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Living in the Bmore/DC area and thinking of moving to Atlanta??

Recently single (26yr. old white male) and could have a job opportunity with my current company to move to Atlanta. I have family and friends in the DC/Baltimore area but also lots of memories from a lengthy relationship. I have always wanted to move South, my only fears stem from not having any friends/connections in Atlanta and I would be working from home and on the road. Any advice about the city, people, single life, ability to adapt? Thanks

Asked By: NC - 6/25/2007
Best Answer - Chosen by Asker
I think cowboy has time for nothing but answering questions on the computer! His book is correct. Come on down. Great place to be!
Answered By: hasdad62 - 6/25/2007
Additional Answers ()
I hope this works out for you...

Excellent job opportunities, and Atlanta has a balanced economy: travel (Delta, world's busiest airport), Fortune 500 (Coke, Home Depot, UPS, Southern Company...), Technology (tons of software, Scientific Atlanta), Healthcare (CDC and Amer. Heart Assn based here), and the list goes on & on.

The airport makes it cheap & easy to fly anywhere, and you will be able to get back to DC for about $250 round trip. You can easily make day trips to anywhere in the Southeast. Also consider living north of Atlanta and look for jobs in Chattanooga, Athens, Rome or Gainsville.

If you ever were to look for another employer, sites to check out would be monster.com, the ajc.com site, or look for local industry groups. For example, in the technology area, the Technology of Association of Georgia would be a good place to look.

Cost of living is lower than most US cities. Real estate is affordable still. 1. Decatur - very close to downtown and would be more of an older community but still very accessible.
2. Lilburn / Snellville - great schools in this area, good mix of demographics, good suburban life for rasing family.
3. Alpharetta - accessible by GA 400, nice homes and good schools
4. Hickory Flat / Holly Springs - inside Cherokee County, very affordable homes, excellent environment, lots of young families
5. Marietta / Ackworth - bad traffic, but good area with good schools
6. Henry & Clayton Counties - South of the city. don't know as much about these areas.

Key: figure out where you will work first (or maybe where you will go to church) and then find a good area. Atlanta has lots of communities in the suburbs that will give our children good schools and a lot of strong communities where you can live.

You will find a 2400 sq. ft. home with 1/2 acre of property will cost you about $175,000 - 190,000. There are a lot of communities that have pools & tennis courts in them. The further in towards the city you are, the more expensive the homes.

I am married, but there are tons of singles in the city. There are 4 million people in Atlanta and Atlanta is a young city with a lot of 20 somethings. I expect you will have no trouble finding dates.

Lastly, Atlanta has a dynamic arts, sports and music scene, and as with any big US city there is plenty to do here. The weather is spectacular (although it is hot during the summer, it is not much worse than DC can be) and you will not have as many cold winter days. Very little snow every year.

Have a nice move!
Answered By: cowboy_with_big_boots - 6/25/2007
I also agree with cowboy, one thing thogh, stay outside the beltway, MARTA area unless you making more than 5000 bucks a month, min. or on welfare. Lots of the "affordable" areas are rather dangerous and gang infested and as a white boy you gonna be the absolut minority. Basically new money in the north, old money in the south and hillbillys east and west lol good luck
Source(s):
living here since 1963
Answered By: Thorsten L - 6/25/2007
My sisters and I was born & raised in the Metro DC area and my oldest sister and her family have lived in Atlanta over 20 years. My parents retired in Florida but recently it was necessary to relocate my elderly Mom to Atlanta bec everything is much cheaper in terms of housing when compared to DC esp where we live in Fairfax County/ Northern Virginia.

Atlanta GA and Charlotte NC are the 2 biggest cities in the Southeast and like all major cities, it does have pockets and certain neighborhoods where the prices of large homes get rather expensive as well as the not-so-nice neighborhoods. In general the nice recently built oversized homes are much cheaper than around the DC/Batimore corridor

No one mentioned but Georgia Tech is located in downtown Atlanta and the MARTA metro is much farther stretched out than the Metrorail in DC and like someone suggested, finding the right apartment or condo within walking distance to a MARTA Stop might be ideal when you want to fly back to DC bec you would not have to catch a taxi or look for a ride to the airport.

The skyscrapers and night life are there to be enjoyed but it is one major city maybe like Los Angeles where TRAFFIC and interstates I-95, I-85 and I-20 all converge...

If you plan your air travel in advance, airfare get be rather inexpensive like $100 or so, one-way. Driving from Atlanta to DC is like 10 hours and there are certain booming areas like between WashDC and Richmond VA and several along I-85 in North Carolina where traffic can get very congested as the interstates are being expanded and many people are moving to NC along the I-85 corridor. Best time to travel if driving alone is late at night and cheapest gasoline is found in South Carolina.

Best of Luck!
Answered By: DvSkV - 6/25/2007
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