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Images: Office-replacing Satellite Commons project to debut next month Josh Green Fri, 08/01/2025 - 13:02

Northeast of Atlanta, a multifaceted infill project is finishing construction that designers call a refreshingly walkable alternative to typical suburban development.

Satellite Commons, named for its location along Satellite Boulevard, is claiming a 40-acre former office site and parking lots across two phases in Duluth’s Sugarloaf area. It’s just north of the Interstate 85 junction with Ga. Highway 316, across the street from Mercedes-Benz of Atlanta Northeast, a large dealership. 

The site is the former headquarters of Fortune 500 company NCR, a financial telecommunications firm that made waves by uprooting from Gwinnett to a glassy high-rise complex in Midtown seven years ago. 

Officials with Nelson Worldwide, Satellite Commons’ architect of record, tell Urbanize Atlanta the project’s initial phase is finishing construction and scheduled to be completed in September.

alt Courtesy of Nelson

alt The vacant former NCR headquarters, prior to demolition in 2021. Google Maps

Phase one includes 350 apartments, 64 rental cottages, and 25,000 square feet of walkable retail and restaurant space. Another 350 multifamily units are in the pipeline for phase two.

Onsite perks include saltwater pools described as “resort-style,” fitness centers, clubhouses with coworking, pocket parks, business centers, conference rooms, and multi-use trails that link the community to the Gwinnett County Trail Network. Overall, the goal was to create a “seamless blend of modern living, retail convenience, and accessible recreation,” per an architectural overview.

On the retail front, the project is partially leased, and tenants have begun moving in. We’ve asked for a list of signed tenants and will update this story should that come.

alt Scope of the 40-acre site, in relation to I-85 and Ga. Highway 316 in Duluth. Google Maps

alt Rendering of the project's multifamily component. Courtesy of Nelson

John Lewis, a Nelson principal and multifamily national practice leader, says the project’s planning lends functionality, aesthetic cohesiveness, and a modern feel—for “not just another suburban center,” in other words.

“Unlike other nearby small to medium-sized suburban developments, which tend to be standalone retail or office… or residential apartments, Satellite Commons blends both residential and commercial within one pedestrian-friendly complex,” Lewis wrote in an email.

“It's a full experience,” he continued, “[with] daily necessities, amenities, recreation, and social spaces, all walkable and programmed. That is rare in the broader Satellite Boulevard area, where commercial corridors dominate.”

In the gallery above, find more context and all available imagery.

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alt The vacant former NCR headquarters, prior to demolition in 2021. Google Maps

alt Scope of the 40-acre site, in relation to I-85 and Ga. Highway 316 in Duluth. Google Maps

alt Rendering of the project's multifamily component. Courtesy of Nelson

alt Courtesy of Nelson

alt Courtesy of Nelson

alt Courtesy of Nelson

alt Courtesy of Nelson

alt Google Maps

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Multi-building Duluth complex replaces former Fortune 500 company headquarters

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Developer behind NHL push, billion-dollar project talks timelines, more Josh Green Fri, 08/01/2025 - 08:16

Back in June, hundreds of readers on these pages responded to a poll asking them to rate their confidence a National Hockey League team will return to metro Atlanta soon. The most popular response by an overwhelming margin (43 percent) was this: “Yes, it’s happening. Third time’s a charm.”

Clearly, Vernon Krause—the car dealership entrepreneur, aspiring megaproject developer, and driving force behind plans to lasso another NHL franchise for the metro—concurs. 

Since uncloaking plans for the $3-billion The Gathering at South Forsyth two years ago, Krause has assembled a powerful team, detailed the redevelopment vision for 100 acres he owns, and scored the Forsyth County Commission’s official blessing to move forward with a mixed-use project to rival The Battery Atlanta. But all of it—including $350 million in county tax incentives—hinges on the NHL deciding to award metro Atlanta its third pro hockey franchise. Krause said in June his team “is more energized than ever” as it prepares to meet with NHL Commissioner Gary Bettman to discuss possible league expansion.

NHL brass have given no indication when they’ll decide on expansion, but Bettman has said Atlanta’s past two failures to keep NHL franchises here (the Flames and Thrashers) won’t count against the region. He acknowledged the league has talked to “a couple of groups” striving to bring the NHL back to the metro, noting that Atlanta is a different market than when both previous teams fled north, in 1980 and 2011, respectively. Last month, the NHL and NHL Players’ Association locked in a new collective bargaining agreement, which was seen as necessary before expansion could be considered. 

alt The Gathering at South Forsyth; designs, SCI Architects

Back in Forsyth, Krause (owner of 29 car dealerships across the Carolinas, Florida, and Georgia) envisions The Gathering sprouting to life with 2,400 residential units and 1.6 million square feet of retail and office space, among other facets, in coming years. About $1 billion of the estimated $3 billion price tag would go toward the cornerstone 18,000-seat arena, which would also stage concerts and events.  

What follows are excerpts from a recent Krause interview with Alpharetta.com, republished here with permission, in which he outlines his ambitions for the prosperous north metro region. Q&A responses have been edited for length.

Krause on the initial impetus for trying to pull off a development of such scale:

“My passion for creating The Gathering at South Forsyth really came from something deeper—a passion to bring hockey back to Georgia, to the community where I spent 35 years raising my family and building my business. I looked around Forsyth County, one of the fastest-growing counties in the nation, and saw a need for a destination that could bring people together. A place where families could spend the day, where businesses could thrive, where our youth could be inspired by sports, music, and innovation.

“I knew that if we didn’t create that kind of visionary space now, we’d miss a rare opportunity to help shape the future of this area in a meaningful, lasting way. So, The Gathering was born out of a sense of responsibility. I wanted to create a destination that reflects the energy and potential of this community, something we could all be proud of for generations to come.”

On how The Gathering would stand out as a suburban destination:

“We’re not just building an arena for a potential NHL team, [the project] is designed to be the entertainment hub for North Georgia—and the heartbeat of the Forsyth community. The Gathering will be a place where people can connect, celebrate and thrive. Whether it’s families enjoying the outdoor spaces, kids seeing a world-class sporting event for the first time, neighbors meeting at local restaurants, or entrepreneurs collaborating in innovative workspaces, The Gathering at South Forsyth will be the heart and soul of the community and truly a place where people can gather—right in their backyard without the hassle of traveling to downtown Atlanta.”

alt Results of an in-house poll in June. Urbanize Atlanta

How Forsyth’s bid for the NHL’s return stands out from others:

“[The Gathering] is a vision for the future of professional sports in the Southeast. What makes this development truly compelling is that it will be built from the ground up with the NHL in mind. We own the land. We have the support of the local government and the community. We’re designing a purpose-built, state-of-the-art arena in a thriving, high-growth corridor that already supports youth and adult hockey at a high level—and [we’re] not retrofitting a pre-existing space to fit a team.

Forsyth County is not only one the fastest-growing counties in Georgia and among the top in the nation, but also one of the healthiest and wealthiest counties. The community wants a destination they can visit, and [the project] will be that year-round destination. It’s an ecosystem of entertainment, retail, residential, and office space, all anchored by a team that fans can support and grow with. This isn’t a revival of past efforts. It’s a completely new playbook. And I believe it’s the one that finally gets it right for Georgia, for the NHL, and for generations of fans to come.”

On the vision for retail and new housing:

“One of the most exciting aspects of The Gathering is how it blends lifestyle and community. On the residential side, we’re planning a mix of living options from single-family homes to luxury apartments, all designed to offer walkability, convenience, and access to amenities right outside your door. Whether you’re a young professional, a growing family, or empty-nesters looking to downsize without sacrificing quality, there will be a place for you… Our retail offerings will provide a dynamic mix of local boutiques, national brands, and chef-driven restaurants. The vibrant environment will serve those who live, work, and visit from across the region and nation.”

alt The Gathering at South Forsyth; designs, Nelson

On next steps toward bringing it all to fruition:

“With the Forsyth County commissioners’ approval in hand, our team is moving into the next phase. We have assembled our package to present to NHL Commissioner Gary Bettman, which includes our vision of bringing an NHL expansion team to Georgia. We believe this project, with its built-in infrastructure, entertainment district, strong community, and passionate fan base, is the ideal location to grow the league in the Southeast. The ultimate decision rests with the NHL.”

The outlook on timelines:

“We anticipate The Gathering at South Forsyth to open in phases, with the first major phase projected for completion in 2028, depending on permitting and construction timelines. To the community of Forsyth County: thank you. Your support, engagement, and vision have helped shape [the project] into a destination that will not only bring entertainment and economic growth, but also a sense of pride and place for everyone who lives, works, and visits here. We’re excited about what’s ahead and can’t wait to welcome you when the doors open.”

alt A main street and retail corridor in the multi-billion-dollar proposal. The Gathering at South Forsyth; designs, Nelson

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Businessman Vernon Krause says The Gathering at South Forsyth's first phase poised to open in three years

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Exclusive: Old Fourth Ward project 'The Bowery' won't include grocery Josh Green Thu, 07/31/2025 - 13:54

The impact of Atlanta Medical Center’s closure three years ago is being felt by more than neighbors who depended on hospital care at the longstanding Old Fourth Ward facility. 

Developers behind a block-sized, mixed-use project that recently broke ground nearby say the hospital’s abrupt shutdown in November 2022—and a subsequent redevelopment moratorium enacted by the city that spanned two years—cost them a chance at landing the large-scale grocery option that many residents in the area need and want. 

As of 2023, that grocer was reportedly going to be another intown Publix. 

Wellstar’s shuttering of the hospital over financial concerns, and the city’s clampdown on property rezoning, “essentially scared away our grocer contacts,” Ben Yorker, Northwood Ravin development partner, tells Urbanize Atlanta. “The grocers felt that, with the closure, we had lost a major chunk of jobs and daytime population. And then questions lingered for some time as to what, exactly, would be replacing that use. 

“After trying to wait things out, we ultimately had to move forward without a grocer,” York continued. “It’s been a disappointment for us.”

Northwood Ravin, headquartered in Charlotte, is barreling ahead with the project’s demolition work in partnership with Atlanta-based Fuqua Development on underused land at a high-profile eastside intersection. The development team today shared the project’s first finalized rendering and more details—including the official name, “The Bowery at Old Fourth Ward”—that lend a clearer picture of what’s to come. 

alt The Bowery at Old Fourth Ward's first new rendering showing finalized plans for townhomes (left), retail, and apartments along Highland Avenue. Courtesy of Northwood Ravin/Fuqua Development

Plans have been percolating since 2022 on the vacant Old Fourth Ward block in question, situated along Boulevard between Highland Avenue and John Lewis Freedom Parkway. Demo work has taken down a shuttered house and the former Desperate Housewares Atlanta furniture store on site. 

According to York, the development will see three buildings total—two of them blocks of townhomes. Expect 273 apartments and 12 townhouse units overall. 

Plans also call for roughly 10,000 square feet of retail (hardly enough for a standard Publix now) at street level, with patio spaces. 

Another 2,000 square feet of retail or incubator space will be placed so that it faces a popular dog park next door, Freedom Barkway. The project’s 400-space parking deck will include 17 spaces reserved for dog park patrons, per York.  

alt Rough boundaries of the Old Fourth Ward property in question, where Highland Avenue meets Boulevard, just north of the neighborhood dog park. Google Maps

alt Prior to demolition work this month, the idle 3-acre site and shuttered Desperate Housewares Atlanta furniture store, seen here in 2024. Google Maps

Once demolition and other pre-development work finishes, York said construction should be ready to start in late fall this year. The developers estimate construction will wrap in early or mid-2028.  

On a positive note, York pointed to recent, large-scale demolition work at the former Atlanta Medical Center as a good sign for the neighborhood.

“It looks like a mixed-redevelopment project is finally in the works for the Wellstar property,” he said. “I understand that the grocery users are now back and anxious to be a part of that project.”  

alt Looking southwest, initial images of Fuqua Development's proposal distributed three years ago are shown next to John Lewis Freedom Parkway. Plans have been refined since. Submitted

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alt The Bowery at Old Fourth Ward's first new rendering showing finalized plans for townhomes (left), retail, and apartments along Highland Avenue. Courtesy of Northwood Ravin/Fuqua Development

alt Prior to demolition work this month, the idle 3-acre site and shuttered Desperate Housewares Atlanta furniture store, seen here in 2024. Google Maps

alt Rough boundaries of the Old Fourth Ward property in question, where Highland Avenue meets Boulevard, just north of the neighborhood dog park. Google Maps

alt An earlier rendering illustrating how the project will transform one corner of the Highland Avenue-Boulevard intersection. (Highland Avenue frontage is at left.) Northwood Ravin/Fuqua Development; 2023

alt An early look at the proposal's scope as it relates to Tribute Lofts, pictured at right. Submitted

alt Tentative breakdown of the Fuqua proposal as submitted to the city in 2022. Fuqua Development/Office of Zoning and Development

alt Looking southwest, initial images of Fuqua Development's proposal distributed three years ago are shown next to John Lewis Freedom Parkway. Plans have been refined since. Submitted

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Three-building Fuqua, Northwood Ravin development now underway on full Boulevard block

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Roswell's cure for downtown parking woes set to move forward Josh Green Wed, 07/30/2025 - 16:44

The aspirin for downtown Roswell’s parking headaches is about to start getting real, according to city officials. 

The north Fulton County city has scheduled a groundbreaking ceremony Aug. 7 for a tax-funded parking deck that officials view as an investment toward strategic long-term planning and growth, support for local businesses, and as ironic as it may sound, enhanced downtown walkability.  

The deck will rise on a corner where Green Street meets Ga. Highway 9 (Alpharetta Street), about a block east of Canton Street, a regional dining and shopping destination where finding parking can be tough. The site is also just south of the multi-building Southern Post development that replaced a dated shopping center, opening last year. 

“This parking deck is more than infrastructure—it’s a strategic investment in the future of our downtown,” said Mayor Kurt Wilson in a groundbreaking announcement today. 

alt Finalized plans for the downtown parking garage near a Green Street entry. Courtesy of City of Roswell

alt Rough approximation of where the nearly 400-space deck will rise, in relation to Canton Street (left) and other downtown landmarks. Google Maps

Plans call for the brick-clad, 395-space structure to echo the historic district aesthetically. Touches will include large windows for airflow and light, plus “architectural parapets and metalwork, tower-like corner stairwells, and variation in the depth of the exterior walls to add dimension and interest to the structure,” according to a project description. 

Roswell voters in 2022 approved nearly $180 million in bond funds that included $20 million for a new deck to help alleviate parking frustrations near Canton Street. Roswell leaders picked the site in question last year after evaluating eight potential locations. 

Back in March, Roswell’s mayor and city council unanimously approved a design-build contract with Winter Construction for the $14.5 million new parking deck, noting that it will rise within a few minutes’ walk of most downtown attractions. 

The construction schedule calls for opening the deck next summer. 

alt Winter Construction/City of Roswell

alt Winter Construction, via City of Roswell

The parking structure isn’t the only significant change planned for the immediate area. 

The Green Street Activation Plan, a tactic to increase safety and connectivity, will convert that street to a one-way, southbound road, with facets that include a new brick-paved, multi-use trail and improved lighting. 

The plan also calls for converting nearby Plum Street—a one-way thoroughfare located between Green and Canton streets—into a brick-paved, pedestrians-only, multi-use trail for direct access to downtown’s shopping and restaurant strip.

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alt Finalized plans for the downtown parking garage near a Green Street entry. Courtesy of City of Roswell

alt Rough approximation of where the nearly 400-space deck will rise, in relation to Canton Street (left) and other downtown landmarks. Google Maps

alt Winter Construction, via City of Roswell

alt Winter Construction/City of Roswell

alt The planned 395-space parking structure's location, in relation to Canton Street and other downtown attractions. Google Maps

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Groundbreaking scheduled for nearly 400-space deck a stone's throw from food, retail hotspot Canton Street

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Neighbors hope petition, campaign will squash townhome proposal Josh Green Wed, 07/30/2025 - 13:31

Northwest of Midtown, an infill townhome proposal has rankled some Bolton neighbors who fear it will destroy nature and viable homes, raise taxes, dilute neighborhood charm, and clog streets with vehicles. They’ve recently started an online petition and yard-sign campaign to drive home concerns. 

Developers pitching the Bolton townhomes, meanwhile, contend the project will inject a growing and increasingly walkable part of Atlanta with relatively attainable housing the market needs. Despite two recent rejections from neighborhood boards, they’re working with the city and other agencies to move revised plans forward, undeterred.

Is it a case of NIMBYism run amok, or reasonable neighborly concerns in a swiftly changing area? Or something in between? 

The concept by Middle Housing Company—an Atlanta-based developer founded in 2020 that’s behind new duplexes in Howell Station, a 10-unit townhome project along Metropolitan Parkway, and cottages elsewhere in Bolton, among other projects—was first hatched in March. 

Initially, it called for 39 townhomes to replace two single-family houses at 1905 and 1911 La Dawn Lane; when combined with smaller adjacent, vacant parcels, the site would total about 2.6 acres. The properties in question are tucked just west of Marietta Boulevard, near the original Scofflaw Brewing Co. location, situated next to large single-family homes and the Clayburne Place condo complex. 

The site isn’t without unique perks. 

alt Imagery circulated as part of the campaign to stop townhome development in Bolton. Courtesy of Paul Swicord

alt Location of the four parcels totaling about 2.6 acres today. Courtesy of Middle Housing Company

The entire western border is the Whetstone Creek Trail, a leafy, two-mile PATH Foundation rails-to-trails project that will become part of the Centennial Olympic Park to Silver Comet Trail connection in coming years. The site is also about two blocks from Westside Village, a mixed-use project opened five years ago that counts a Publix, Spiller Park Coffee, and a number of other eateries and retailers. The latter is meant to serve as a commercial lynchpin for the so-called Upper Westside district.  

Derek Turner, Middle Housing Company’s founder and president, says his team met with neighbors and conducted surveys with 100 respondents earlier this year, before drawing up townhome plans and seeking rezoning that would allow for medium-density development. 

Pushback against those plans started before a Bolton Neighborhood committee meeting in June, during which a majority of participants voted against the townhomes. Ditto for an Neighborhood Planning Unit-D meeting that month; Turner estimates the vote was 60 percent against his project there. An online “Stop Rezoning” petition fighting the townhomes had collected 173 signatures, as of this writing. 

alt A recent yard-sign campaign urged neighbors to join the pushback against townhomes. Courtesy of Paul Swicord

alt The two La Dawn Lane single-family homes in question, at left, as seen in January. Google Maps

Bolton resident Paul Swicord, who lives directly across the street from the properties in question, says the current houses are in fine condition and reflect low-density charms that make the residential enclave unique. A website naysayers established states neighbors are “outraged” by the proposal, pointing to fears the new buildings and paved lots would trigger stormwater problems with nearby wetlands, among other issues.  

“I would go from looking at nature to two years of construction, before having a three-story wall to stare at,” Swicord said via email this week. Prior to future hearings on the matter, “we will make another big push for more signatures,” he said. 

According to Swicord, the neighborhood has been supportive of high-density development in the past, including the BRYKS Upper Westside project with its nearly 600 apartments. The difference, he says, is that those dense nodes have better access to main thoroughfares. 

“This will add 100 cars onto our limited-capacity neighborhood street” where afterschool and rush-hour traffic commonly back up now, said Swicord. “This [also] has the potential of escalating our home values and increasing taxes. We have elderly and fixed-income neighbors that may be forced to leave what was to be their forever home.”  

The Bolton townhome project was scheduled to come before Atlanta’s Zoning Review Board in early August, but Turner’s team has hit pause and headed back to the drawing board, to an extent. Middle Housing Company has yet to close on the La Dawn Drive properties, pending the outcome of the rezoning push. 

alt Revised site plan for the 38-home La Dawn Lane site. Courtesy of Middle Housing Company; B+C Studio

alt A rendering showing revised plans for an entrance to the planned Bolton community. Courtesy of Middle Housing Company

Within the next week, Turner plans to submit a revised site plan to the Office of Zoning. Officials there requested he resubmit the project for a classification called Planned Development—Housing, or PD-H, that sets different standards, limits the amount of buildable square footage, and helps ensure developers stick to promised plans, said Turner.   

In response to earlier community feedback, and following meetings with PATH Foundation and Department of Watershed Management officials, Turner said the original site plan has been revised to include “key improvements” without losing “attainable” housing. (Tentative plans call for the townhomes to start at roughly 1,800 square feet, with prices from the high $500,000s, per Turner.) 

Changes include the addition of a small public park, a PATH spur-trail connection through the site to Westside Village, stormwater fixes, and enhancements along the existing trail, both aesthetic and for pedestrian safety. Turner plans to take the revised, 38-home plans back to both the neighborhood association and NPU soon, though developers are only required to revisit the NPU, he said. 

“We’re doing it in good faith,” said Turner, “and I think it’s the right thing to do.”

Turner said his company’s goal, should all go well with zoning, would be to break ground on the 38-home project in the second quarter of 2026. For the time being, he’s actually renting and living in one of the La Dawn Drive homes in question, hoping to ride out the storm. 

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alt Location of the four parcels totaling about 2.6 acres today. Courtesy of Middle Housing Company

alt The two La Dawn Lane single-family homes in question, at left, as seen in January. Google Maps

alt A recent yard-sign campaign urged neighbors to join the pushback against townhomes. Courtesy of Paul Swicord

alt Imagery circulated as part of the campaign to stop townhome development in Bolton. Courtesy of Paul Swicord

alt A rendering showing revised plans for an entrance to the planned Bolton community. Courtesy of Middle Housing Company

alt Revised site plan for the 38-home La Dawn Lane site. Courtesy of Middle Housing Company; B+C Studio

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Developers contend tweaked, trailside Bolton concept will benefit area, add needed housing

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MARTA: Long pause for Atlanta Streetcar on horizon Josh Green Wed, 07/30/2025 - 08:14

Frequent streetcar riders and forthcoming Atlanta visitors should take note: The downtown trolley is going off the grid for a while. 

For the second time in two years, the Atlanta Streetcar will be pulled from service for several months, beginning Sept. 8, MARTA officials announced this week. Shuttle van service will be offered along the streetcar’s 2.7-mile loop around downtown and Sweet Auburn while the trolleys are offline. 

MARTA plans to suspend streetcar operations to allow Georgia Power to perform underground electrical line repairs considered urgent, and to complete scheduled infrastructure upgrades along the streetcar loop. 

According to MARTA, the streetcar shutdown will last roughly three to four months, but a MARTA shuttle wrapped to appear similar to streetcars will carry passengers along the route in the meantime. 

Streetcar fares are $1 per one-way trip, or $3 for a day pass. 

alt The Atlanta Streetcar (right) and its equally purplish-blue shuttle counterpart. Courtesy of MARTA

Georgia Power’s excavation work will require one lane closure between Courtland Street and Peachtree Center Avenue. Safety protocol forbids streetcars from operating along open construction areas, according to MARTA. 

MARTA plans to use the downtime to perform a deep cleaning along the streetcar route, update vehicles and signage, inspect and repair catenaries, trim trees, and refurbish stations, per the agency. 

Streetcar fans may recall all four of the transit vehicles were pulled from service and replaced with shuttles for more than three months in 2023. That pause came after engineers spotted wheel degradation issues on the streetcars that could have posed risks. 

Atlanta’s streetcar system opened a decade ago—behind schedule and substantially overbudget—with a 12-stop route of new tracks. It’s taken lumps for being stuck in traffic, shut down for some major events, and for pulling in dismally low ridership numbers, but it remains a valuable service for transit riders and downtown guests. 

Controversial, $230-million plans to expand the streetcar system to Ponce City Market via the Beltline were squashed by Atlanta Mayor Andre Dickens’ administration earlier this year. The city’s focus is now to implement streetcar service to the Old Fourth Ward near Krog Street Market, and along the Beltline’s Southside Trail, in conjunction with MARTA, though no timelines have been specified. 

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alt The Atlanta Streetcar (right) and its equally purplish-blue shuttle counterpart. Courtesy of MARTA

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Months-long shutdown will address utilities, infrastructure upgrades; shuttle to be offered

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Former CNN Center revival vows to open before Atlanta’s World Cup Josh Green Tue, 07/29/2025 - 15:33

A timeline and specific plans for the rebirth of downtown’s former CNN Center are coming into sharper focus, and as with investments from historic Broad Street to the Beltline’s southern reaches, a certain global soccer tournament is top of mind. 

With the 2026 FIFA World Cup less than a year away, commercial real estate developer CP Group this week spotlighted what it calls major construction progress at The Center, its remake of a 1.2-million-square-foot downtown landmark that housed CNN’s global headquarters for decades. 

According to CP Group officials, a renovation of The Center’s soaring, ground-level atrium is scheduled to finished construction and open in early 2026. Exactly when wasn’t specified, but project leaders say the space will be ready for global visitors when World Cup matches kick off in Atlanta in mid-June. 

A new rendering provided to Urbanize Atlanta depicts what’s now described as a food hall component, a wood-clad corridor linking the atrium to the street.  

alt Fresh rendering showing the expected look of The Center's food hall component. Courtesy of CP Group

Other upgrades are expected to finish sooner, by the end of 2025. Those include a new exterior “arrival experience” around the building, large-scale permanent art installations in collaboration with SCAD and others, and entryways turned into hubs of activity, per CP Group.  

Elsewhere, the first of three 12-story digital signs on the building has been installed. 

CP Group last month also launched a program called CTR Culture, in partnership with local arts and culture consultants ASHA Advisory, to help provide exposure for Atlanta arts, culture, and creative community storytelling. Grant applications for free ads on The Center’s towering billboards are due Aug. 31

CP Group, the city’s largest private owner of commercial office space, unveiled the general CNN Center redevelopment plans and rebrand in April last year. No specific tenants have been announced to date, but project heads in March did hint that “a confidential high-end restaurant tenant” had agreed to lease 10,000 square feet. 

The building’s multifaceted next iteration will encompass “global entertainment, best-in-class retail, and elevated dining options” alongside an “experiential hub of cultural and community-centered activity,” said Chris Eachus, a CP Group founding partner, in an announcement.  

“Hosting Club World Cup watch parties,” Eachus continued, “providing a platform for local artists, and supporting brand activation and film production opportunities are all ways we hope to engage Atlanta residents and catalyze the downtown experience.”

alt How The Center's revised atrium is expected to look and function in early 2026. Courtesy of CP Group; designs, TVS; ASD/SKY

alt A planned facet of The Center's atrium at CNN Center's former food court. Courtesy of CP Group; designs, TVS; ASD/SKY

Overall, CP Group’s renovations call for 130,000 square feet of retail space, alongside 920,000 square feet of creative office and media production spaces, officials have said. That will be part of a massive portfolio the Boca Raton, Fla.-based company has amassed in Atlanta in recent years that now includes Buckhead’s 14-building Piedmont Center, where significant upgrades are planned.

CNN departed the downtown property last year and stripped off its branding as its offices were moved to Midtown’s Techwood. That ended a four-decade era of the media company being headquartered downtown.  

Have a closer look at the landmark property's planned revival in the gallery above. 

alt Courtesy of CP Group; designs, TVS; ASD/SKY

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alt Fresh rendering showing the expected look of The Center's food hall component. Courtesy of CP Group

alt How The Center's revised atrium is expected to look and function in early 2026. Courtesy of CP Group; designs, TVS; ASD/SKY

alt A planned facet of The Center's atrium at CNN Center's former food court. Courtesy of CP Group; designs, TVS; ASD/SKY

alt Plans for The Center's revised Marietta Street facade.Courtesy of CP Group

alt Courtesy of CP Group; designs, TVS; ASD/SKY

alt New LED signage installed on the downtown building's exterior. Courtesy of CP Group

alt CP Group; Healey Weatherholtz Properties; designs, TVS; ASD/SKY

alt CP Group; Healey Weatherholtz Properties; designs, TVS; ASD/SKY

alt Courtesy of CP Group; via Vimeo

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For ‘The Frazier’ project, revised look and potential start date emerge Josh Green Tue, 07/29/2025 - 08:44

More than five years in the making, a mixed-use infill project in Chamblee’s burgeoning downtown has a targeted start date and revised designs, according to developers. 

Atlanta-based Windsor Stevens Holdings this week unveiled plans for The Frazier, which began life as a smaller condo concept under a different name but is now moving forward as a “transformative” mix of apartments and retail, per project officials. 

One tweak of note: The building is now expected to stand an additional story for a total of eight floors, making it the tallest in the city and “signaling a new era of thoughtful urban growth,” per Windsor Stevens.  

alt Revised designs for the 315-unit The Frazier building released this week. Cooper Carry; courtesy of Windsor Stevens

Plans call for the Class A development at 3553 Chamblee Dunwoody Road to include 315 apartments and cost roughly $115 million, replacing a vacant former auto facility. (Windsor Stevens also purchased the .4-acre property next door in 2023 that included a 1980s auto repair building to increase The Frazier’s size.) 

Beyond the rentals, The Frazier calls for about 10,000 square feet of retail at street level, along with a three-story parking deck with 338 spaces. 

The commercial component will see 6,000 square feet of “culturally rich restaurant space, offering an immersive taste of the city’s global flavor,” in hopes of creating a landmark destination, per a Monday announcement. 

Plans call for The Frazier to be a certified EarthCraft project with an emphasis on green infrastructure, plus elements such as EV charging stations and bike parking. Some units will be specifically marketed toward teachers and first-responders, per developers. 

alt As seen in early 2023, the 3535 Chamblee Dunwoody Road auto property added to The Frazier's scope. Google Maps

Developer Rod Mullice of Windsor Stevens tells Urbanize Atlanta the project’s architects plan to start the permitting process in September, with a goal of breaking ground in the first quarter of 2026. The team includes Cooper Carry architects, Eberly & Associates landscape architects, and CBG Building Company. 

Windsor Stevens has been working with Chamblee officials behind the scenes to ensure the project aligns with the city’s vision for livability in coming decades, according to the developer. 

“By transforming parcels that currently yield limited value into a thriving, walkable community hub, we’re creating a project that will have generational impact,” said Mullice in a statement. 

alt Renderings released in 2024 showing The Frazier at Olde Towne Gordon project as previously designed with 144 units. Windsor Stevens Holdings; designs, Niles Bolton & Associates

Initial plans called for The Frazier (formerly “The Gordon”) to be for-sale condos, with construction scheduled to start in March 2020, just before COVID-19 clamped down society. According to a sales push early that year, the initial phase of 24 homes was going to be priced from the $200,000s, with condos ranging from 501 to 1,098 square feet.  

The Frazier would join a sizable, recent injection of multifamily options around Chamblee’s historic downtown. Last year, the Lumen Chamblee project debuted across the street, and another nearby multifamily development, City Heights, later followed suit. Collectively those developments have brought more than 560 apartments to the district.

Find more context and imagery for The Frazier’s plans today in the gallery above. Windsor Stevens officials say more visuals and construction updates will be released in coming weeks. 

In other recent Chamblee news, the city hopes to start constructing a new stormwater-capturing greenspace for downtown called Fish Bolt Park by the end of 2025. That 1900 Chamblee Tucker Road property is a former MARTA stormwater detention pond acquired by the city as part of its 2016 trails and parks expansion program. The two-mile Chamblee Rail Trail, a multi-use pathway, abuts the southern border of the future park today. 

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alt The Frazier project's combined 3535/3553 Chamblee Dunwoody Road location in relation to the rest of downtown and Chamblee's MARTA hub. Google Maps

alt As seen in early 2023, the 3535 Chamblee Dunwoody Road auto property added to The Frazier's scope. Google Maps

alt Earlier project designs. Windsor Stevens Holdings; designs, Niles Bolton & Associates

alt Renderings released in 2024 showing The Frazier at Olde Towne Gordon project as previously designed with 144 units. Windsor Stevens Holdings; designs, Niles Bolton & Associates

alt Revised designs for the 315-unit The Frazier building released this week. Cooper Carry; courtesy of Windsor Stevens

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Photos: Centennial Yards unveils first new tower, now seeking renters Josh Green Mon, 07/28/2025 - 15:02

The first new tower at downtown’s multi-billion-dollar Gulch replacement is ready for its closeup. 

Centennial Yards Company officials have begun pre-leasing efforts for The Mitchell, a 19-story project with 304 apartments that marks the megaproject’s first ground-up new building to start delivering. 

Rentals range from small studios to three-bedroom options the size of many older Atlanta bungalows. 

The Mitchell, which broke ground in November 2022, is being marketed as a stylish, mixed-use, luxury addition to Atlanta’s intown urban living options. It’s considered part of Centennial Yards' first phase of development. 

alt Courtesy of Centennial Yards

alt Courtesy of Centennial Yards

Here’s a pricing breakdown for The Mitchell, as provided by Centennial Yards Company reps today: 

  • Studios from $1,450 to $2,500 per month (434 to 638 square feet)
  • One-bedrooms from $1,800 to $2,460 per month (649 to 746 square feet)
  • Two-bedrooms from $2,900 to $3,635 per month (1,191 to 1,363 square feet)
  • Three-bedrooms from $5,688 to $5,753 per month (1,539 to 1,549 square feet)

Perks with some units include floor-to-ceiling windows with views of downtown and Mercedes-Benz Stadium, walk-in closets, and balconies. (According to a floorplan breakdown, move-ins will start in mid-September.) 

Building amenities call for a rooftop pool and event lawn (facing east, or toward South Downtown), a pet spa, coworking space, fitness center, and club lounge. At the street, about 16,000 square feet of retail is in the works. 

Last winter, Thai tapas concept Khao from the 26 Thai team was announced as one tenant for The Mitchell’s ground-floor retail space. 

alt The 19-story The Mitchell tower today, looking west along Martin Luther King Jr. Drive, with Mercedes-Benz Stadium across the street. Courtesy of Centennial Yards

alt The Mitchell's west facade today, with the 292-key Hotel Phoenix shown at left. Courtesy of Centennial Yards

Elsewhere at Centennial Yards, another 19-story tower, the 292-key Hotel Phoenix, is on pace to open sometime this fall, marking the district’s first hotel. 

At the under-construction entertainment district, Centennial Yards Company officials announced in May they’ve signed a long-term lease with entertainment giant Live Nation to bring live music and events to a new 5,300-person capacity venue, slated to open sometime in 2027. 

That music venue will neighbor the third Cosm venue in the U.S., a three-story immersive entertainment concept that started going vertical in May. 

Centennial Yards facets that have already opened include adaptive-reuse projects Centennial Yards South, Wild Leap Brewery, and the pedestrians-only Steele Bridge. 

Centennial Yards Company—a partnership between an affiliate of CIM Group and another group led by Atlanta Hawks owner Tony Ressler—is serving as the project’s master developer. Centennial Yards is expected to ultimately cost $5 billion and span some 8 million square feet of mixed uses, described by its financial backers as one of the largest public-private partnerships in the U.S. right now. It's backed by a nearly $2-billion tax-incentive package, a record for Atlanta. 

Ultimately, the 50-acre downtown venture is expected to bring more than 2,000 residential units (at least 200 of them deemed affordable), more than 2,000 hotel rooms, and roughly 1 million square feet of retail across a decade of development. Overall, 8 million square feet of residential and commercial construction are planned. 

Have closer look at Centennial Yards' first (nearly) finished high-rise component in the gallery above. (Note: No photos of amenities and common areas were provided today.) 

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alt The 19-story The Mitchell tower today, looking west along Martin Luther King Jr. Drive, with Mercedes-Benz Stadium across the street. Courtesy of Centennial Yards

alt The Mitchell's west facade today, with the 292-key Hotel Phoenix shown at left. Courtesy of Centennial Yards

alt Courtesy of Centennial Yards

alt Courtesy of Centennial Yards

alt Courtesy of Centennial Yards

alt Courtesy of Centennial Yards

alt Courtesy of Centennial Yards

alt Courtesy of Centennial Yards

alt Expected look of activated patios at The Mitchell building, with Mercedes-Benz Stadium across the street. Courtesy of Centennial Yards; images by Apex Visualization

alt Courtesy of Centennial Yards; images by Apex Visualization

alt Courtesy of Centennial Yards; images by Apex Visualization

alt Courtesy of Centennial Yards; images by Apex Visualization

alt How Centennial Yards' first two towers (The Mitchell apartments, in foreground, and the new hotel behind it) will stand in relation to the football and soccer arena. Courtesy of Centennial Yards Company

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304-unit luxury venture The Mitchell stands near Mercedes-Benz Stadium, State Farm Arena

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'Major' sections of Beltline's Northwest Trail near bidding phase Josh Green Mon, 07/28/2025 - 13:21

Atlanta Beltline Inc. expects to take steps toward eliminating significant gaps in the 22-mile multipurpose loop soon. 

Beltline leaders have scheduled information sessions and a walking tour next month for builders interested in bidding on three sections of the Northwest Trail described this month as “major” and previously as uniquely complex. 

All segments have been broken down into smaller sections for construction. Unlike most of the Beltline, none of them are in a former railroad corridor. 

They are Northwest Trail Segments 2A and 2C in Buckhead, and Segment 4B in Berkeley Park near Atlanta Waterworks reservoirs. 

alt Atlanta Beltline Inc.

Specifically, the Beltline is seeking to hire small and medium-sized construction firms in an effort to increase inclusivity and diversity.  

Two virtual sessions (each with the same information) will be presented for potential bidders on the afternoons of Aug. 6 and 7. That will be followed by a guided site walk on Aug. 8. 

alt Atlanta Beltline Inc.

Construction of the Northwest Trail was broken down into smaller components in an effort to open the door to “firms of varying sizes and capabilities to take part in building the 22-mile Beltline loop—one of the largest redevelopment efforts in Atlanta’s history,” per ABI leadership. 

The two segments in Buckhead near the Shepherd Center are collectively .4 miles long. Ditto for the segment in question in Berkeley Park. 

The Beltline's timeline calls for breaking ground on Segment 4 in September and opening it in April 2027. No groundbreaking timeline for Segment 2 in Buckhead has been set, though all real estate and easements work is expected to wrap early next year. 

The full Northwest Trail will span 4.3 miles. The corridor spans from the northern end of the Westside Trail (near Huff Road) and arches around through neighborhoods such as Blandtown and Buckhead before connecting with the Northeast Trail (near Lindbergh MARTA station and Armour Yards). 

alt Planned look of the suspension bridge over Peachtree Creek as part of Northwest Trail Segment 1.PATH Foundation/Atlanta Beltline Inc.

Other sections of the Northwest Trail—the eastern and western tips, if you will—are very much under construction. 

To the west, the .7-mile section in Blandtown (Segment 5) is on pace to open this fall. And in Buckhead, the .8-mile Segment 1 is scheduled to deliver in June, replete with a suspension bridge high over Peachtree Creek. 

A short piece of Segment 4 near Northside Drive is also unofficially open now, with a new brewery pitstop set to debut alongside it in August. 

To date, 12.6 miles of the mainline Beltline loop have been completed, with several segments now under construction, per project leaders. More than 10 miles of connector trails are also finished. 

The Beltline’s goal is to finish 18 miles of trail (most of it contiguous) before FIFA World Cup matches begin next June. 

The full loop is projected to be in place by 2030. 

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Images: Large new shelter near Georgia Aquarium rounds into shape Josh Green Mon, 07/28/2025 - 08:11

A downtown project scheduled to open before Atlanta’s 2026 FIFA World Cup—but without the fanfare of splashier, larger projects—is rounding into shape on a former parking lot. 

The Salvation Army started construction last summer on the Center of Hope, a major expansion of its longstanding facilities just north of Centennial Olympic Park. Its purpose is to take in Atlanta’s most vulnerable populations from the streets and help get them on tracks to more sustainable lives.

According to Brasfield & Gorrie, the project’s general contractor, the Center of Hope topped out in March and is scheduled to open in the fourth quarter of this year.

The 46,000-square-foot Center of Hope now stands five stories where Marietta Street meets Mills Street, about a block from the Georgia Aquarium. (The brick façade remains from renderings, but other facets have been altered.) 

alt The Marietta Street site's previous functionality as a parking lot, as seen in 2020. Google Maps

alt How the Center of Hope meets Marietta Street today, just north of a row of shuttered structures. Josh Green/Urbanize Atlanta

A Salvation Army of Metro Atlanta capital campaign, HOPE with Dignity, raised the funding to expand the organization’s Red Shield Services homeless shelter at 400 Luckie St. into a more comprehensive, modernized campus. 

The current facility is cramped and doesn’t have adequate space to separate male and female residents, which has prompted safety concerns, according to project supporters.

The expansion will double the size of the Salvation Army’s current downtown building. It will house the organization’s emergency and transitional living shelter facility, boosting the number of beds from 321 today to 437, project officials have said.

Plans call for two floors of dormitory-style housing for male residents, and another two floors of individualized living spaces. The addition will allow for Salvation Army’s current facilities to be dedicated to women and families, easing concerns caused by overcrowding.

Another component will be a Salvation Army Education and Workforce Development Center with a computer lab and six classrooms, plus study and collaboration areas. That center will offer services to residents such as housing solutions, financial education, emergency assistance programs, and other specialized programs designed to support veteran services. 

A portion of the new beds will be reserved specifically for military veterans, project leaders have said. 

alt As shown in early renderings, six-story facade plans where Marietta Street meets Mills Street downtown. Salvation Army/HOPE with Dignity; via Invest Atlanta

alt The Salvation Army Center for Hope's western face today. Josh Green/Urbanize Atlanta

Invest Atlanta’s board approved a $2 million Westside Tax Allocation District Ascension Fund Grant in 2023 to help the project get off the ground. Additional funding was sourced from Atlanta Emerging Markets ($15 million), investment firm Dudley Ventures ($9 million), and Truist Community Development Enterprises ($4 million).

The expansion is expected to create 23 full-time jobs. During the intake process, all unemployed residents at the Center of Hope will be connected with the facility’s Workforce Development Center, which will partner with local job placement agencies, according to Dudley Ventures. 

The downtown housing option will join the city’s first rapid temporary housing initiative, The Melody, another modular-housing proposal in Mechanicsville, and other recent projects meant to help quickly curtail homelessness. 

Find more images and context for the Center of Hope project in the gallery above.  

alt The 400 Luckie Street location just north of Centennial Olympic Park. Google Maps

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alt The 400 Luckie Street location just north of Centennial Olympic Park. Google Maps

alt The Salvation Army's facility at the corner of Luckie and Mills streets, prior to recent construction. Google Maps

alt The Marietta Street site's previous functionality as a parking lot, as seen in 2020. Google Maps

alt How the Center of Hope meets Marietta Street today, just north of a row of shuttered structures. Josh Green/Urbanize Atlanta

alt Josh Green/Urbanize Atlanta

alt Josh Green/Urbanize Atlanta

alt The Salvation Army Center for Hope's western face today. Josh Green/Urbanize Atlanta

alt As shown in early renderings, six-story facade plans where Marietta Street meets Mills Street downtown. Salvation Army/HOPE with Dignity; via Invest Atlanta

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2 housing developments 'progressing steadily' in heart of downtown Josh Green Fri, 07/25/2025 - 13:11

Permitting paperwork filed this week with the city is one indication that downtown projects expected to add hundreds of new living options steps from Five Points and Underground Atlanta have hardly been shelved, officials tell Urbanize Atlanta.

The planned conversion of former office skyscraper 2 Peachtree Street into a mix of affordable housing and commercial space, and the ground-up construction of smaller, sibling building 1 Peachtree across the street, made headlines between 2022 and early 2024. 

The affordable housing initiatives have largely gone quiet, at least in public, since then.

But on Monday, representatives with the development team picked last year by Invest Atlanta, Two Peachtree Partners, filed for 1 Peachtree building permits with the Department of City Planning, signifying a step toward groundbreaking. 

Development officials have called the 1 Peachtree infill project—proposed as 65 units of senior housing, situated where Peachtree and Wall streets meet, immediately north of Underground Atlanta—the first phase of a “transformative” injection of new housing. 

Richard White, senior vice president with The Integral Group and part of the Two Peachtree Partners group, said the 1 Peachtree project is “progressing steadily” through planning, design, and permitting phases, though no outlook on groundbreaking was available. 

alt An early rendering show what facets of the 1 Peachtree property directly across the street from the 2 Peachtree complex (currently a plaza bordering a large parking garage) could become. City of Atlanta

alt Looking north up Peachtree Street, the 2 Peachtree complex is shown at left, with 1 Peachtree at right. City of Atlanta

Plans are also advancing—albeit behind the scenes—at the 2 Peachtree high-rise complex across the street, said White. 

2 Peachtree includes a 44-story, 890,000-square-foot landmark tower dating to the 1960s, which Invest Atlanta purchased from the State of Georgia last year for $41.5 million to create adaptive-reuse housing. A seven-story building occupied by Georgia State University next door has been added to the project mix, representing another 126,000 square feet of redevelopment opportunity. The tower conversion is expected to add at least 200 new housing units. 

White said his team and consultants are in active coordination with the National Park Service regarding 2 Peachtree to ensure the building’s redevelopment respects its historic character and architecture. A federal funding component through the 2025 Congressional budget has been secured to help move the project forward, White said. 

“It is not a schedule that we control,” said White via email, regarding his team’s work with National Park Service. “Things are not quiet because things have somehow stalled. It’s quiet because we’re doing the work.”

alt Rendering illustrating the 1 Peachtree office tower and neighboring building remade for residential uses, with housing and retail added to a standalone parking garage across the street (bottom left). City of Atlanta

The 2 Peachtree tower opened in 1966 as the Southeast’s tallest building, and it remained the tallest in Atlanta until John Portman’s cylindrical Westin Peachtree Plaza surpassed it a decade later. It had served as offices for banking and state government since its inception. Next door, 14 Marietta is significantly older, dating to 1940 as the original headquarters of First National Bank, prior to the tower’s development. It hasn’t been renovated since 2 Peachtree was completed nearly 60 years ago.

According to renderings, the slim 1 Peachtree building would rise between an existing parking garage (masking one façade from public view) and Peachtree Street. Earlier filings with the city indicate the building will see a mix of one-bedroom and studio apartments. White previously said the rentals will be reserved for residents age 62 and older earning at max 80 percent of the Area Median Income.  

Two Peachtree Partners, the development partnership, consists of Underground Atlanta owners Lalani Ventures, Integral, The Atlantic Companies, and office leasing firm T. Dallas Smith and Company. 

In September, Lalani Ventures unveiled plans for a 30-story residential tower that would bring more than 400 apartments to Underground’s doorstep. Shaneel Lalani, Lalani Ventures CEO, told Urbanize earlier this year that lining up financing for the roughly $160-million proposal has been difficult. 

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alt Looking south, the open plaza site where 1 Peachtree is planned, with Underground Atlanta in the distance. The taller 2 Peachtree tower is shown at right. Google Maps

alt The building's planned Peachtree Street facade, with an existing parking structure behind it. Courtesy of The Integral Group

alt An early rendering show what facets of the 1 Peachtree property directly across the street from the 2 Peachtree complex (currently a plaza bordering a large parking garage) could become. City of Atlanta

alt Looking north up Peachtree Street, the 2 Peachtree complex is shown at left, with 1 Peachtree at right. City of Atlanta

alt Rendering illustrating the 1 Peachtree office tower and neighboring building remade for residential uses, with housing and retail added to a standalone parking garage across the street (bottom left). City of Atlanta

alt The 2 Peachtree Street tower's east facade downtown, where hundreds of units of affordable housing are expected to be converted from underused offices. Google Maps

alt Invest Atlanta

alt Invest Atlanta

alt Invest Atlanta

alt Invest Atlanta

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Peachtree Street renovation, new construction envisioned as "transformative" residential injection

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