A converted warehouse on Krog Street, the market gathers independent food vendors, bars and small retailers into a pedestrian-facing place with a steady calendar of events and visitor tools.
Krog Street Market sits in the Krog District on the edge of Inman Park, converting a warehouse footprint into a compact food hall and retail market. The site collects independent vendors under one roof, provides dates and tenant details for visitors, and runs a steady slate of pop-ups and events that tie the market to the BeltLine and surrounding neighborhoods.
Fast facts
- The market occupies an adapted industrial building in the Krog District. Krog Street Market repurposes a warehouse-style structure into a multi-vendor market rather than a single restaurant, concentrating independent food stalls, bars and small retailers inside an indoor market layout.
- It’s a pedestrian-friendly stop near the Atlanta BeltLine Eastside Trail and neighborhood streets. The market sits on Krog Street within walking distance of the BeltLine’s Eastside Trail and is positioned as a walk-up destination for trail users and nearby Inman Park and Cabbagetown residents.
- Tenant mix balances daily-serving vendors with rotating pop-ups and event activations. The market’s directory lists permanent stalls and bars alongside guest vendors, market pop-ups and occasional special-event activations that change the on-site lineup on a regular basis.
- Practical visitor resources are published for planning group visits and bookings. Krog Street Market posts hours, a tenant directory and an event calendar on its site, and provides information about coordinating group dining and private-event bookings for visitors and organizers.
- Public programming and music are part of how the market anchors neighborhood gatherings. The market’s events calendar includes public-market happenings, musical programming and community-focused activities intended to make the space a regular gathering spot for locals.
The story behind it
The market’s identity is built around reuse and curation. Rather than operating as a single full-service restaurant, the building houses a variety of independent stalls, bars and small retailers that share seating and common spaces. That layout makes it practical for groups with different tastes to gather in one place: everyone can order from separate vendors and meet back at shared tables. The market’s directory is the practical hub for that setup, helping visitors see who’s open on a given day and where to find cuisines and services under the roof.

Krog Street Market’s location matters for how Atlantans get there and what they do when they arrive. It sits within walking distance of the Atlanta BeltLine Eastside Trail and is framed on the market’s public pages as a pedestrian-friendly destination for trail users and local residents. The proximity to neighborhood streets means many visitors arrive on foot or by bike; the market’s events and occasional pop-ups intentionally sync with that foot-traffic culture, offering rotating vendors and live-music activations that change the feel of the space across a single week.
If you’re planning a visit, the market publishes the basics you’ll want: hours, a live tenant directory and an events calendar with details on pop-ups and private-event bookings. Those resources are useful whether you’re coordinating a group dinner, hoping to catch a guest vendor or checking which stalls are regularly serving. The market’s event programming—public markets, music and neighborhood-focused activities—frames it less as a one-off food stop and more as a recurring place to meet, shop and sample what small Atlanta vendors are offering on any given day.
Keeping You In The Know


