The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Peach will drop from Flatiron Building

Annual bash moves from 28-year home at Undergroun­d Atlanta.

- By Helena Oliviero holiviero@ajc.com

V-103’s Ryan Cameron will emcee the event and Mayor Kasim Reed will help ring in 2018.

It’s official: Atlanta’s annual New Year’s Eve celebratio­n will move to Woodruff Park this year where the Peach will drop from the historic Flatiron Building.

Admission is free and the park will open to visitors at 5:30 p.m. on New Year’s Eve, according to a press release from the Mayor’s Office of Communicat­ions.

Entertainm­ent will begin at 7 p.m. More details on the entertainm­ent is expected early next week.

V-103’s Ryan Cameron will MC the event. Mayor Kasim Reed will join Atlanta residents and visitors in a celebratio­n to ring in 2018.

Access points to Woodruff Park (91 Peachtree Street NW) will be at Auburn Avenue and Park Place, Edgewood Avenue and Park Place, Peachtree Street and Edgewood Avenue and Peachtree Street and

Walton Street.

The Flatiron Building is a 120-year-old building, the nation’s first flatiron building, predating the flatiron building in New York City by five years. The Flatiron Building opened in 1897 and is Atlanta’s oldest standing skyscraper.

The refurbishe­d office building houses a diverse tenant base including B2B start-ups and digital advertisin­g and music businesses.

For 28 years the city has hosted an all-day party each New Year’s Eve at Undergroun­d, featuring bands, food, confetti, and the ceremonial lowering of the 800pound Peach from a tower above the plaza. The traditiona­l New Year’s Eve celebratio­n has often attracted more than 100,000 people, according to PeachDrop.com.

Expectatio­ns that the event would make a move were ramped up with the sale this spring of Undergroun­d Atlanta to the South Carolina firm WRS Real Estate Investment­s. The sale had been announced two years ago, but was postponed due to complicati­ons, including questions about easements from MARTA and railroad companies.

The Peach Drop has undergone a few changes over the years, including the version in 2014, when the giant peach shared space on the tower above Undergroun­d with an even-moregiant replica of a peanut M&M.

 ?? By Maya T. Prabhu maya.prabhu@ajc.com CURTIS COMPTON / AJC ?? The peach waits to drop from the tower at the Peach Drop at Undergroun­d Atlanta in 2013.
By Maya T. Prabhu maya.prabhu@ajc.com CURTIS COMPTON / AJC The peach waits to drop from the tower at the Peach Drop at Undergroun­d Atlanta in 2013.

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