Safety Committee Meeting
Zoom Virtual WebinarPlease visit the Safety Committee page to learn more about what we do and to register to attend this virtual committee meeting!
Please visit the Safety Committee page to learn more about what we do and to register to attend this virtual committee meeting!
Please visit the License and Permits Committee page to learn more about what we do and to register to attend this virtual committee meeting!
Please visit the Board of Directors page to learn more about what we do to educate, advocate, and connect our Midtown Neighborhood. You can click here to register to attend this monthly overview of our progress on Midtown topics that are important to our community. The full agenda can be viewed here.
The City of Atlanta is divided into twenty-five (25) Neighborhood Planning Units (NPUs), which are citizen advisory councils that make recommendations to the Mayor and City Council on zoning, land use, and other planning-related matters. The NPU system was established in 1974 by the late Mayor Maynard Jackson to provide an opportunity for all citizens…
Please visit the Infrastructure Committee page to learn more about what we do and to register to attend this virtual committee meeting!
A beloved tradition about a love for Midtown, plants and sharing. A neighborhood favorite.
Each month there is a public meeting of the Midtown Development Review Committee – comprised of 10 individuals representing residents, property and business owners, institutions, neighborhood associations, and MARTA. The committee, appointed by the City of Atlanta, provides formal recommendations to the Office of Planning on all Special Administrative Permit (SAP) applications within the Midtown…
Please visit the Safety Committee page to learn more about what we do and to register to attend this virtual committee meeting!
MARK YOUR CALENDAR! Calling all Midtown residents! Property owners and renters alike. Students, retirees, families, professionals. Each of us has an interest in zoning. You may not realize this but zoning is the greatest shaper of our neighborhood landscape. Density, scale, watershed management, architectural fabric, type variety. These elements drive affordability, transit access, street level…