popcorn. methods for dieting, and I’ve danced I’ve heard about the Starbucks with them all and sent them home hapdiet—that one woman lost 85 pounds py. by eating exclusively at Starbucks. I I’ve heard to “eat breakfast like a have been pretty close to doing that king, lunch like a prince, and dinner diet myself, but the pumpkin bread and like a pauper.” I pretty much eat breakcake pops kept winning out over the fast, lunch, mid-morning snacks and oatmeal. mid-afternoon happy hours like an exThe frustrating thing for me is that iled prince, and dinners like a freakit wasn’t always this way. Despite giving emperor. So, to use a more accurate ing birth to four children, despite the comparison, I have the diet of a sumo wrestler. I nibble and nosh throughout fact that two of them were born at the the day, and I eat the heaviest, most casame time, despite the fact that my loric food in the last two hours before I body weight increased by half during go to bed, so that all of the calories can that twins pregnancy, I always manjoin hands and turn into layers of fat aged to return to my normal weight overnight. and jeans size, I’ve heard to and maintain it limit yourself steadily. to one sweet Not true now. thing a week. I I have had antried that and other birthend up making day and there myself a weekare squatters at ly dessert the my belly. The size of a Hapounds—about waiian island. 10 of them— I’ve heard have settled to count caloalong my midries. The probsection and are lem with this making plans method is that to retire there. I am an unscrupulous I don’t want to cheater. I will take them with not count the me when I finalspoons full of ly, one day, beice cream that come an empI eat, straight ty nester. I want from the box, to leave them in or the brownthe basement SPECIAL ies that are along with the Robin nibbles and noshes throughout the day, stuck to the saving the most calories for closer to bedtime. boxes of kinderside of the pan garten artwork. that I have to My mother has stayed slim and trim pry out and consume before putting towell into her senior years, and when gether a tray for the class party, or the asked how she does it, her standard remelted peanut butter-chocolate powply is, “I eat whatever I want and I never bar that I find between the minivan er exercise.” seats while I’m waiting in the carpool I’ve tried that method too, but it line. I only count lettuce and rice cakes. doesn’t seem to work as well for me. So, no matter how much I actually eat I’ve decided that the only thing left during the day, my calorie count always for me to do is follow another piece of amounts to roughly 235. mom’s advice…to stand up straight and I’ve heard to eat six mini-meals a suck in my stomach. day. My mini-meals turn into one conSS
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14 | Community
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Traffic the top concern with Sandy Springs five-skyscraper plan BY JOHN RUCH Johnruce@reporterenewspapers.net
Five new Sandy Springs skyscrapers could mean thousands of more cars on local streets, raising concerns among about 45 residents and business owners who attended the first community meeting on Jan. 20 about the massive redevelopment of 1117 Perimeter Center West. Representatives of the developers— identified as Hong Property Trust of Sydney, Australia—said the mixed-use nature of the project could reduce its effect on traffic. And a direct connection to the Sandy Springs MARTA station, which sits under part of the site, is a potential traffic mitigation, project attorney Jessica Hill said. “The idea is that it’s live, work and play, and you never have to leave,” said Rob For-
rest, the real estate professional who’s representing Hong Property in the deal. But the sheer scale of the project and some of its preliminary numbers still worried residents, especially with other major redevelopments coming nearby, such as the planned headquarters for MercedesBenz USA in Sandy Springs and the new building to house State Farm in Dunwoody. The 1117 Perimeter Center West plan calls for about 1,600 residential units in three towers; about 1.5 million square feet of offices in two towers; and about 200,000 square feet of new retail and restaurant space. The towers could stand 20 to 29 stories tall. That’s in addition to the hexagonal office building currently on the 13.5-acre site, which would remain with modifications. About 5,200 new parking spaces would
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John Walker of Kimley-Horn explains traffic issues to attendees, while project attorney Jessica Hill looks on, at the Jan. 20 community meeting about the 1117 Perimeter Center West redevelopment, held at the project site.
be created in a new deck, compared with 1,300 on the site now, Hill said. Some parking might need to go off-site during construction, Hill said, though it’s early for such details. The proposed MARTA connection would be through an existing emergency exit tunnel, Hill said. The project will be deemed a Development of Regional Impact and get a massive transportation study, said John Walker of Kimley-Horn, the traffic consulting firm hired by the developer. One resident of Mount Vernon Woods who works at the Arby’s fast-food company headquarters next door said most of her coworkers do not use MARTA and that current traffic is already bad. “It’s a nightmare…God forbid if it rains or snows,” she said. “As soon as [the plan] hit the papers, everybody in the [Arby’s] building across the street started freaking out.” Bill Woulfin, CEO of Metabolic Testing Services, was among several of the existing building’s commercial tenants who expressed concerns about the plan. He said his business has been there 13 years, and he learned at the meeting of the developers’ intent to turn the first two floors into retail or service businesses only, meaning he would be moved elsewhere. “That’s the first we heard of it,” Woulfin said, adding he is concerned about traffic and parking impacts on his patients. “We want to make sure tenants stay here,” Forrest said during the meeting. “We’re very cognizant of that.” The mixed-use concept includes streetlevel retail in the towers along Mount Vernon Highway, as well as a “retail alley” facing a semicircular path between the existing hexagonal building and the new tow-
JOHN RUCH
ers. The existing building will get a “significant facelift” that is already underway, Forrest said. That includes cutting three new entrances into its central courtyard. That courtyard is current private, but will be opened to the public and possibly host concerts or performances, Forrest said. He said that Hong Property wanted to keep the hexagonal building because of its unusual design and potential as an attractive retail and restaurant spot. Because the meeting, held at the existing Perimeter Center West office building, was a preliminary review required before filing actual plans, few other details were available. Hill said the filing should happen in February, with the DRI and Sandy Springs city zoning reviews running into the fall. The developers will seek rezoning from office to mixed-use and anticipate variances for excessive height and less parking that is usually required because of the proximity to MARTA.
SPECIAL
Above: updated design illustrations of the skyscrapers and new retail and restaurant space proposed for 1117 Perimeter Center West. SS
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‘Lynwood ights Pages 4-9 hardships, it highl Exhib discrimination CALENDAR: TARTAN s TROT | P17 and many challe Integrators’ ’s Lady Wolverine nges Atlanta in on Miller Grove Wildc honoats redtake for Fire chief want 50 objects Dunwoody’s Lady City honors found s er of nonprofit courage during with Humanita to reform hydr rian ant of the Year awar desegregation d inspectio ns
OUT & ABOUT Puppetry Arts Center expands
Page 42
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BY DYANA BAGBYernewspapers.net dyanabagby@report would Run Theater Renovating Brook and fit ately $7.5 million cost approxim y’s comcrowd city of Dunwood BY DYANA BAGBY Familiar sights easily into the a new feasiBY JOHN RUCH at the Atlanaccording to dyanabagby@report the new exhibit prehensive plan, Conserernewspapers.net johnruch@reporterne Georgia The Brook Run Center. wspapers.net ta History bility study from Wreck holds Eugenia Calloway Tech’s Ramblin’ vancy. that we flipped through A hole in the ady pages of the 1968 to let you know sidewalk near the pleased am center stage. A billboard-re one “I Cross Keys High a Dunkin’ y has a Donuts at 6060 in yearbook, glancing School that Dunwood Roswell Road marks where Chick-fil-A cow protests are now certain over the photograp a fire hydrant there is sigof many white was knocked away, a Varhs facility and that down by a vefaces. But in corner. A few feet ty for need for this hicle nearly a the back of the yearbook year ago and in the communi hangs from a she found first remains misssity car-hop’s tray nificant support ing. And for the President the boys’ basValiant. ketball team Conservancy last four months and then the need,” states door of a ’63 Plymouth counthat of 2015, if the fi to refighters had girls’ items basketball the team. a Jan. 15 letter needed water It’s no surprise that to battle a Danny Ross in blaze there, they museum show “That’s me,” would have found she said, pointing in this particular cil. hydrant across theater at a fire new of a part all smiling to the street gone the girl at the far The cost to construct cost $24.5 milas well. seem familiar. They’re Such long repair right in the varsity team chosen to repgirls’ size would times and uncertain photo. One other Atlanta. Each was about the same inspections for of states. black feature was study the girl on city’s the far left; all 4,000 public PHIL MOSIER resent some important lion, the feasibility private fire hydrants feasibility the players and and PHOTOS BY coaches in between cy sent its curators say. the breaks are an ongoing The conservan the city, the exhibit’s were white. Anjanice Cutno cern for Sandy conmembers recently in 50 Obbasketball player court during a varsity Springs “That’s Council “Atlanta School City when fi re to High officials. Fire I had the most The exhibit, study Rescue Chief come up at the down her home on Jan. 15. fun, when At left, Dunwoody I was playing Keith Sanders Jan. 16 and is is expected to pack as she heads Lady Wolverines basketball,” she is now gearjects,” which opened and the issue ing up a tighter, away from the Grove High School said. July 10, is more accountab Calloway was 25 meeting. against the Miller Jan. game be on display through one to le council’s tion system. inspecof 17 students Nash talks Jamie Chatman, that there is support own way, Step one: bringing integrated Cross who Coach Angela one of the “Lynwood intended to show, in its While Ross argues Keys High School he may hydrant inspections in-house who integrated Above, Lady Wildcats with her players. Integrators,” ly 50 years ago, nearAtlanta. Cross Keys High g Brook Run Theater, attends instead of using Atlanta over strategy a Rev. Martin School nearly part of that what makes by graduates for renovatin council. vate contracto pri50 years ago. is the King Jr. Day first group of Lynwood High of black students thing Luther battle from the rs, as the The Jan. top, 62-37, and dinner and my favorite School, Cross “I think program, held to attend an still face an uphill came out on PHIL MOSIER has done since city 22 Keys High School 18 curator are 8-9 at Lynwood Park celebration honoring the all-white school in DeKalb The Lady Wolverines its ,” guest and Chamblee Continued on page 17 students The Lady Wildcats Recreation Center, County and now Charter High King manuscript 15.► a 12- 8 record. founding. page have on featured beSchool. currently as the “Lynwood known comments See additional on the day additional photos photos on page Integrators.” Amy Wilson said this season. See “The 13. 13.► 2016 as she and Tillie O’Neal-Kyle PHIL MOSIER s, founder of fore the show opened, inspections Every Woman named the city’s Continued on page Works, a nonprofi exhibitions direc2016 Humanitar Kings Day or 12 History Center will be done t that during the Three ian of the Year, at the 10th annual helps achieve financial 15. made last-minute prepares for a performance photos on page 15.► Reporter Rooney independence, Rev. Martin Luther tor Dan by the SanNewspapers pointAztec Dance Group, See additional firm, personal growth PHIL MOSIER King Jr. Day celebration member of the Danza Atlanta History Center on Jan. 10. and family leadership, market research exhibit. Sheis working with a new Atlanta-ba to the sed Ana Avilez, 14, a tweaks dy Springs at City Hall on festival at the mobile market 1Q, to survey was with a new mobile a series Jan. 18. Story “Dia de Los Reyes” periodically about residents of our research firm, rs is working case holding topics ofa state on page 15.► communities fire departed toward communities and frominterest. Reporter Newspape a yelthe proposed residents of our periodically about pages local In our first poll, Religious Freedom we ask about 1Q, to survey ment,” Sandof handwritten Legislawe ask about Atlanta-based In our first poll, Restoratio the Rev.n Act the proposed on which d in the state ture. pad two-third and local interest. being considere legal Nearly ers low Here are two being considere research firm, topics of state said. d in the state writof 200 Jr. shad should be rejected. respondents said Restoration Act new mobile market King a bill Reporter reactions Legislawith Luther the Freedom ► about said “That way, I Newspapers Martin ts to the law. Read for his is working the bill should Religious s periodically s on page 11. is working with speech more about the be rejected. Here s of 200 responden Reporter Newspapers Atlanta-based of our communitie and local comment a new mobile poll and local know all hyPage 18 ten the acceptance are two 1Q, to survey to survey residents ture. Nearly two-third about the poll market research comments on ask about the proposed residents of our “It’s the original Atlanta-based 1Q, topics of state law. Read more our first poll, we page 11. ► firm, drants have 1964 Nobel Prize. communities and local interest. local interest. In reactions to the in the state Legislaperiodically about topics of state and In our first poll, Religious Freedom being considered are two been touched manuscript.” Restoration Act be rejected. Here we ask about Restoration Act started the proposed said the bill should Religious Freedom ture. Nearly being considere 11. ► BY DYANA BAGBY Wilson and Rooney and have been of 200 respondents two-thirds of BY JOE EARLE d in the state comments on page 200 responden spapers.net ture. Nearly two-thirds reactions to the Legislathe poll and local I’m the project in Novemonsick dyanabagby@reporter ts said the bill inspected.” workso joeearle@reporternew Read more about law. Read more of Georgia beshould be rejected. a proposal newspapers.net reactions to the law. aboutthe The original idea thecity’s Here are two poll and local PageEven 18 looking ber 2014. like Even having a That will mean 18 having law comments on sound off on backwa – gathering proposa Page City officials to page 11. ► The chance to rd buf“more accuracy, hind the exhibit so sick of Georgia buf120 people are preparing of a religious freedom I’mfor foons. of a religious freedom l more than This represent to look more a new city manager 12. just imporparks drew accountability,” backward objects that is be a step in the like to law to replace Marie branch on Jan. seems histoSanders said, library looking in legalize seems y’s rett, Garor events who held the d discrim to be a step standDunwood adding it will also give to start tant themes job since Brookhav ination, is just meeting room, Page 18 firefighters hands-on Even having a proposal inception. right direction... packed into a used in a few othfoons. en’s This I’m soThey plain right direction... in the been edge of where ideas on a knowland , sick ry – had rof Georgia simple. law to voice their the city’s hydrants shows to start If that d discrimination I’m so sick of Georgiad bufmuseum A national search plan. ing room only, of a religious freedom having more conside case they need looking are in isn’t er high-profi having more conside enoughle, it’s for a new city legalize five-year parks Even having a proposa likeofbackwa to find them the the city’srd , period. “The Smithager was expected man- and simple. If that in an emerfor buf-n a bit familrlooking like backwar books, such as bad gency. seems to be a step in to plain foons.rewrite ation for religion of a religious freedom l theand ation for religion the discussio state Thisfound America in tails of a separation begin as soon as defor ofically. is econom just just start bad is History to Some ... it’s , This But those inspection sonian’s , period. law foons. between the city isn’t enough right direction WOMAN legalize 14 seems to be a step Garrett could s are where the d discrimination these ation, iar. A 34-YEAR-OLD department’s A 44-YEAR-OLD Continued page be reached. Council and A 34-YEAR-OLD fire SPRINGS in the we went direct control legalized discrimin economically. , to all right WOMAN WOMAN bers met behind having more considerstate memfew years ago, LIVES IN SANDY plain “Asimple. of the crucial the WHO and safety 12 WHO directio WHO that closed page If devices LIVES IN BROOKH LIVES IN SANDY Teenage friends doors with Garrett n... to start ends. The 2,910 Continued on center’s and a mediation plain and simple. for SPRINGS hydrants on city streets The Atlanta History AVEN isn’t enough, it’s If that WOMAN ation for religion, period. having more conside attorney on Jan. in 50 are actually owned A 44-YEAR-OLD create clothing 20 to try to work out an bad for AVEN exhibition, “Atlanta risn’t enough, it’s bad city of Atlanta’s BROOKH by agreemen IN the unique, LIVES WOMAN the D t. ation for religion Department of state economically. WHO Objects,” showcases A 34-YEAR-OL Mayor John Ernst Watershed line to teach Management, katana from , period. and members SANDY SPRINGS the state economically. which can take local items like this of City WHO LIVES IN TV show. months to make repairs. A 44-YEAR-OLD entrepreneurshi A 34-YEAR-OLD “The Walking Dead” WOMAN WOMAN p WOMAN Countinued on WHO LIVES A 44-YEAR-OLD WHO LIVES Sanders called page 14 IN BROOKH IN SANDY SPRINGS that situation BROOKHAVEN Page 19 AVEN a “challenge,” though WHO LIVES IN he added he is not aware of any recent fire where firefighters had trouble finding a working hydrant on a public Continued on page 14
OUT & ABOUT Puppetry Arts Center expands under Atlanta’s r own puppet maste
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Residents resistant to Brookhaven/Oglethorpe MARTA development plans in early 2017, Germano said. $200 million in new revenue promised Rhein said the development is projected to bring in $200 million to the city on a site where there is currently no revenue being produced. MARTA owns the land and will not pay property taxes, she explained, but the developments to the property, including retail space, means more sales tax revenue. Also planned are mid-rise towers, no more than seven-stories high, to include nearly 600 one-bedroom or two-bedroom residences, such as condominiums, Germano said. “We’re looking at young urDYANA BAGBY ban professionals and empty nesters. Approximately 150 people packed Brookhaven City Hall Feb. 2 to hear plans These places will be fairly expensive,” he for a transit-oriented development at Brookhaven/Oglethorpe MARTA station. said. Plans are to also have 126 BY DYANA BAGBY ed to know about will be done affordable apartments for in partnership with the city, dyanabagby@reporternewspapers.net seniors, he said. Rhein added. A mostly skeptical crowd packed City A 1-acre park is also The first formal step in creCouncil’s chambers at Brookhaven City planned within the developating a TOD, also dubbed by Hall on Feb. 2 to listen to MARTA’s plans ment to connect Peachtree MARTA as a “town center,” at for development around the MARTA/ Road and Apple Valley Way. the Brookhaven/Oglethorpe Oglethorpe station. Officials said the projThe new demand for station is to apply for rezonect could bring $200 million to the city. TODs and multi-use proping of the approximate 15-acre Questions were raised about traffic, erty comes from millenisite to allow for multi-use dedensity, safety, storm water and sewers als who want to walk to resvelopment. That request is set Amanda Rhein resulting from the planned transit-oritaurants and work and have to take place the first of April, ented development, but most could not ready access to public transportation, said Trent Germano, senior managing dibe answered by MARTA’s representatives Germano added. “They want to be in an rector with Transwestern Development or the development partners on hand for urban area,” he said. Company. what is expected to be the first of many One resident, who said he was a comTranswestern and The Integral Group community meetings. mercial Realtor, dismissed the plans have joined forces as the Brookhaven More due diligence, including a traffor urban development in Brookhaven. City Center Partners to plan the project fic study, is set to take place soon, ex“We’re not trying to become Midtown,” with MARTA. The project is to include afplained MARTA Senior Director of Tranhe said. “We are a car city and are always fordable senior housing and street-level sit Oriented Development and Real Estate going to be a car city. This is the wrong retail. Amanda Rhein. site. I’m not looking to revitalize the CapMore community meetings are “We want to get feedback before getital City Country Club.” planned throughout February and there ting too much along in the process,” RheAnother person said there would be will also be meetings with the local in said. no way the small two-lane roads leading Chamber of Commerce and Citizen ReThe traffic study many people wantinto the MARTA station site could hanview Board. Groundbreaking is expected
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dle a major increase in traffic. Terrell Carstens said MARTA’s plans to have offstreet parking on Apple Valley Way was a mistake because it would lead to people circling neighborhoods while waiting for a space to come open. Frank McCloskey said he was concerned about the lack of trust he perceived there to be between residents and the city government when it came to ensuring transparent development. “I hear what you’re saying about the city being a kind of backstop, a firewall … and I think this is fair, but there’s not a lot of trust at this moment with the city and how it is approving things,” he said to applause. Despite the overwhelmingly doubtful crowd, there were a few people who supported the project. “I think this is a spectacular project here,” said Bill Roberts. “This could change everything about Brookhaven. Make it your A-game and make it something we can be excited about and I think we will all get behind it and be supportive of it.”
UPCOMING DISTRICT COMMUNITY WORKSHOPS District 1
February 10, 7-9 p.m. Lynwood Park Recreation Center
District 2
February 11, 6:30-8:30 p.m. Briarwood Park Recreation Center
District 3
February 18, 6-8 p.m. Capital City Club
District 4 TBD
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On Our Borders Editor’s note: News knows few boundaries. Here are some of the local news stories breaking in neighboring communi�ies that may be of interest to Buckhead residents.
CITY OF SANDY SPRINGS
Roswell Road could be transformed, with its central turn lane converted into a tree-lined median on the northern stretch and a grass median on the southern leg. Large sidewalks or multi-use paths could line much of the street as well.
this that is out of the ordinary in the way A portion of Roswell Road remade as of density, something that is going to in“Roswell Boulevard” with a tree-lined vite questions.” median? That’s among the big ideas Dickson and attorney Chip Collins, a coming out of Sandy Springs’ “Next former Sandy Springs city councilman, Ten” planning process. offered to shave 12 feet of dirt from the “It’s more than just a land-use plan. site to reduce its height. No one in the It’s a vision for the community,” said crowd seemed thrilled, but several said Sandy Springs Mayor Rusty Paul, introthat in today’s skyscraper-sprouting ducing a presentation on the work thus Sandy Springs, they were willing to setfar for the Next Ten—combining a revitle for a relatively low-impact project. sion of the city’s Comprehensive Plan, a “To be completely honest, this is not rewrite of its zoning code and detailed what I want…[but] this could be a much plans for certain areas. worse possible property—a gas station, The concepts met interest and curifor God’s sake,” said Scott Nelson, a osity from at least 70 residents who atGlenridge resident. tended a community workshop, held Meanwhile, state transportation ofJan. 27 at the Sherwood Event Hall on ficials planned to start work this month Roswell Road. The sheer scope of the vion a controversial project to build sion—from mixed-use “nodes” along a roundabouts at the Riverside Drive/I-285 new tree-lined “Roswell Boulevard” to a interchange in Sandy Springs. Construckind of Central Park for Perimeter Cention will continue through November, ter—appeared to engage the crowd, but GDOT says. The $5.6 million project will it kept mostly quiet. replace ramps with roundabouts and reThe general thrust of the planning hab the Riverside Drive bridge over I-285. is more mixed-use redevelopment and In Brookhaven, a new Pill Hill road reducing car travel. But the consulextending the Perimeter Center Parktant team, led by Rhodeside & Harwell, way “flyover bridge” to Johnson Ferry is adding some bigger proposals that Road is worth a study, according to a rewould transform entire areas, such as port delivered recently to the Perimeter routing some form of alternative public Center Improvement Districts. The PCID transit east-west through central Sandy plans to hold a community meeting on Springs. And a much-discussed idea of a Sandy Springs monorail was talked about some more. Also in Sandy Springs, plans to replace a church with a 201unit senior housing building is drawing traffic and density concerns—and some grudging acceptance. About 70 residents attended a community meeting Jan. 25 to hear about Parc Communities’ plans for the Apostles Church site at Glenridge Drive and Hammond Drive. “I live in Sandy Springs,” said Parc Communities President and SPECIAL CEO Roy Dickson, sympathizAbove, Gresham, Smith and Partners conducted ing with visions of traffic nighta preliminary feasibility study for PCIDs on mares discussed at the meeting, extending the flyover bridge from Perimeter Center Parkway to Johnson Ferry Road. which was held at the church. PCIDs is close to securing a grant to make bicycle and “I understand all the dynamics. pedestrian improvements to Peachtree-Dunwoody Road And I understand something is and Lake Hearn Drive, including beneath the I-285 bridge. To see a larger version, go to ReporterNewspapers.net. going to happen on a corner like
the plan in coming months. Meanwhile, PCIDs is close to securing a $4 million grant to build an already planned Pill Hill project that would make bicycle and pedestrian improvements to Peachtree-Dunwoody Road and Lake Hearn Drive, said Yvonne Williams, the district’s president and CEO. The work also would make room for a PATH400 multi-use trail extension through the intersection. The flyover bridge over I-285 was completed in 2007 and is sometimes jokingly called the “bridge to nowhere” as it ends at Lake Hearn Drive. However, PCIDs long planned to make it a bridge to somewhere with a 2,000-foot road extending from the Lake Hearn Drive intersection to Johnson Ferry, running along the Sandy Springs-Brookhaven border on the eastern side of Emory Saint Joseph Hospital’s campus. Meanwhile, consultants helping to
draw up a management plan for the Nancy Creek watershed in Brookhaven say they likely will recommend spending $15 million to $20 million over the next half century to clean up waterways in the area. The money would pay for 30 to 40 separate projects, ranging from adding litter collectors to catch floatable items in streams near I-285 to projects that would provide shore restoration for Murphey Candler Lake. Kimberly Shorter, principal engineer for Sustainable Water Planning and Engineering. Shorter said the SWP&E consultants expected to present their report to City Council in March or April. “This is a long-term visionary goal,” Shorter told about a dozen people who gathered at the Marist School on Jan. 27 for the first of two public meetings scheduled to discuss the study. “We will not be there in five years.”
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Chastain construction projects soon will give parts of park a new look
PHOTOS BY JOE EARLE
A roof is being added to allow year-round swimming at the pool at Chastain Park.
The PATH Foundation is overseeing the extension of the park’s jogging path along Powers Ferry Road. The 5-footwide sidewalk is being replaced by a 10-foot-wide trail.
Continued from page 1
Jim King, chairman of the Chastain Park Athletic Club, says the new pool roof will cover the swimming lanes and cost about $700,000.
ers Ferry Road. The PATH Foundation is overseeing the extension of the park’s jogging path in that area by replacing the 5-foot-wide sidewalk with a 10-foot-wide trail. Pete Pellegrini of the PATH Foundation told members of the Chastain Park Civic Association that the work was slowed by rain and by required work to move utility lines along the path. The target for completing the project now is Rosa McHugh, executive director May 1. of the Chastain Park Conservancy, visits the renovated playground. “A lot of people are probably wonNew features within the Chastain Park playground offer a that joggers are dering why this is taking so long,” Pellegrimusical area, including “drums,” top, and a xylophone, above. running in the ni said. “We’re almost there.” The playground reopens this month after a $2.5 million street or in neighThe conservancy has received commakeover spearheaded by the conservancy. boring yards rathplaints from residents who are concerned er than turning covered, King said. around and retracing their steps when The roof structure costs about they reach the area where the sidewalk has $700,000, King said. It is part of renovation been torn up. “It’s a construction zone and of the pool and grounds that could cost the from the original Chin Chin Brookhaven team people are walking in neighbors’ yards,” athletic club from $1.2 million to $1.5 milCelebrating 21 years in Brookhaven! McHugh said. lion, he said. Several residents attending the civic asConstruction of the roof is expected to sociation meeting suggested adding signs be completed this month, depending on to the construction area warning runners weather, and the athletic club hopes to to stay out of the street. “We do have ishold a public opening of the new structure sues,” Pellegrini said. “Are we taking this in March, King said. “Every day we encounseriously? The answer is yes.” ter a different challenge – lightning, winds, In a separate project on the other side snow… pick your thing. We’re just overcomof the park, the Chastain Park Athletic ing them one at a time,” King said. Club, the nonprofit group that operates the When completed, the roof will allow the Chastain pool, is building a new roof above club to expand uses of the pool. “Our goal is the pool so that it can operate year-round. to have year-round swimming,” King said When completed, the roof will be made of WATCH OUR OPEN KITCHEN & EXPERIENCE THE ART OF CHINESE COOKING!! one recent afternoon as he watched workers a white translucent fabric over an alumiDELIVERY (LIMITED AREA, MIN. $10) / CARRY OUT / CATERING / FULL BAR SERVICE use a tall crane to hoist beams for the roof. num frame. 3887 Peachtree Road, Buckhead/Brookhaven And Other Locations Nearby, McHugh checked in with work404-816-2229 | www.ChinChinGA.com Jim King, chairman of the athletic club, ers putting the finishing touches on struc# said the roof will rise 47 feet at its hightures in the new playground. She had tak2009 Best Chinese-The Sunday Paper est point. The structure will stand 135 feet 2001-2002 Best Chinese by Atlanta Jewish Times readers en a ride down one of the park’s new slides 1998-2012 Best Chinese by Creative Loafing wide by 85 feet long, he said, and will proherself and thought it would play well with “Mouth-watering Chin Chin spices things up.” –The Atlanta Journal Constitution vide cover for the pool’s swimming lanes. neighborhood kids. “Most Memorable Meal” –Where Atlanta Magazine - 21/2 stars–Knife & Fork Other portions of the pool will remain un“It’s fun,” she said. ground one recent afternoon. “We have places for imaginative play, musical play... You can be a daredevil if you want to.” McHugh says the renovated playground, located at the corner of West Wieuca Road and Dudley Lane, will provide a place where families from surrounding neighborhoods can come together. It is intended to create a place in the park where parents or grandparents can watch children “run around in a safe area” or where families can have picnics while the kids play. About 85,000 children live within five miles of the park, she said. “I think it will serve as an outdoor community center,” she said. “[It creates] a place that doesn’t exist now.” Work began on the new playground in June, she said, and was expected to be completed by the end of last year. But weather delayed construction, she said, and a formal opening ceremony now is scheduled for March 19. A second phase of work will continue after that, she said. Construction of a separate conservancy project continues this spring along Pow-
Thank you Atlanta
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Educa�ion | 19
FEB. 5 - FEB. 18, 2016 ■ www.ReporterNewspapers.net
Achieve Atlanta launches need-based scholarships ties for financing college. Achieve Atlanta understands that while high school advising and scholarships will help more APS students access post-secondary education, it is not enough to get them over the finish line. Less than half of APS students who enroll in college graduate within six years. Starting in early March, APS seniors will be able to apply for the Achieve At-
lanta Scholarship. Eligibility requirements include enrollment and graduation from an APS high school, and minimum standards related to GPA, financial need and post-secondary enrollment. “We launched the scholarship program because we believe our students deserve a fair chance to achieve their dreams,” Fernandez said. “This is a lifechanger for a lot of our students.”
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five APS high school graduates completes a post-secondary degree of any kind. Yet by Achieve Atlanta will award 2020, 60 percent of the jobs approximately 900 needin Georgia will require some based scholarships this spring form of post-secondary deto eligible Atlanta Public gree. School (APS) high school seNeed-based scholarships nior applicants. Recipients are a key part of Achieve Atwill receive up to $5,000 per lanta’s strategy to tear down year for a four-year instituthe barriers that prevent stution or up to $1,500 per year dents, especially those who are the first for a two-year college or technical in their families to go on to higher edschool. Scholarships are renewable for ucation, from completing a degree or student recipients who remain in good credential after high school. academic standing. Achieve Atlanta is a supporting orga“Our vision is to have every student nization of The Community Foundation for Greater Atlanta, and is currently funded through a grant from the Joseph B. Whitehead Foundation. Achieve Atlanta invests in strategies that combine financial assistance with academic and social supports to increase postsecondary access, retention and completion. Since Achieve Atlanta’s launch in July 2015, there are 30 additional mentoring adults serving all APS high schools, thanks to a partnership with the College Advising Corps and Hands on Atlanta/AmeriCorps. Prior to this effort, it is estimated that for every 400 APS high College Access Coach Trudy Nelson with school students, there was one of her ninth-grade students. one counselor. College Advising Corps mentors work with 11th and 12th gradin APS complete post-secondary eduers on the “nuts and bolts” of going to cation and attain the full benefits that college, such as ACT/SAT test prep, aphigher education provides,” said Tina plications, applying for scholarships Fernandez, Achieve Atlanta executive and more. For ninth and 10th graders, director. “When paired with other fiHands on Atlanta/AmeriCorps mennancial aid, these scholarships are intors work on building awareness and a tended to greatly reduce the need for “college-going mindset.” For example, families to get high-interest, private ninth graders hear about the imporloans,” Fernandez added. tance of a good GPA and the possibiliRecent data shows that only one in
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20 | Education
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North Atlanta parents review Milestones test results for local schools Parents in the North Atlanta cluster of schools recently reviewed comparisons of their elementary schools’ test performance. John Keltz, director of research and evaluation for Atlanta Public Schools, presented a series of charts showing comparisons of student proficiency, ranked by elementary school, on the 2015 Milestones test. The charts, some of which are reproduced here, show the percentage of the students in each school in the cluster and in the district that were graded as proficient in a subject. The tests showed results in English and language arts, math, science and social studies. Generally, the north Atlanta schools had higher percentages of students rated as proficient on the tests than the district as a whole. Keltz told the parents attending the Jan. 27 meeting of the North Atlanta Parents for Public Schools that test results reflected student poverty levels in each school. “Poverty explains about 94 percent of the variance in test scores,” Keltz said. NAPPS co-president Jane Rawlings said the goal was to help parents make “datadriven decisions” about the schools.
JOE EARLE
John Keltz, director of research and evaluation for Atlanta Public Schools, at left, discusses test scores with a parent during a North Atlanta Parents for Public Schools meeting.
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Education | 21
FEB. 5 - FEB. 18, 2016 ■ www.ReporterNewspapers.net
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Weber School, senior In school, Adele Stolovitz sets an example for her fellow students as a peer leader. Outside the classroom, she helps teach patrons of the Fernbank Museum of Natural History about the natural world. As a freshman at Weber, Adele felt somewhat lost, she said. Fortunately, she found a peer leader to guide her through her first year. The school’s peer leaders, juniors and seniors, help underclassmen ease into high school Adele Stolovitz and find their ways. Once she was a senior herself, Adele applied for the position. Teachers at Weber evaluate each student who applies for peer leadership and vote on whether they believe the student is fit to be a peer leader. They thought Adele would make a fine one. “Adele is an exceptional leader who is quietly confident, resourceful and sincere,” said Rebecca McCullough, Weber’s director of marketing. “She shines as a peer leader, where she embraces her responsibilities as a mentor and advisor to new students.” Outside of school, Adele is among 80 students in the Atlanta area to volunteer for the Ultimate Naturalist Program at the Fernbank Science Museum. As part of her job, she strolls around the museum with a cart dedicated to a subject from the natural world. Sometimes she runs the whale cart, sometimes the sea-and-space cart. In the future, she hopes to continue her work in a museum. Adele says she would love to work specifically with classical history or art history. While she’s been volunteering at Fernbank for two years, Adele has been playing volleyball for six. She started playing in sixth grade, she said, and hasn’t stopped since. While she’s been a member of school teams for the entire six years, she dedicated even more of her schedule to the sport, playing club volleyball for two years of high school. For this past season and the one before, her varsity team went undefeated, combining for 18-0 over the two seasons.
What’s Next:
Adele applied to several colleges. Her top choices are Barnard College, George Washington University and New York University. She hopes to study history wherever she goes, so she can work in a museum after college. This article was reported and written by Sam Wimpfheimer, a student at the Galloway School.
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22 | Dining Out
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The mille-feuille contains layers of chocolate.
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into squares. They don’t have seaweed holding them together. The missing seaweed makes everything a bit sweeter and creamier, and the unusual sushi shape delivers ingredients in a fresh, more balanced way for the palate to consider. Don’t forget to order the avocado salad. Is it really just a half avocado with a pit dent full of wasabi vinaigrette? Yes and no. Technically, yes. But they could bottle that wasabi vinaigrette and retire next year on the windfall. You can also just go for drinks and dessert. We got five fluffy profiteroles piled like something out of “The Grand Budapest Hotel,” each filled with an individually icy gem of black sesame, yuzu, ginger, green tea or five spice. Wow, the five spice – a perfect wintry mix of warm and mysterious. The mille-feuille was also manna from heaven, with its two layers of chocolate between an infinitude of paper-thin French pastry slices and layers of cream, miles beyond a good tiramisu. Plan to order two different cocktails. I’m not worried about which ones – this selection of divinely balanced cocktails is the work of Shingo Gokan, who performed similar magic at legendary NYC speakeasy Angel’s Share in NYC. Himitsu is the lovechild of a restaurant development dream team, and it shows in the every detail. Sure, it’s pricey, but consider Himitsu as a brief staycation in the land of elite privilege for moments when decent sushi alone is simply not enough.
ew
au
Himitsu means “secret” and seats about 80 people.
The avocado salad is filled with wasabi vinaigrette.
This place has ambience to spare, right down to the sparse, soft electronica piping in from hidden speakers and the giant Todd Murphy mural, “King of the Birds.” Everything here is nice to look at – brilliant, edgy, sophisticated. Go with somebody you want to impress, whether for romance or signing contracts. Go to celebrate when you finally get that promotion. Go if you already like the food at Umi and would gladly pay a little bit extra for the awesome atmosphere. Right now, most of the Himitsu menu is drawn from Umi’s menu. This is understandable. Himitsu is the type of place where management thinks just as much about design and service as it does about food, and they are taking their time to get each element right. By the time you’re making reservations for Valentine’s Day, they’ll be ready to show you the menu on an iPad – little bursts of digital starshine lighting up the face of the film star at your neighboring table. So let us remember that Umi’s menu is totally great. At Himitsu, you can find some of the “sushi boxes,” which are not bentos but sushi rolls that are pressed
Res
Friends, prepare to part with your money. Himitsu belongs in New York and I’m glad to find it in Atlanta – a city whose finest chefs have been beleaguered by its second-class status in national roundups of cuisine. The Itos, that sushi master and pastry chef powMegan Volpert er couple of Fuyuhiko and Lisa Matsuoka, are raising their game from the lovely work they do at Umi to Umi’s little sister restaurant, this perfect new hotspot nestled in a disguised location in Buckhead. Himitsu means “secret,” after all. You have to find the email address needed to request a reservation. They email you back a confirmation, and then two hours before your reservation, you receive a keypad code. Use Umi’s valet, but you’re not going to Umi. Turn a few corners to find the fake storefront, enter your keypad code, then greet your gatekeeper to the dining room. The dining room is on two levels and seats about 80 people. Himitsu’s ambience is about finely blended combinations of light and shadow, from the stunning gorgeousness of its orange blown glass chandelier hanging eye level with the balcony tables to the subtlety of the yellow tones in the superbly backlit bar. The bar is the star of the first floor – or the corner table with a velvet bench for three is the star, or the golden votive holder with precisely geometric laser cut-outs is the star, or the very many kinds of unique barware and stemware are the star.
rant Re
vi
The secret of Himitsu’s success
To find Himitsu, visit Umi at 3050 Peachtree Road, Buckhead, umiatlanta.com. Megan Volpert lives in Decatur, teaches in Roswell and writes books about popular culture.
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Under the Cork Tree has opened in The Prado in Sandy Springs. According to Tomorrow’s News Today, Jason SPECIAL Sheetz and William SigUnder the Cork Tree has opened in The Prado in Sandy Springs. ley of Hammocks Trading Company quietly opened the restaurant last month. Under The Cork Tree is a “wine-centric Mediterranean inspired restaurant” that occupies the nearly 6,800-square-foot space formerly home to Joli Kobe.
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Fifth Group Restaurants is planning two new Buckhead outposts of its popular restaurants. South City Kitchen (modern Southern cuisine) will open at Capital City Plaza soon, while Ecco (seasonal European cuisine) is expected to open at Phipps Plaza in mid-2017. R. Thomas Deluxe Grill in Buckhead has reopened after a fire damaged the interior in October. The eclectic menu still features fresh-to-order juices and smoothies, freerange meats, and organic, vegetarian and vegan, macrobiotic, gluten-free and raw food items, as well breakfast anytime. Metro Atlanta Kroger customers and associates contributed more than $406,000 in six weeks to Kroger’s 2015 Can Hunger campaign and an additional $91,000 to a second initiative benefitting the Atlanta Community Food Bank. From Nov. 15 – Dec. 24, Kroger customers supported the annual Can Hunger campaign by purchasing $1, $3 and $5 icons. Each icon purchased benefitted Feeding America food banks and helped to provide food to local families in need. --Collin Kelley
Dan Sasser loves coming and going as he pleases. That’s just one of many reasons he chose Canterbury Court to be his home. “I left a tenured position so I could live wherever I wanted. Then I retired at 60 and was working part time when I discovered Canterbury Court. I thought, ‘How wonderful it would be to live there.’” When he decided to move to Canterbury Court, he chose a studio apartment, which he says “is more than big enough for me.” The maintenance-free lifestyle also lets him keep a second home in Florida and take frequent road trips.
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24 | Community
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Summer Horse Camps Chastain Horse Park - convenient Buckhead location! Mon-Fri 8:00am-1:00pm Camp includes daily riding lessons, crafts, and games! Lots of fun! Contact Bergen at 404-252-4244 or lessons@chastainhorsepark.org Boarding * Riding Instruction * Therapeutic Riding Professional Clinics * Pony Parties * Camps
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Community | 25
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26 | Community
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28 | Community
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HERE’S LOOKING AT YOU
Bowled over by winning
A green thumbs up
Chamblee Middle School finished first in the Professional Association of Georgia Educators Academic Bowl for 2016. Each year over 1,500 students from more than 120 schools around the state participate in the PAGE Academic Bowl.
Back row, from left, Woodland Elementary School Principal Tara McGee, Andy Batcheller, owner, Handy Andy Outdoors, Gina Gill, along with, front row, from left, Gaman Nischay, Gargi Nagarkar and Alani Cabrera-Garcia, thank Batcheller for his company’s help in creating the school’s sustainable, organic food garden.
Above, back row, from left, PAGE Foundation President John Varner, coach John Donegan, Ashley Veazey, Sam Grant, Carson Ankeny, Logan Durisch, Ethan Shi and PAGE Foundation Trustee Charles Richardson. Front row, from left, co-captain Nevin Aresh, Shanru Xu, co-captain Foster Cowan and Gunter Schroeder. Right, the participants get a hand on their trophy.
Welcome to the new chairman Above, Teresa Finley, senior vice president of global marketing at United Parcel Service, delivers the keynote speech at the Sandy Springs/Perimeter Chamber of Commerce annual luncheon on Jan. 21. Below, Lever Stewart, left, is the new chairman of the Sandy Springs/Perimeter Chamber of Commerce, succeeding Chris Burnett, right.
Breaking bread Holy Innocents’ Episcopal School eighth-grader Tyler Bride, left, and third-grader Chloe Kelley work together on Jan. 27 to package meals for Stop Hunger Now.
FEB. 5 - FEB. 18, 2016
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Classifieds | 29
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Robust development underway on Atlanta’s Westside
SPECIAL
New establishments like Monday Night Brewing, above, Stoddard’s Range & Guns, right, and Trinity Anglican Mission Church, below, are finding homes on Atlanta’s Westside. The area once served as the center of the community’s livestock and meat processing industries, and remained a somewhat gritty area for decades, characterized by warehouses and food storage facilities.
BY JULIE HERRON CARSON Witnessing the robust redevelopment underway throughout Atlanta’s Westside, it would seem business owners and residents have taken to heart author Horace Greeley’s famous quote, “Go west, young man.” The area, just west of the city along the Norfolk-Southern rail lines, once served as the center of the community’s livestock and meat processing industries, and for decades remained a somewhat gritty industrial district characterized by warehouses, processing plants, industrial buildings and food storage facilities. But now, Atlanta’s Westside “is quickly becoming a pe-
destrian-friendly community featuring a diverse and eclectic blend of exclusive dining establishments, specialty shops, professional firms and unique, cuttingedge residences,” according to the West Midtown Business Alliance. What distinguishes this community’s redevelopment from that of neighboring areas is the creative adaptive redesign of many of the existing structures. Business owners, developers and architects are preserving the characteristics of this once working-class neighborhood by repurposing industrial buildings into shops, restaurants, residences and even churches. Some business leaders have compared Westside’s resurgence to that of New York City’s
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meatpacking district. Jerry Spangler, director of architecture at TSW, a Midtown-based architecture, planning and landscape architecture firm, is one of the visionaries helping to transform Atlanta’s Westside. As a Westside resident, he understands the balance required to maintain the community’s historical context, while creating a hip, urban destination where people want to live, work, shop, dine and play. He and his firm have been involved in a number of Westside design projects recently, including a brewery, cidery, gun shop and firing range, and a church. “It’s exciting to work with the entrepreneurs who believe Westside’s energy and vibe make it the perfect location for their businesses,” said Spangler. “In almost every case, these are creative, driven business owners who are passionate about what they do, and have strong ideas about how they want their buildings to look and function. Our Westside design projects have all been collaborative processes with the owners, where we have shared ideas and worked as a team to repurpose and bring new life back into several unique industrial buildings.” TSW has worked or is working with a number of businesses and property owners to find and adapt space, including Monday Night Brewing, Stoddard’s Range and Guns, Trinity Anglican Mission Church and Urban Tree Cidery. Repurposing old buildings is an en-
vironmentally friendly, sustainable endeavor that preserves the architectural character and historical context of a community, but there are a number of factors to consider before undertaking a project of this nature, advises Spangler. First, he would strongly advise any entrepreneur to work with his or her architect or engineering group to conduct a thorough examination of all building structures and systems to determine their viability prior to purchase or lease. It’s crucial to know in advance what works and what doesn’t, from electrical and plumbing to floors, walls and roofs. Is the building sound? What utilities serve this building? Because most industrial buildings are located within municipalities, redevelopment and usage are subject to zoning codes, parking requirements and other regulations. Spangler says the redevelopment team must carefully research all of the applicable codes and restrictions before undertaking a repurposing project. His advice to other architects is to recognize that many business owners who take on a repurposing project are passionate about their vision and want to be hands-on throughout the process. They expect to be listened to and included in the design process. “Part of the inherent value of these old buildings is the character of the space,” Spangler said. “It’s this very quality and richness that probably attracted the entrepreneur in the first place.”
FEB. 5 - FEB. 18, 2016
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Public Safety | 31
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Police Blotter / Buckhead From police reports dated Jan. 3 through Jan. 23 The following informa�ion was provided by the Zone 2 precinct of the Atlanta Police Department from its records and is presumed to be accurate.
R O B B E RY 20 block of Standish Avenue NW –
Two men armed with handguns walked up to another man and demanded, “Give me all your money.” The man handed over $60 in cash, a book bag with an orange zipper, Georgia ID card and a $4 Staight Talk cellphone. 3300 block of Peachtree Road NE – A
man entered the Macy’s at Lenox Square Mall, picked up a mannequin, removed the shoes it was wearing and concealed the shoes in a book bag. The man fought with security guards when they attempted to apprehend him. He dropped the shoes. 1000 block of Woodland Avenue –
Three men with handguns entered through an unlocked front door and ordered those in the residence into the living room. Some of the armed men searched the house while one struck a woman on her head and her child in the stomach with the gun. The armed men took keys, checks, a wallet with $700 in it and jewelry before running toward Cheshire Bridge Road. 600 block of Norfleet Road NW – A
man was walking from a convenience store when two men pulled up next to him in a vehicle. One of the men pointed a dark-colored handgun at the victim and demanded he throw his wallet in the car. He complied and the two men drove away. 3200 block of West Andrews Drive – A
couple was unloading groceries at their townhome when three men armed with handguns approached them. The couple was forced into their residence as the armed men searched their home. Taken were $250 in cash and a Lenevo laptop. Peachtree Road/Palisades Drive NE
– Four men with faces covered approached two people waiting for a bus. One of the masked men had a handgun and demanded their belongings. The four men fled on foot after taking a purse, $200 in cash, an Alcatel cellphone and a Samsung smartphone. 4400 block of Roswell Road – While
closing up shop, a business owner noticed a man squatting on the right side of the building. The businessman ran away, but stopped after the squatting man pursued him, yelled, “Stop!” and
shot a gun once in the air. The businessman’s wallet was taken.
AG G R AVAT E D A S S AU LT 2000 block of Peachtree Road NE –
A woman was stabbed in the arm by her partner during an argument about moving out. An arrest was made. 700 block of Sid-
ney Marcus Boulevard NE – A man was hit in the eye with a champagne glass by his boyfriend during an argument. The boyfriend flipped over several pieces of furniture before fleeing the residence. 1800 block of Piedmont Avenue – A
man got out of a vehicle and attempted to fight a group of people in a parking lot before a second person exited the vehicle armed with a BB gun. He pointed it at the group and waved it in the air. An arrest was made. 500 block of Main St. NE – A man said
he was jumped by an assailant in the parking deck. He had noticeable injuries to his chin and bruising on face as well as loss of teeth.
600 block of Allen Court NW – A
200 block of Monroe Drive NE – A ceil-
rear glass back door was broken with a brick. Taken from the house were two Apple MacBook laptops, a Panasonic TV, a Samsung TV, watches and jewelry. A 2013 Hyundai Sonata was also taken from the garage.
ing screen was cut and a Samsung 55inch flat panel TV was taken from Public Storage.
1100 block of Conway Drive NW – The front door of a house was pried open. A diamond wedding band, a GoPro camera, a black Leica digital M7 camera with six lenses and a Hasselblad camera with four lenses were taken.
2400 block of Burtz Street NW – A
house bedroom window was broken with a rock. A Samsung 42-inch TV was taken. 9100 block of Chastain Drive NE – An
apartment front door was damaged and a 42-inch Smart TV, a 36-inch Smart TV, five pairs of UGG boots and a MacBook laptop were taken. 1800 block of Wellbourne Drive NE
– Someone broke a window of a house and took a Wolf Pro 36-inch glass cook top and an Electrolux 30-inch oven.
R E S I D E N T I A L B U R G L A RY
CO M M E R C I A L B U R G L A RY
2900 block of Sequoyah Drive NW –
1700 block of Howell Mill Road – A
Two Trek mountain bikes stolen from a house; no sign of forced entry. 1900 block of Grandview Avenue –
Several drawers were opened and rummaged through in a house. A TV, laptop computer and gold ring were taken. No signs of forced entry.
rear slide door was broken and approximately $1,500 in cash stolen from the cash register at a tire company. First block of West Paces Ferry Road
– A rock was used to break a front window of a business and men’s, women’s and children’s clothing worth $20,000 taken.
3000 block of Roswell Road NW – The
front window of a bike shop was broken with a rock, and a black and red Turbo S bicycle was taken. 3300 block of Peachtree Road NE –
An employee entered the stock room of a shop in Lenox Square Mall and saw a suspect hiding. The suspect was arrested. 2100 block of Monroe Drive – A door
was damaged and a unit ransacked. Electronics, a snowboard and tools were taken. 2400 block of Cheshire Bridge Road –
The door was kicked in at a house and a welding machine, metal cutter, emission OBD tester, compressor, two oxygen sensors, a new catalytic converter and miscellaneous tools were taken. 2000 block of Manchester Street –
Someone entered an auto repair shop and a heating and air conditioning company next door in a blue and green Dodge Ram. A pile of copper was taken. 2100 block of Monroe Drive – The roof
caved in and split open at a storage company. A Sony Bravia 55-inch TV, a tan acoustic guitar and a drum machine were taken.
LARCENY FROM VEHICLE Between Jan. 3-23, there were 51 larce-
nies from vehicles reported and a total of 69 other larcenies, including shoplifting, were also reported. Seventeen vehicles were reported stolen.
4400 block of Peachtree Park Drive NE
– A man entered his apartment to find someone he didn’t know in his roommate’s room. He locked himself inside his room and called 911. He later found an Apple MacBook and charger were missing. 3400 block of Stratford Road NE – A
dead bolt was found damaged at a condo. No signs of entry.
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700 block of Morosgo Drive NE – An
apartment door was kicked in. A Dell laptop, a Visio 27-inch TV, car keys and Bose mini-speaker were taken.
Karen Anderson Stephens
3000 block of Westminster Circle NW
404-963-2227
– A basement window was pried open and a 48-inch, stainless steel Thermador range oven was taken.
Anderson Stephens Agency kstephens@farmersagent.com www.farmersagent.com/kstephens
3655 Roswell Rd., NE, Ste. 122 Buckhead Atlanta, GA 30342
32 |
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