Historic Westside Village

"'Historic Westside Village"' is a mixed-use development in Vine City, Atlanta including a Walmart, other retail stores, and apartment complexes.

New townhomes at Westside Village, August 2012
A Walmart under construction at Westside Village, August 2012

History

In 1999, the Atlanta Housing Authority first announced plans for the "Historic Westside Village", a $130 million commercial, residential and retail project at the area's southern end near Martin Luther King, Jr. Dr. at Ashby St.[1]

Publix failure

A Publix supermarket opened in May 2002[2] but the overall project stalled by 2003 as further anchor tenants did not materialize.[3] This, along with disappointing sales, caused the Publix - the only full-sized supermarket for miles around - to close in December 2009.[4] Creative Loafing called the project the most notorious "municipal boondoggle...to have tarred Atlanta" during mayor Bill Campbell's era; the project "fell victim to...cronyism, bureaucratic incompetence and a flagrant disregard for federal lending guidelines".[5]

Walmart success

In December 2010 things looked up as the Atlanta Development Authority announced plans for Wal-Mart to open a store on the site, which Mayor Kasim Reed called "an end to the food desert in the area".[6][7] In January 2013 the Wal-Mart opened for business.[8][9]

"Legends of Historic Westside Village"

In 2015, "Legends of Historic Westside Village" exhibit was unveiled, "a series of photos of community activists, businesses, and educational institutions that impacted the neighborhood" including Mayor Maynard Holbrook Jackson, former Judge Austin Thomas Walden, Dr. Hamilton E. Holmes, Sr., and educator W.E.B Du Bois.[10][11]

gollark: I'm glad you are adding topic labels to this. This is very useful and I'd never have known this without you mentioning it.
gollark: Fascinating.
gollark: As far as I know this is only true of some things, and in general things just have mass because they have energy and ??? things occur with this.
gollark: If you are saying "the only reason anything has mass is the Highs boson" then according to my very approximate knowledge this is not true.
gollark: Yes, you said.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.