How This $4.8 Billion Walkway Is Redefining Atlanta

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  • Опубликовано: 27 ноя 2022
  • The metro Atlanta region emerged as a national economic bright spot in recent decades. Population growth has boomed in Atlanta's sprawling suburbs, fueling concerns over equity. The current vanguard of groups in the city are attempting to build with density while preserving affordable housing. Local planners believe that the BeltLine, a 22-mile-long pedestrian path, will reconnect communities and provide a bridge to the city's future.
    Financial and tech firms continue to flock toward metro Atlanta. This builds on the city’s strong logistics, entertainment and film, and health services industries.
    Demand for quality housing in the region has become fierce, particularly in the city center.
    “Atlanta is becoming a wider city,” said Nathaniel Smith, founder and chief equity officer at the Partnership for Southern Equity. “Now, whether we’ll be able to kind of balance that out and ensure that, you know, black folks don’t get pushed out ... I’m not sure.”
    In September 2022, the median home in the city of Atlanta was valued at about $400,000, according to Zillow’s Home Values Index. That price would be out of reach for the typical household in the city of Atlanta, which made about $64,179 annually in recent years. Rents also have ticked above the national median.
    Some Atlanta locals believe ambitious urban redevelopment projects, such as the BeltLine, have contributed to fast-rising prices in the area.
    The BeltLine is a 22-mile loop of walking and cycling trails built largely on abandoned rail lines and developed as a public-private partnership.
    It was intended to connect different neighborhoods in the city with each other and to create, along the path, walkable communities where residents could access a variety of services without needing a car.
    “We’ve put about $700 million into the BeltLine to date,” said Atlanta BeltLine Inc. CEO Clyde Higgs. “What we’ve seen is roughly an $8 billion private investment that has followed the BeltLine. That has caused a number of good things and also a number of pressures within the city of Atlanta.”
    While the region evolves, a raft of community organizers are launching efforts to preserve housing affordability.
    “It would have been great if we had an opportunity to secure more land earlier in the life of the BeltLine,” said Amanda Rhein, executive director of the Atlanta Land Trust, “because property values continue to increase in close proximity to the project.”
    Watch the video to see how Atlanta plans to preserve housing affordability amid rapid growth.
    Produced by: Carlos Waters
    Additional Camera: Sydney Boyo
    Graphics by: Jason Reginato, Alex Wood
    Supervising Producer: Lindsey Jacobson
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    The Rise Of Atlanta

Комментарии • 2 тыс.

  • @RealMattHaney
    @RealMattHaney Год назад +1003

    As a native Atlantan I feel that, while the beltline is great (even with the issues described), the city should really focus more on improving density and decreasing sprawl. The city is just not that walkable, except in midtown and along the beltline. Meanwhile there is a very rich collection of neighborhoods, and it would be great to be able to get to them without a car. But the city is so spread out, with so much wasted space in surface parking, it can be complicated to navigate.

    • @als3022
      @als3022 Год назад +32

      Agree that is an issue, but the biggest issue is going to be simply water. Atlanta doesn't have enough water for those who live nearby already. And I remember the drought of the early 2000's when Atlanta went to war with Savannah and Augusta over water rights to the Savannah River.

    • @elijahharrison4164
      @elijahharrison4164 Год назад +24

      Right on the money @Matt Haney. The video doesn't mention and most folks don't know that the original vision of the BeltLine consisted of a circumferential light rail line to run its length, tying together all the neighborhoods it intersects as well as connecting those neighborhoods to the MARTA main heavy rail at four separate stations. In short the two visions you spoke to are not in conflict, in fact quite the opposite!
      If you're interested I volunteer with a group, BeltLine Rail Now, that 20 years on is trying to make that vision a reality. Give me a holler I'd love to talk more!

    • @joejacko1587
      @joejacko1587 Год назад +1

      I drove though there on my way to disneyworld i didn't even want to get out my car i was going to go to six flags there with my son later that year but someone who lives there told me not to its has a lot of gangs that go there

    • @shanghaidiscovery2664
      @shanghaidiscovery2664 Год назад +23

      I visited Atlanta last month for the first time and am European and as you say it is not walkable. Even midtown.... The main issue there is too few street side businesses. Sure you can walk that area but then there are no street side shops or cafes...

    • @kaykay7434
      @kaykay7434 Год назад +2

      "Decrease Sprawl" & "Increase Density" are university terms that students have been brainwashed with. Atlanta is dense enough. Thanks to urban sprawl, some people can be located far away from high crime areas like this one. No one was walking there because they don't want to be a victim of a crime.

  • @454lin
    @454lin Год назад +679

    For a city with 6 million ppl the traffic is horrible. We need a mass transit system

    • @ryersongorman5237
      @ryersongorman5237 Год назад +47

      Not only that, but we also have InterState highways connecting throughout the metroplex that travelers are passing by.

    • @tira2145
      @tira2145 Год назад +2

      Exactly where's the money coming from?

    • @dreadhead5719
      @dreadhead5719 Год назад +53

      @@tira2145 taxes

    • @danielkelly2210
      @danielkelly2210 Год назад +108

      You have one... MARTA. It's just that NIMBYs don't want it to be comprehensive, for reasons.

    • @TheRandCrews
      @TheRandCrews Год назад +85

      @@george_cantstandya it comes from the idea taking people off cars on the road and putting them in transit like buses and metros. Usually drivers in the road are single or two occupants per car, while transit takes one person away from their car which won’t contribute to traffic. In contrast with highway widening projects it doesn’t alleviate traffic for having more lanes brings in more people believing there would be space for them.
      I saw this in my own eyes by having my sister drive me to the airport from Temecula to San Diego Lindbergh Field to catch a flight which had a 1.5 hour drive become a 2-3 drive due to the traffic on I-15. Didn’t help that it was more than 8 lanes long and still having it expanding to two more lanes and the alternative transit route can be from 4-8 hours long depending on any time I would leave. Too many cars on the road with little to no good alternative

  • @shanghaidiscovery2664
    @shanghaidiscovery2664 Год назад +739

    I visited Atlanta last week and a European and used to walkable cities. I decided to walk from my hotel in the hotel district to a place called Atlantic station which is 2.5 miles I believe (and back later on). First, except for a couple of vagrants near the hotel, I was basically the only person walking and that was sort of eerie. And secondly, there are no street side businesses: no cafes, no shops. I walked through the Georgia Tech area and some of the streets were nice but again it looks like nobody ever walks them. But the next main issue is that many of these streets just end so you detour and then half a mile later you are again on the same street that sort of ended just before. Midtown is better in terms of street layout but again there are street side businesses. I also rode Marta and it was surprisingly nice but also very few users.... And when I got off in Buckhead, well you could clearly see that is the type of area where some would consider you suspicious for walking around so I guess it may take a while to change that mentality. If you want to entice people to walk there should be shops and cafes.... you have to have mixed use zoning if you want to have people walking around because let's face it, you can probably have most people walk a half or quarter mile radius but not much more than that

    • @michaelmcchesney6904
      @michaelmcchesney6904 Год назад +36

      Unfortunately you just went the wrong way. I have hopes for west midtown but east Atlanta belt line and west end is where it’s at. Great areas. I never go to buckhead so I can’t comment.

    • @michaelmerck7576
      @michaelmerck7576 Год назад

      Walking through the Georgia tech area will get you killed

    • @michaelmerck7576
      @michaelmerck7576 Год назад +39

      It's too dangerous to walk because you can't safely cross any streets in atlanta

    • @hootiehoo3000
      @hootiehoo3000 Год назад +40

      Sadly a lot of this comes from our major focus on still trying to please car culture here in Georgia, that and the income inequality in Atlanta is one of the highest in the US which increases the crime rate, only decreasing our public transportation adoption.

    • @jessestallworth5284
      @jessestallworth5284 Год назад

      @@michaelmcchesney6904 sheeesh its unfortunate that there's a wrong way to walk, go to any city in Germany, France, Poland etc you'll find yourself walking into everything one could need no matter the direction. Sorry it will take more than a walk trail to make a city more walkable, more like a magic eraser to undo all the DOT lobbyist that shoveled having massive motorways as the solution

  • @rom7633
    @rom7633 Год назад +250

    Another reason the Beltline is so successful even without the Light-Rail yet is because it's the first "third-place" built in this city since the original city parks. People enjoy the Beltline because unlike most parks which have just housing around them, it's a place to hangout and go somewhere without necessarily paying money. You can meet so many people and go to different neighborhoods without needing a car. That's why it's so successful

    • @nicocorbo4153
      @nicocorbo4153 Год назад +19

      someone watches The City Beautiful lol

    • @katarh
      @katarh Год назад +15

      It also attracts people from other parts of the state. I'm a cyclist in Athens and we make a visit to the city any time there is a new section of the Beltline open. We spend our money at restaurants and bars and stores along the way.

    • @NazriB
      @NazriB Год назад

      Lies again? Acura Mecca Facial Botox

  • @christophercollins9473
    @christophercollins9473 Год назад +1045

    The belt roads goal is to create an environment where you can go to work, find a home, shop for groceries, access healthcare and education all without having to use a car. That’s priceless.
    Car culture is the reason why our municipalities can’t support our underserved communities. We spend billions on high maintenance cost of car infrastructure (parking, roads, accidents etc.) it spreads out our utilities and increases the cost of living to a point that’s unsustainable.

    • @HeyMavDak
      @HeyMavDak Год назад +11

      It's not unsustainable.
      Low wages that don't support the affordability of a car are the problem.

    • @gamelord12
      @gamelord12 Год назад +187

      @@HeyMavDak No, it's inherently unsustainable. Even if you ignore that cars have always, especially now, been a massive household expense for all sorts of reasons, they also take up far more space per person. This means everything is further apart to fit parking, multi-lane roads, and so on. This means it costs more to get electricity, plumbing, and other services to those locations as cities expand. It's unsustainable, and we didn't even get to the environmental or safety problems with mass car ownership.

    • @Mrmudbone_gaming
      @Mrmudbone_gaming Год назад +20

      Until you see homeless people moving into the belt line 😂😂😂

    • @nomore-constipation
      @nomore-constipation Год назад +8

      I posted a comment about using the train trails and put in a bus line only. But give them the right of way. Meaning gates just like trains. Which in turn makes buses now faster than cars
      Buses are gas now but maybe electric later. But this would have been a better use for the land imo
      I'm no egghead about this but land like this on the east coast is like gold. No wonder why others were drooling over its use. That state should have been aware and made a better solution for all not just certain people imo

    • @rosewoodreadingroom8473
      @rosewoodreadingroom8473 Год назад +47

      100% if you can walk/bike-ride to everything you need you can be better off than any minimum wage increase. We do need high-density, low-cost housing that is built to last.

  • @zacharyesparza9300
    @zacharyesparza9300 Год назад +202

    It’s weird to me that when someone adds something of value, they don’t think that the value of the area will go up and change a lot.

    • @fishngiggles5272
      @fishngiggles5272 Год назад +11

      I’ll pass on walking in atlanta I don’t want to die also how does a walking path cost billions of dollars

    • @TheDarkAdventure
      @TheDarkAdventure Год назад

      How come Black people making things of value equates to white people getting rid of the Black people in the area to enjoy those spoils?

    • @plinkvevo
      @plinkvevo Год назад +30

      @@fishngiggles5272 The Beltline isn’t just a walking path, the it includes new parks and light rail

    • @smrk2452
      @smrk2452 2 месяца назад +6

      It’s weird to me how something of value can’t just be enjoyed without pushing aside the people it was meant to serve.

    • @quandaledingle8960
      @quandaledingle8960 Месяц назад +3

      @@smrk2452 I bet you believe in a true utopia. Go move to Russia

  • @RonniReMIX
    @RonniReMIX Год назад +187

    The Beltline was supposed to be a rail loop that was to help ease traffic in Atlanta. If you've ever been to Atlanta - THE TRAFFIC IS INSANE!!!

    • @MrSupergingerman
      @MrSupergingerman Год назад +12

      Man, a rail loop would be so much more effective. Just getting from Ponce to Krog St., takes forever if you're walking, and a fast, frequent train between them would make them feel so much more connected.
      Alas I think the problem is that people in ATL are afraid to take the train. MARTA isn't bad at all, we really just need a culture shift / PR campaign to make people more comfortable using it.

    • @hyoon93
      @hyoon93 Год назад

      Yup wheen 225 gets backed up 75 n 85 becomes grid lock

    • @kgamer1715
      @kgamer1715 Год назад

      @@MrSupergingerman I heard they're updating the rail cars on Marta, which is pretty nice, I just wish they'd add more railroads in any way, especially to help with traffic coming from the outer perimeter, like Gwinnett, Cobb, Dekalb, or Fulton

    • @abinsurly2910
      @abinsurly2910 Год назад +1

      Is it? I'm in it every day. It's not so bad. Then again I was raised in NYC.

    • @akbarbukhari
      @akbarbukhari Год назад +1

      @@MrSupergingerman I disagree, people can use bikes, electric bikes, electric scooters. this is more effiecient and keeps people more healhty from just walking. A rail system would take years and billions. It unites communites. the issues is the winter, it will be cold.

  • @TheLIRRFrenchie...
    @TheLIRRFrenchie... Год назад +202

    I lived in Atlanta without a car (Buckhead), and heed my words when I say Atlanta is not a place to live without a car. I lived by 2 Marta stations and a single bus line (the 110) and it was still a bit difficult getting around IF where you're going isn't close to Marta or the route is infrequent. The Marta rail is great!! It's really fast and if your point A and B resides on the rail, it's a great alternative to driving, PREFERRED actually!! But it just doesn't go enough places for NIMBY reasons 😌. Thank God I'm in back NYC (my home city) now.

    • @stephenishola6205
      @stephenishola6205 Год назад +12

      I lived in Atlanta as well and the Marta isn’t bad at all if you live inside the perimeter. I lived in old fourth ward and would commute to work in Sandy Springs to avoid that horrible traffic on 285/400. Like yourself I’m in a city with great public transportation as well (Chicago) all the luck to you in NYC!

    • @LeeeroyJenkins
      @LeeeroyJenkins Год назад +8

      And this ladies and gentlemen is why NYC government officials don’t care about the cost of living. Because someone richer like this guy will just move in and take your spot. AND will be grateful to be living in NYC as compared to the previous tenants that were complaining.
      Gentrification train coming through 🚂 Choo Choo!!

    • @rainbowsix7959
      @rainbowsix7959 Год назад +5

      @@LeeeroyJenkins I love gentrification, makes the area so much safer

    • @LeeeroyJenkins
      @LeeeroyJenkins Год назад +2

      [Placeholder]

    • @rainbowsix7959
      @rainbowsix7959 Год назад +6

      @@LeeeroyJenkins 😁😁😁 well what’s funny is I moved back to NYC as well but I wish Atlantiens the best 😄😄😄

  • @shanehaney1001
    @shanehaney1001 Год назад +340

    As a current Atlanta resident, I love this city! It wasn’t mentioned in the video, but the walking paths of the Beltline are just phase one. There will be a light rail added to parts of it in the next decade. So excited for my city and its future. As long as it continues to listen to diverse voices and prioritize the special culture it has, it will remain one of America’s greats

    • @bt2598
      @bt2598 Год назад +22

      I was going to say, 22 miles is not walkable at all! We definitely should invest more in the MARTA. I do find the buses helpful to get connected to the actual trin but wish it got me to other areas of the city in a more convenient way.

    • @LeeeroyJenkins
      @LeeeroyJenkins Год назад +1

      People seem to love pointing to East Asia and Europe for public transportation, but you know what I don’t see…
      HOMELESS PEOPLE!! Sleeping on the public transit and randomly assaulting people on it.

    • @MarkWongMD
      @MarkWongMD Год назад +1

      Like everything in America they can't get anything done fast unless it's a war. So good luck with your light rail in the next 20 years. If it doesn't involve war or politics this country doesn't move fast.

    • @brianh9358
      @brianh9358 Год назад +10

      If they are able to build the light rail line I will be surprised. I was born in Georgia and I've seen many communities oppose any type of subway or rail system expansion over and over. The only practical way to build any transit system would be underground and I'm just not sure the will is there to do it. When it starts getting built it is always "Not in my area - that seems to win".

    • @GriffenDoesIt
      @GriffenDoesIt Год назад +5

      @@bt2598 As someone who works *slightly* too far from the end of a MARTA line, that "Planned vs. Built" map hurt to look at :_)

  • @brianh9358
    @brianh9358 Год назад +251

    I left Atlanta 2 years ago, primarily because I was spending 1.5 hours each way in commute time. I couldn't afford to live downtown and was out in the suburbs. The city really needs a viable subway and commuter rail network but they won't ever build one. It is really too late to do so and would be economically impossible. I don't consider the MARTA system to be viable because it doesn't have enough lines nor do they go far enough out. I do think the BeltLine is a positive thing but it is going to end up pushing out everyone who isn't rich.

    • @LeeeroyJenkins
      @LeeeroyJenkins Год назад +4

      All the “walkability” YT channels trying to mask gentrification.
      Guess who HAS TIME to WALK to work. The rich person that owns the business. They can arrive at whatever time they want.
      No poor person working 2 jobs wants to walk to both of them.

    • @KRYMauL
      @KRYMauL Год назад +13

      This is effectively what will happen because rich people can afford to live in a place that has a grocery store.

    • @LeeeroyJenkins
      @LeeeroyJenkins Год назад +12

      @@KRYMauL No no no. There are plenty of poor towns and cities with grocery stores. It’s when people start shoplifting or straight up committing armed robbery against the store is when they leave the area.

    • @poopyfartboi
      @poopyfartboi Год назад +1

      @@KRYMauL this is the dumbest take I’ve ever heard

    • @jerrymylove1754
      @jerrymylove1754 Год назад +16

      Traffic is awful but if they can create an environment where we don’t need a car at all is a very good idea. Ride my bike everyday.

  • @rlbond
    @rlbond Год назад +119

    Atlanta's lack of mass transit has been holding it back for half a century. Unfortunately there are a lot of people who don't want mass transit for explicitly racist/segregationist reasons.

    • @ZeusAVI
      @ZeusAVI Год назад +22

      That’s the elephant in the room that many won’t discuss.

    • @prettyclassylady6218
      @prettyclassylady6218 Год назад +1

      Atlanta is majority white so what are you talking about? Who is trying to keep white people from using public transportation?

    • @brucet2756
      @brucet2756 Год назад +35

      @@prettyclassylady6218 Atlanta is not majority white. Even at 40%, this is the whitest it’s been in many decades. And yes, the poster is correct, the original reason MARTA expansion was blocked to extending outside of the city limits was because white people in the suburbs did not want poor people of color from the city in their neighborhood.
      en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Demographics_of_Atlanta

    • @rlbond
      @rlbond Год назад +14

      @Tony P Oh yeah, you don't want any "crime" in the suburbs (wink wink nudge nudge). As if someone is gonna take the subway all the way out to you, walk half a mile from the station to your house, and rob you? Come on dude, we all know what you really mean.

    • @brucet2756
      @brucet2756 Год назад

      @@tonyp314 This is you bro: ruclips.net/video/nkC3Nc3LqFI/видео.html

  • @inspectah2342
    @inspectah2342 Год назад +32

    I live in Atlanta and the Beltline is pretty amazing . You can literally get to any part of the city from it.

  • @GKP999
    @GKP999 Год назад +173

    All American cities need to be redesigned for higher density living, walkability, better public transportation, mixed use/mixed income housing, reduce car use.

    • @CinnieReal
      @CinnieReal Год назад +15

      @@robierahg17 Then cities aren't for you, live on a farm.

    • @CinnieReal
      @CinnieReal Год назад

      You are absolutely correct

    • @nishiljaiswal2216
      @nishiljaiswal2216 Год назад +14

      @clot shots EVERY town and city needs to prioritize people and places. We need to go back to good urbanism like how we have been doing it since the start of civilization.

    • @CinnieReal
      @CinnieReal Год назад

      @clot shots Stupid statement, Cities are better with less cars, cope and seethe you living soiface

    • @CinnieReal
      @CinnieReal Год назад

      @@nishiljaiswal2216 Agreed, atleast you aren't brain dead like clot shots here

  • @Fellowtellurian
    @Fellowtellurian Год назад +40

    The reason the city is in constant deficit is because it just accepted the sprawl model. Roads and infrastructure is expensive and if that infrastructure is serving 10 homes vs 100 homes, the costs are higher for tax payer or the city just makes cuts to other things because their budget is eaten up by the inefficiency infrastructure model. But hey, you get a big piece of land for the kids located next to nothing, reliant on your car and increasing gas prices.

  • @isaac198428
    @isaac198428 Год назад +36

    Most people are moving much further like Cartersville, Acworth, Douglasville, Canton, Austell, Mableton, Hiram, Dallas, Powder Springs and Lithia Springs to save money on rent/mortgage and get lots of land/space but unfortunately by doing so, they MUST have a car because public commute to and from those cities is damn near impossible if they work around Atlanta.
    One bus twice a day connecting to downtown Atlanta is NOT ENOUGH! Other major cities like in the states of New Jersey, New York and California have more reliable rail transport and also city buses to all routes unlike here in Ga where everything starts and ends within the city limits of Atlanta.

    • @markfennell1604
      @markfennell1604 Год назад +7

      i moved out of city of Atlanta to Mcdonough. Best decision i ever made i love in Mcdonough. i bought a brand new house 3k square ft for 220k which would have cost me 500-700k within the city,.

  • @HafezBd
    @HafezBd Год назад +556

    After selling a couple homes in 2020, I'm anticipating a housing crisis in order to buy inexpensively. As a backup plan, I've been thinking about purchasing stocks. What recommendations do you have for the best time to buy? On the one hand, I keep reading and seeing trader earnings of over $500k each week. On the other side, I keep hearing that the market is out of control and experiencing a dead cat bounce. Why does this happen?

    • @harod033
      @harod033 Год назад

      The fact that the US stock market had been on its longest bull run ever makes the widespread worry and enthusiasm understandable given that we are not used to such unstable markets. As you pointed out, it wasn't tough for me to earn over $780k in the last 10 months, so there are chances if you know where to go. I hired a portfolio advisor since I was aware that I needed a solid and trusted plan to survive these trying times.

    • @alexanderjames3043
      @alexanderjames3043 Год назад

      @@harod033 Do you think you could suggest this coach to me? I've been researching advisors and I truly need advice to move forward.

    • @parker553
      @parker553 Год назад

      @@harod033 Ruth appears to be very knowledgeable. I discovered her online profile and read through her resume, educational background, and qualifications, which were all very impressive. She is a fiduciary, which means she will act in my best interests. So I scheduled a session with her.

    • @yasssgawwwd5643
      @yasssgawwwd5643 Год назад +1

      Options trading is where the money is at.

    • @matthewcain2880
      @matthewcain2880 Год назад

      That investor talk sounds so soulless. I hope people could someday invest into themselves, their families, and communities instead of investing into big corporations and single family homes.

  • @SincerelyFromStephen
    @SincerelyFromStephen Год назад +139

    Low density sprawl will cripple the city’s ability to maintain infrastructure. If the metro is going to keep growing in population, it can’t keep growing in physical size without coming to a breaking point. Eventually it all just becomes unsustainable

    • @seanthe100
      @seanthe100 Год назад +4

      The thing is this the only way for it to be cheap, it'll only get extremely expensive with density it always does. The most expensive places are the most dense ones, and the ones that are becoming more dense.

    • @spd_bird
      @spd_bird Год назад +26

      @@seanthe100 Or maybe the most dense places are the ones that are the most expensive because there was already a lot of demand there to begin with so density followed to relieve that market pressure.

    • @SincerelyFromStephen
      @SincerelyFromStephen Год назад +23

      @@seanthe100 California is extremely low density and the state is also extremely expensive. Seattle is mostly single family zoning and housing is also super expensive. And the city itself is a behemoth. Miami is a sprawling mess and it’s also becoming super unaffordable

    • @seanthe100
      @seanthe100 Год назад +2

      @@SincerelyFromStephen California sprawls, but by Urban areas Los Angeles and San Francisco are literally the most dense Urban areas in the country winch is why they are so expensive. California sprawls because of mountain ranges and valleys more than anything else. Actually the entire west coast is like this it looks like it's a significant amount of land, but when you actually look at where people are living it's really not.

    • @seanthe100
      @seanthe100 Год назад +2

      @@SincerelyFromStephen Miami also became unaffordable when the city ran out of room to sprawl now the city is actually adding density at a rapid clip and is only becoming more expensive.

  • @deshipe
    @deshipe Год назад +44

    I live in Atlanta. The beltline proves the power of a name. It's literally just a sidewalk paved over old railroad tracks. But if you called the sidewalk, no one would go to it. Call it the beltline and everybody goes.
    How does it cost so much? It's concrete.
    And, might some light rail been good idea too? You had the railroad tracks. If you really wanted to connect to Marta, you would want commuter rail (I thought that was the idea when I first heard)

    • @georgebootoo4026
      @georgebootoo4026 Год назад +7

      4.8 bilion .... for something that probably costs 1.8 billion.

    • @YouGoLearn
      @YouGoLearn Год назад

      I couldn’t agree more.

    • @sri-kaushalramana437
      @sri-kaushalramana437 Год назад +3

      they are building a light rail that's supposed to run parallel to the beltline

    • @mimitrent1163
      @mimitrent1163 Год назад +1

      They’re doing the same in Detroit-removed the railroad tracks & poured concrete in it’s place.

    • @yucol5661
      @yucol5661 Месяц назад +3

      Most if the cost is purchasing real state. It’s not just concrete. It’s parks and markets and affordable housing. Those take LOTS of space, and space is way more expensive that the materials and labour for building a park. At least it’s not a water of money since it’s basically making all the real state around it worth more. So the city as a whole is making more money.

  • @reel1tv587
    @reel1tv587 Год назад +19

    I live in Charlotte but I be in Atlanta all the time. Over the course of my life I've watched this city go from country to a mega city and in just 20 plus years. It's like every time I go down there is doubled in size. It's nothing short of Amazing.

  • @nomaticors
    @nomaticors Год назад +45

    The other day, we took a 5 minute walk from our apartment to a bowling alley. It was magical. I would prefer this transportation over a car if most things were 10 minutes away or less. Unfortunately, the next closest building is a 40 minute walk 1 way.

    • @pickmeisha
      @pickmeisha Год назад

      Lol once you factor in how many times you can get shot/robed/ran over in 10 minutes in ATL, that walk suddenly sounds less beautiful.

    • @razkrunk3169
      @razkrunk3169 Год назад

      @@pa3465 Why are you all such massive scaredy cats?

    • @razkrunk3169
      @razkrunk3169 Год назад

      @@pa3465 Lol I take it you don't drive either because you have a higher likelihood of dying in a car accident than being mugged in the streets. Stay coddled child.

    • @HigherQualityUploads
      @HigherQualityUploads 26 дней назад

      ​@@pickmeishaCars aren't some impenetrable shield. If you honk at the wrong person in Atlanta, you'll be shot just the same. It's more of an Atlanta demographics problem than how someone chooses to transport themselves.

  • @brucet2756
    @brucet2756 Год назад +51

    Just no.
    1) Marta is inefficient, underused, and underinvested.
    2) rent is too high compared to local salaries.
    3) the city is poorly designed, little sense of grid/urban planning, even with the beltline it is still incredibly unwalkable, with many neighborhoods missing sidewalks.
    4) It's a liberal city landlocked in a republican state, not to mention the Deep South in general.
    5) traffic is horrendous- it literally cannot afford to grow without major commute concerns. Atlanta is like a truck stop that just never stopped growing.

    • @jenniferlynnkarr
      @jenniferlynnkarr Год назад +10

      I love the idea of a walkable city and reducing reliance on cars, but to your 4th point, as much as I want to live in a walkable city, the state's overall political climate is terrifying and I would never move to Georgia because of the politics.

    • @tedstrogis4823
      @tedstrogis4823 Год назад +2

      @@jenniferlynnkarr Good.

    • @jenniferlynnkarr
      @jenniferlynnkarr Год назад +2

      @@tedstrogis4823 Agreed

    • @brucet2756
      @brucet2756 Год назад +6

      ​@@jenniferlynnkarr I understand. The "New South" needs to earn that "New" title. It hasn't yet.

    • @prettyclassylady6218
      @prettyclassylady6218 Год назад +4

      Ok good. Don't move here

  • @dsdddsd4543we
    @dsdddsd4543we Год назад +69

    I've been in the Atlanta Metro for 18 years. I graduated from Georgia State University. Atlanta is such a great place. The main problem has always been traffic. Most major cities, like Chicago and New York, were built with transportation infrastructure.
    However, Atlanta's growth happened in the last 50 years, with Delta making Atlanta this hub.
    I hope for an ambitious transportation plan from Atlanta for the next 20 years.

    • @GriffenDoesIt
      @GriffenDoesIt Год назад +1

      Check out MARTA's 2040 Plan...or is it called More MARTA? The communication's a nightmare but at least its ambitious
      www.itsmarta.com/uploadedFiles/City%20of%20Atlanta%20More%20MARTA_Print_Update_v7.pdf

    • @blast4me754
      @blast4me754 Год назад +3

      The main problem I have here is the crime. I would rather the traffic get worse and the crime go downwards..

    • @Racko.
      @Racko. Год назад +3

      @@blast4me754 Crime will decrease if the ppl in power were giving harsh sentences, but they're not

    • @weslierossmal1747
      @weslierossmal1747 Год назад +10

      @@Racko. crime decreases when poverty decreases. Solve that first, build infrastructure and fund the schools in the most impoverished areas

    • @Racko.
      @Racko. Год назад +2

      @@weslierossmal1747 Until you find about that the African American culture in the US has normalized bad behavior and no morality towards each other which is a huge reason for the crime, neither money or building infrastructure can fix that, it's a deep cultural issue

  • @nickstemberger1289
    @nickstemberger1289 Год назад +75

    I visited Atlanta first about 5 years back and then again this year. It's hard not to love this place. I'm glad to see it's getting its due. I look at other places like Detroit that are moving in the same direction and using the city almost as a blueprint. Is Atlanta perfect? No. But they're taking steps in the right direction and it's looking like mass transit would really benefit there.

    • @pudanielson1
      @pudanielson1 Год назад +4

      I really hope S.E Michigan pursues highspeed commuter rail between all the major areas along with light local rail. It would make this place more livable instead of being so dependent on cars

    • @yvonneplant9434
      @yvonneplant9434 Год назад +2

      Places like Detroit and Philadelphia helped build the country originally. Let's not forget that.

    • @stacynewton34
      @stacynewton34 Год назад +1

      @@yvonneplant9434 false

    • @XTRABIG
      @XTRABIG Год назад

      @@yvonneplant9434 New York. Chicago. probably had a bigger impact.

    • @neox9369
      @neox9369 Год назад

      @@yvonneplant9434 Georgia/Atlanta is amongst the original 14 colonies not Michigan

  • @gmac8586
    @gmac8586 Год назад +110

    I live in a small city in Ontario Canada. We had converted our old rail lines to bike paths over 30 years ago now. Being able to bike everywhere is a given here and we have snow! Our sidewalk snowplows also clear the main bike paths for us. People cross country ski on some of them as they connect our parks.

    • @plumpnfit
      @plumpnfit Год назад +2

      Love Canada 🍁

    • @notverynotoriousg5674
      @notverynotoriousg5674 Год назад +10

      I live off the Beltine and I am more that familiar with the politics and greed surrounding it, this video has a lot of lying greedy psychopaths. The project was started over 20 yrs ago and the guy who started it quit a couple years ago because he was tired of all the corruption, he is mentioned once in this, when Nathaniel Smith mentions "Ryan", that is Ryan Gravel, who started the project with his thesis. As it is its free marketing for developers, they refuse to put up any money to help fund it but they conveniently bought up all the land around it waiting to build overpriced "luxury" apts. My neighborhood is probably millennial central, where all the new highrises are being built, and there are literally thousands of vacant apts, the prices are entirely dictated by the developers.
      Just to give you an idea the city is using a boatload of tax money, I have no idea how much, to welcome Microsoft to raise a historically black neighborhood and build its campus, redesigning infrastructure in the area that was completely ignored when it was a black neighborhood.
      What is happening with real estate at large across the US should be criminal, while Atlanta is bad there are place much worse. To live in po dunk down in Florida with no infrastructure is going to cost almost as much as it costs to live in Atlanta, its really crazy stupid how developers are destroying the US.

    • @sonsofstretford3866
      @sonsofstretford3866 Год назад

      @P A i walk to Microsoft from the arts Center Marta everyday, where exactly are the shootings?

    • @sonsofstretford3866
      @sonsofstretford3866 Год назад

      @P A oh Damn, this is literally the first time I’m hearing about this, reading the report looks like this happened at night, I cross the 17th Street bridge around 6am in the morning and 3pm in the afternoon on my back home, around both times there’s usually no one on the bridge except sometimes there’s a local news channel capturing the sun rise in the morning

    • @sonsofstretford3866
      @sonsofstretford3866 Год назад +1

      @P A lol I’m not disagreeing with you on anything you said, same reason I feel this belt line sounds like a Utopia, if we can have shootings near Atlantic Station there’s no guarantee of public safety anywhere on the beltline north or south

  • @KailuaChick
    @KailuaChick Год назад +40

    Don’t even want to drive through Atlanta, let alone live there. The traffic and highways are terrifying.

    • @truelife974
      @truelife974 Год назад +2

      Only between 7:00 A.M. and 7:00 P.M. after that it's like you're in a small country town.

    • @apophisxo4480
      @apophisxo4480 Месяц назад

      It's honestly not that bad. Being stuck in traffic sucks no matter where you are in the world, and 75 North can be a pain, but LA and NYC are far worse! Not even a close comparison. Seeing the NYC skyline as you approach the city from Queens is unmatched, but I really like our drive through our own little skyline in the city. I'm biased, but Atlanta is a pretty town. We have some issues with crime, but it's beautiful down here. We need to keep it that way!

  • @launcelot02
    @launcelot02 Год назад +12

    Atlanta’s traffic is Hell on earth.

  • @portcybertryx222
    @portcybertryx222 Год назад +43

    Love the city. Walking around midtown and downtown where I live it is amazing to see how the city has grown. But the Beltline is a mass gentrification project that has pushed out so many people.

    • @dbclass2969
      @dbclass2969 Год назад +14

      The Beltline isn't what's causing gentrification though, it's a mix of our zoning and economic policy that's pushing people out. One being a lack of investment into low income communities where generational poverty is present, the other being selfish people who don't want to open their neighborhoods to townhomes and apartments because people who make less money than them would stay on the same street. Beltline or not, this would've occurred either way like it is in every other US city.

    • @portcybertryx222
      @portcybertryx222 Год назад +2

      @@dbclass2969 good points. The NIMBYS are definitely a problem. I hope there is a better solution to this

    • @dbclass2969
      @dbclass2969 Год назад

      @@portcybertryx222 Yes, I hope city council does what's rights when it comes to rezoning. Allow property owners to build what they want on their own property. We're not talking about putting factories next to people's homes, just asking for people to open their neighborhoods to everyone for the benefit of everyone.

    • @can72287
      @can72287 Год назад

      So wait, a jogging track is now a force of evil.
      A jogging track!
      I’m convinced some people see any form of progress or amenity as a negative. Terribly sad and unhealthy.
      For decades we have been moving in to Clayton and Henry and Rockdale and Douglass county by choice…some of us selling our urban homes in a rush to get out of summer hill and mechanicsville.
      Now that white people took an interest in it all of a sudden the story changes. 🤦🏾

    • @info781
      @info781 Год назад

      Running the interstates though the middle of the city pushed out people, they need to go underground.

  • @KamiInValhalla
    @KamiInValhalla Год назад +35

    They should build an elevated rail right next to the Belt Line. The city already owns the land so that should significantly reduce the cost.

    • @calebkopitsky7611
      @calebkopitsky7611 Год назад +14

      I’m surprised they didn’t mention it in the video but they are going to build light rail along much of the beltline, it’s just not estimated to be completed for well over a decade

    • @weenisw
      @weenisw Год назад +6

      It could also function as a rain canopy over the path. New build elevated rail is much quieter than it used to be

    • @vhateverlie
      @vhateverlie 11 месяцев назад +2

      ​@@calebkopitsky7611that seems like a timeline they should really be accelerating.

    • @MikeWiesenberg
      @MikeWiesenberg Месяц назад +1

      If it cost them 5 billion to build a walking path, how many trillions would they take to build proper rail?

    • @neuralgarden
      @neuralgarden Месяц назад

      @@MikeWiesenberg yeah but most of the cost was just purchasing real estate, and now that they own it, it's at least worth considering

  • @martingroceryservice4421
    @martingroceryservice4421 Год назад +187

    I grew up in the Oakland City and Capitol View neighborhoods in Southwest Atlanta. I’ve seen this city change so much throughout the years. In the 60s and 70s, this city was left for dead! White flight was real. I know a lot of black families took advantage of the opportunities to buy homes in the city like my grandparents. We still own a property in the Capitol View neighborhood as a family which right along the Beltline. My sister owns a home in the Venetian Hills neighborhood not that far from our old neighborhood. It’s having the foresight to see down into the future. It’s here now and a lot of Atlantans didn’t see it. But if you had bought early on you can benefit right now! Houses were going for dirt cheap in my old neighborhood! And those that are owners held on through the bad times and are going to reap the benefits. Gentrification CAN be a good thing because it improves the surrounding communities and services. But if you can’t afford to live where you stay it’s sucks

    • @NoribyNature
      @NoribyNature Год назад +34

      While i understand your viewpoint on gentrification, alot of families were uprooted when the city decided to develop these areas and unfortunately many lost their homes due to the city requiring them to leave so they could use their land or people lost homes because they could not afford the drastic tax increase. The majority of these individuals were people of color who had lived in their homes for decades 😞.
      Your family is fortunate to still have their home 🙏🏾

    • @martingroceryservice4421
      @martingroceryservice4421 Год назад +18

      @@NoribyNature i understand your point. And i understand t that the reality of the situation is that people are being priced out and sold out to developers and investors. And sad to say a lot of them are black Atlantans who are born and raised. But honestly how long did people think that it was going to stay this way? Atlanta isn’t Detroit. The Fortune 500 companies eyed Atlanta for a reason. I’m not saying my family was smart in that they saw all this coming. They just was in the right place at the right time. My grandfathers parents come to Atlanta in the 50s with nothing. But understood home ownership. And let’s be real. The rates on these house are artificially inflated! If your poor you can’t afford them. It’s sad and I hate to see it. I would also encourage a native however to get a group of their family or friends they trust. Form a LLC or INC. Pull their money together. And try to buy in on that Atlanta Land Trust. That is a smart move for getting some investment in the City. I love my City and didn’t like when natives get taken advantage of or priced out because we are Atlanta.

    • @NoribyNature
      @NoribyNature Год назад +6

      @@martingroceryservice4421 Absolutely! Thats a great idea honestly. It seems the majority of the ones who were bought out didnt have the knowledge to understand how this works. There are also others, one of whom an organization I worked with tried to help, who was raised in the home she lived in. The city decided they needed to build a detention pond and her home was going to be destroyed in order for the city to do so. Unfortunately, they cut her a check and she had no say so in the matter. These companies prey on communities that are in need, knowing they will not have the wherewithal to dispute them. It’s a combination of lack of education and capital leaving our black communities in the dust, thereby forcing these people to the eastside or other areas where the vibration is low and rid with crime. I pray we build a generation of new leaders who will ensure our communities have the resources they need to build wealth and thriving businesses that will last for centuries and beyond.

    • @ADOS_DSGB
      @ADOS_DSGB Год назад

      How do they benefit? By selling their homes to non blacks contributing to displacement of black families?

    • @ADOS_DSGB
      @ADOS_DSGB Год назад +7

      @@martingroceryservice4421 These home prices are out of range for not only the poor but the working class, even people with degrees can't afford them. Atlanta use to be a place where a black blue collar working class family could afford to live, that's not the case anymore. You have to make 6 figures just to get by.

  • @dougwatson-dv7ok
    @dougwatson-dv7ok Год назад +88

    I have lived in Atlanta since 1995. I have ridden my bike, on Rail trails and Greenways, all over the South East. So many cities have done a faster, cheaper job than Atlanta of creating a linear park system that works. I believe the Beltline was an amazing idea, but I am very convinced it has become a corrupt endeavor. It's taking an existing rail trail and it still only has small sections completed all over the city. In the meantime, it's the public investors that are making all the return on rising property values, so no one seems intent on completing it in a timely manner. Think about it. $4.8 billion to build a wide sidewalk over a 20-year timespan. If the public has invested (think private companies) more than $8 billion, around it, it is not out of some altruistic urge. For sure the government officials overseeing it are getting something personally. Not surprised that some of the original visionaries, left the organization, disappointed, and the folks with perfect hair, makeup, and outfits remain.

    • @fib4923
      @fib4923 Год назад

      It is defintely scrunitzed and overpriced. Is there an audit to this project?

    • @alexk6126
      @alexk6126 Год назад +4

      There are entire massive parks included with the BeltLine funding. It’s not all just a sidewalk. It’s also a bunch of land remediation from the toxic metals left by the train traffic

    • @vintagemotorcyclerepair4052
      @vintagemotorcyclerepair4052 Год назад +2

      @kahnquistador Well, that explains it.
      I'm calling this project a complete success.

    • @christophersorel6056
      @christophersorel6056 Год назад +1

      50 years of systemic democrats. Vote red for once morons.

    • @vintagemotorcyclerepair4052
      @vintagemotorcyclerepair4052 Год назад

      @@christophersorel6056 Democrats are definitely the "systemic" cancer that needs to be removed.

  • @georgiabrother
    @georgiabrother Год назад +23

    Atlanta's beltline is nice for walking BUT the city itself is becoming expensive as hxll to live in. Even degreed professionals are not getting salaries here to match the new and insane inflation prices. Yes, big name companies are here but they are not providing big salaries to match for most residents. They are only that, big names. Delta Airlines definitely does not need to be named with them paying college grads $15/hr in many cases and flight attendants $30 in a place where it is recommended that you make 110k annually to live comfortably (all of a sudden). Natives and incoming residents cannot even buy themselves homes/properties due to investors buying up the city and leaving nothing but high rent to the everyday and middle class people of the city. The city has began bullying and pushing out its Black lower AND middle class residents with expensive developments. Capitalism at its worst.

  • @stateofkrunk
    @stateofkrunk Год назад +30

    i was one of the people who were originally against the belt line. i live in this area and thought there was way to0 much crime. wow was i wrong the belt line is amazing. if this is an example of gentrification i hope your city gets some soon. the cops use to tell me not to stop at red lights at night. now you can safely walk your dog. the progress is incredible.

  • @Cuminbeef
    @Cuminbeef Год назад +70

    I fell in love with Atlanta ten years ago when I visited, it’s such an international city that you will find people from anywhere in the world, great job market and affordable houses

    • @enigmathegrayman2953
      @enigmathegrayman2953 Год назад +18

      …..THEN certainly not NOW

    • @Dsexh_dsexh
      @Dsexh_dsexh Год назад +8

      I feel like you just described every city I’ve ever been too. So idk why you singularly claim it’s an Atlanta thing

    • @Geophrie39
      @Geophrie39 Год назад +1

      @@Dsexh_dsexh Only Atlanta has diversity.

    • @Cuminbeef
      @Cuminbeef Год назад +3

      @@Dsexh_dsexhNYC and CA are both international, but it will be much harder to buy a house in a nice neighborhood.

    • @djwoosie98
      @djwoosie98 Год назад

      @@Cuminbeef not it won't

  • @DezNaomi
    @DezNaomi Год назад +19

    Atlanta native here- everyone is talking about public transportation, the video briefly mentioned that Marta expansion keeps getting blocked but it didn’t give a reason why. It’s because the affluent suburbs don’t want the “riff raff” coming into their areas and keep voting no on it. Fear of crime is how it’s messaged, which we all know is coded racism and classism. It’s continued to block expansion and block opportunities for everyone, and it only looks like it’s getting worse. Gotta address that before any public transportation will get fixed

    • @incubus3114
      @incubus3114 Год назад

      I don't think it has anything to do with racism, classism for sure. Rich people want to keep the "Riff Raff" out of cobb County. That's why the Braves moved. They found our that the people buying tickets for games were the folks on the Northside. The belt line is only going to raise home prices and force poor folk out. It is the Olympics all over again. I hate the idea that it's racism. People get the two confused. its rich vs poor. Riff raff comes in all colors.

    • @Ray-pp5qb
      @Ray-pp5qb Год назад

      exactly!!!

    • @NathanGWright
      @NathanGWright Год назад

      I'm sincerely not trying to be naive, but how is fear of crime coded racism?

    • @keinlanz
      @keinlanz Месяц назад +3

      Except crime is an actual problem, not a made up one. So it isn't actually racism, it's basic pattern recognition and letitimate concern. At what point do communities start addressing this head on instead of always deflecting responsibility for it?

  • @Bluejaye2020
    @Bluejaye2020 Год назад +89

    I used to live in the city then we relocated to College Park (10-15 mins away). I LOVE the Beltine. It’s like a little city in ATL. Definitely gentrified but a nice change since a lot of those areas were abandoned.

    • @jamesbott3788
      @jamesbott3788 Год назад

      Getting tired of this… you know what im talking about.

    • @Bluejaye2020
      @Bluejaye2020 Год назад

      @@jamesbott3788 ???

    • @neox9369
      @neox9369 7 месяцев назад

      So what if it’s gentrified…look at the opposite effect over in Clayton county. I’ll take gentrification over generational dysfunction that seems to never end in “predominant” homogeneous areas.👌🏾

  • @fataznboi911
    @fataznboi911 Год назад +9

    I lived in Atlanta metro my whole life. The city’s crime is getting so bad. My car has broken into, been robbed with a knife, saw someone get carjacked in the ‘safe spot’ of Atlanta. If it wasn’t for Johns Creek, Duluth, and Suwannee I would have left already

    • @jaywoods378
      @jaywoods378 Год назад +3

      Yes, I find it very convenient that they didn't mention that (and also most of the comments here are making Atlanta sound so amazing). Finally got out of there. It is a complete nightmare with the crime. I lived in a so called "nice area", and we didn't go out after dark. The constant sounds of gunfire and street racing was terrifying.

    • @BearingMySeoul
      @BearingMySeoul Год назад +5

      @@jaywoods378 Not everyone's built for cities.
      The people who are raving about Atlanta, would probably praise NYC or San Francisco just as highly. There's a mindset and energy needed to endure the annoyances and potential dangers of big city living. It is what it is. 🤷‍♀

    • @blast4me754
      @blast4me754 Год назад +2

      Atlanta has too many pookie and ray-ray looking dudes walking around.

    • @neox9369
      @neox9369 7 месяцев назад

      @@blast4me754so does DC, Philly, Chicago, NYC, Charlotte, Jacksonville, Miami etc….. just act like they don’t exist and avoid them 👌🏾

  • @robertsmith5744
    @robertsmith5744 Год назад +20

    Nashville, TN needs a massive trolley system for the entire metropolitan area.

    • @loveblushpink
      @loveblushpink Год назад +3

      I'm from Nashville I moved because it became to expensive. They don't give a crap about anything but what the rich want. The difference between rich and poor is very clear. I'm very disappointed in the city. Even downtown isn't the same. For all the tourists we get, they can find better ways to invest into the city.

    • @areoladan5580
      @areoladan5580 Год назад +3

      EVERY metro area needs a massive trolley system. I can’t wait for a future where I don’t need to own a car anymore.

    • @Healthyagingwithmarvin
      @Healthyagingwithmarvin Год назад

      Nashville and Tennessee only want to fund corporate relocations and tourism. Nothing is being done about transportation and upgrading public infrastructure throughout the state. Why not build a city for the people first then incentivize growth.

    • @ciaraoh9102
      @ciaraoh9102 Год назад

      Only fairies take trollies

    • @uploadvidz4490
      @uploadvidz4490 Год назад

      Or something, bc traffic is terrible there too

  • @CrownRider
    @CrownRider Год назад +14

    My whole country is built that way. The Netherlands has walkable / bikable cities and Public Transport is high quality and affordable.

    • @DiamondFlame45
      @DiamondFlame45 Год назад

      The thing is, in America they still want you to be car dependent so they don’t invest that much in public transportation because of lobbying. The same applies to affordable housing. Real estate developers bribe local politics from enacting affordable housing. But they will approve development for high rises

    • @valeriabellettinijerves4308
      @valeriabellettinijerves4308 Год назад

      True

    • @peregrino9154
      @peregrino9154 2 дня назад +1

      And really good pancakes.

  • @jermainelatimer804
    @jermainelatimer804 Год назад +15

    I moved to Atlanta back in 2004 when I was 21, and I got offered at least 10-15 jobs in a week or two. I just finished community college and I was staying in Decatur off Wesley Chapel and Snapfinger and I never looked back. Coming from South Carolina it was a whole new world for me and I got caught up with the nightlife. My biggest mistake ever. My advice to coming to ATL is don't stay in the city unless you make over 75k a year. A two bedroom will easily cost you 2500 a month in rent. I would suggest moving to Henry or Gwinnett County. That's just my opinion 🤷. Besides it's crowded everywhere you go. I have met more people from outside of Atlanta than I have who are from Georgia. If you do decide to come, make you have a plan for yourself and your family.

    • @z0tw
      @z0tw Год назад +1

      I agree about the traffic part. I live in northwest cobb and commute to the opposite side of cobb 5 daya a week for work. It takes me like 45 to 55 minutes to get home even at 4 pm which is just around the start of rush hour. There is massive congestion on i75 northbound at the marietta/roswell exit around six flags white water. That whole area slows down immensely just for relatively moderate merging traffic and then some.
      Also the cobstruction compabies these last couple of weekends have decided to clise off 3 of the 5 lanes to do some sort of paving or cleanup on either shoulder. Like what is the point of this? Can it not wait for the nighttime?
      Kennesaw Mountain area is also very much in need of roundabouts on Old Hwy 41 and even in connection to Stilesboro. There are a couple of lights there that take forever in a day to give consistent traffic flow especially right in front of the visitors center located there. All it takes is for a couple of people to leave the main parking and wanting to take a left onto old hwy 41 and boom, instant traffic buildup. Roundabouts are definitely needed in suburban Atlanta in the worst ways possible. Idc if i have to detour for a whole month if it means better traffic flow in the future.

    • @jermainelatimer804
      @jermainelatimer804 Год назад

      @@z0tw exactly.

  • @Cuttypie201
    @Cuttypie201 Год назад +15

    Making atl walkable with a better Marta system and bike-able will improve the health of people. Humans need to move not sit all day.

  • @NICOGIA300
    @NICOGIA300 Год назад +13

    An incredible city that has a very bright future!! I love Atlanta and the surrounding suburbs.

  • @cutsomeone
    @cutsomeone Год назад +54

    It’s cool to know that the city’s officials aren’t as oblivious as they may seem to someone on the outside looking around.
    There’s always talk about crime, but very rarely is their acknowledgment about the cities role in creating this unfortunate situation for so many and how the investors have only amplified the tension.
    This video touched on pretty much everything both right and wrong with Atlanta today.
    Thank you for the transparency.

    • @MorganKreig
      @MorganKreig Год назад

      The only person responsible for crime is the perpetrator.

    • @cutsomeone
      @cutsomeone Год назад +1

      @@MorganKreig why is there a perpetrator, how did the “perpetrator” get in that situation, and are there more who share a similar trajectory? If so then “how do we get to the root issue and avoid worsening the problem?” Should be our thinking.
      Very occasionally do you meet an individual who is naughty by nature (pun). In most instances people who end up in troubled situations have a trail of red tape behind them.
      Lack of compassion/understanding is what makes things worse before they have a chance to get better.

    • @MorganKreig
      @MorganKreig Год назад

      @@cutsomeone Single mothers and the destruction of the nuclear family.

  • @2TMarie
    @2TMarie Год назад +12

    I think every city/state, should have bike & walking paths everywhere! Safer, increases health & environment because, it's better to walk & bike than drive!

  • @rauli386
    @rauli386 Год назад +11

    What a surprice, you build a walkable alternative and sudenly the price hikes.

  • @sonyamoste
    @sonyamoste Год назад +4

    I worked on the Beltline project from 2004-2010. Glad to see it's coming along. Great project!!! Hi Amanda.

  • @TlawFoto.CityofATL
    @TlawFoto.CityofATL Год назад +28

    As a Native, I can say The Beltline is as transformative as the Olympics were. I saw many of those who moved here for The Olympics get priced out by The Beltline. I walk The Beltline everyday!

  • @Kindness808
    @Kindness808 Год назад +12

    This is great! I'm interested in living in cities that are prioritizing public transit, walking paths, bike paths. It's what newer generations of workers want to see. Cities that aren't prioritizing this infrastructure are going to find themselves behind. Atlanta has its problems...all cities do. Absolutely. This is the right direction. Very commendable.

  • @rikwarren3999
    @rikwarren3999 Год назад +18

    I have lived in the City for 45 years. Gentrification is inevitable as locations become more desirable. Are you going to tell another they cannot sell their land at market price? The reason (IMO) for Atlanta's lack of rapid transit is the states antipathy towards Atlanta and the Depart. of Transportation's lock on transport budgets. I suggest we issue window stickers or transponders for everyone who lives and pays property taxes within the City and collect a toll for others entering the city. Tourists passing thru can circumvent the city via I285 and others who don't want to pay the toll will take the train and bus network. Eliminate any new surface parking lots. Commercial developers tear down existing buildings and warehouse the land buying it for parking.

  • @jiggyfun807
    @jiggyfun807 Год назад +14

    Atlanta traffic is odd, people make it personal and won't let you merge in.
    I like Atlanta, I hope the growth makes it demand more from developers. (They will pay for public art if you make them)

  • @juanitabing2739
    @juanitabing2739 Год назад +74

    As a person from ATL, born and raised, it's great to see the city grow as much as it has over the years... But what is disappointing is that former Atlanta mayor, Maynard Jackson worked with major organizations after the '96 Olympics to bring in jobs/opportunities for the citizens of Atlanta. However, when these companies came to Atlanta, they brought in their staff and did not hire local talent. Most people will say that the local people didn't qualify, but every job gives you on-the-job training. Whether you're a barista at Starbucks or an Engineer at Microsoft, you will be trained on how to do your job. With the number of companies coming to Atlanta, there should be no families, especially Atlanta locals, making less than $60,000 annually. I challenge the Atlanta officials to make companies hire and train a certain percentage of true Atlanta natives. This will help bridge the wealth/unemployment gap within the city.

    • @universalsuccess3776
      @universalsuccess3776 Год назад +7

      That means they would actually have to care. They'd rather just act clueless on RUclips videos. If we can think of solutions ofcourse they can. But theres no profit in that. Better off just blaming them, like all people of color are their own problems. When they were the ones in the city for decades making the city what it is today

    • @smwokk
      @smwokk Год назад +14

      That would be ridiculous to say the locals didn't qualify. Atlanta has a highly educated population with people from every corner of business. You're 100% correct.

    • @dondeal3561
      @dondeal3561 Год назад

      If you gonna keep voting for the boule Blacks they are gonna sell you out every time. Andre is boule you may not even be able to shake his hand let alone get him to look out for the natives

    • @LeeeroyJenkins
      @LeeeroyJenkins Год назад +8

      Hiring workers from other areas means they can jack up the price of housing. Which means more tax dollars for them. And if you are to poor to leave, that means you’ll continue to pay tax for the rest of your life. So a win win for the government.

    • @greg-iw7mf
      @greg-iw7mf Год назад +1

      It's expensive to have extensive on-the-job training for white collar jobs because there's no such thing as loyalty anymore for both parties. So if a company trains an expensive engineer for a year and the guy leaves right after (which happens pretty frequently), then what's the point?

  • @ZeMarkKrazee
    @ZeMarkKrazee Год назад +5

    I hate Atlanta. The traffic is absolutely horrible. It takes forever to get anywhere.

  • @eze3914
    @eze3914 Год назад +3

    ATL.
    LOW WAGES.
    RIDICULOUS TRAFFIC.
    BUGS, HUMIDITY.
    COPS MESS WITH EVERYONE.

  • @bobbullethalf
    @bobbullethalf Год назад +5

    Great idea, any city that has a walkable or bike-able loop is a place that is highly valued. Great job Atlanta!

  • @elijahsplaytime2540
    @elijahsplaytime2540 Год назад +5

    I visited Atlanta a few years ago and I wasn't impressed. Extremely overrated and underwhelming

    • @saratemp790
      @saratemp790 Год назад

      You have to go to the right areas.

  • @anthonymalik9952
    @anthonymalik9952 Год назад +22

    I moved to Atlanta two decades ago and hated it back then but today I think it is one of the best cities in the country. Interesting, intelligent, ambitious people from all over the U.S. are flocking here which I consider a net positive despite the rise in cost of living. I think the key for young newcomers is that they should bring a utilizable skill. The city has tremendous opportunity but without the skills to meet those opportunities you're SOL. Atlanta will chew you whole and spit you out.

  • @gregkeelen8428
    @gregkeelen8428 Год назад +10

    I live here. This investment is great. This gentrification is awful.
    More transit, better walkway, and more housing supply

    • @nishiljaiswal2216
      @nishiljaiswal2216 Год назад +3

      and less suburban sprawl

    • @LeeeroyJenkins
      @LeeeroyJenkins Год назад +1

      @@nishiljaiswal2216 so… less housing supply.
      People seem to HATE skyscrapers and suburban sprawl. Then complain about a lack of affordable housing.

    • @pranaym3859
      @pranaym3859 Год назад +2

      @@LeeeroyJenkins Mix of everything dude, Americans are outrageous it's either extreme or nothing

    • @nishiljaiswal2216
      @nishiljaiswal2216 Год назад +1

      @@LeeeroyJenkins are those the only 2 options? We need more apartments, duplexes, triplexes, multiplexes, low rise, mid rise

    • @LeeeroyJenkins
      @LeeeroyJenkins Год назад +1

      @@nishiljaiswal2216 There is no difference between living on the fourth floor or the seventh floor. Both floors will probably need elevator access. And on both floors you don’t have to worry about noise on the ground as much as the first 2 floor.

  • @griffinmaxwell789
    @griffinmaxwell789 Год назад +12

    As someone who grew up in the suburbs and has been wanting to move into the city after I graduated college, it's just way too unaffordable at the moment. The beltline has contributed a lot to this

    • @A1fbggrxwnshxxter
      @A1fbggrxwnshxxter Год назад +2

      Make more money

    • @griffinmaxwell789
      @griffinmaxwell789 Год назад +3

      @@A1fbggrxwnshxxter if only it were that simple 🤯

    • @can72287
      @can72287 Год назад

      How selfish. So no progress because you can’t live exactly where you want to live.
      Make more money or reroute your dreams.

    • @griffinmaxwell789
      @griffinmaxwell789 Год назад

      @can72287 you're just talking out of your ass dude. Go look up the cost of 1 Br, 1 bath Apts in atlanta. You can't even find a nice 700 Sq ft apt for

    • @A1fbggrxwnshxxter
      @A1fbggrxwnshxxter Год назад +1

      @@griffinmaxwell789 but it is, you’re in control of your own life the only thing that will ever be in your way is you, or you can sit around and throw a pity party feeling bad for yourself all day which only yields undesirable results. You went to college, I didn’t and I still can afford to live right off of north ave and Piedmont ave in a luxury mid rise unit, why? Because I go and get what I want, you can too.

  • @zahawolfe
    @zahawolfe Месяц назад +1

    4:03 I love the attempt to say a 15 minute city without using the term (which now has stigma behind it)

  • @RonKraftwerk
    @RonKraftwerk Год назад +5

    It amazes me when these planners states that these large tech firms are going to bring firms that will have million dollar salaries. There may a hand full of gold making that kind of money. Good selling point. Lot of 6 figure salaries, but you can bet the house on offshore jobs will take up the bulk of the workforce. Why pay an Atlanta transplant or whatever, when they can sign contract in India, Poland, Mexico, or Greece for $20k a year. Sounds like a good ole gentrification plan. Traffic is terrible in Atlanta.

  • @rontom3405
    @rontom3405 Год назад +9

    building the place for the people not for cars.
    this idea has been done in denmark,berlin, thenetherlands
    walkable cities is something the US need as a whole
    " whole communities " are walkable cities.. nothing new We are just catching up

  • @GeorgiaMade404706
    @GeorgiaMade404706 Год назад +7

    This is definitely NOT the city I grew up in. Doesn’t seem like the South anymore with southern culture and values because of all the transplants.

    • @nTrubl3
      @nTrubl3 Месяц назад

      Long gone from the southern city it once was

  • @davidgolf3245
    @davidgolf3245 Год назад +5

    Random thoughts from Australia. Forget a transit system, they should have trails for horse and buggy. Thanks I am here all week!!!

  • @Atlexplore
    @Atlexplore 2 месяца назад +1

    Atlanta is truly going through a massive transformation. Fortune 500 companies, Art, culture, sports and great weather. Amazing time to be a resident!

  • @markfennell1604
    @markfennell1604 Год назад +31

    I lived within the BELT line and moved out to Mcdonough which is about 30-40 min drive to downtown. Best decision i've ever made not only i was able to afford a brand new home my commute has also has gotten 10X better. it's funny how moving just 30 minutes from downtown can make life so much better.

    • @Ray-pp5qb
      @Ray-pp5qb Год назад +4

      you better erase the name of your town before they come running over there jacking up your cost of living. Keep it on the low long as ya can. lol

    • @thehoneydeev
      @thehoneydeev Год назад +2

      Congratulations on your new home

    • @A1fbggrxwnshxxter
      @A1fbggrxwnshxxter Год назад +1

      You just lame, there’s no way you’re telling me living in McDonough is better than downtown 😭 there’s nothing in McDonough just a bunch of police.

    • @RK7LifeLine
      @RK7LifeLine Год назад +1

      Same, moved to Conyers in Rockdale county and boy oh boy... That was the best decision ever...I don't mind driving 40 min to downtown.

    • @geniegoldroyalty7371
      @geniegoldroyalty7371 Год назад

      @@RK7LifeLine how is Conyers? I'm considering a home there, but since I've lived in the city for over 10 years or near it, Idk how it would be with the lack of public transportation.

  • @baronvonjo1929
    @baronvonjo1929 Год назад +14

    Everybody I know and met in the south HATES Atlanta.
    The traffic is the biggest reason.
    And when I went it was very.... ugly... run down, homelessness, bad attitudes by the locals, ugly buildings.
    This was several years ago. I hope it has changed.
    They need to focus on building a more livable city beyond cars. However saying that and doing that are very different things.
    I think I'm technically part of the megalopolis that includes Atlanta and cities to the north from SC to NC.
    Man so many people are moving here. The infrastructure is not designed for it. Deforestation everywhere. Thousands of cheap, ugly, cookie cutter wooden suburbs, townhouses, apartments being built everywhere. I suppose if we were growing we would be declining. But this growth is just so needlessly ugly and impractical.

  • @robbiestalker898
    @robbiestalker898 Год назад +7

    I've lived near Atlanta my whole life. I go actually in Atlanta about once a week. There's different parts of the beltline I actually like. I feel like there's only like a 5 mile section that's worth walking which i've a couple times. It's really nice, it has a lot of coffee shops one of which has the best donuts i've ever had. So I feel like certain parts of the beltline are becoming more actually cool and convenient. If you want to walk around the city areas and not the out skirts I would walk the streets around Centennial Olympic Park but that's a touristy part. Little 5 Points is also a great option.

    • @ethanovation
      @ethanovation Год назад +1

      I need the name of that shop, for donut research proposes lol.

  • @aaronhutchinson885
    @aaronhutchinson885 Год назад +11

    I lived North of the city for 8 years. Moved down from the DMV area where I thought traffic was nuts. Then I hit 85/400/285 and the side streets..my goodness. Forget being near perimeter from 330 until 830..traffic like I've never seen. I miss the food, but not the traffic or the airport TSA lines..👀👀👀

    • @jeremiah_12
      @jeremiah_12 Месяц назад

      DC has way worse traffic than ATL.

  • @ronaldfranke9225
    @ronaldfranke9225 Год назад +20

    The Atlanta area is the world's best-kept secret for wonderful walking and biking trails; the BeltLine is just a small part of that whole picture. The Silver Comet Trail from Cobb County to the Alabama border includes wonderful views and connects diverse neighborhoods. Talk about the southeast side, the beautiful Rockdale River Trail and the trails that connect to it include Martin Luther King High School, Panola Mountain State Park, the Monastery of the Holy Spirit, and Arabia Mountain National Heritage Area as well as large majority-minority neighborhoods.

    • @bradIeyyy
      @bradIeyyy Год назад

      Yeah and getting robbed or kiIIed by bIack gang members

    • @XTRABIG
      @XTRABIG Год назад

      safety?

    • @tglaspie7037
      @tglaspie7037 Год назад

      😯🤫🤫hush! 🤐

    • @XTRABIG
      @XTRABIG Год назад

      @@tglaspie7037 hahaaaa i gotta explore it being an outdoor person myself... but i'll keep it hush

  • @alihussain4349
    @alihussain4349 Год назад +5

    Istanbul is a city of more than 16 million. It is on two continents. It has a multi-type mass transit system (which is faster than taking a car. Its incredibly cheap to use and CLEAN. Look it up. Why can't it be here?

    • @greg-iw7mf
      @greg-iw7mf Год назад +3

      because racism and NIMBYism

    • @skaterboi65
      @skaterboi65 Год назад +1

      they don't want it

    • @alihussain4349
      @alihussain4349 Год назад +1

      @@skaterboi65 Most of the Istanbul metro, made up of subways, trams, underground fast trains, underground tunnels for cars to bypass the downtown core, gondolas, boats, fast buses on their own dedicated lanes were all built in the last 20 years. In a city that is already 1700 years old. If you have the will it will get done. You are right, they don't it.

  • @langstonj2476
    @langstonj2476 Год назад +2

    great to see my city represented! I recognized so many locations and places from the shots of the video. I literally recognized the places the shots of the Marta were taken lol. Very cool vid :)

    • @WangMotions
      @WangMotions 12 часов назад

      yeah atlanta downtown a small place. My dorm was in the drone shots

  • @shellyu1442
    @shellyu1442 2 месяца назад +1

    I moved into downtown Atlanta for ease of commute, lived there for 2 weeks and my car was vanadalized in the gated parking garage that left me with $6k of damage, i put in with managmenet to break my lease and move out right away…

  • @ShortVersion1
    @ShortVersion1 Год назад +14

    The beltline is like a sarcastic joke when wrapped around such an otherwise sickly city.
    Don't get me wrong, the beltline is nice for a leisurely visit, but Atlanta is slowly killing everyone who lives (works) there. Until they figure out the 4-hour commutes, leading-class wealth inequality, and braindead public transit... the beltline's just another reminder of how far from sustainable the city actually is.

  • @ispinola
    @ispinola Год назад +3

    Love walkable cities 🌆 So much value in this mode of transportation. Simple, smart, and great in many ways!

  • @houchi69
    @houchi69 Год назад +31

    Let's hope they are going to hold their ground and do this right.
    With all the large corporation establishing their headquarters here, if they don't put in legislative measures to control the real estate prices, it will only turned into another Silicon Valley, and eventually, it will decline.

    • @diverman1023
      @diverman1023 Год назад +3

      My issue is the crime. The Marta system is very unsafe, many bad neighborhoods are also “connected”, etc..

  • @wompa70
    @wompa70 13 дней назад

    I came to Atlanta in 1999. I lived on the south side in Morrow and worked at Ft Mac. Then moved to Newnan less than a year later. In that time I've worked in Ellenwood, at Delta, at Georgia Tech, near the Arts Center MARTA station, and in Peachtree City. My small company in PTC was bought by a bigger company with an office way up in Alpharetta. The seven of us down here refused to make that commute and we were converted to full time remote. Outside of the airport, I haven't been inside the Atlanta city limits in 3 years. And that was for Dragoncon.

  • @daneflanigan
    @daneflanigan Год назад +12

    Great segment, I lived in Dallas in late 90’s and saw communication jobs come in as it became a telecom powerhouse. It’s the dichotomy of a growing city, along with displacement and gentrification.

    • @genzofthe2148
      @genzofthe2148 Год назад +2

      I’ve lived in Dallas since I was born and it’s growing everyday especially people moving North to Plano, Frisco and Allen

    • @buzz469
      @buzz469 Год назад

      Dallas continues to have some of the exact issues that are present in Atlanta: severe income inequality, divestment, unaffordable housing, displaced people, limited transit (especially on the South and South Eastern side), private investors scooping up properties, food deserts in minority-majority communities. Growth is happening primarily in the northern part of the metroplex.

    • @deyoungyoung3059
      @deyoungyoung3059 Год назад

      I live in the Big D born and bred. Sadly I will be leaving in a few months because it’s getting too expensive with a lot of folks from California and the Northeast moving in. I’m moving to Iowa in a few months. Wish me luck.

    • @gregorriusadolphus2729
      @gregorriusadolphus2729 Год назад

      Dallas and Atlanta are one in the same....big boring cities where you can find a good job and great places to launch a career. That's about all the "charm: they hold lol

    • @daneflanigan
      @daneflanigan Год назад

      @@buzz469 solid points, what happened with the train system?

  • @Frisbeeninja2
    @Frisbeeninja2 Год назад +4

    Who knew that people would pay a premium to live next to pedestrian priority infrastructure! *(Sarcasm)*

  • @TheTrill334
    @TheTrill334 8 месяцев назад +1

    I havent lived in atanta in 20 years but i see why people love the beltline . Before the beltline there was no easy way to walk or bike through atlanta safely. When they add the rail its going to really be the happening area of Atlanta. Because now you can not need a car to go out .

  • @andrewe.7907
    @andrewe.7907 2 месяца назад +1

    Don't live in Atlanta, but when driving thru I always dread that stretch of the 20 and beltway. No matter what it's always brutal..

  • @jeffbezos4746
    @jeffbezos4746 Год назад +3

    They have 8 billion dollars for a walking path. And there's still no homeless shelters or mental hospitals

  • @drewh3224
    @drewh3224 Год назад +7

    Im NYC. I will never want to move to Atlanta!! There are so many eyes opening choices for bizness or for life from around the tropical world where it could be 10 times better than Atlanta!

    • @campertaeva
      @campertaeva Год назад +1

      Way To many Hispanics & Asians in NYC for my liking.

    • @asianstud7
      @asianstud7 Год назад

      @@campertaeva you racist

    • @rikwarren3999
      @rikwarren3999 Год назад +2

      @@campertaeva Wow, tell us how you really feel! How does Atlanta stack up in that regards?

    • @Boxhead42
      @Boxhead42 Год назад +1

      And there are so many places better to move to than overpriced NYC. An awesome place to visit, but not to live. No city is worth living in a noisy cardboard box vs living in a 3k square foot home, for the same price.

    • @dreamscometrue246
      @dreamscometrue246 Год назад +1

      ❤️ NYC

  • @akinmytua4680
    @akinmytua4680 Месяц назад +1

    My husband and I lived in midtown (in his father's condo purchased in 1999) for about 6 months in 2016. And I remember when we were trying to find an apartment near Ponce and the beltline had just gotten built there. And the prices shocked me then. I can't imagine it now.

    • @conqueror03
      @conqueror03 25 дней назад

      Prices are in the millions now, its ridiculous.

  • @MIYDNA
    @MIYDNA Год назад +2

    Cary, NC and the surrounding towns invested in a similar Greenway years ago. It is excellent

  • @teranova5566
    @teranova5566 Год назад +3

    I am sorry I watched this video by accident looking at huge price 4.8 bn$ and I want to compare it to the price in Warsaw Poland of the new metro system M1. I noticed 4.8 bln $/22m of walkway. That is only 35.2 km and it means cost of 136 mln $/km. Now the 23km of line M1 in Warsaw costed around 885 mln $. That means the price of 38.5 mln $/km.
    So in summary the underground metro in Warsaw was cheaper by 3.5 times than the walkway in Atlanta.
    Absolutely unbeliveble how you in Atlanta can waste money 💰!

  • @boatymcboatface18
    @boatymcboatface18 Год назад +26

    It's hard to understate the weather factor.
    No matter the economic policies and incentives, cities like Miami and Atlanta would not be growing at anywhere near the same rate if they experienced brutal winters.

    • @andrewsteavpack9079
      @andrewsteavpack9079 Год назад +10

      Denver, Salt Lake City, Bozeman, Seattle Portland all have winter weather and are also growing rapidly

    • @MarkWongMD
      @MarkWongMD Год назад +3

      @@andrewsteavpack9079 Portland and Seattle are definitely not growing rapidly they are both losing more people than anything. The other ones on your list are though.

    • @sortasurvival5482
      @sortasurvival5482 Год назад +4

      Ya minneapolis would like to have a word...

    • @TeedAtlanta
      @TeedAtlanta Год назад

      Miami and Atlanta have nothing in common weather wise except maybe the month of August.

    • @angelaburress8586
      @angelaburress8586 Год назад

      But Miami exchanged brutal winters for hurricane 🌀 season so it all equals out!!!! and most of Florida’s population is due to retirement Miami is gonna be Miami no matter what just like Orlando is going to be Orlando because of Disney

  • @advanced8998
    @advanced8998 Год назад +9

    The only thing rising in Atlanta is homelessness

    • @jaywoods378
      @jaywoods378 Год назад

      And crime.

    • @geniegoldroyalty7371
      @geniegoldroyalty7371 Год назад +1

      This is very true! I'm even homeless rn but it's cuz of other reasons besides the job opportunities because there are plenty of low class jobs in this city thankfully.

  • @josiahclagett7369
    @josiahclagett7369 Год назад +2

    It's a bummer that those guys resigned. The solution here is not less beltline but more. This is proof that people want SAFE walk/bike space that connects them to work and life. I think they should just continue stretching out the beltline so that it's not so scarce. Scarcity and desireablity are a recipe for inflated prices. We've got proof that the beltline is desireable. Let's make it less scarce by making more of it. Driving in Atlanta is awful, and took years off my life (in stress) when I lived there. More beltline please.

  • @losojohnson672
    @losojohnson672 Год назад +4

    The belt line is nice! Unfortunately if you live along the belt line your rent has increased 500-1000 dollars and your apartment is outdated! We need rent security or some laws in place to help residents in these areas.

    • @info781
      @info781 Год назад

      Rents are going up all over the country.

  • @XLseattle
    @XLseattle Год назад +4

    Like the Seattle’s hugely popular repurposed rail line called the Burke-Gilman that was repurposed into a bike walk trail back into early 1980s

  • @chillydawgg4354
    @chillydawgg4354 Год назад

    Been following this project for a few years & think it's really cool!

  • @troytruong8246
    @troytruong8246 Год назад +49

    I have a small business right next to the beltline. It is so exciting and fun to work near the belt line. I can get to any locations such as grocery stores, ponce city market mall, piedmont park, etc just by walking. Or i can get to these places in 3-5 mins on my escooter. So many hot chicks 😁

    • @mhairsto24
      @mhairsto24 Год назад +6

      That last part of your statement!!! 👍👍👍👍👍👍💪💪💪💪💪💪💪💪. So many beautiful ladies flock to Atlanta. I used to live in Atlanta back in 2005-2006, the airport was the place to work at, beautiful ladies from Phoenix, Arizona, Milwaukee, Detroit and other cities were coming to get a piece of the Atlanta experience, YES!!!

  • @suckmyartauds
    @suckmyartauds Год назад +52

    Not a local but I think if there can be enough pressure to build out the transit system north and in general, Atlanta can sustain its boom for decades into the future. If the boom is only for the wealthy and not for the working class, eventually the homelessness problem will get awful just like in California now, and even the wealthy people will want to leave just like they are leaving Cali. It's so disturbing how American city elites and politicians don't care about the long term consequences of gentrification. They would rather profit in the short term alone than build sustainable wealth for their whole city in the long term.

    • @alexisnicolewhite
      @alexisnicolewhite Год назад +7

      No ma’am. As the video has stated, it’s been on the ballot for years, and even with the creative tactics to get the initiative passed, the residents continuously vote against it. Unfortunately, certain individuals of socioeconomic statuses equate transportation to crime and they perceive that it’s best to afford to sit in traffic for 20 hours a week than to have the public transportation extended into their neighborhoods.

    • @fareshajjar1208
      @fareshajjar1208 Год назад +1

      Atlanta is dangerous and crime-ridden. I would not ride on any transit system for that reason.

    • @suckmyartauds
      @suckmyartauds Год назад +5

      @@fareshajjar1208 you're more likely to die or be seriously injured from a car crash than from any crime on a rail system, but I know that's probably unconvincing to you. There are Atlantans who can't afford cars or who have disabilities that prevent them from driving who could get better jobs if lots of cheap public transit existed for them. You can't work your way out of poverty if the jobs you want are too far away with no convenient transit to get there. Even if you don't ride transit, it will benefit your community and reduce crime by reducing poverty over time. Public transit projects across the country have been boosting economic development in the neighborhoods they serve if you look at study after study.

    • @skaterboi65
      @skaterboi65 Год назад +1

      @@fareshajjar1208 you're too scary its not even that bad I've used Marta for years now and nobody really bothers me.

    • @fareshajjar1208
      @fareshajjar1208 Год назад

      @@skaterboi65 That's great to hear. I will try it again.

  • @Trully1949
    @Trully1949 Год назад +14

    I was excited when the idea was going from concept to reality. Unfortunately, the vision of Ryan Gravel was to have a path that was user-friendly. That is walkers, runners, and bicycle riders. Now there are motorized vehicles on the path which was absolutely prohibited when the project came to fruition. I went to the Beltline Authority and brought this to their attention and they basically shrugged her shoulders and said, “we can’t do anything about it. We can’t enforce it” even though there were signs that prohibited motorized vehicles. So, my big question is, when are they truly going to make it user-friendly without feeling endangered by people riding scooters and other motor vehicles? And, lastly, invest in M.A.R.T.A. I use it whenever possible. It’s not maintained properly and it doesn’t branch out into enough areas. One example is that Cobb County has voted down having M.A.R.T.A. go into in their area because it will bring crime. There already is crime in their area. The city should make it mandatory and make it safe to ride. And, lastly, lastly, invest in public schools. Graffiti is destroying our city and the city is doing nothing about it. I live in the city because I live in a neighborhood that is very community-rich.

    • @paulazemeckis7835
      @paulazemeckis7835 Год назад +1

      I remember MARTA coming to Buchead in 1984. It was true that crime did increase. But on the other hand it became invaluable for people working downtown. Cobb county was predominately white back then and was "rural" shall we say. I am not surprised that MARTA has not been extended to Marietta and thereabouts. Cobb county has always seemed to have opposed what Atlanta wanted. I was never a fan of Cobb county with the exception of Vinings. Glad I moved in 2002 from Peachtree Battle area to sunny and warm St. Petersburg, Fl. St Pius was a great school (besides it being Catholic) and I really loved Atlanta from 1972 till 2002. After the 1996 Olympics Buchead started to get traffic jams. I love Atlanta but am glad I got out.

    • @ifonlyicared
      @ifonlyicared Год назад +2

      I remember when Gwinnett had the option to get MARTA and they voted it down, "saying the black people will ride the train to break into their houses and ride back with their stuff". 🤣🤦🏿‍♀️ It was so IGNORANT. Then the banks crashed and there was a gas shortage and Gwinnett Transit bus didn't go to Atlanta. Remote work wasn't even a thing. People couldn't go into the office and had to use vacation days. 🤣 They wish they had MARTA then. It's sad that Cobb can't learn from the mistakes of other counties. Crime can happen anywhere and why would someone ride public transportation with stolen goods?! 🤔 I think they'll be easier to catch that way. 🙄

    • @minifishy7162
      @minifishy7162 Год назад

      It isn't unsafe... Just stay as far to the right unless passing someone. It's rlly that simple

    • @minifishy7162
      @minifishy7162 Год назад

      How is graffiti ruining our city??? How about we talk about how there's only 1 legal public graffiti spot in all of Georgia. Makes me think maybe not everyone wants all voices to be heard

    • @jonathanmccann5942
      @jonathanmccann5942 Год назад +1

      ''Motorized vehicles?'' Like E-bikes and E-scooters? Give me a break, watch where you're going and you'll be fine

  • @markhemsworth2670
    @markhemsworth2670 Год назад +4

    Canada built its entire east to west rail in the 1800s without spending one dollar. They simply put each station wherever they could buy land (5km from the old downtown)

  • @lesliessgarciaa
    @lesliessgarciaa Год назад +1

    I am from Atlanta live and work here! Used to live in Midtown now bought a house in the North. Def need more public transportation because the traffic is ridiculous.

  • @nosamsauce7747
    @nosamsauce7747 Год назад

    Excellent production quality and interesting story. Nice job

  • @jjbdbd8279
    @jjbdbd8279 Год назад +3

    Trying to bring poor people and rich people together is dumb asf!!! They’re not supposed to be together you’re supposed to work your way into that area

  • @saleemjavaid8870
    @saleemjavaid8870 Год назад +3

    Moved to ATL 2 years ago, can’t wait to leave

    • @brucet2756
      @brucet2756 Год назад +1

      Haha moved there this year. Can't wait to leave too

  • @kavastudios6216
    @kavastudios6216 Месяц назад +1

    i grew up in NW ATL - Marietta and now live in the North East where the train system was established early and remains a reliable, safe, and clean mode of transit - this keeps cars off the road. I recently returned to ATL and took Marta from the airport to the Arts Center - the overall experience on the train was repulsive. The over powering odor of feces and urine combined w constantly being asked for $ made for an unpleasant commute. I may have been uninformed as a youth but I recall MARTA attempted to extend its lines to reach further outside the city limits but it was always voted down by the suburbs who were afraid of the crime during the mid / late 70's. Looking back if the MARTA lines were established early the traffic issues around ATL would be different. The growth in population and the lack of (safe / clean) mass transit demands residents to have a vehicle. Most vehicles on the road have 1 person in them. When a city has 16 wide lanes and still has a traffic issue then you have to look at the poor planning decisions the city made decades ago.

  • @darrylanderson9264
    @darrylanderson9264 Год назад +3

    The Beltline intentionally didn't include the black middle-class neighborhoods in South West Atlanta. We are black homeowners who didn’t run to the suburbs. We have doctors, lawyers, engineers, project managers, software programmers, news anchors, and Hank Aaron.

    • @can72287
      @can72287 Год назад

      The belt line goes through the West side and north from vine city/west end