North Springs Charter High School’s Show Choir alumni from 1991-98 practice their song and dance routines on May 14 before sharing the stage with current performing arts students for the Sandy Springs school’s Musical Theater Showcase. Audra Priluck, second from left, front row, organized the event.
Visitors stroll in a walkway lighted for Sparkle Sandy Springs. (John Ruch)
New District 2 City Councilmember Steve Soteres, joined by family,is sworn into office Jan. 2. (John Ruch)
A house decorated by Riverwood International Charter School students. (John Ruch)
St Martins of the Field
Deer passing through a moonlit, snowy field is the decoration on the Abnerathy Arts Center’s house. (John Ruch)
Professor Alan Abramowitz.
Robin, left, and friend Cathy enjoy the “Snackadium” for last year’s Super Bowl.
Park Center,
Hammond Drive and Perimeter Center Parkway, Dunwoody
Project: The next two State Farm office towers, one 22 stories and one 19 stories, rising across the street from a tower that opened this year.
Expected completion: 2019-2020
Robert Wittenstein, presiding over his last DHA annual meeting as president on Jan. 28. (Dyana Bagby)
AirWatch chairman Alan Dabbiere, at left, listens as Gov. Nathan Deal praises the high-tech company’s expansion.
Dunwoody Nature Center 06/14/13
Photo by Phil Mosier Kids Concert with Jason Koornick in the park. Sunday June 2, 2013 2:00pm. Dancer Tallulah Clute (4yr) [pokadots].
Jeff Goghill points out the proposed trail’s path through the park. Despite residents’ objections over tree removal, the Dunwoody City Council plans to move ahead with the project with no major changes.
Sandy Springs City Manager Andrea Surratt’s report said this office building at 620 Morgan Falls Road is on two parcels totaling 12.5 acres and has plenty of room for the Police Department, Municipal Court and ancillary services. (Google Maps)
Jim and Laura Strange of Dunwoody support Karen Handel.
Some the trees felled for the course renovation. (Evelyn Andrews)
The “Texas,” a legendary locomotive dating to 1856, has been installed inside the museum’s new wing built along with the cyclorama building. (Phil Mosier)
Left to right, Andrea Sneiderman, Rusty Sneiderman and Hemy Neuman
Mercedes-Benz USA headquarters,
Abernathy Road at Mercedes-Benz Drive, Sandy Springs
Project: The luxury automaker’s North American headquarters, relocated from New Jersey.
Expected completion: Early 2018
Georgia House Minority Leader Stacey Abrams addresses the crowd at Jon Ossoff’s Election Night watch party.
A Steinway & Sons Model D concert grand piano. (Special/Steinway & Sons)
Mayor Reed at this morning’s winter weather press conference.
From left, ArtSS board members Melissa Patterson, Bridgette Cunniff and Randy Young; artist Corrina Sephora; and Sephora’s studio assistant, Richard Pepe, pose with Sephora’s sculpture “La Voyageur Qui Fait Son Nid,” recently installed at City Green at City Springs. (City of Sandy Springs)
The intersection of Grogans Ferry and Roswell roads as seen in a Google Earth image.
On April 17 the public first heard that Sutton Middle School Principal Audrey Sofianos, left, and North Atlanta High Principal Howard “Gene” Taylor would not return for the next school year.
U.S. Rep. Barry Loudermilk speaks about the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act at the Dec. 4 Sandy Springs Rotary Club luncheon at the Hilton Atlanta Perimeter Suites hotel. (John Ruch)
Some of International Paint Pals’ art was chosen from around the world for display at the 2015 World Summit of Nobel Peace Laureates.
Dr. Laura Braswell points out the nerve openings on a lion’s skull, a gift from a patient.
Juan Rabadan
Mayor Rusty Paul, joined by family members, shakes hands with Fulton County Superior Court Judge Shawn Ellen LaGrua after being sworn into office Jan. 2. (John Ruch)
A teacher in Afghanistan sent Longino a note thanking him for the program.
Harry Hower (in foreground) takes a swing at virtual bowling at Atria Buckhead, the senior community where the 79-year-old lives on Lenox Road. Hower, Phillip Stroud (at left), John Davis (on couch and below) and Al Medore play in a Wii bowling league called the Buckhead Kingpins.
City Councilmember Jim Riticher tries his hand at Pickleball.
Joyful family camping in the park
Officer Bell walks Mary Anna to a dentist in Town Brookhaven. (Brookhaven Police Department)
Sandy Springs police evacuated the Art Institute after shots were reported. (Photo SSPD)
Emma Kate Sellers
Dunwoody Councilmember Terry Nall, left, with Bev and Windy Wingate, also of Dunwoody, who all support Karen Handel.
Fulton Schools Superintendent Mike Looney, right, hears what the district’s IT staff had accomplished to make the first day of universal remote learning relatively problem free for video streaming of classes.
Mayor Shortal cuts off pieces of Dunwoody ribbon to hand out to children.
Christian Marty, a Swiss painting conservator, studies the “Battle of Atlanta” painting from a platform while consulting a historic image on a tablet. (Phil Mosier)
Kyla Daley ties yellow ribbons around trees marked to make way for a paved bike/walking trail in Brook Run Park in Dunwoody.
Derrick Polk and his son, Grant, 11, play a game of Horse at the park opening for Pernoshal Park.
The scene at the Art Institute in Sandy Springs on Friday, Sept.
Sandy Springs resident and driver Harry Stone says something changes in motorists’ minds come the rush hour.
Bella Murray, left, and Conor Crahan play cello in the Ridgeview Charter Chamber Orchestra as Sparkle Sandy Springs begins. (Phil Mosier)
Surveillance camera image of purse snatching suspect. (Dunwoody Police)
Melissa Dorrell, a volunteer with Ahimsa House, works with Boss, one of the dogs in the nonprofit’s care.
Granite countertops and stainless steel appliances are standard in the Adley City Springs Apartments on Roswell Road just north of Hammond Road in Sandy Springs. (Adley City Springs)
Visitors will eventually walk into the cyclorama building from underneath the painting before going up escalators to a viewing platform. The pieces missing from the bottom of the painting won’t be replaced, but will be covered by the diorama that will be installed at the base of the painting. (Phil Mosier)
The Sandy Springs Fire Department will get two of these Pierce Custom PUC Pumper trucks delivered in late summer 2021 after City Council approved spending $2.96 million on the pumper trucks and an aerial truck on Aug. 4. Pierce/Ten-8 of Georgia
City staff created a simplified concept drawing of potential future uses for the new public safety headquarters on Morgan Falls Road, which could include a future fire station, at bottom right, a training facility, top right, and a vehicle maintenance facility, slightly behind the four-story office building. The office building is the only existing structure on the property. (City of Sandy Springs)
Northside Hospital addition,
1000 Johnson Ferry Road, Sandy Springs
Project: 8-story addition to the main Northside Hospital in the Pill Hill medical center, going up along with a 10-story parking garage.
Expected completion: 2018
Teens enjoy a game of basketball at the city’s new park.
Jean Kaufman, a resident of PARC at Buckhead on Phipps Boulevard, plays Wii bowling once a week with her friend Helen Miller in the gym of the retirement community.
Mayor Denis Shortal greets everyone at the grand opening of Pernoshal Park.
Dunwoody Police Officer Jared Bradley.
The potential for a scenic vista can be seen in this existing site plan for the Northridge shopping center, along with its unusual shape that doesn’t front on Roswell Road. Access to both Roswell and Northridge roads is shown. (City of Sandy Springs)
Above is an artist rendering of the new administration building that may be built at the Ignatius House Jesuit Retreat Center on Riverside Drive in Sandy Springs. The 3,000-square-foot building would house the retreat center’s employees.
Christmas Tree.
Evelyn Andrews
One of three River Access site proposals by Sandy Springs was chosen for riverfront property just west of Roswell Road, with a connecting trail envisioned to the bridge project. (City of Sandy Springs)
Douglas Edwards, assistant city manager for infrastructure.
Georgia Democratic Party Chair Dubose Party leads the crowd in a “Flip the Sixth!” chant.
1000 Park Avenue,
1000 Park Avenue at Phipps Boulevard, Buckhead
Project: 27-story, 270-unit apartment building.
Expected completion: August 2018
Karen Handel removes candles from a birthday cake presented to her at her Election Night watch party in Roswell. Dunwoody Councilmember Terry Nall is behind her.
Resident Kim Bornstein attended a Feb. 22 meeting at City Hall about Roswell Road streetscape upgrades.
Center for Advanced Pediatrics, 1400 Tullie Road, Brookhaven
Project: Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta outpatient care tower, 8 stories.
Expected completion: 2018
Linden Longino, right, was honored by LeadingAge Georgia as an example of “positive aging” and for his longtime leadership of International Paint Pals. Joining him, at left, Chris Keysor, president and CEO of Lenbrook, a resident senior community in Buckhead, and Jackie Durant, also of Lenbrook.
Tracy Brown, left, and Terri Polk of Jack & Jill-Dunwoody, a nonprofit organization for African-American mothers. The organization is donating a “bird tree” library to the park for children to grab a book to read while at the park or take it home and then bring it back.
Dunwoody Mayor Denis Shortal presents a proclamation to the Peachtree Charter Middle School Patriots baseball team congratulating them for winning the Dunwoody Senior Baseball Middle School Championship.
Asher Cull, 2, sports a Santa shirt as he explores the houses at Sparkle Sandy Springs. Asher is the son of Sandy Springs residents Brad and Melissa Cull. (Phil Mosier)
Dozens of news reporters worked the Jon Ossoff Election Night watch party.
Kenneth Zeff takes over as interim superintendent for Fulton County schools on June 2.
Teen pop star Cory Simpson performs Nov. 10 for students at Ridgeview Charter School in Sandy Springs.
Keisha Lance Bottoms gives a speech during her inauguration ceremony on Jan. 2.
Gordon Jones, the Atlanta History Center’s senior military historian and curator, works with German consultant Ulrich Weilhammer on Jan. 25. (Phil Mosier)
Hundreds of people packed the ball room at Jon Ossoff’s event at the Crowne Ravinia hotel in Dunwoody.
A Google Earth image of the site of the Delido Apartments in Dunwoody.
Andrea Surratt (Special)
The crowd watches students from the Atlanta School of Rock perform amidst lights after dark. (John Ruch)
New District 4 City Councilmember Jody Reichel, joined by family members, is sworn into office Jan. 2. (John Ruch)
A conservator works on the “Battle of Atlanta” painting. (Phil Mosier)
a group gathered in Brook Run Park on Dec. 1 to protest the construction of a 12-foot wide concrete path, for which approximately 330 trees will be removed. Residents are also concerned about potential runoff issues.
assistant spends chemical experiments on a white background
Some audience members take a look at the houses while others take a seat to hear live music at Sparkle Sandy Springs. (Phil Mosier)
Eileen Esworthy of Sandy Springs with her son, Evan, 15, volunteered for the first time in an election for Ossoff.
Wendell Lawing (center) surveys GDOT’s “Transform 285/400” interchange project during a tour guided by project manager Marlo Clowers (right) with his son, Mike Lawing (left) (Hannah Greco).
Guests play bean-bag horseshoes on the patio of the Innovation Center during the grand opening. (John Ruch)
The Sandy Springs Georgia Smart pilot project will focus on MARTA Route 5, within the congested areas in the cities of Sandy Springs and Dunwoody, as shown by the purple line on the map above. Intersections between the Roswell Road/Lake Place intersection and the Dunwoody MARTA station shown with green circles will be part of the pilot project in which MARTA buses will communicate with them to reduce the amount of time they must stop at intersections. Credit: Sandy Springs
Danielle Collier, a local painting conservator, cleans varnish off of the painting. (Phil Mosier)
Brook Run Park, Saturday April 16, 2016 1:00pm. Lemonade Days. Claire Stephens, and Hannah Hummel [light green shirt].
Sandy Springs City Council approved the purchase of three fire trucks from Pierce Manufacturing dealer Ten-8 of Georgia, including this mid-mount, 100-foot aerial truck. Ten-8/Pierce
Al Medore also bowls with the Wii league at Atria Buckhead.
Local seniors enjoy playing on the Nintendo Wii gaming system. At left, Harry Hower plays Wii bowling at Atria Buckhead, a senior facility that sponsors a National Senior League Wii bowling league called the Buckhead Kingpins.
Marcus Heart and Vascular Center,
Peachtree and Collier roads, Buckhead
Project: Piedmont Hospital’s hub for new center
funded by $75 million Marcus Foundation gift.
Expected completion: Late 2020
The crowd at Karen Handel’s Election Night watch party.
Here are the 2015 honorees from public and private high schools in Brookhaven, Buckhead, Dunwoody and Sandy Springs.
A Sandy Springs condo building that caught fire Jan. 31 is show in a photo from the Sandy Springs Fire Department.
Jason Lappe in a photograph from his Facebook page.
The units in Adley City Springs Apartments range from studios with a little more than 630 square feet to two-bedroom, two-bath units with an office in almost 1,4000 square feet of space. A salt water pool and aquatic lounge is found on the roof of the building. (Adley City Springs)
The electric bus that will be tested on MARTA routes in Fulton and DeKalb counties. (MARTA)
Doug Schuster, an incident management consultant working with the Atlanta-Fulton County Emergency Management Agency, used this chart during the Aug. 4 Sandy Springs City Council meeting to show that the projected death total for the county by Nov. 1 is 1,133, but that number could be cut to 647 deaths if a universal mask mandate was adopted immediately.
Above is an artist rendering of the new administration building that may be built at the Ignatius House Jesuit Retreat Center on Riverside Drive in Sandy Springs. The 3,000-square-foot building would house the retreat center’s employees.
Evelyn Andrews photo
From left, Wendell Lawing and Marlo Clowers pose for a photo during a tour of Georgia Department of Transportation’s “Transform 285/400” interchange project (Hannah Greco).
Cutting the ribbon on the Sandy Springs Innovation Center on Oct. 12 are, from left, Dan DiLuzio, board chair of the Sandy Springs Perimeter Chamber of Commerce; City Councilmember Chris Burnett; Mayor Rusty Paul; City Councilmember Gabriel Sterling, who is also vice chair of the Sandy Springs Development Authority and a candidate for Fulton County chair; Andy Macke, a vice president at Comcast; and Chamber of Commerce President Tom Mahaffey. (John Ruch)