![]() ![]() Beams from the concert hall construction shoot up from the ground behind the terraced patio. A buildout has recently launched.Ī stroll through the Atlanta Dairies backyard, a pedestrian-friendly garden that opens up among the retail, office, and apartment offerings, lends a view of a roughly 2,000-seat concert hall that’s on the rise now. On tap for later this winter or early spring is Decatur-based brewer Three Taverns’s “ Imaginarium,” which aims to be “equal parts laboratory, brewery, and tasting room,” officials have told Curbed Atlanta in the past. Jonathan Phillips, for Curbed Atlanta The decayed Parmalat milk-production facility in 2015 and a bridge structure that’s been preserved. The space where Wonderkid operates now, as seen in 2015. Last month, the new restaurant concept Wonderkid, which also features a whimsical ice cream station by King of Pops, opened its doors with a menu of diner classics, fancy cocktails, and strong coffee, as Eater Atlanta reported. An office component is planned for the empty lot at left.Īround that same time, just a catwalk away, the Dairies Coffee House and Cold Brew Bar debuted in a section of the old brick building maintained as part of the development’s adaptive-reuse efforts. ![]() A corridor overlooking Memorial Drive where old structural elements meet new lighting and design flourishes. Today, the Atlanta Dairies project is abuzz with activity-apartment tenants, revitalized commercial spaces, the works-with plenty more on the way.īack in April, the first residents began moving into Alta Dairies, a 312-unit apartment complex overlooking Memorial Drive. The big idea: Memorial Drive’s version of Krog Street Market, only larger, with a music component. ![]() Five years ago, developer Paces Properties announced plans to rehab an old industrial site in Reynoldstown into Atlanta’s next hot mixed-use community. ![]()
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