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The Atlantan Article – July 08 Issue July 3, 2008

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Our local glossy did a story on real estate for their magazine. The group Modern Luxury covers most of the major cities with their magazines highlighting the upper east side of life.

They kindly featured our home in one of the Real Estate 08: Neighborhood sections. They refer to our house as “mind blowing” – thank you much, but not yet – and the neighborhood as one of the hottest in the ATL. BTW – we didn’t topple a crack house to build our home. Check it out!

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IN-AGAIN INMAN

REAL ESTATE SPECIAL INMAN PARK AND THE OLD FOURTH WARD

Aristocratic Inman Park is the kind of consummate country-meets-city neighborhood that makes people flee wintry Northern climes for the New South. A 19th century spin on the ‘50s suburb, Atlanta’s first planned community boasts mega Victorian mansions and green spaces like Springvale Park within walking distance to the happening hubs of Little Five Points and the booming Old Fourth Ward. “It’s not cookie-cutter,” says real estate agent Pat Westrick of the motley mix of lawyers and architects, but also young creatives who relish the neighborhood’s convenience to city life. “You definitely realize how central it is to everything,” says Brad Lewis, cofounder of creative agency The SuperGroup, whose Inman Alley neighbors are architects, ad agencies, film companies and a chef named Kevin who makes killer steaks. Modern design is scarce in Inman because of National Register of Historic Places restrictions. But there is a mini-modernist boom town.

“At the time that I moved into the area, there was not much to be had here. Now, some three years later, O4W is one of the city’s hottest neighborhoods.” — Caren West PR Creative Director

Inman’s North Highland corridor is on fire and boasts that most unusual of Atlanta car culture sights: foot traffic! Even after 10PM! The city-within-a-city has experienced a retail tsunami, with folk art stalwart Barbara Archer Gallery in the house and hip florist. Adaptation blooming next door to mid-century modern shrine, the 3,000 square foot City Issue, recently decamped from Buckhead. The area is hopping with big-city refugees like one-time New York doll Jaci Effron who’s credited with opening the first real girlified boutique in Inman, Jac; New Orleans transplant Tracy Ewell, who has an eponymous, storybook make-up shop on Lake Avenue; and former Angeleno Laura Saunders, Inman Park Pet Works purveyor of doggie “couture” and organic kibbles.

Several restaurant dynasties call Inman Park home: Kevin Rathbun’s upscale meat-opolis Rathbun’s, Krog Bar and Kevin Rathbun Steak, named one of the best new steakhouses in America by the red meat-savvymenfolk at Details. Riccardo Ullio’s pasta empire of Sotto Sotto and Fritti were pioneers, followed by Shaun Doty’s fancy, comfort food-mecca, Shaun’s, on Edgewood. And good luck finding a parking space any time of day at Parish. Bob Amick’s paean to the Big Easy has helped turn Inman Park into a certifiable scene.rising up in Inman’s shadow. The hipster new kid- on-the-block is the Old Fourth Ward, sandwiched between the MLK Historic District and Inman. Like some European appraising the Americas, photographer Ruth Dusseault calls it “the new world,” with its cool restaurants and retail. The modernist mecca has its own Sol LeWitt sculpture and a conceptual art gallery, Saltworks. Crack houses are being toppled for cutting-edge design like the mind-blowing Florian-Hart House. Designed by New York Times magazine-lauded architects Brian Bell and David Yocum of the firm bldgs, the house has a facade painted by DJ/artist John Otte and is flanked by a host of modernist starter homes, many by resident architect Scott West, who explains the mod madness in the O4W is “not like Inman Park where someone’s going to be pissed off at you building a modern house next to a Victorian.”

Thanks to Modern Luxury and Felicia Feaster for the press. If you would like to read more of this issue click this link “The Atlantan” to view a pdf version of the magazine.

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