Geared toward "luxury lifestyle lovers" and priced at $895,000, it’s touted as gorgeous, spacious, and unique with a walkable "Location! Location! Location!"
Atlanta is preposterously chockfull of large-scale gatherings during the fair-weather weekends of spring, late summer, and fall. These days, the same can basically be said of fair-weather deep winter.
While Atlanta may not be geographically situated to have a white Christmas, the city isn’t one to shy away from the holiday season. Whether there’s shopping to be done, or you just want to check out Christmas in the city, Atlanta has a long history of great offerings.
It wasn’t long ago the buildings that house Ponce City and Krog Street markets were carcasses. But if recent musings in Atlanta media are any indication, there’s a growing sentiment that such inwardly focused hives of activity are detracting from a more vibrant overall city.
A new office and retail-focused mixed-use development could soon be coming to the Westside, adjacent to Atlantic Station. The site, bounded by Northside Drive and 17th Street, sits just north of the railroad tracks that run behind IKEA.
While some developers are shying away from building new apartments, AMLI has doubled-down on the Atlanta rental market. The apartment giant reportedly plans to break ground on projects in Decatur and Atlantic Station by the end of the year.
This is a corner unit on the so-called Executive Level, which offers, as the listing declares in a burst of all caps, "MILLION DOLLAR VIEWS & PENTHOUSE UPGRADES WITHOUT THE PENTHOUSE PRICE!" And it's that rare ATL condo that comes furnished.
Atlantic Station is often viewed as an entertainment enclave near the heart of the city, rather than a residential neighborhood. But according to a new study, the area landed at number 10 on the list of "America’s Boom Towns." But what do you think?
From downtown to Inman Park and Buckhead, one thing is increasingly clear: Neighborhoods determine prices in luxury apartments. Especially when it comes to one-bedroom units.
After the most recent price dipped to $729,750, this tri-level, nearly 3,900-square-footer went under contract, signaling that brighter days could lay ahead here in Home Park. Some touch-ups are required. But the views are killer.
There's a brand-new taco festival, an event paying homage to the Great Atlanta Fire of 1917, a battle of local chefs from great restaurants, an opportunity to walk (rather than drive) through your neighborhood, and we're just scratching the surface.
Ten years ago this month, the New York Times published a piece on gentrification in Atlanta. With the rapid growth of inner-city neighborhoods, the issue remains a concern of residents, developers, and the government. So what's changed in a decade?