Tag: Atlanta BeltLine
The BeltLine Guy: A Q&A with Ryan Gravel
What’s now a destination was, until very recently, trash and kudzu. And it’s not hyperbole to say it would be still if Ryan Gravel hadn’t decided in 1999 to write his Georgia Tech master’s thesis on how four different rail lines encircling the city could be strung together.
4 great Atlanta dining events in March
Kick off spring with brunch, beer, bacon, and more.
Atlanta Must Reads for the Week: Atlanta’s auto addiction, a septuagenarian blues guitarist, and Kendrick Johnson’s divisive death
The best stories each week about Atlanta, from Atlanta-based writers, and beyond.
A brief timeline of Atlanta millennial milestones
A few big moments from the past 35 years, including the 1996 Olympics, the plan for the BeltLine, the introduction of the iPhone, and more.
What happens now that the Atlanta BeltLine dispute is over?
“Without this resolution, the future of the BeltLine just had a cloud of uncertainty hanging over it in every respect."
December 2015: Dude, where’s my car?
If you were living here just a dozen years ago, then the changes you’re seeing now in pockets of intown Atlanta are nothing short of staggering.
Orpheus Brewing
Perched above the Westminster Drive entrance of the Atlanta BeltLine’s Eastside Trail, this is where fans of sour beer styles find their happy place. When the brewery launched in 2014, brewmaster Jason Pellett was driven to offer the market something new.
Cruisers: Intown Bicycles
No bike store is better positioned than the Piedmont Park– and Atlanta BeltLine–adjacent Intown Bicycles.
Hipster Hangout: Ladybird Grove and Mess Hall
The base camp for the bearded, tattooed masses is this rustic watering hole on the Atlanta BeltLine. That’s not a knock against the place—more like a dress code alert, so you don’t saunter in sporting Vineyard Vines or Jimmy Choos.
An architect couple designs an oasis by the Atlanta BeltLine
Despite its busy location tucked between Freedom Parkway and the Atlanta BeltLine, the Old Fourth Ward home of married architects Cara Cummins and Jose Tavel feels like a peaceful urban spa.