The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

First paved stretch of Beltline’s Southside Trail opens to public

Rest of Southside Trail also open but unpaved for now.

- By J.D. Capelouto jdcapelout­o@ajc.com

The first segment of the Atlanta Beltline running through the Southside of the city is now open to the public.

Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms gathered Tuesday morning with leaders from the Beltline, city and community for a ribbon-cutting of the newly paved Southside Trail.

The mixed-use path runs for 0.8 miles from the existing Westside Trail at the end of University Avenue to Pittsburgh Yards, just west of the I-75/85 overpass.

“We often look at these plans on paper, but to actually see it happen, to know all the work that’s gone (into) making it happen, it’s great to be able to celebrate that all in one term,” Bottoms said at the ribbon-cutting event.

“We love (the Beltline). It’s somewhere we can go walk in the community and we can get some exercise,” said Devin Brown, who visited the new portion of the Beltline on Wednesday and lives in nearby Adair Park.

The remainder of the Southside Trail, which connects with the paved Eastside Trail near I-20, is open as an unpaved trail for now as design and planning work continues. City leaders heralded the Southside Trail opening as the first step toward a connected, paved route from the Eastside to the Westside.

“As the Beltline was being built out, one of things that was being said across the city ... was that the Beltline would never come to the Southside of Atlanta,” said Councilwom­an Joyce Sheperd, who thanked Bottoms and other city leaders for achieving “the dream of having the Beltline on the Southside.”

But Sheperd also pointed out that housing costs are increasing in Beltline-adjacent neighborho­ods like nearby Pittsburgh.

“In that neighborho­od now, houses are selling for unbelievab­le prices,” she said. “We appreciate what’s happening, but … we just have to keep affordable housing in our communitie­s.”

By the end of the decade, officials say, the Beltline will be a connected, 22-mile paved loop around the city. Tax dollars from the Beltline’s Special Service District, along with philanthro­pic and federal funding, will cover the constructi­on for the remainder of the Southside Trail. Constructi­on is expected to start in the next year or two.

 ?? ALYSSA POINTER/ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM ?? An informativ­e sign greets visitors Wednesday to the Beltline’s Southside Trail in Atlanta’s Pittsburgh community. The mixed-use path runs 0.8 miles from the existing Westside Trail at the end of University Avenue to Pittsburgh Yards.
ALYSSA POINTER/ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM An informativ­e sign greets visitors Wednesday to the Beltline’s Southside Trail in Atlanta’s Pittsburgh community. The mixed-use path runs 0.8 miles from the existing Westside Trail at the end of University Avenue to Pittsburgh Yards.
 ?? COURTESY OF ATLANTA BELTLINE ?? Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms (center right) joins other city leaders for the Southside Trail ribbon-cutting ceremony Tuesday.
COURTESY OF ATLANTA BELTLINE Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms (center right) joins other city leaders for the Southside Trail ribbon-cutting ceremony Tuesday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States