The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

A new downtown rises in Sugar Hill

Gwinnett city’s officials say millions in public spending part of plan to lure private investment.

- By David Wickert dwickert@ajc.com

Aside from its gleaming City Hall, there’s not much to Sugar Hill’s sleepy business district. But that’s about to change. Next month, a renovated amphitheat­er downtown will host its first concert. Not long after, the city will break ground on a mix of public facilities and commercial space. And several developers are negotiatin­g to build a hotel, residences and other projects nearby.

By the end of 2017, Mayor Steve Edwards said, the town will have created something that will stand out not just in Gwinnett but across the region. Officials in this Gwinnett County city say hundreds of millions of dollars in public and private investment will transform the area into a thriving downtown.

“We don’t want to be like every other city in Gwinnett or the area. We want to compete with the Greenville, South Carolinas, of the world. We’ve got a ‘go big or go home’ mentality.”

Cities across Gwinnett and

metro Atlanta have staked their futures on new or revitalize­d downtowns — a mix of commercial and residentia­l developmen­t usually associated with urban communitie­s. Even unincorpor­ated areas like Gwinnett Place and the county’s Infinite Energy Center have big plans to create dense urban developmen­ts.

Sugar Hill, a city of about 21,000 residents in northern Gwinnett near Lake Lanier, bought nearly 16 acres to expand its downtown. It spent $11 million for the city hall, which opened in 2013.

It’s spending another $3 million to upgrade the amphitheat­er, which will host its first concert — the Mavericks — on May 28.

And it will spend $36 million for the adjacent mixeduse developmen­t dubbed the EpiCenter.

That developmen­t will feature a performing arts center and gymnasium, plus 40,000 square feet of offices, shops and restaurant­s.

The city’s Downtown Developmen­t Authority will own the property and hire a private firm to manage the commercial space.

City Manager Paul Radford said the public spending is needed to attract private investment and to allow Sugar Hill to control the developmen­t of its own downtown.

“Nobody’s going to invest here if you don’t have a commitment to a plan,” Radford said. “It’s hard to get a developer to come in if you don’t own the land.”

The approach seems to be paying off.

Several developers have plans to buy other city property for downtown projects. Those plans include tens of thousands of square feet of office space, a hotel, a niche grocery store and hundreds of residentia­l units, many of them for seniors.

Details of the projects are still being negotiated. But Radford said the total private investment would be nearly $200 million. Most of the projects should be under constructi­on in the next two years.

Plans for downtown have won praise in the community. One measure of the public support: Three incumbent City Council members ran unopposed for re-election last year.

“We have a city government right now that really does understand our community,” said Pastor Chuck Allen of Sugar Hill Church, across Ga. 20 from the new downtown. “We’re a burgeoning community of 30- to 40-something couples with children. These young couples want to stay home and have a Mayberry feel (to their community).”

City officials see a Mayberry where hundreds of people live and thousands drop in for work, concerts, shopping and dinner.

“In the next two years,” Radford said, “this place is going to be hopping.”

 ?? TAYLOR CARPENTER PHOTOS / TAYLOR.CARPENTER@AJC.COM ?? The constructi­on site for the upgraded amphitheat­er next to Sugar Hill City Hall is one of several projects the city plans. “We don’t want to be like every other city in Gwinnett or the area,” says Mayor Steve Edwards. “We’ve got a ‘go big or go home’...
TAYLOR CARPENTER PHOTOS / TAYLOR.CARPENTER@AJC.COM The constructi­on site for the upgraded amphitheat­er next to Sugar Hill City Hall is one of several projects the city plans. “We don’t want to be like every other city in Gwinnett or the area,” says Mayor Steve Edwards. “We’ve got a ‘go big or go home’...
 ??  ?? Sugar Hill, with a population of nearly 21,000 in northern Gwinnett County near Lake Lanier, bought nearly 16 acres to expand its downtown. It spent $11 million for the City Hall, which opened in 2013.
Sugar Hill, with a population of nearly 21,000 in northern Gwinnett County near Lake Lanier, bought nearly 16 acres to expand its downtown. It spent $11 million for the City Hall, which opened in 2013.
 ??  ??
 ?? TAYLOR CARPENTER / TAYLOR.CARPENTER@AJC.COM ?? Sugar Hill is spending $3 million to upgrade the amphitheat­er, which will host its first concert — the Mavericks — in May. And it will spend $36 million for the adjacent mixeduse developmen­t dubbed the EpiCenter.
TAYLOR CARPENTER / TAYLOR.CARPENTER@AJC.COM Sugar Hill is spending $3 million to upgrade the amphitheat­er, which will host its first concert — the Mavericks — in May. And it will spend $36 million for the adjacent mixeduse developmen­t dubbed the EpiCenter.
 ?? TAYLOR CARPENTER / TAYLOR.CARPENTER@AJC.COM ?? Constructi­on workers work on the new amphitheat­er next to Sugar Hill City Hall. It’s one of several projects the city plans to use to create a new downtown.
TAYLOR CARPENTER / TAYLOR.CARPENTER@AJC.COM Constructi­on workers work on the new amphitheat­er next to Sugar Hill City Hall. It’s one of several projects the city plans to use to create a new downtown.

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