Lakewood Heights, Atlanta Explained

Lakewood Heights
Settlement Type:Neighborhoods of Atlanta
Subdivision Type:Country
Subdivision Name:United States
Subdivision Type1:State
Subdivision Name1:Georgia
Subdivision Type2:County
Subdivision Name2:Fulton County
Subdivision Type3:City
Subdivision Name3:City of Atlanta
Subdivision Type5:NPU
Subdivision Name5:Y
Population As Of:2008
Population Footnotes:[1]
Population Total:2750
Lakewood Heights Historic District
Nrhp Type:hd
Nocat:yes
Built:1895
Architect:William Augustus Edwards, William J. Sayward
Added:July 5, 2002
Refnum:02000712

Lakewood Heights is a primarily Black (and historically also a Jewish working-class)[2] neighborhood in southeast Atlanta. It is bounded by:

Lakewood Heights contains the Lakewood Heights Historic District, listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

History

Factors leading to development

Lakewood Heights developed as the result of three separate factors:[3]

Private enterprise and model homes

One section of Lakewood Heights is Oak Knoll, which was noted in a 1937 meeting between Techwood Homes organizer Charles Forrest Palmer, President Franklin Delano Roosevelt, first lady Eleanor Roosevelt and Secretary of the Treasury Henry Morgenthau Jr. Roosevelt was delighted that private enterprise—backed by guarantees the Federal Housing Administration—could provide good homes at moderate rentals. The conversation about Oak Knoll drew the conclusion that private projects were in fact strengthened by public housing projects serving as a "pace setter", and helped support arguments for a more proactive nationwide public housing policy.[4] The house at 1099 Oak Knoll Drive was featured in a 1938 issue of Life magazine, as it was a Life "model house"; the model kits were available for purchase from retailers around the country.[5]

Assembly plant to media productions

The neighborhood was home to the Lakewood Fairgrounds which until 1979 had a racetrack, Lakewood Speedway. Now the Lakewood (a.k.a. Aaron's, a.k.a. Hi-Fi Buys) Amphitheater is located on the old fairgrounds.

Around 1970 the area began to decline as middle-class families moved away. The assembly plant finally closed in 1990.[6]

The area is now an important center of the growing Atlanta-area film and television production industry. The EUE/Screen Gems Atlanta soundstages were established there in mid-2010 and by Autumn 2011 were already expanding.[7]

Parks

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Lakewood Heights neighborhood in Atlanta, Georgia (GA), 30315 subdivision profile. www.city-data.com.
  2. Web site: The South Bend Commons. southbend.co. 2020-02-10.
  3. http://www.sustainablelakewood.org/home/history_of_lakewood_heights Sustainable Lakewood: History of Lakewood Heights
  4. https://archive.org/stream/adventuresofslum00palmrich/adventuresofslum00palmrich_djvu.txt Charles Forrest Palmer, Adventures of a Slum Fighter
  5. Web site: LIFE. Time. Inc. 26 December 1938. Time Inc. Google Books.
  6. News: COMPANY NEWS; G.M. Will Close Factory in Atlanta. AP. The New York Times . 18 May 1990 .
  7. http://blogs.ajc.com/radio-tv-talk/2011/09/21/euescreen-gems-studios-at-lakewood-in-expansion-mode/ Atlanta Journal Constitution Radio & TV Talk blog: "EUE/Screen Gems studios at Lakewood in expansion mode", September 2011