Atlanta, GA
The (somewhat definitive) ranking of Atlanta’s Peachtree streets
In accordance with an oft-cited determine from the Atlanta Regional Fee, the metro boasts 71 streets bearing some variation on the title “Peachtree.” That quantity is a number of years outdated, although, and a spokesperson says the group doesn’t maintain a operating record. (Peachtree, in the meantime, is likely to be a variation on one other phrase completely: The title derives from a Muscogee settlement close to the Chattahoochee River known as Pakanahuili. That’s been translated from the Muscogee as “Standing Peach Tree,” however it could imply “Standing Pitch Tree”—referring to pine, not peach.)
Looking for readability, we put a listing collectively ourselves, beginning downtown and dealing outward. We solely made it a little bit previous the Perimeter, however in that house, we had been capable of finding 40 streets bearing the title. It’s attainable the sooner determine distinguished between directionals—i.e., Peachtree Avenue NE and Peachtree Avenue SW—whereas we thought-about them elements of the identical Peachtree Avenue, although to not be confused with West Peachtree (separate avenue), and in addition to not be confused with the Peachtree Avenue in Peachtree Corners, or for that matter any of the three (?) Peachtree Streets in Norcross. It’s additionally attainable we simply received worn out; as we went to press, we saved discovering Peachtrees in locations we had been certain we’d already seemed. Right here, then, an assuredly incomplete, extremely subjective rating. You’ll by no means guess who got here out on high.
40
Peachtree Avenue
The one in Peachtree Corners.
39-37
The Peachtree Forests
Avenue, Drive, and Terrace. (In that order.)
36
Peachtree Corners Circle
35
Peachtree Dunwoody Circle
34
Peachtree View
33
Peachtree Approach
The one in Dunwoody. It intersects with North Peachtree Highway (see merchandise 28).
32
Peachtree Hole Court docket
31
Peachtree Industrial Court docket
30
Peachtree Place Parkway
When you put “Peachtree Boulevard” into Google Maps, it’ll present you Peachtree Industrial Boulevard, however enter “Peachtree Place Parkway” and also you’ll wind up at a spot known as Peachtree Boulevard (in Dunwoody).
29
Peachtree Parkway
The far reaches of the Peachtree universe; it turns into Medlock Bridge Highway close to the Chattahoochee.
28
North Peachtree Highway
This one intersects with the opposite Peachtree Highway in Chamblee, between Peachtree Industrial and New Peachtree Highway. Acquired it?
27
Peachtree Dunwoody Highway
26
Peachtree Industrial Boulevard
An underdog amongst Peachtrees, this bustling thoroughfare splits off from Peachtree Highway in Brookhaven and extends for miles past the Perimeter, winding all the best way up previous Sugar Hill.
25-23
Peachtree Streets (charming downtown Norcross version)
West Peachtree Avenue begins at Jimmy Carter Boulevard, operating parallel to Norcross’s South Peachtree Avenue earlier than it hits Holcomb Bridge Highway and turns into North Peachtree Avenue.
22
Peachtree Middle Avenue
When you’re right here, you’re misplaced in downtown’s maze of one-way streets. You’re in all probability a vacationer. When you’d wished to eat at Hsu’s (a worthy goal), it is best to’ve walked.
21
West Peachtree Avenue
Not the west finish of Peachtree Avenue, however parallel to it. At Hardy Ivy Park, West Peachtree intersects with itself.
20
Peachtree Highway
The one in Atlanta.
19
New Peachtree Highway
Sandwiched between Peachtree Industrial Boulevard and Buford Freeway, that is considerably a roadway with an id disaster—however any avenue that gives a (much less trafficked) path from Atlanta Chinatown to the BuHi Farmers Market can’t assist however shine.
18-13
Peachtree variants between Pharr and Collier Roads
Land of the wannabes. On this two-mile stretch of Buckhead, the unique Peachtree Highway intersects with at the very least seven streets named Peachtree something-or-other, together with: Peachtree Avenue, Peachtree Hills Circle, Peachtree Hills Avenue, Peachtree Memorial Drive, Peachtree Park Drive, Peachtree Valley Highway. (Not counting Peachtree Battle; see under.)
12
Peachtree Approach
One other of the Buckhead offshoots, however ranked barely increased given its proximity to Duck Pond Park.
11
Peachtree Stroll
The uncommon Atlanta avenue that’s just for strolling, at the very least partially; it begins on tenth Avenue throughout from Midtown MARTA and heads north a pair blocks.
10
Peachtree Place
9
Previous Peachtree Highway
The metro’s unique—aka the supply of all this—really positioned in Gwinnett County.
8
South Previous Peachtree Highway
Any person seen this on the map—additionally in Gwinnett, a number of miles southwest of Previous Peachtree Highway—simply as we had been going to press. Bonus factors for being
a shock!
7-4
Peachtree Battle Avenue + three offshoots (Circle, Court docket, Place)
Certainly one of Atlanta’s most stunning boulevards, with a reputation evoking a bloody Civil Warfare battle.
3
Peachtree Circle
We’re endlessly misplaced on its roundabout, although the situation—Ansley Park, between Piedmont Park and the Excessive Museum—is very good.
2
Peachtree Drive
With a nondescript entrance subsequent to Krystal’s on Piedmont Highway, this avenue results in a bucolic, walkable neighborhood, based within the early twentieth century for railroad staff.
1
Peachtree Avenue
House to DragonCon and Satisfaction—and the principle artery of downtown, Midtown, and Buckhead. Plus, there’s expanded pedestrian entry close to AmericasMart! Oops, no there’s not.
This text seems in our August 2022 subject.
Atlanta, GA
Atlanta-based health app finds success in ‘Damp January’
ATLANTA, Ga. (Atlanta News First) – Throughout January, millions of Americans participate in “Dry January,” an attempt to go the whole month without drinking.
Vedant Pradeep’s research has taught him otherwise. The 28-year-old Georgia Tech alumnus is the founder and CEO of Reframe, an app that helps people reduce their drinking. His research shows that a more gradual decline, which he calls “Damp January,” achieves better long-term results.
“We started out trying to help out people with hypoglycemia,” Pradeep said.
But as many startups do, Pradeep pivoted when he noticed many of the people he was helping struggled with alcohol.
“Alcohol is a bad coping strategy, but it is a coping strategy,” Pradeep said.
Reframe, headquartered in Alpharetta, went live in 2020 and has surged to the top of health-app sales in the Apple Store. It offers voluminous options for people to help them cut back or quit drinking, including challenges, counseling, summaries, calendars, stats, and a vast community of users.
“We now have the world’s largest community of people that are trying to cut back on alcohol,” Pradeep said.
Most of all, Reframe has been successful, with over 1 million people using the app. Pradeep says internal numbers show that nearly 40% of users have stayed with it for over a year.
“It helps you understand what alcohol does to your body, how it works,” Pradeep said. “It helps you understand what your triggers are and helps you build these coping strategies.”
It’s also gained support in the medical community. Atlanta cardiologist Dr. Ali Rahimi recommends it to his patients.
“You get a lot of support in an app like that that you don’t get when you see your doctor or therapist a couple of times per year,” he said.
That’s where Reframe fits in with other programs like Alcoholics Anonymous. The app and community are constantly available in a way that’s difficult for other alcohol-reduction programs.
The need is urgent, based on the latest scientific data. The U.S. Surgeon General’s Office publicly discussed the relationship between alcohol and certain cancers earlier this month.
Pradeep has known this for a while and understands that quitting cold turkey leads to slip-ups and then give-ups.
“Alcohol isn’t actually serving you,” he said.
So, as Reframe continues to pile on users, it’s all about making progress toward one’s goal; it’s less about being dry than about becoming your best self.
“That’s the goal,” Pradeep said. “To get to a point where you no longer use alcohol as a coping strategy.”
Copyright 2025 WANF. All rights reserved.
Atlanta, GA
‘Put the guns down’: Atlanta dad mourning teenage son killed in Austell apartment shooting
EAST POINT, Ga. (Atlanta News First) – On Monday, hundreds of people crowded into an East Point shopping center for a candlelight vigil to mourn the death of 17-year-old Kenneth Collier Jr.
Cobb County police have launched a homicide investigation after receiving an initial 911 call on Jan. 9 for gunshots at the Residence at Riverside Apartments in Austell.
In a news release, police officials said they found the teenager with multiple gunshot wounds.
Collier’s family said the body was that of the 17-year-old who was an 11th grader at Eagle’s Landing High School in McDonough.
“Kenneth didn’t deserve to be killed that way. Nobody deserves to be killed that way,” said Kenn Collier, Kenneth’s dad.
Kenn said Kenneth went to see a friend at the Austell complex. He does not know what the circumstances were leading up to the shooting.
“Nobody ever imagines getting a call that your son has been murdered. Your son has been shot, is hurt,” Kenn said. “As a parent, the hardest thing ever to go through. Kenneth was a good kid.”
Kenneth’s death comes roughly seven years after the death of Kenneth’s mother, Tamika Trimble, who also died of gun violence.
17-year-old shot to death at Austell apartment complex, police say
In December 2017, Trimble was shot and killed in her car, with her daughter in the backseat.
“I sat on this same couch and did this interview. Talked about my son’s mom, about his mom being murdered through gun violence. Now, (I) sit here again, without my son, talking about gun violence,” Kenn said.
After that deadly shooting, Kenn said Kenneth acted out and began bullying before channeling his anger.
By 11, Kenneth had written a book advocating against bullying.
He was awarded a proclamation from the City of Atlanta after publishing the book titled “Button Buddy Stops Bullying: And So Can You.”
Kenn said his son got off track and eventually was pulled back into a rough crowd.
“Unfortunately, when you’re still in a situation around your friends and environment, and that’s all you see a lot of times, you can fall back into it,” he said. “As a parent, of course I did everything I can, we did everything we can do.”
Kenn said they recently moved Kenneth away from southwest Atlanta to McDonough where he enrolled at Eagle’s Landing High School. He said his son’s death shows the complexity of the gun violence epidemic.
“We really need to put the guns down,” Collier said.
Cobb County police is asking anyone with information surrounding the shooting incident to call police at (770) 499-3945.
Copyright 2025 WANF. All rights reserved.
Atlanta, GA
The Kyle Pitts Question Continues to Vex Atlanta Falcons
Atlanta Falcons fans will remember when the multi-million dollar acquisition of veteran quarterback Kirk Cousins was going to set misfiring tight end Kyle Pitts on the road to career redemption.
For a while, that looked to be the case. Through the Falcons’ first-eight games, Pitts had 29 catches for 419 yards and three touchdowns. That number included a goose egg he had Week 4 against the New Orleans Saints.
After his Week 8, 91 yard, two-touchdown performance against the Buccaneers, Pitts went MIA.
He had just 183 yards and a touchdown during the final-nine games.
Isn’t it funny just how quickly things can implode and go south?
When Falcons general manager Terry Fontenot offered up his assessment of his team’s failed season on last week, it came as no surprise that he unashamedly pointed the finger at Pitts’s lack of production. This seems to be an annual conversation with regards to Pitts.
“When you take a player that high in the draft, obviously you expect a certain level,” Fontenot said of the highest drafted tight end in NFL history. “We understand Kyle had a really good rookie year, and he hasn’t equaled or exceeded that production since then. There’s no excuses we’re making about it.”
Even given Fontenot’s sleuth-like observations, and for as cathartic as it might also have felt for him personally, it did little to lay out a map of the road ahead with regards to a Pitts future in Atlanta.
The Falcons picked up his fifth-year option before the season. They’re on the hook for $10.9-million guaranteed in 2025. Beyond that, Pitts is scheduled to be an unrestricted free agent.
Considering the hot water Fontenot was already in for the Cousins failure and losing a draft pick in the process, the subsequent double whammy of Pitts having another subpar season is particularly depressing.
Fontenot also finds himself with only four picks in the upcoming NFL Draft. All of which begs the imminent offseason conundrum of deciding whether or not it’s time to simply cut ties and firesale the former 4th overall selection.
Of course, some kind of value can always be found out there, especially if a host of tight end hungry teams really believe they can resuscitate the former 1,000 yard Pro Bowler’s beleaguered reputation. However, the Falcons will be selling low, and the return won’t come close to matching the fourth-overall selection or the $33-million the Falcons have already sunk into Pitts.
Quite clearly, the entire future of the Falcons franchise now rests squarely on the powerful left arm of quarterback Michael Penix Jr., but therein lies the inherent issue.
Pitts inability to develop into a more sure-handed pass catcher doesn’t immediately appear to mesh with the fast ball type of passer Penix Jr. actually is.
Having said all of that, Fontenot is well aware that he needs to do his level best to give Penix as many explosive receiving options as he can as they move ahead with his development.
Throwing the baby out with the bath water with Pitts must ultimately resonate strongly with Fontenot. Plus, running the risk of seeing Pitts resurrect his career elsewhere would presumably be catastrophic for Fontenot’s own future in Atlanta.
Atlanta would obviously like to see a return on Pitts, but how much longer can they ultimately wait?
Decisions, decisions.
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