Greystar Breaks Ground on Elan Inman Station Mixed-Use Project

The 285-unit mid-rise apartment community should open summer 2016.

Caleb J. Spivak Editor-in-Chief
Blake Moore
Edited By Blake Moore
News Writer

The 285-unit mid-rise apartment community should open summer 2016.

Greystar in a press release Monday announced construction has started on Elan Inman Station, a 285-unit mid-rise apartment community.

The mixed-use development will boast 16,000-square-feet of ground floor retail space, at 144 Moreland Avenue NE, just south of the Little Five Points entertainment district.

“We’re thrilled to offer residents a new upscale living option in such a highly coveted neighborhood,” Todd Wigfield, Managing Director of Development for Greystar, said in the release.

“The community is being thoughtfully designed to complement the area’s surrounding architecture and pedestrian friendly location.”

Elan Inman Station will offer one and two-bedroom floor plans ranging in size from 570 to 1,200 square feet of living space.

Amenities will include a two-story community clubhouse featuring a fitness center with cardio and strength equipment, a spin studio and yoga room. The clubhouse will include a Wi-Fi cafe and gaming room. The community will feature three outdoor amenity spaces: a “resort-style” swimming pool, an elevated sun deck with grilling stations, and a “Zen courtyard.”

Construction is expected to be completed by summer 2016.

 

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Editor-in-Chief
Caleb J. Spivak is the Founder and CEO of What Now Media Group.
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  • Do you have the link for the Press Release itself? I can not find it anywhere. I want to see if Reynoldstown, where this building is located, was left out of the PR/your article. We are a vibrant evolving neighborhood that sadly keeps getting overlooked.

  • Glad they are building this. That’s R-Town though, not Inman Park. Reminds me of Buckhead suing people to stop calling their businesses Buckhead _____ in Kennesaw.

  • Racism is baked right into the DNA of this place. Every one knows “Reynoldstown” is on the wrong side on the tracks to be considered “upscale”.

  • I’m confused. This project broke ground months ago and parts of it are four or five stories tall already. Or is this the press release for some different project that is actually in Inman Park?

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