The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Walk or ride through city’s history, culture

Tours explore street art, TV and movie sets, hip-hop museums and civil rights.

- By Jewel Wicker

Atlanta is a city that is constantly changing, making preserving its history extremely important. There are several tours throughout the city that touch on Atlanta’s impact, focusing on the civil rights movement, the ways in which the city is portrayed throughout pop culture, and more.

Whether you’re visiting locations from popular TV shows, experienci­ng hip-hop landmarks up close or biking through historic neighborho­ods, these tours can teach both locals and visitors something new about Atlanta.

Walk around the city with this self-guided street art tour

Use Atlanta’s buzzing street art scene as an excuse to get to know a new part of town on this no-fuss tour. There’s no scheduling ahead or payment necessary. All you need is your phone.

Art Rudick was inspired to create a digital map of Atlanta’s street art after participat­ing in a walking tour in New York. Recently retired, he launched Atlanta Street Art Map in 2017. Today, the website features informatio­n on more than 800 pieces of art throughout the city, including murals and graffiti. Updated regularly, the site compiles a photo, the title of the artwork and the name of the artist (with a link to their portfolio or social media) when possible. Directions are also a click away.

The website includes seven self-guided walking tours of

Atlanta neighborho­ods such as East Atlanta, Edgewood, West End and Pittsburgh.

Recognizin­g the importance of archiving “gone-but-not-forgotten” street art in a city that changes daily, Rudick also keeps track of art that no longer exists.

Visit streetartm­ap.org to plan your walking tour.

Visit the Upside Down

Take a tour of places from Netflix’s “Stranger Things” with popular Atlanta touring company DTours, visiting some of the obvious landmarks as well as some obscure locations from the show. The tour is named after an alternate dimension that exists within the show.

The four-hour tour will take fans of “Stranger Things” to see the Screen Gems lot where the show is filmed, Hawkins Public Pool, Hawkins middle and high schools, the homes of the Wheelers, Sinclairs, Hendersons and more. Tours are $150 per person. They take place at 9 a.m. on weekdays, and 9 a.m. and 2 p.m. on weekends.

Other tours with the company are based on “The Walking Dead,” “Gone With the Wind” and Atlanta’s sports teams.

Visit dtour.me to schedule your trip to the Upside Down.

View Atlanta through a hip-hop lens

It’s been less than a year since Ryan Minor started hosting tours of the city under the Hip Hop Tours of Atlanta moniker, but he says he’s already conducted more than 500 tours. And his tour of the city — one of the only tours that centers on the city’s hip-hop scene — has garnered endorsemen­ts from musicians such as Lil Baby, T.I., Jermaine Dupri and others.

Minor’s tour offers participan­ts a chance to view the Dungeon, the basement studio where OutKast and Goodie Mob once recorded, and Tyler Perry Studios. The East Atlanta native says he prides himself on being able to tell participan­ts about a wide range of history. When he visits “The Bluff ” (English Avenue), a neighborho­od made famous by the Netflix movie “Snow on Tha Bluff,” he talks about the history of drugs in the neighborho­od, but also explains how the neighborho­od was affected by urban renewal and the developmen­t of the nowdemolis­hed Georgia Dome.

Minor conducts two private tours a day, charging $260 for two people. Tours also include a visit to the Trap Music Museum and its Escape the Trap escape room.

Visit hiphoptour­sofatlanta.com to reserve a time.

Bike through history

Learn about Reynoldsto­wn and the former enslaved people who settled there, the history of Sweet Auburn and the 1906 Race Riots while biking through the city. The threehour bike tour may teach you something about the city that you didn’t learn in school, while also allowing you to get your daily exercise.

Atlanta’s Journey for Civil Rights Bike Tour costs $65 per person and includes a bicycle, helmet, snacks and bottled water.

Speaking to the camaraderi­e of tour guides, it was Ryan Minor of Hip Hop Tours of Atlanta who informed us that Bicycle Tours of Atlanta guide Victoria Lemos has an excellent podcast on Atlanta history called “Archive Atlanta.” Continue to learn about the city after your tour is over by listening to this podcast on your way home.

Book your bicycle tour at biketoursa­tl.com.

Go where the zombies have gone

As Atlanta increasing­ly became the “Hollywood of the South” in the 2010s, it wasn’t unlikely to see a zombie or two lying bloody on the sidewalk, or a truck dangling off a bridge in downtown Atlanta. In 2012, Atlanta Movie Tours capitalize­d on the popularity of “The Walking Dead” by starting a Big

Zombie Tour. Today, they have three tours dedicated to the AMC show and estimate they’ve had about 40,000 tourists.

Tour options include three bus tours (one in Atlanta and two in Senoia), as well as a walking tour in Senoia. Each tour focuses on a different season of the show and occurs at varying times. Big Zombie 1, for example, takes place in Atlanta and allows tourists to visit Rick’s hospital and Daryl and Carol’s bridge.

Bus tours are $55 for children and $69 for adults. The walking tour in Senoia is $10. For an extra $30 per person, transporta­tion to Senoia can be included.

Schedule your zombie tour, or a tour that focuses on “Stranger Things,” superhero movies filmed in Atlanta and more at Atlantamov­ietours.com.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D BY ART RUIDICK ?? This mural, painted by Chris Veal, is one of more than 800 pieces of street art that Art Rudick has mapped out throughout the city at streetartm­ap.org.
CONTRIBUTE­D BY ART RUIDICK This mural, painted by Chris Veal, is one of more than 800 pieces of street art that Art Rudick has mapped out throughout the city at streetartm­ap.org.
 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D BY RYAN MINOR ?? Ryan Minor’s Hip Hop Tours of Atlanta takes tourists to the Trap Music Museum, as well as to various neighborho­ods throughout the city.
CONTRIBUTE­D BY RYAN MINOR Ryan Minor’s Hip Hop Tours of Atlanta takes tourists to the Trap Music Museum, as well as to various neighborho­ods throughout the city.
 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D BY DTOURS ?? DTours allows “Stranger Things” fans to visit several familiar locations from the show, including the schools that the main characters attend.
CONTRIBUTE­D BY DTOURS DTours allows “Stranger Things” fans to visit several familiar locations from the show, including the schools that the main characters attend.

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