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Take a Tour'Round Atlanta and Discover an Underground World of Possibilities

Atlanta began as a railroad town helping to supply the cotton trade throughout the 19th century. Long ago in 1936, the 138 mile Western & Atlantic Railroad which linked Chattanooga to mid-Georgia was chartered by the State of Georgia. As various towns spent my youth across the route, the extreme southern end was marked by the emerging city of Atlanta, expanding outwards from the sanwellsr2fiwriu.onion Zero Milepost which marked the center of Underground Atlanta.

In 1968, the Atlanta Board of Aldermen bestowed historic status on the location to help protect the five-block region of the downtown Atlanta, "city beneath the city ".Despite the countless years of neglect which had occurred, workers trying to restore the site found with their surprise, surviving original ornate marble storefronts with granite archways, decorative brickwork, hand carved wooden posts and cast-iron pilasters of still intact.

In 1969 the Underground Atlanta re-opened as a retail and entertainment center supplying a unique shopping, dining and entertainment experience within the historic confines of this old site.

Despite its popularity, the construction of a rapid transit line alongside a series of other factors led inevitably to the Underground being closed in 1980. The huge affection with which the spot has always been held however resulted in the cities civic and business leaders having the place added to the National Register of Historic Places, further protecting its future, before a massive joint venture between the City of Atlanta and private industry enabled the New Underground Atlanta to be opened in 1989.

The $142 million re-opening was intended to help revitalize downtown Atlanta, a move which is apparently working, as private travel industry players such as for instance Embassy Suites hotels have begun to go into the location, having seen the opportunities that the regeneration and redesign has afforded the area.

Underground Atlanta since it stands today offers an all round family experience, with countless shops, including one-of-a-kind specialty items which it will be difficult to locate elsewhere, food courts, and fine restaurants which attract over 6 million visitors a year. Additionally, there are special organized events, such as the Oktoberfest where in fact the Underground becomes filled up with the sounds of authentic German music, or the weekend long Montreux Jazz Festival, in addition to providing dancing, food and drink, and regular live entertainment, through the entire exciting mix of bars and nightclubs created for adults to enjoy.