the city too busy to stop and read a plaque for once
Did you know Atlanta is one of the only true skyscraper cities in the United States? Outside of New York & Chicago, Atlanta’s buildings are taller than any others in the Western Hemisphere. Whether you’ve never been to Atlanta or have lived here your entire life, chances are you learned that just now.
(click to enlarge with zooooom capabilities)
As a seven-year resident of the city of Atlanta (and lifetime resident of the metro area), I can say with certainty that this city has a unique inferiority complex.
A history of Civil War, Civil Rights, and ah, Ted Turner has shaped Atlanta’s legacy as the major political and cultural center of the Southeastern US. Thanks to the astronomical number of Fortune 500 companies headquartered here, from Delta to Coca-Cola to UPS to Waffle House (okay, that last one may not be Fortune 500), the city has become an unexpected international hub for big business (remember that one time, when the Olympics happened?). Like many urban environments, Atlanta is a city composed of a kaleidoscopic population spanning demographics worthy of a census taker’s dreams (or nightmares, if they’re making up their statistics), with an atypical concentration of left-leaning, progressive types that render the city a deep blue island awash in a sea of roiling red. These factors combined have crafted Atlanta into a unique American city: an historically crucial, culturally diverse, surprisingly global urban center in the American South.
But Atlanta unnecessarily struggles with a cohesive identity, a desperate yearning for tourist dollars, and having to live with the fact that no matter how commercially & historically important the city may be, the rest of the South views it as a danger-filled strip club for Bolsheviks & Black Panthers and the rest of the country only sees a humid, backwater billboard plantation with a big airport. And the city’s desperation for tourism sometimes yields results like unnecessary trolley projects, an aquarium that looks like a mall food court, and museums dedicated to multimillion-dollar corporations. External prejudice and internal cynicism contribute to Atlantans’ mutual complex that their city isn’t perfect. Which, of course, it isn’t. But as far as underrated cities go, it ranks high. The individual personalities of each neighborhood, the plethora of historic districts and incredible museums, the annual events that transform the city into an American mecca, the immense (and delicious) restaurant culture, the mix of Old & New South architecture, and the grassroots community arts groups shape a uniquely amazing city. For any visitor to understand that, just spend a day exploring every shop & restaurant in Little Five Points; have a beer & a gyro and stalk Anderson Cooper in the CNN Center; explore the Sweet Auburn neighborhood that shaped Martin Luther King’s life; dress up like Sailor Moon or Hawkman for DragonCon; go ghost-hunting in Oakland Cemetery (Margaret Mitchell’s always wandering around at night); or grill out with a grindhouse b-movie at the Starlight Drive-In. Even the aforementioned questionable tourist traps are admittedly kind of awesome (beluga whales & international sodas!).
So while Atlanta may lack the cultural iconography of New York or the charming climes of San Francisco, the city’s rich reserves in history, the arts, neighborhood culture, food, and natural beauty are sometimes left untapped. Many Atlantans I know have never explored Cascade Springs Nature Preserve, the Fernbank Natural History Museum, the King Center, Westview Cemetery, the BeltLine Trail (especially the west side), the Botanical Gardens, the State Capitol Museum, the Carter Center, the countless parks dotted throughout the city that aren’t Piedmont, or the international cuisines of Buford Highway. So I encourage any Atlantans to venture outside for once and see what this city has to offer (and any non-Atlantans to come over & say hi), because you’ll be surprised at how awesome this place is when you actually look.
July 12, 2011 at 12:33 pm
This is awesome! Informative, thoughtful and cool to look at! I’ll be looking at the skyline in a different way!
July 12, 2011 at 5:46 pm
Awesome, that’s definitely the preferable end result.
July 12, 2011 at 4:20 pm
Does skim reading count?
July 12, 2011 at 5:45 pm
Yes.
July 21, 2011 at 6:58 pm
This post describes the exact reason I started my own blog. ATL is awesome!
July 21, 2011 at 11:35 pm
Thanks, Barbara! Yeah, there will be a plethora of Atlanta-oriented infographics as this goes on.
March 2, 2013 at 2:05 pm
really enjoyed this…after growing up in suburbs and living in city for close to 3 years, just now starting to explore the uniqueness of atlanta’s neighborhoods and imminent growth like ponce city market or westside/howell mill area
September 27, 2013 at 2:42 pm
Thank you! It’s nice to see other people publicly acknowledge nice things about the city I’ve loved and called home my whole life.
October 1, 2013 at 10:15 am
[…] sure to read the text Geoff wrote about this infographic. It contains probably the most accurate, succinct description of Atlanta’s charms that I’ve read in years. (Of course, Atlanta has plenty of problems, too, but that’s another story – perhaps […]
December 20, 2013 at 11:40 am
I found this when I googled Atlanta skyline. An addition to the infographic would be to include the names of the different architects .
December 20, 2013 at 4:26 pm
A lot of them are John Portman, but point taken. I’m planning on expanding this graphic very soon!
February 9, 2014 at 8:52 pm
Thanks, I’d like to expound on this one.
August 5, 2014 at 8:58 am
Love this graphic, best one I’ve found to help remember the building names – clever descriptions “the one that looks like batman” lol, make it easier to commit them to memory. In the expanded graphic please include Promenade II, AT&T, 3344 Peachtree and GLG Grand.
April 23, 2014 at 9:40 am
Great article. However (don’t you hate that?), I believe Coke moved their formula out of the SunTrust building / vault after an employee attempted to sell the formula to Pepsi a few years ago. Isn’t it stored at the new world of coke now? Keep up the good work!
April 23, 2014 at 10:40 am
It has been moved into the World of Coke. I’ve been thinking about expanding this graphic, and I’ll have to update some of the info!
September 18, 2014 at 1:21 pm
Great stuff! I would like to speak with you about being the cover artist for one of our publications and would appreciate your reaching back to me with contact information.
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