Atlanta News

427 readers
157 users here now

News about Atlanta, auto-sourced from RSS feeds of local and regional media. User names indicate the news source.

founded 2 years ago
MODERATORS
501
 
 

Georgia Tech's first new residence hall in decades starts topping out Josh Green Wed, 07/23/2025 - 13:46

The first traditional residence hall to be built on Georgia Tech’s campus in almost 50 years has reached its max height—at least partly.

One section the two-building Curran Street Residence Hall, the south tower, has topped out on the western fringes of campus, according to a Georgia Tech Infrastructure and Sustainability photo update this week.

The project’s north tower has largely topped out, too, apart from a middle section. A formal groundbreaking was held in March, though construction had launched last year.  

The dorm project continues a building spree for Georgia Tech that includes the expanded Science Square district, a football stadium expansion, and the topped-out Technology Square Phase 3 in Midtown, in addition to smaller projects.

The Curran Street Residence Hall calls for 862 beds spread across eight residential floors for first-year students. Building features—previously described as state-of-the-art—will include a 24-hour automated market, study rooms, e-gaming spaces, and a fitness center, Georgia Tech officials have said.

alt Looking southeast to downtown, recent construction progress on the two-building Curran Street Residence Hall project. Georgia Tech Infrastructure and Sustainability

alt Georgia Tech Infrastructure and Sustainability

The project has risen from a site along Northside Drive, between Eighth and Ninth streets. It marks the first housing of any sort added on campus since 2005, when the 153-bed Tenth and Home complex opened along 10th Street to accommodate growing family-student and graduate enrollment.

Formerly the property in question—situated just south of The Interlock project’s second phase and new Stella at Star Metals luxury high-rise—was home to surface parking and little else.

Officials consider the new residential facility an important cog in goals put forward in Georgia Tech’s emerging Comprehensive Campus Plan, which could continue to transform multiple areas of the campus grounds. The project was estimated to cost $117 million in 2023, when it was approved by the University System of Georgia Board of Regents.

alt How the Curran Street Residence Hall project will meet Northside Drive. Georgia Institute of Technology

alt The project's footprint between Eighth and Ninth streets on the western edge of campus. Georgia Institute of Technology

The residence hall will be geared toward accommodating Georgia Tech’s first-year enrollment growth over the next decade, while also housing students relocated during planned renovations to existing on-campus residential buildings.

All rooms in the 191,000-square-foot building will be made for double-occupancy, with group kitchens, community lounges, and collaborative learning spaces featured elsewhere, according to the school.

The construction schedule calls for opening the new dorms in August 2026 for fall semester.

The student living options will join a multitude of new off-campus housing in highly amenitized buildings that have sprouted across Midtown and downtown over the past decade.

Swing up to the gallery for more context and visuals.

...

Follow us on social media:

Twitter / Facebook/and now: Instagram

• Georgia Tech news, discussion (Urbanize Atlanta)

Tags

Northside Drive

Georgia Tech Housing

Georgia Tech dorms

Atlanta Development

Student Housing

Lord Aeck Sargent

University System of Georgia Board of Regents

Yellow Jackets

Atlanta Colleges

Affordable Housing

Curran Street Residence Hall

Georgia Institute of Technology

Atlanta Construction

Images

alt The site in question on Georgia Tech campus' western edge, just south of The Interlock project's second phase. Google Maps

alt Looking southeast to downtown, recent construction progress on the two-building Curran Street Residence Hall project. Georgia Tech Infrastructure and Sustainability

alt Georgia Tech Infrastructure and Sustainability

alt Georgia Tech Infrastructure and Sustainability

alt Looking north at the Northside Drive site, at right, as seen in January 2023.Google Maps

alt How the Curran Street Residence Hall project will meet Northside Drive. Georgia Institute of Technology

alt The project's footprint between Eighth and Ninth streets on the western edge of campus. Georgia Institute of Technology

alt Alternate interior angle of the project, as released in 2023. Lord Aeck Sargent; via Georgia Tech

Subtitle

Two-tower project calls for hundreds of new living options near western edge of campus

Neighborhood

Georgia Tech

Background Image

Image

An image showing a new housing tower planned on Georgia Tech's campus under blue skies near a large greenspace.

Before/After Images

Sponsored Post

Off

#Atlanta #UrbanizeAtlanta #theATLBot

502
 
 

Last week, Atlanta officials celebrated an agreement between the police department and the Atlanta Citizen Review Board to increase civilian oversight over the agency.  In a statement, Mayor Andre Dickens described the agreement as a step toward rebuilding trust between the government and the people it serves.  Tiffany Roberts, co-founder of Building Locally to Organize […]

The post APD Must Now Report All Deadly Force to Citizen Review Board appeared first on Capital B News - Atlanta.

#Atlanta #CapitalBNews

503
 
 

Set against the backdrop of the NMA conference, Executive Officers from the National Medical Association, Grammy Award Winning Artist and Advocate Raheem DeVaughn, and Gilead Sciences experts, are holding today an important conversation on HIV prevention and health equity. Black women continue to be disproportionately impacted by HIV despite advances in prevention options. Today’s event … Continued

The post LIVE from the NMA Convention Raheem DeVaughn Says The Time Is Now: Let’s End HIV in Our Communities appeared first on Atlanta Daily World.

#Atlanta #AtlantaDailyWorld #AtlantaNews #theATLBot

504
 
 

By Rachel Anderson, Vice President, Policy Analysis and Impact, Data Quality Campaign (DQC) If you’ve ever tried to find childcare or a preschool for your child (or know someone who has), you know it’s a full-time job. Where do you even start? What programs are near you? Do they have slots open for your child’s … Continued

The post How States Can Make It Easier for Parents and Families to Make Early Childhood Care and Education Decisions appeared first on Atlanta Daily World.

#Atlanta #AtlantaDailyWorld #AtlantaNews #theATLBot

505
 
 

To celebrate its 30th birthday, Dad’s Garage Theatre — now an Atlanta comedy institution with many notable alumni and thousands of shows in its history — will host a weekend full of special events, including lots of improv shows and a massive party. “Something that has allowed Dad’s Garage to be around for 30 years...

#Atlanta #AtlantaArts #Arts

506
 
 

Is Atlanta’s hot streak ending—or are red flags overblown? Josh Green Wed, 07/23/2025 - 10:44

If you’re starting to notice a negative trend around here, you’re not alone.

This past weekend, the Wall Street Journal published a population-analysis, urban trends piece that’s garnered a lot of buzz and reactionary media attention (not to mention schadenfreude from afar, if texts from friends in other cities are any indication). The article’s hair-raising headline: “Atlanta’s Growth Streak Has Come to an End.”   

Gasp! We’re screwed! Right? Let's proceed.

The WSJ cites U.S. Census Bureau data that indicates metro Atlanta saw a dip in domestic migrants over the 12 months ending in mid-2024, enough that the region lost more people to moving away than those who moved in. The decline wasn’t severe—1,330 former residents, equivalent to basically one larger apartment complex—but it did mark the first instance of this happening in metro Atlanta in three decades, since the Census started keeping such records.

Anecdotal evidence of the region’s decline peppered throughout the WSJ piece includes Microsoft’s indefinite pause of its economy-changing Westside campus, a foreclosed apartment building in Buckhead, the metro’s scourge of office vacancies, cripplingly low housing inventory, local employer hiring called “weak,” and younger folks fed up with traffic and high rents who’ve bolted to places like Chattanooga, Greenville, and Huntsville. The metro, in summation, “is finally cooling off,” the authors assert.

Make no mistake: According to the 2024 data, metro Atlanta is still growing, with births outnumbering deaths and international migration on the uptick (at least until recently); and by all indications, the City of Atlanta itself remains on a growth hot streak, now with its highest population in history. In so many places the city certainly feels more alive, more populated and vibrant, than even five years ago. 

But the WSJ’s take isn’t alone in pointing out something foul afoot around here.

alt Many of the Midtown high-rise rentals shown here in December 2022 delivered last year, continuing a multifamily boom. Urbanize Atlanta

Back in March, Census estimates showed that metro Atlanta was being stripped of what many urbanists considered a point of pride: being the sixth largest metro in the U.S.

According to those 2024 estimates, the metro areas of both Miami and Washington D.C. leapfrogged Atlanta’s in terms of overall population, bumping Georgia’s capital city back to No. 8 on the list of largest metros in the country. (A year prior, a similar report showed metro Atlanta had surpassed both Miami and Washington D.C.—after having overtaken metro Philadelphia—to become the sixth largest U.S. metro and the biggest in the Southeast. But that party was short-lived, per the data.)

More recently, findings from a leading real estate marketplace show an abnormal pricing dip around Atlanta.

In fact, bottom-of-the-barrel abnormal—and unfamiliar territory for a Sunbelt boomtown, traditionally speaking.

alt Homes.com

According to Homes.com, the metro’s median home prices dropped by 3 percent in June compared to last year, marking the most significant year-over-year decrease in home prices across the nation. It also marked metro Atlanta’s biggest dip since the tail end of the Great Recession in July 2012. Metro Atlanta condos (down 6.1 percent) and townhomes (6.5 percent) took the biggest price hit.

Per Homes.com’s analysis, metro Atlanta’s median home price is $407,500, down about $12,500 from last June, which is leaning in favor of homebuyers though interest rates remain relatively high.

alt Homes.com

What’s more, active home listings around Atlanta ballooned by 40 percent over the year ending in June, signaling a slowdown but helping to give buyers leverage.

Another recent report by analytics firm Cotality (formerly CoreLogic) found Atlanta to be the country’s No. 2 market at “very high risk of price decline.”

alt Cotality

That trend “is thought to be due to buyers being unable to afford home prices as they currently stand …, rising home inventory in Atlanta putting pressure on sellers to reduce prices to stay competitive, and rapid rising prices of homes since the COVID-19 pandemic,” reads a summary.

Could all the above be proof of the dreaded “B” word (rhymes with “rubble”) in Atlanta? Are we doomed? Or are the alarm bells overblown? Will the city and metro quickly course-correct as we’ve done, by and large, for a century and a half? Is it too late now?

Certainly food for thought. Gulp.

...

Follow us on social media:

Twitter / Facebook/and now: Instagram

Opinion: These Atlanta neighborhoods are still a smart buy in 2025(Urbanize Atlanta)

Tags

Atlanta Population

Atlanta Population Growth

City of Atlanta Population

Atlanta Population Decline

Atlanta Decline

Wall Street Journal

Atlanta Growth

Atlanta Development

Cotality

Homes.com

U.S. Census

Atlanta Housing Market

Subtitle

Reports: Metro Atlanta in 2024 lost domestic migrants for first time in Census-recorded history; housing unstable

Neighborhood

Citywide

Background Image

Image

A image of skyline in Atlanta with a huge highway beside under blue skies and many clouds.

Before/After Images

Sponsored Post

Off

#Atlanta #UrbanizeAtlanta #theATLBot

507
 
 

Groundbreaking virtual symposium to be held Sept. 17 Today, UNCF’s Institute for Capacity Building (ICB), in strategic collaboration with the Historic African Diaspora Placement Program (HADIP) and the Association of African Universities (AAU), announced the convening of a groundbreaking virtual symposium on Sept. 17, 2025. The theme “From Dialogue to Action: Advancing Partnerships between Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs) and African Higher Education … Continued

The post Joint Conference to Investigate Global Partnerships between African Higher Education Institutions and Historically Black Colleges and Universities appeared first on Atlanta Daily World.

#Atlanta #AtlantaDailyWorld #AtlantaNews #theATLBot

508
 
 

A commission created in 2024 by Gov. Brian Kemp and state lawmakers to evaluate health care challenges facing low-income Georgians has not met this year, despite the drastic changes debated […]

#Atlanta #WABE #AtlantaPolitics #AtlantaNews #theATLBot

509
 
 

Each week, ArtsATL curates a selection of the most exciting arts and culture events happening in Atlanta this weekend, highlighting nine must-see experiences.  :: Thursday A Strange Loop  Summertime is generally light on theater offerings, but this week marks the opening of A Strange Loop at Actor’s Express. The winner of both the Pulitzer Prize and the...

#Atlanta #AtlantaArts #Arts

510
 
 

Photo: JSO Jacksonville Sheriff T.K. Waters has stated that there is no criminality in the viral video of a Black man who deputies repeatedly punched during a traffic stop, per ABC News. The viral traffic stop involving 22-year-old driver William Anthony McNeil and Jacksonville sheriff’s deputies unfolded on February 19 and was captured on cellphone … Continued

The post Deputies Who Punched Black Driver In Viral Video Broke No Laws: Sheriff appeared first on Atlanta Daily World.

#Atlanta #AtlantaDailyWorld #AtlantaNews #theATLBot

511
 
 

Carjacking 972 Myrtle St

We will post the following carjacking arrest on our website on 7/23/25, around 11:45 p.m., officers responded to 972 Myrtle St in reference to a pedestrian robbery and carjacking. Upon arrival, officers met with two individuals were robbed at gunpoint and carjacked by three armed male suspects. The victims stated three males approached them on foot, brandished firearms and demanded their keys, wallets, and phones. The victims complied and the suspects fled in the victim’s vehicle. Units immediately began canvassing the area and reviewing nearby surveillance footage. During the investigation, Officers located the vehicle traveling near Leet St. SW in Zone 4. With supervisor approval due the recent carjacking, units gave pursuit behind the carjacked vehicle.

Two suspects exited and fled from the vehicle on foot, along with the diver, who was later identified asErnest Jones(DOB: 12/2001) The victims positively identified Jones as one of the suspects. Officers recovered a replica BB gun, personal items, and stolen financial cards from Jone’s possession. Jones faces multiple charges including Aggravated Assault, Armed Robbery, Theft by Taking (Felony), Possession of a Firearm during a Felony, Financial Transaction Card Theft, Theft of Lost or Mislaid Property, Driving without a License, Failure to Maintain Lane, Fleeing and Eluding, Reckless Driving, Striking a Fixed Object, and Obstruction. He was transported to Grady detention. Two additional suspects remain at large as the investigation continues.

Please keep in mind the above information is preliminary in nature and can change as the investigation progresses and new information comes to light.

#Atlanta #AtlantaPoliceDepartment #theATLBot

512
 
 

Traffic Accident Report

#Atlanta #AtlantaPoliceDepartment #theATLBot

513
 
 

The City of South Fulton’s District 3 Councilwoman Helen Zenobia Willis is shining a spotlight on the next generation of innovators with the inaugural Young Boss Festival, a community event celebrating youth entrepreneurship. The event will take place on Saturday, August 9, 2025, from 11:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. at Welcome All Park located at … Continued

The post Councilwoman Helen Z. Willis Hosting Inaugural Young Boss Festival Celebrating Youth Entrepreneurs appeared first on Atlanta Daily World.

#Atlanta #AtlantaDailyWorld #AtlantaNews #theATLBot

514
 
 

Develop Fulton, the development authority for Fulton County, proudly announces the reappointment of restaurateur and philanthropist Pinky Cole Hayes to its board of directors and the appointment of Lynne Riley, former Georgia State Treasurer, as its newest board member. The Fulton County Board of Commissioners recently approved both actions, reflecting the County’s continued commitment to … Continued

The post Develop Fulton Announces Board Reappointment of Entrepreneur Pinky Cole Hayes and Welcomes New Member Lynne Riley appeared first on Atlanta Daily World.

#Atlanta #AtlantaDailyWorld #AtlantaNews #theATLBot

515
 
 

On Tuesday, President Donald Trump, while welcoming Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. into the Oval Office, openly accused former President Barack Obama of treason. Trump, sitting at the Resolute Desk, proclaimed to reporters that Obama had “attempted to steal the 2016 election” by “his” intelligence community investigating Trump’s campaign. His comments came during heightened media … Continued

The post Obama, MLK, and the Politics of Distraction in Trump’s Playbook appeared first on Atlanta Daily World.

#Atlanta #AtlantaDailyWorld #AtlantaNews #theATLBot

516
 
 

On Thursday, July 17, local and national organizers  will highlight the legacy of late Civil Rights leader and former Congressman John Lewis on the fifth annual John Lewis National Day of Action. With more than 1,600 events scheduled nationwide, GoodTroubleLivesOn.org says it will respond to the attacks posed on civil and human rights by the … Continued

The post WATCH: April Albright of Black Voters Matter on the John Lewis National Day of Action 7/17 appeared first on Atlanta Daily World.

#Atlanta #AtlantaDailyWorld #AtlantaNews #theATLBot

517
 
 

The youngest daughter of Martin Luther King Jr. has joined the chorus of critics calling on President Donald Trump to release the Jeffrey Epstein files in response to the federal government unveiling thousands of investigative documents relating to her father’s assassination. Bernice King expressed disapproval in a series of statements on Monday regarding the Trump […]

The post Bernice King Cites ‘Trauma’ after Trump’s MLK File Release, Calls for Epstein Docs appeared first on Capital B News - Atlanta.

#Atlanta #CapitalBNews

518
 
 

As Fulton County's lease of Atlanta's detention center ends, the city and county should commit to utilizing diversion services.

You can support stories like these at https://atlpresscollective.com/support-us.

#Atlanta #AtlantaPressCollective

519
 
 

By Stacy M. Brown Black Press USA Senior National Correspondent In its most urgent warning to date, the National Urban League has declared a “state of emergency” for democracy and civil rights in the United States. The organization’s 49th annual State of Black America report, unveiled at its conference in Cleveland, Ohio, outlines what it … Continued

The post National Urban League Declares’ State of Emergency’ for Black America in 2025 Report appeared first on Atlanta Daily World.

#Atlanta #AtlantaDailyWorld #AtlantaNews #theATLBot

520
 
 

A Spanish-language journalist who was arrested while covering a protest just outside Atlanta last month and is being held in a federal immigration jail felt a duty to help those whose voices […]

#Atlanta #WABE #AtlantaPolitics #AtlantaNews #theATLBot

521
 
 

As more than 200,000 government documents related to the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. were released this week, his children are reminding the public that while their father’s death has long captivated the nation, it remains, first and foremost, a deeply personal loss. In a joint statement Monday, Dr. Bernice King and Martin […]

The post King family responds to MLK Jr. files and says now do Epstein’s appeared first on SaportaReport.

#Atlanta #AtlantaJournalConstitution #AJC #AtlantaPolitics #theATLBot

522
 
 

Chamblee plows forward to build downtown park with pond centerpiece Josh Green Tue, 07/22/2025 - 12:24

Burgeoning downtown Chamblee is gearing up to become a bit greener soon. 

Fish Bolt Park, a greenspace and stormwater initiative in the works for nearly a decade, has recently begun the bidding process for contractors in hopes of breaking ground in coming months. City officials held a pre-bid conference today. 

Tucked between Peachtree Boulevard and the city’s MARTA station, the 1900 Chamblee Tucker Road property in question is a former MARTA stormwater detention pond acquired by the City of Chamblee as part of its 2016 trails and parks expansion program.

The site is surrounded by infill development including hundreds of new multifamily units in nearby blocks downtown, with more in the pipeline. The two-mile Chamblee Rail Trail, a multi-use pathway, abuts the southern border of the future park. 

alt Location of Fish Bolt Park along the Chamblee Rail Trail, in relation to the city's MARTA hub (bottom) and downtown restaurants. Google Maps

alt Overview of plans for the constructed wetlands, seating areas, and multi-use pathways at Fish Bolt Park. Kimley-Horn, via City of Chamblee

According to project engineers Kimley-Horn, Fish Bolt Park will be considered a “constructed wetland,” or a shallow marsh system that controls runoff and treats urban stormwater, removing pollutants by way of marsh vegetation. 

Fish Bolt Park’s scope will also include an elevated observation deck, ADA-accessible pathways, a mural wall, additional decks with seating, lighting, landscaping, and other features meant to control erosion. 

alt Kimley-Horn, via City of Chamblee

alt Kimley-Horn, via City of Chamblee

Construction on Fish Bolt Park is scheduled to start before the end of 2025. No targeted opening date has been specified. 

In the gallery above, find more visuals and context. 

alt Overview of the 1900 Chamblee Tucker Road site, now surrounded by residential development. Kimley-Horn, via City of Chamblee

...

Follow us on social media:

Twitter / Facebook/and now: Instagram

• Chamblee news, discussion (Urbanize Atlanta)

Tags

1900 Chamblee Tucker Road

Fish Bolt Park

Kimley-Horn

Kimley-Horn & Associates

City of Chamblee

Chamblee News

Chamblee Construction

Chamblee Development

Chamblee Parks

Atlanta Parks

Atlanta Parks and Recreation

Parks and Rec

DeKalb County

Chamblee Rail Trail

Atlanta Trails

Chamblee Trails

ITP

Park Design

Images

alt Location of Fish Bolt Park along the Chamblee Rail Trail, in relation to the city's MARTA hub (bottom) and downtown restaurants. Google Maps

alt Overview of plans for the constructed wetlands, seating areas, and multi-use pathways at Fish Bolt Park. Kimley-Horn, via City of Chamblee

alt Overview of the 1900 Chamblee Tucker Road site, now surrounded by residential development. Kimley-Horn, via City of Chamblee

alt Kimley-Horn, via City of Chamblee

alt Kimley-Horn, via City of Chamblee

alt Kimley-Horn, via City of Chamblee

alt Kimley-Horn, via City of Chamblee

alt Kimley-Horn, via City of Chamblee

Subtitle

Functional Fish Bolt Park to be sited along Rail Trail, near hundreds of new residences

Neighborhood

Chamblee

Background Image

Image

An image of a site where a park with many trails and bridges and seating areas and a large pond is planned, next to many new buildings.

Before/After Images

Sponsored Post

Off

#Atlanta #UrbanizeAtlanta #theATLBot

523
 
 

  By Stacy M. Brown Black Press USA Senior National Correspondent Despite relentless corporate hype and rising concerns about mass unemployment, artificial intelligence has yet to lead to widespread job losses. Reports from Goldman Sachs, Brookings, CNN, the World Economic Forum, and tech industry analysts all point to the same conclusion: AI is changing the … Continued

The post AI Isn’t Killing Jobs—Yet. But Entry-Level Workers and Middle Managers Should Be Watching Closely appeared first on Atlanta Daily World.

#Atlanta #AtlantaDailyWorld #AtlantaNews #theATLBot

524
 
 

APD Statement on Recruit Conduct and Policy Standards

The Atlanta Police Department holds all members of our organization to the highest standards of professionalism, integrity, and conduct-both on and off duty. We can confirm that four police recruits have been separated from the Department following off-duty conduct that did not meet the standards of our agency. Upon learning of the situation, the Department took swift action and opened an internal investigation.

The incident occurred at a business outside of our jurisdiction in the City of East Point.

The Atlanta Police Department has learned that the recruits were asked to leave the business and became involved in a dispute with a member of the establishment's security team, during which one recruit discharged a firearm. The recruits were not celebrating their Police Academy graduation, as they had not yet completed their required training. Actions that compromise the public's trust or jeopardize community safety will not be tolerated. This incident does not reflect the values or expectations of the Atlanta Police Department.

#Atlanta #AtlantaPoliceDepartment #theATLBot

525
 
 

House Speaker Mike Johnson is rebuffing pressure to act on the investigation into Jeffrey Epstein, instead sending members home early for a month-long break from Washington after the week’s legislative agenda […]

#Atlanta #WABE #AtlantaPolitics #AtlantaNews #theATLBot

view more: ‹ prev next ›