Misplaced Pages

Krog Street Market

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Krog Street Market

Krog Street Market is a 9-acre (3.6 ha) mixed-use development in Atlanta, located along the BeltLine trail at Edgewood Avenue in Inman Park which opened in Summer 2014. The complex is centered on a 12,000-square-foot (1,100 m), west coast-style market and restaurants, and also includes up to 300 apartments (of which 225 in Phase I). The marketplace has been planned to have four or five restaurants and merchants such as florists, cheesemakers, butchers, and bakers under one roof. It is to incorporate two existing parcels on either side of Krog Street: The Stove Works on the west side and the former Tyler Perry Studios at 99 Krog Street, on the east side. The conversion to Krog Street Market is to cost $70 million. The Stove Works is to remain unaltered. Illustrations in the plans show the existing bridge over Krog Street renovated as a pedestrian bridge and incorporated as part of the complex.

Site history

The Atlanta Stove Works, a former pot-belly stove and iron-pan factory opened in 1889, and flourished in the 1920s when it began exporting the 32 BOX stove that sparked industrial demand and expansion. After decades of decline, it was abandoned around 1988 before being transformed into a mixed-use development of offices, Rathbun's restaurant (opened on site in 2004) and the Krog Bar.

The former studio space at 99 Krog Street was used until 2008 by Tyler Perry Studios, now located in Greenbriar, Southwest Atlanta. Tyler had purchased the land from Atlanta Stage Works in 2006 for a reported $7 million.

References

  1. "Tyler Perry's old studio in Inman Park to become mixed-use 'epicurean center'", Thomas Wheatley , Creative Loafing, November 15, 2012
  2. Krog Street Market website, retrieved 2013-11-20
  3. ^ "70M redevelopment for Inman Park", Douglas Sams, Atlanta Business Chronicle, November 16, 2012
  4. "Food-drive Krog Street Market on the Way", Atlanta Intown, January 1, 2013
  5. Atlanta and Environs: A Chronicle of Its People and Events, 1880s-1930s,Franklin M. Garrett, p.330
  6. Rathbun's website
  7. "Filmmakers have Georgia on their minds", Todd Longwell, Hollywood Reporter as reported on Houghton Talent site

External links

Inman Park neighborhood, Atlanta
Events
People
Places
Transportation
Atlanta-area shopping malls
Enclosed regional centers
Enclosed local centers
Outdoor centers
Defunct

33°45′24″N 84°21′51″W / 33.7567°N 84.3641°W / 33.7567; -84.3641

Categories: