In 2002 discussions started with negotiations between DeKalb Commissioner Elaine Boyer and the Dunwoody Preservation Trust.
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| Brook Run Lemonade Days 2003 |
In 2002 discussions started with negotiations between DeKalb Commissioner Elaine Boyer and the Dunwoody Preservation Trust.
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| Brook Run Lemonade Days 2003 |
Brook Run Park once had a 34,000 square foot theater (16 other buildings were demolished before the theater). A brick building with a stage, seating for hundreds, and many other attributes. A few years after becoming a city, the Dunwoody City Council decided to demolish the building. Where are the stained glass windows today?
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| Home Tour 2000 |
It all started with a tornado - a tornado that roared through Dunwoody April 09, 1998. Shortly after the tornado destroyed as many as 100,000 trees locally, the Replant the Forest project begun. Fundraising for Replant the Forest involved many smaller projects. Corporate donations, residents donating, 5K races, auctions, fashion shows, art fairs, home tours, theatrical productions, and the first Lemonade Days. Within two years of the storm, approximately 20,000+ trees were purchased and planted here in Dunwoody.
Lemonade Days did not start at Brook Run. It wasn't until 2002 that events were held at Brook Run. Brook Run was very different in 2002 compared to today. No turf sports fields, no amphitheater, no dog park, no playground. There was a nice theater that our city council demolished. The early Lemonade Days had a 5K and 1-Mile Fun Run and a kids carnival. The first type carnival was held on the lawn at the Farmhouse (Mt Vernon and Cham Dunwoody Rd, also known as the Historic Dunwoody Town Hall.
Barbie and James Bond Flop at Dunwoody Polls
The $60 million Dunwoody Bond was voted down by voters across the city yesterday. The Bond failed to gain 50% of the votes in 10 of the 13 voting precincts throughout the city.
The biggest turnouts and the largest 'NO' margins were in precincts with major projects (mega sidewalk/paths or overwhelming park amenities) in said precincts.
Why did the Bond fail? Many reasons - but perhaps not the most cited reason (taking on debt).
Council members Harris and Seconder, both very supportive of the Bond, easily won their races. What's that mean? The translation is that voters appreciate the efforts and work these two put in on council, but do not support the Bond for one or more reasons. The Bond wasn't lost because voters do not approve of the mayor and the six council members. (However, a handful of 'Yes' zealous Bond advocates DID motivate people, probably 500 swing voters, to vote NO due to their aggressive social media presence. Thanks Trv and T-na😜)
Lots of talk in town about why the Bond failed. The Yes crowd spouts about misinformation being circulated by old white guys. It's funny to hear that a bunch of old white guys supposedly outwitted the progressive young ABetterDunwoody crowd on the socials. On a side note, A Better Dunwoody was formed a decade ago and was primarily a blog. It posted some good things happening in the area. You can view the site and see how it looked in 2013 using the WayBackMachine. The site was scrubbed and repurposed earlier this year, under new management.
The Bond did not fail because the fear of adding too much debt; it failed because the mega-wide concrete paths were being shoved down our throats. The 'Parks' movement got hijacked by a handful of Dunwoodians when PATH Foundation starting promising free money.
If the Bond was $20-$30 million and had a good plan for improving existing green space (Austin, Vermack, Brook Run, and Waterford) it would have passed.
I really hope the City of Dunwoody rethinks their plan for each site and drops the mega-wide concrete paths. And build four-foot sidewalks.
The year is 1988. There is no City of Dunwoody. Dunwoody is an affluent, quiet bedroom community. Schools were some of the best in the state. Crime was low. Some consider the 1980's-90's peak Dunwoody.
A year earlier DeKalb voters passed a referendum to fund parks throughout the county, including Dunwoody. Ideally, DeKalb would have taken this opportunity and purchased land for parks in the Dunwoody area. Instead, DeKalb did direct some funds into the rare Dunwoody parks, including the Dunwoody Park (Nature Center). One idea was for $180,000 to be spent to improve the playground at Vanderlyn. Spoiler alert - it did not happen. Follow along in the documents below. (Note: The Crime Stopper's Journal is worthy of it own post - anyone know the author?)