Little Five Points is reviving Atlanta’s vinyl and live-music scene—record shops, DJs and nearby venues are reconnecting listeners to physical music.
Old Fourth Ward designers are turning BeltLine studios, pop-ups, and market drops into Atlanta’s next streetwear scene — small labels, music ties, and local drops shaping the city’s style.
Adair Park Farmers Market in Southwest Atlanta spotlights local growers, small-batch breads and sustainable practices—neighbors turning seasonal produce into weeknight meals.
Rapidly changing murals in Atlanta’s Krog Street Tunnel map the city’s politics, gentrification debates, and Afro-diasporic aesthetics—reporting needs named sources, image rights, and sharper local detail.
Old Fourth Ward incubators near Ponce City Market and the BeltLine are creating a hub for women founders with flexible spaces, mentorship, and community-backed demo nights.
How Castleberry Hill’s artist-run galleries are reshaping Atlanta’s contemporary art scene — storefront projects, direct sales, and community-driven exhibitions fueling a downtown renaissance.
A 21st‑century infrastructure project that became a backbone for trails, parks, development—and contested change across the city.
Fast facts
The Atlanta BeltLine is a roughly 22‑mile...
Pie Bar is opening a stall at Atlanta’s Westside Market, serving slices, grab‑and‑go pastries and seasonal whole pies to West Midtown and the Upper Westside; opening date TBA.
Since the BeltLine concept was proposed in the mid‑2000s, Atlanta’s BeltLine project has converted former rail rights‑of‑way into trails, parks, and mixed‑use development, dramatically...