The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Austell Seeks Public Input On Downtown Vision

Residents can offer thoughts on draft plan until Friday.

- By Matt Bruce For the AJC

Austell residents can review preliminar­y plans of the city’s long-term vision for downtown.

City officials propose $64 million worth of projects to be implemente­d over about

10 years in the small town of fewer than 8,000 residents in southwest Cobb County.

Nearly 80% of those project dollars would be devoted to transporta­tion-related

pgrades such as road improvemen­ts and a streetscap­ing initiative along Broad Street.

Residents can go on the city’s website to make com- ments and take a feedback survey about the downtown plan through Friday. The survey is available at https:// tsw.mysocialpi­npoint.com/ downtown-austell-lci.

The draft plan is based on a monthslong study that began in December, when city officials started analyz- ing housing, businesses and attraction­s in a 600-acre area in and around downtown.

That resulted in what is known as a “livable centers initiative,” or LCI, plan. Such plans are part of a grant program sponsored by the

Atlanta Regional Commission.

The program offers federal funding to entice local government­s to re-envision their jurisdicti­ons by focusing on vibrant, walkable com- munities that increase mobility and encouragin­g healthy lifestyles.

Among the short term goals included in the new plan is a concept to create a “Town Green” park area along Love Street that’s surrounded by a cluster of redevelope­d retail buildings. The plan also includes a vision for a new civic center on the grounds of the Post Office along Veterans Memorial Highway.

More long-term goals include convert i ng the Sweetwater Lumber and Land Company industrial site along Humphries Hill Road into a mixed-use developmen­t with houses, apartments, townhomes and retail shops. The city also proposed creating a Downtown Developmen­t Authority to spearhead the redevelopm­ent plans and establishi­ng a “quiet zone” on the railroads.

Austell first devised a $9.6 million plan in 2002 that proposed improvemen­ts to the city’s housing strategies, transit guidelines and pedestrian pathways. Many of the recommenda­tions included in the current plan are updates to that original plan.

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