New Highland Park

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View towards N. Highland Ave. from St. Charles Pl. New highland park.jpg
View towards N. Highland Ave. from St. Charles Pl.
Christmas Tree at New Highland Park, December 2010 New highland park xmas 2010 tree.jpg
Christmas Tree at New Highland Park, December 2010

New Highland Park is a small 0.41 acre park at the northeast corner of North Highland Avenue and St. Charles Place in the historic Atkins Park neighborhood of Atlanta, often considered a part of the larger Virginia Highland neighborhood.

Atkins Park United States historic place

Atkins Park is an intown neighborhood of Atlanta, Georgia, nestled against the southeast corner of the neighborhood of Virginia-Highland, west of Briarcliff Avenue and north of Ponce de Leon Avenue ("Ponce"). It consists of just three streets - St. Louis Place, St. Charles Place, and St. Augustine Place - as well as an internal sidewalk known as Malcolm's Way that bisects them from St. Charles to St. Louis. It was originally designed to give quicker access to the streetcar stop at Ponce.

Atlanta Capital of Georgia, United States

Atlanta is the capital and most populous city in the U.S. state of Georgia. With an estimated 2018 population of 498,044, it is also the 37th most-populous city in the United States. The city serves as the cultural and economic center of the Atlanta metropolitan area, home to 5.9 million people and the ninth largest metropolitan in the nation. Atlanta is the seat of Fulton County, the most populous county in Georgia. Portions of the city extend eastward into neighboring DeKalb County.

The park was originally the site of two adjacent lots, 1076 and 1082 St. Charles Place. 1082 was a house. In 1952 the house was demolished and the Highland Branch of the Atlanta Public Library was built on the two lots. The library was enlarged in 1976 and demolished in 1990. In December 2008 the Virginia Highland Civic Association bought the land.

The park is undeveloped as of March 2011. However, there are plans to develop it into an eco-friendly park and rain garden. The project is planned to function as a demonstration project for managing storm water through bioretention. Bioretention involves capturing the water on site with the help of native Georgia plants, which naturally remove pollutants from water. The water goes back into the water table instead of into storm drains and being lost. [1]

Rain garden form of rainwater runoff management

Rain gardens, also called bioretention facilities, are one of a variety of practices designed to treat polluted stormwater runoff. Rain gardens are a designed depressed area in the landscape that store runoff from impervious urban areas, like roofs, driveways, walkways, parking lots, and compacted lawn areas. Rain gardens typically rely on plants and an engineered soil media to soak up stormwater while absorbing and filtering pollutants carried in urban runoff.

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The History of Virginia–Highland, the Intown Atlanta neighborhood, dates back to 1812, when William Zachary bought and built a farm on 202.5 acres (0.819 km2) of land there. At some point between 1888 and 1890 the Nine-Mile Circle streetcar arrived,, making a loop of what are now Ponce de Leon Avenue, North Highland Avenue, Virginia Avenue, and Monroe Drive. Atlantans at first used the line to visit what was then countryside, including Ponce de Leon Springs, but the line also enabled later development in the area. Residential development began as early as 1893 on St. Charles and Greenwood Avenues, must most development took place from 1909 through 1926 — solidly upper-middle class neighborhoods, kept all-white by covenant.

Lemuel P. Grant Mansion building in Georgia, United States

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Virginia–Highland Summerfest

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St. Charles-Greenwood is a former neighborhood of northeastern Atlanta, named after St. Charles and Greenwood avenues. Ponce de Leon Place and North Highland Avenue were the western and eastern boundaries. The neighborhood It had its own neighborhood association in the 1980s, and in the 1990s had its own seat on the Virginia-Highland Civic Association board. Around 2003 the neighborhood was fully absorbed into the Virginia-Highland neighborhood. Atlanta city maps up to approximately 2007 still show the neighborhood, but current city maps and neighborhood lists do not.

The Virginia–Highland Tour of Homes is an annual two-day event each December in the Virginia–Highland neighborhood of Atlanta. During the event, houses around the neighborhood are opened to visitors. The Virginia–Highland Civic Association organizes the event.

References

  1. Virginia Highland Civic Association

Coordinates: 33°46′32″N84°21′08″W / 33.7756°N 84.3523°W / 33.7756; -84.3523

Geographic coordinate system Coordinate system

A geographic coordinate system is a coordinate system that enables every location on Earth to be specified by a set of numbers, letters or symbols. The coordinates are often chosen such that one of the numbers represents a vertical position and two or three of the numbers represent a horizontal position; alternatively, a geographic position may be expressed in a combined three-dimensional Cartesian vector. A common choice of coordinates is latitude, longitude and elevation. To specify a location on a plane requires a map projection.