Transit talks underway to serve Hapeville’s redevelopment hope
June 9, 2008 at 11:39 am by Thomas Wheatley in NewsIt’s an odd twist to the transit discussion. For decades, road builders, developers and lawmakers have walked in lockstep about transportation. Roads were access routes to cheap property. Roads meant money.
But as more and more residents are choosing to live closer to Atlanta — and shorter commutes mean cheaper gas bills — one developer behemoth has been in talks with MARTA to serve them.
The Atlanta Business Chronicle reports that Jacoby, the development firm that turned Atlantic Station from a polluted steel mill into a mixed-use pocket of urbania — has been meeting with the city’s largest transit agency to bring rail service into the shuttered Ford plant in Hapeville it has under contract. Jacoby plans a massive office and retail complex for the 122-acre property. The article also discusses the now-vacant GM plant along I-285 and what several companies will need to consider.
From the piece:
“‘Build it and they will come’ doesn’t hold much value if it takes too much time to get there,” said Chris Montesinos, planning and zoning manager for the city of Hapeville.
“Developers see the value of transit as an alternative means of getting people to and from their projects.
“As the region’s population continues to grow exponentially, transit availability is going to play an increasingly important role in the decision to locate new development in one particular location over another.”











June 9th, 2008 at 12:54 pm
Was the hapeville branch part of the full plan originally approved by voters back during MARTA’s inception?