Quote:
Originally Posted by ChrisInmanPark
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My issue with Buckhead is just the traffic. And the 6,000 units under construction/proposed is huge for traffic, as is new office space in the Buckhead Atlanta development which is not adjacent to a highway.
Contributors to this forum seem to evaluate projects on two totally different bases. Some seem to ask, "what would make Atlanta look really cool in a photograph?" These contributors want tall skyscrapers all up and down Peachtree, a continuous connection between Lenox and Midtown.
Others seem to take a more "urban planning" perspective and think about the lifestyle that built environments create for current and future residents.
Will all these apartment towers around Lenox make Atlanta look better in pictures? Sure. But they will also make that area a less desirable place to live. Where are people going to walk from the back side of Lenox other than into the mall? Nowhere. They are going to come down from the 30th floor, get in their cars and sit in traffic. What happens in November and December when everyone floods Lenox and you just want to get to a grocery store?
This stands in contrast to Midtown where density has already reached a point that there are a significant number of places to walk, and the grid layout means traffic is not really a problem except during rush hour. Additional units are being added in an already walkable environment (though it can always get better). In my opinion, additional density adds to Midtown, but takes away from Buckhead.
Buckhead may eventually become a pleasant place to live densely, but that will be a long term shift. It will mean breaking up the super blocks around Lenox. It will require better transit along Peachtree and Piedmont, and it will require some basic services within a pleasant walk of all these different quazi-dense pockets that are being developed (BA, Lenox, Lindbergh).
I see the current density being added in too large of a geographic region to create synergies. It may eventually come together, but I predict the quality of life is going to get worse before it gets better in Buckhead.