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$189,000
****If
you know a friend, family member, or coworker who would like their
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Tuesday’s
Tip
Blank
check for Beltline
The
Arthur M. Blank Family Foundation signaled the viability of The
foundation donated the money to the Trust for "It's
a serious commitment of serious dollars by a well-known philanthropic
institution in Blank
wrote a check for $1.15 million to the trust. The rest --- $1.35 million
--- is a challenge grant, to be paid when $5 million is raised from other
sources, according to the foundation. Blank,
Atlanta Falcons owner and the co-founder of Home Depot, said in a
statement that the grand, green vision for The
trust has not determined how much it would cost to create four But
70 percent to 80 percent of the proposed parkland and greenways are
already in public hands, owned by By
comparison, Midtown's The
trust envisions 2,014 acres in new and existing parks linked in an
"emerald necklace." Elise
Eplan, the Blank foundation's vice president for special initiatives, said
the family's interest in expanding "They
want people, and children especially, to have access to what parks and
green space can give them, the role that parks can play in building
community, that they are gathering places," Eplan said.
Two
years ago, Blank trustees walked and drove around the Beltline with Ryan
Gravel, the Georgia Tech graduate whose 1999 master's thesis spawned the
Beltline idea, and former Atlanta City Council President Cathy Woolard,
the project's first champion. Early
interest had centered mostly on the public transit component, for trolleys
or streetcars, but Blank's people zeroed in on the park possibilities
immediately, Eplan said. "It's
a dream project for a city that has focused on growth outward, outward,
outward," Eplan said. It
also fits neatly into the foundation's renewed focus, to concentrate the
bulk of its $30 million-a-year charitable contributions to arts, education
and park acquisition inside the city of "If
you just buy a piece of land and plop it down, it's not part of a system
that can change the lives of thousands of people," Eplan
said. Stacy Shelton - Staff FOR ADDITIONAL INFORMATION ON THE PROPERTY LISTED ABOVE OR THE TIP PROVIDED
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