📍 7 stops · ⏱ ~9 h
A day built around the rhythm of a big match: we start in the converted Sears warehouse that became a city food hall, trace the BeltLine's mural corridor through the Old Fourth Ward, drop into an indie creative studio, eat at Krog Street Market, and end courtside at the WNBA.
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A 1920s warehouse turned into a sprawling food hall and retail hub. The building's original concrete bones and freight-elevator shafts are still visible — the history tour takes you through the old Sears catalogue-order floors and the rooftop view over the Old Fourth Ward. The food hall stalls range from Vietnamese pho to Southern biscuit counters, so there is a genuine spread for a pre-match gather.
Ponce City Market: Food Hall an… · TicketsTiqetsThe history tour includes the original freight-elevator shafts and the catalogue-order floor where clerks processed mail orders for the whole Southeast. The rooftop amusement park, Skyline Park, opens at 11 — worth a quick look for the downtown skyline before you leave.
The is a 22-mile loop of former railway turned pedestrian and cycling path, and the is its most art-dense stretch. Between Ponce and Krog, the concrete walls shift every hundred yards — a commissioned mural by a local artist, a guerrilla wheat-paste, a steel sculpture bolted to the old rail bridge. On a match day the trail fills with people walking toward the gathering spots, and the street-art backdrop becomes the city's living gallery.
The is the 's most walked segment, running 2.25 miles from down to Reynoldstown. The stretch between Ponce and Krog is dense with commissioned murals — every few hundred yards the concrete retaining walls become a new canvas. On a July Saturday the trail hums with cyclists, skaters, and groups walking toward the markets. The old rail bridges overhead still carry the original steel rivets. A guided walking tour that pairs the BeltLine's most significant murals with food stops along the Eastside Trail. The guide unpacks the artists behind the large-scale commissioned pieces — many are Atlanta natives whose work appears on the trail's concrete retaining walls — and the food stops pull from the independent stalls and kitchens that line the corridor. It is a structured way to see the art you would otherwise walk past without context.
Atlanta Beltline Eastside Trail · Book a tourTiqets Things to do nearby
Atlanta: Cityscape Charms & Capital History Audio Tour
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The art density is highest on the half-mile south of Ponce toward Krog — the northbound stretch is quieter and more residential.
A flexible creative hub inside the Old Fourth Ward's Studioplex that works as a podcast studio, comedy club, workshop zone, and rentable event venue. It is one of the newer independent spaces in the neighbourhood — the programming shifts weekly, so what you walk into depends on the day: a live podcast recording, a stand-up open mic, or a screen-printing workshop. The raw industrial interior keeps the original Studioplex concrete floors and exposed ducting.
The Studioplex building has a central courtyard where artists sometimes set up pop-up tables on weekends — small-batch ceramics, zines, and prints. It is not advertised online, just a walk-through-and-see situation.
A 1920s warehouse turned food hall in Inman Park, with a dozen stalls under a single long skylight. The vendors lean toward the independent and chef-driven — a tiny sushi counter, a Southern fried-chicken stall, a craft-beer taproom — and the communal seating fills fast on a Saturday. The building's original steel trusses and exposed brick give it a warm, industrial feel that is quieter than .
Krog Street Market · Book onlineGetYourGuideJust outside the market's east entrance, the is a constantly-changing graffiti gallery — every surface is painted, and the artwork shifts week to week. It connects Inman Park to Cabbagetown and is a 2-minute walk from the market doors.
The tour runs in small groups and the guide points out details — artist names, technique, and the story behind specific murals — that you would miss walking solo.
Little Five Points is Atlanta's long-running bohemian pocket — a few blocks of independently-owned record shops, vintage clothing racks, tattoo studios, and the kind of dive bars that host punk shows in the back room. The commercial strip on Euclid Avenue feels like a small town dropped into the city, and on a match day the sidewalks fill with a mix of regulars and people drifting in from the . The street art here is older and more layered than the BeltLine murals — decades of wheat-paste and stencil work on the side walls.
A compact, walkable commercial district centred on Euclid Avenue, known for its concentration of independent record stores, vintage clothing shops, and tattoo parlours. Criminal Records and Wax 'N' Facts are the two long-standing vinyl spots — both have been here for decades. The neighbourhood's punk and indie roots are visible in the shopfronts and the street-level murals that cover the side alleys. On a Saturday afternoon the sidewalks are busy but the pace is unhurried.
Little Five Points · TicketsViatorA dive bar on Euclid Avenue that has been here since the 1980s — the interior is covered in nautical kitsch and the back room hosts punk and hardcore shows. Even if you are not staying for a drink, the building's exterior mural is one of the neighbourhood's most photographed spots.
East Atlanta Village, or EAV, is the city's edgier, less manicured answer to the polished food halls of the corridor. Flat Shoals Avenue runs through the centre, lined with independent bars, vintage shops, and music venues that have been here since before the neighbourhood became a destination. The village has a genuine neighbourhood feel — locals walk their dogs past the bar patios, and the street art here is more DIY than the commissioned BeltLine murals. On a match day, EAV fills with people who want a pre-game drink somewhere that does not feel like a corporate sports bar.
The village itself is the viewpoint — the intersection of Flat Shoals Avenue and Glenwood Avenue is the neighbourhood's living centre, with a cluster of independent bars, vintage shops, and music venues radiating out from it. The Earl is the long-standing live-music anchor, hosting indie and alternative acts most nights. Argosy is the gastropub with a large back patio that fills with pre-game crowds. The whole area has a low-key, unpolished energy that feels like the Atlanta that existed before the redevelopment.
The Earl is a music venue and bar that has been the anchor of EAV since 1999. The front room is a low-lit bar with a solid burger; the back room is a 300-capacity venue that has hosted everyone from local punk bands to national touring acts. On a match day the front room fills early with people grabbing a drink before heading to the arena.
A WNBA regular-season matchup between the and the at the . The Dream play their home games in , just south of the city, in a 3,500-seat arena that puts you close to the court. Tickets are required and should be booked ahead — the Saturday afternoon tip-off draws a family-heavy crowd and the atmosphere is loud and local. The arena is compact, so even the upper seats feel close to the action. A 3,500-seat arena in College Park that serves as the home court for the WNBA's Atlanta Dream. The venue is attached to the Georgia International Convention Center and sits just off I-85, about 15 minutes south of downtown. The compact size means every seat is close to the floor — the crowd noise feels immediate and the sightlines are clean. Concessions inside include local craft beer and Southern stadium staples.
Atlanta Dream v Golden State Va… · Ticketsticketmaster.comThe 's mural corridor runs over two miles between and , and the best pieces are tucked under bridges and around bends — pulling up the trail map on the fly keeps you from walking past a Wheatley or a Faile without noticing it.
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