| |
|
Overview

How to Find Foreclosure Listings
This site focuses primarily north metro Atlanta area. Browse free Atlana area foreclosure listings, including Cobb County,
north Fulton County, Dekalb County, Forsyth County and Gwinnett County. We
are very familiar with Sandy Springs, Dunwoody, Marietta, Roswell,
Alpharetta, Buckhead, and Midtown. We have sold homes inside the perimeter
and outside the perimeter. We can't know everything so for clients who want
to look for property in Peachtree City, Newnan, Stone Mountain,
Douglasville, Macon and areas further out we will gladly recommend a good
agent who specializes in those areas. Foreclosed houses in Atlanta are
hot right now. You can find information that will help you in the purchase
of your new house built by any of the following builders: Torrey Homes, MDC
Homes, Centex Homes, Pulte Homes, Morrison Homes, Ryland Homes, John Wieland
Homes, Winmark Homes, Meridian Homes, John Willis Homes, Benchmark Homes and
many more home builders. Access foreclosure listings for homes that
banks want to sell- even some executive homes and luxury homes. Some
terms that we might be found by are realty Atlanta, Ga homes, Atlanta
realty, condos Atlanta, Atlanta realestate, Atlanta property, houses
Atlanta, Atlanta realtors, Ga houses, or realtors Atlanta. Maybe you found
us by typing in Atlanta MLS listings, or Atlanta MLS search, or MLS Atlanta
GA.
View Listings -->
About Inman Park
Inman Park is a
neighborhood of the city of Atlanta,
Georgia, its first planned suburb. It is
adjacent to Little Five.
During the Battle of Atlanta, an area
where the Inman Park was the scene of
many skirmishes. Inman Park was
developed by Joel Hurt in 1887 which
manages civil engineering aspects of the
Joseph Forsyth Johnson took care of
landscape architecture. Johnson's
contribution to a large extent the
original 138 acre (558,000 sq m)
development plan was the first
naturalistic suburb south of the
Mason-Dixon line, the precursors were
only in the country Llewellyn Park and
Riverside Park. The centerpiece is the
neighborhood was a ten-acre Spring Park,
designed by Frederick Law Olmsted.
Inman Park was the center of two miles
(3 km) of five points, who do not have
direct access to it, that it has
extended the work of Hurt stub line
directly to St. East (around Edgewood
Ave), and established an electric
streetcar system, Edgewood Atlanta
Streetcar Company, to run through.
He was an early stage of some of
Atlanta's elite to build their homes
here: Asa Candler, Charles Winship and
Ernest Woodruff.
By 1910, the neighborhood started to
decline. The High Queen Ann Victorian
structure, which are characterized by
their homes became increasingly passe,
and the increased mobility offered by
the automobile led to the flight, many
of them elite Community newer
subdivisions have been developed in the
north and east, particularly in Druid
Hills. In 1920's much of the stately
Victorian apartment has been acquired,
and absentee landlords subdivided. By
the 1950s, has become one of the poorest
neighborhood of Atlanta. During 1960,
part of Spring Park was paved over due
to road construction. Restoration began
in the neighborhood of 1970, the Inman
Park Development Corporation was
created. In 1973, the neighborhood was
listed in the National Register of
Historic Places. Residents unable to
construct the proposed sentenced Stone
Mountain Freeway, which would cut into
the neighborhood in two. Inman Park was
one of the main beneficiaries of
Atlanta's intown revival of the
mid-1990's, spurred in part, the 1996
Olympic Games.
Inman Park, in their annual Spring
Festival, which is characterized by the
largest street market in the city tour
of the neighborhoods' historic homes and
colorful parade. The neighborhood is
served by the Inman Park / Reynoldstown
MARTA station.
|
|