Better Late than Never: 2025 is the Year of Atlanta’s Historic Westside Core

Seven years ago, while living in the West End, I started this blog. Excited by the number of new residents moving in, businesses opening, and the surging homes prices for homes being renovated in the area, I wanted a way of documenting the progress. Then I moved to New Orleans, and then Miami, and then Baltimore. And finally, in 2022, I returned to Atlanta, and last August, I began renovated a 1920s bungalow in English Avenue. I am amazed at the progress of the historic neighborhoods west of Downtown Atlanta.

So here’s a rundown of where I see things in 2025:

English Ave & Vine City

Vince City is benefitting from the development projects in the Gulch, the revitalization of MLK Drive, and major development projects along Boone Blvd including new a slew of new housing under construction. Rodney Cook Park, the entrance to the Beltline Westside Connector, and the new Insignia Hilton Hotel will help to soften the transition from Ivan Allen Jr. Blvd to Joseph E. Boone Blvd at Northside Drive.

Two of the most exciting projects I see are The Simpson, a 139 unit mid-rise apartment building which is being erected at 810 & 840 Boone Blvd, and a mixed-use development across the street at 839 Joseph E. Boone, which will include 33 units of multifamily and 1200 square feet of retail space.

English Avenue is BOOMING! One of the most exciting projects is the Modern Westside Trail which is coming alive on North Avenue and Northside Drive. This midrise apartment building is almost done, and will feature 373 studio, one, two and three-bedroom homes, and feature “expedient access to the Westside Trail of the Atlanta BeltLine and the various eclectic attractions within West Midtown.” Just next door to the Modera will be Avenue, a new restaurant/bar/lounge concept, Sibi Chalil Cherian, who also owns Vision Lounge.

English Avenue is also benefiting from developments along the Beltline like Echo Street West and Westside Motor Lounge, and the westward expansion of Georgia Tech called Science Square, and the redevelopment of the former Herndon Homes public housing project with new mixed income and senior housing called Herndon Square. As part of this redevelopment, a new supermarket is slated to be built at the corner of Cameroon Alexander Blvd and Northside Drive.

AUC, Ashview Heights & Washington Park

I’ve always been fond of Washington Park. When I was a student at Morehouse College, I tutored at Washington High School and lived in a boarding house next the white store on Ashby Street. I would walk past street walkers and grim reapers to get two filet-o-fish from Mcdonald’s on MLK and Lowery Blvd. I remember going to a Black Greek picnic in Washington Park. I remember when the Walmart was a Publix and the original Pascal’s Motor Hotel was still open. Before it closed completely, Clark Atlanta University used it as an overflow dorm for its students. So, I’ve seen the FULL progression of the area.

When I last lived in Atlanta, the Beltline’s Westside trail stopped at Lena Street, right in front of Washington Park, but there’s new a section between Lena Street and Mayson Turner that just opened, and construction is underway to connect the trail to existing segments and bring this section of the Westside into the fold. This northern segment runs for about 1.3 miles, starting from the existing Westside Trail terminus at Lena Street and extending north to Law Street, where it will tie into Westside Trail—Segment 3 and the Westside Beltline Connector.

The Walmart has reopened; I’m still not a fan. This stretch of MLK, with all its storefronts has so much potential. In the near future, I expect it to have the feel of an Edgewood Ave where AUC students, neigborhood residents, and visitors can eat, stroll, and shop. This corridor is within walking distance to the Mercedes Benz Stadium, and could be an asset during the World Cup in 2026.

West End & Westview

Sadly, the West End Mall has finally closed. I remember shopping at Maxway and going to the RadioShack all the way at the end. The American Deli in the West End Mall was not to be played with! But the redevelopment of this parcel has been a plan for a looooooooong time. So, what’s to come is new live, work, play development called “One West End.”

According to the developers, One West End will be a mixed-income, mixed-use development. Commercial space will include: 125,000 square feet of retail, with a grocery store, fitness center, food & beverage experiences, and local boutiques. Residential space will include: 800+ rental and student-targeted housing units; mixed-income rental housing, with 70% workforce and 30% affordable; and a hotel. Community amenities will include a public green space, fitness center, resident lounge, and bike parking. The multi-year redevelopment process is expected to begin in 2025, with Phase One completion slated for 2028.

In my next post, I’ll break down what I see happening in Mechanicsville, Pittsburgh, Castleberry Hill and South Downtown.

35-Unit Affordable Housing Complex Slated for The Bluff

On Friday, the Westside Future Fund announced their plans for a dilapidated, vacant 35 unit apartment complex in English Avenue.

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395 James P. Brawley Dr. NW was acquired by the Westside Future Fund and will undergo a $2 million  renovation. It will provide affordable housing to legacy residents in the English Avenue and Vine City neighborhoods. “We want to make sure that Atlanta continues to be a place that’s affordable to all, Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms announced at a press conference in front of the complex.

Atlanta City Councilman at Large, Michael Julian Bond said, “there’s no better location, no better space to live here right now on the Westside.”

James P. Brawley Dr. is ground zero of revitalization; Last year, 6 new homes were constructed on Brawley and made available to police officers. Last month, Chick-fil-A opened a new restaurant just a stone’s throw from the new Walmart on MLK and Brawley Dr.

It was just a few years ago that Bill Torpy published an article in the AJC wherein he opined, that “If I belonged to the family of Dr. James P. Brawley, I’d ask the city of Atlanta to remove his name from the stretch of urban rot that bears it.”

Now it appears that the stretch is an example of how The Bluff is bouncing back one parcel at a time.

Rev. Howard Beckham, president of the English Avenue Neighborhood Association and a long-time resident, said he is seeing improvements in the community.

In addition to the 35 units of affordable housing underway, the Westside Future Fund has acquired another 15 single-family homes, which it intends to make available to community residents.

Councilmember Bond said this has been a longtime coming. “It is really great to see the positive transformation taking place in this community … one family at a time, one household at a time, and one community at a time.”

 

 

 

Atlanta City Council Adopts Historic Westside Masterplan

The City of Atlanta  has made yet another landmark move in support of mixed-income growth and community retention on Atlanta’s Historic Westside.

Last week, the Atlanta City Council unanimously approved the Westside Land Use Framework Plan – a design and implementation strategy for the equitable revitalization of the historic Westside neighborhoods of English Avenue, Vine City, Ashview Heights, Atlanta University Center, Booker T. Washington and Just Us. It was sponsored by the Westside Future Fund, City of Atlanta and Chick-fil-A Foundation.

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Recently built Historic Westside Village townhomes sit just behind the new Vine City Chick-fil-a and MLK Walmart.

The plan, which will help guide future developments, was introduced by District 3 and 4 Councilmembers Ivory Young and Cleta Winslow and championed by fellow councilmember and Westside native Michael Julian Bond (Post 1 At-Large).

“As a longtime Westside resident and steward of the community, I am encouraged by the support we received from our City’s leadership to adopt this very important plan, which will serve a catalyst for the revitalization of my entire City Council district,” said Councilmember Young whose district-wide Westside Revive plan includes the Land Use Framework Plan.

“The history, culture and people that exist in these neighborhoods cannot afford to be lost or compromised. This plan will allow us to oversee positive change and guide these neighborhoods to become ‘whole’ and vibrant again.”

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Westside Future Fund commissioned the plan in 2015 – less than a year after its founding – as one of its first orders of business. Plan principles include:

• Grounding in best practice and existing community knowledge: Renowned urbanist Dhiru Thadani and Atlanta-based firm APD Urban Planning and Management were hired to lead the project, which coupled best-practice research of other successful and similar community revitalization projects with extensive consideration of how to link past planning efforts.

The recommendations built upon the 18 previous plans and studies that were completed in the past 15 years, including the City’s most recent Atlanta City Design Project, created by City of Atlanta Planning Commissioner Tim Keane and Atlanta BeltLine visionary Ryan Gravel.

 

  • Robust Community Engagement Process: Community engagement meetings with all neighborhoods were conducted over the course of a year and a half, beginning spring 2016, with each neighborhood providing input on a unique vision statement and goals.More than 1,000 stakeholders participated in the process, including all six neighborhood associations and the Atlanta University Center institutions (Morehouse College, Spelman College, Clark Atlanta University, Morris Brown and Morehouse School of Medicine).
  • Focused Vision for Resident Retention, Neighborhood Character, Infrastructure and Parks and Open Space.

 

The adoption of the Framework Plan comes just weeks after Council’s unanimous approval of the Mandatory Inclusionary Zoning Legislation, which supports the creation of quality, affordable mixed-income housing – a key component of the plan.

The new zoning law requires new rental housing developments in BeltLine communities, such as the Historic Westside District, to set aside  at least ten percent of units for affordable “workforce housing” which is being defined as 60 percent Area Median Income (AMI)* or below OR 15 percent of its total units for households at 80 percent AMI or below.

“We are extremely grateful for the leadership of Mayor Kasim Reed, Commissioner Tim Keane and his team and Atlanta City Council to ensure that all residents — no matter their background or socioeconomic status — have an opportunity to be part of the tremendous growth and revitalization that’s happening in our city,” said John Ahmann, executive director of the Westside Future Fund.

“These two actions are critical and important first steps, but only the beginning. We must continue to be intentional about creating opportunities for individuals who still find themselves below the current threshold,” Ahmann added. “As the birthplace of Civil Rights leaders and the adult home of Dr. King, we have great responsibility to carry on their legacy. Westside Future Fund is dedicated to fostering a community they would still be proud to call home. One that is compassionate, inclusive and economically just.”

Of the 6,300 current historic Westside households, 90% are renters. Of that number, more than 70% fall below the qualifying AMI, earning on average less than $15,000 annually and often occupying notoriously sub-standard housing.

 

Since the establishment of the Westside Future Fund in Dec. 2014 by Mayor Reed and the Atlanta Committee for Progress, the organization has focused on ensuring the historic Westside develops as a mixed-income community, not displacing current residents, while also creating housing options for future residents of all income levels, especially as planned growth and development across the city foreshadow a higher demand for intown real estate.

According to Atlanta City Design Project, the City’s population is expected to grow to 1.2 million people by 2050, nearly triple the city’s current size.

  • In 2016, Westside Future Fund led the development of a community retention plan, created to specifically address Westside residents’ (homeowners and renters) concerns about displacement and gentrification.The plan is a complement to the Land Use Framework Plan, outlining recommendations and strategies to address the concerns expressed during the community engagement period. Partners in the collaboration were City of Atlanta’s Department of Planning and Community Development, the Arthur M. Blank Family Foundation, Atlanta Housing Authority, Invest Atlanta, Atlanta Beltline and Atlanta Habitat for Humanity.

    This collaborative of public-private entities, along with organizations within the nonprofit sector, are considered potential implementation partners of the strategy as well.

  • Back in April, Westside Future Fund, in partnership with Mayor Reed and the City of Atlanta, announced one of the first initiatives of the strategy – the Anti-Displacement Tax Fund, which will pay property tax increases for the next 20 years for current, qualifying homeowners.For renters, however, the solution has been more complex.

    As part of its strategy for providing better quality of life for renters, Westside Future Fund lobbied for the Westside’s four historic neighborhoods to be included in the new legislation, but acknowledges the long road ahead toward guaranteeing high quality, affordable options for all.

    “To be successful at ensuring legacy residents are not displaced and can benefit from the current and future development, it will take collaboration across the public, private and nonprofit sectors,” said Ahmann. “Leveraging philanthropy to bridge this disparity is our greatest opportunity, and we’ll be calling upon the Atlanta community to help us address this need.”

    The inclusionary zoning policy will go into effect on all developments seeking a permit 60 days from the Nov. 7 City Council meeting date.

    The Land Use Framework Plan will now be incorporated into the City’s Comprehensive Development Plan, ensuring its recommendations are factored into future planning decisions.

Demolition of a Portion of Morris Brown’s Campus Underway for New $20 Million YMCA in Vine City

Demolition is underway in the northwestern most section of the historic Morris Brown College campus. The former Jordan Hall, which sits at the corner of MLK Drive and Maple St and was once home to the College’s gymnasium, is being transformed into the new $20 million home of the YMCA of Metro Atlanta.

 

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Last year, the YMCA purchased the property from the City of Atlanta. Morris Brown sold off much of its assets to satisfy a multi-million dollar debt and Chapter 11 bankruptcy.

The school has since emerged from that phase and is on the path to recovery.

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Once completed, the building will also house the Leadership and Learning Center which will offer early learning opportunities to about 70 Vine City youth.

The building is being only partially demolished after residents, community leaders, and curators of black culture pushed for the preservation of the historic structure. It began as the Edmund Asa Ware Elementary School, one of the first schools in the city to educate African-American students.

The YMCA hopes to move into its new building by the summer of 2018.

Another New Park to Be Built in Vine City

It is being reported that a 4 acre park, Boone Park West,  will be built in Vine City.  This is the second park to be announced this year.  This past spring construction began on the Rodney Cook Sr. Park.

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Boone Park West sit at the intersection of Oliver St. NW and Joseph E Boone Blvd. 

Construction of Boone Park West  will include the conversion of  a collection of abandoned and neglected parcels into a “positive, vibrant, and transformative public space” that engages the community in green infrastructure solutions, increases public access to recreational opportunities, provides jobs and training for residents, improves environmental quality, and reduces negative impacts of stormwater runoff, according to a report by Park Pride.

Curbed Atlanta and Saratoga Report both reported that the plans to create Boone Park West in the Proctor Creek Watershed. The plans show the proposed site will carve out space for the future home of the Atlanta Urban Ecology Resource Center (AUERC).

The new park is just one of many within the watershed that could help address issues of flooding in neighborhoods like English Avenue and Vine City. One of the primary purposes of Boone Park West is to control localized flooding around the park site and provide capacity relief for the sewer system around this westward edge of Downtown  Atlanta.

According to Park Pride officials, the park will be the third on the westside (after Vine City Park and Lindsay Street Park) built as part of the Proctor Creek North Avenue Vision for Green Infrastructure study completed in 2010.

Said officials in a release: “A key component of Boone Park West will be a green infrastructure amenity designed to capture, clean, and infiltrate at least 37,500 cubic feet of stormwater runoff from the surrounding streets, mitigating the recurrent flooding that has historically plagued these neighborhoods.”