48 HOURS IN ATLANTA
By Bill Addison
Atlanta thrives on
paradox. An ever expanding vista of skyscrapers peeks above the canopy of trees
that line its streets. The city strives to be a cutthroat business leader and
is home to 15 Fortune 500 companies, but a spirit of southern
hospitality still prevails (though these days you may as quickly be offered a Coke
as a glass of sweet tea). “People tend to forget that Atlanta is young compared
to other American cities,” says author and illustrator Tray Butler, a Georgia
native. “New York was founded 200 years earlier. Even Sunbelt superstars like
Charlotte or Houston are technically our older siblings. What we have is a
youthful exuberance, a kind of rebellious spirit, and yes, some growing pains.
Atlanta is like a teenager: It can’t stop changing.” Conventioneers who visit
only downtown (which empties of locals at night) miss the charm and diversity
of the city’s many singular neighborhoods.
Day One
Morning: A Sense
of History
The Martin Luther
King, Jr., National Historic Site spreads across 42 acres of downtown’s Sweet Auburn
district, long a hub of African-American businesses. At the King Center (where
the civil rights leader and his wife, Coretta Scott King, are enshrined),
procure tickets for daily tours of MLK’s birth home. Details glimpsed in the
two-story Victorian house wonderfully humanize the icon: It turns out he was a
shrewd player of Monopoly, for example. Nearby Ebenezer Baptist Church, where
King was co-pastor with his father, reopened in 2011 after four years and $8
million to restore the Gothic Revival building exactly as it was in the 1960s,
including walls painted a warm peach and the original pulpit microphones that
broadcast King’s sermons.
Take a taxi about one
mile south on Boulevard, the area’s main thoroughfare, to the gently
hilly Oakland Cemetery, established in 1850. Stroll under
magnolias and oaks among monuments, obelisks, and mausoleums of some of the
city’s early wealthy families, as well as more than 3,900 graves marked “CSA,”
for Confederate States Army. Purchase the $4 map from the gift shop to find the
humble headstone for Gone With the Wind author Margaret
Mitchell. Refuel across the street, sipping on the city’s most deftly made
espresso at Octane Coffee. It shares space with Little
Tart Bakery, a neighborhood favorite for quiche and pastries made
using local, seasonal fruit.
Afternoon: Hot
Shops
Once a badland of
abandoned stockyards and mills, the city’s Westside neighborhood recently
transformed into a wonderland of refurbished warehouses full of bespoke shops.
Urbane Billy Reid, where staffers will likely offer you a
bourbon, in the Westside Provisions District complex and preppy Sid
Mashburn in Westside Urban Market next door (a walking bridge joins
the two redbrick complexes) offer different takes on dressing the southern
gentleman in style. Mashburn’s wife also runs a store, Ann Mashburn, featuring
her in-house designs including shirtdresses and pencil and wrap skirts. Across
the parking lot, design guru Jonathan Adler mixes whimsy with
function in his eclectic shop, featuring items such as voluptuous glass lamps,
pillows with psychedelic prints, and vases imprinted with a single, puckered
mouth.
Evening: Dixie
Dining
“Southern food is in
vogue across the country, and in Atlanta, where we might have scoffed at our
regional cooking in the past, we’ve embraced it as well,” says Steven
Satterfield, a Georgia native who is chef and co-owner of farmhouse-chic Miller
Union in the Westside. Satterfield honors his roots without resorting
to southern-fried clichés: Start with small plates meant for sharing, like the
local farm egg baked in celery cream and served with wedges of grilled bread,
and move on to duck confit nestled against cider-braised cabbage
and whiskeyed apples.
Eating regionally
means embracing the seasons, and no local chef highlights the region’s larder
better than Billy Allin, chef/owner of cozy Cakes & Ale in
Decatur, the progressive town that is to Atlanta what Berkeley is to San
Francisco. Allin weaves Italian and Mediterranean recipes among southern
flavors on his changing menu. Look for dishes like pillowy gnocchi with lambragù and
green tomatoes along with North Carolina trout roasted in the wood-burning oven
and served with a tangy bacon and green onion mayonnaise sauce.
Day Two
Morning: Water
World
Georgia Aquarium, across the street from downtown’s
21-acre Centennial Olympic Park, measures more than 600,000 square feet and
holds 10 million gallons of fresh and salt water, making it one of the world’s
largest aquatic zoos. Its many spectacles are worth the plunge, but start early
to beat the crowds: Order tickets online to avoid lines and secure seats for
Dolphin Tales, a show filled with special effects that manage not to detract
from the leaping headliners. The whole visit takes at least three hours. Be
sure to check out the rare, wide-mouthed whale sharks and the white,
cuddly-looking beluga whales.
Afternoon: Midtown
Museums
In Midtown, the city’s
cultural hub, stop for a lunchtime oyster po’boy or a fried chicken salad
at Empire State South, the restaurant owned by Top
Chef judge Hugh Acheson.
The white, curving,
unapologetically modernist building of the High Museum of Art, by
Pritzker Prize-winning architects Richard Meier and Renzo Piano, stands out
majestically along a verdant stretch of busy Peachtree Street. A touring
exhibition showcasing the works of Mexican artist Frida Kahlo and her husband,
Diego Rivera, is a current draw (on display through May 12). Be sure, though,
to spend time with the permanent southern folk art exhibit on the top floor,
full of quirky, poignant caricatures with names like “Take My Yoke Upon You and
Learn of Me Saith Jesus.” Museum of Design Atlanta, with its
modern concrete-and-glass veneer, opened across from the High in early 2011. It
has no permanent collection, so shows are in a constant, fascinating flux: Past
exhibits included skateboard art, Italian motorcycles, and portions of the AIDS
Memorial Quilt.
Evening: Laugh
Out Loud
At the edge of Inman
Park, a great walking neighborhood and Atlanta’s first residential
“suburb,” planned in the 1800s, chef Robert Phalen uses imagination at his
restaurant One Eared Stag. Adventurous carnivores will sigh
over beef belly with pickled eggplant and roasted bone marrow with onion
marmalade; tamer palates will love the chicken schnitzel and, for dessert,
chocolate pot de crème. A few blocks away, Dad’s
Garage, home to the city’s premier improv troupe, inspires belly
laughs with outrageous, unscripted performers acting along loose themes like
the Civil War or a genre of music (rock, hip-hop) chosen by the audience.
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