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Mission Accomplished

The Gateway Marietta CID Revitalizes Franklin Road

In the summer of 2014, a small band of Cobb County business owners gathered with the intent to do something rarely seen in the world of commerce — they devised a plan in which they would pay more in local taxes. The catch, of course, is that they would be able to dictate where and how their additional tax dollars would be spent. The business owners wanted to take it upon themselves to improve the community in which they live and work — to the benefit of everyone in the county. Thus, the Gateway Marietta Community Improvement District (CID) was formed.

This particular type of financial arrangement — also known as Business Improvement Districts, Business Revitalization Zones or Special Improvement Districts — isn’t new. In fact, the concept dates back to at least the 1970s, but CIDs are gaining traction as an expedient way for communities to revitalize derelict areas and to make capital improvements without the necessity of navigating extensive red tape or by shifting existing tax revenue from other programs or projects. There are more than 1,000 such programs operating in the United States. In Cobb County alone, there are now three CIDs: The Town Center CID, the Cumberland CID, and now the Gateway Marietta CID.

These programs work by taxing only the commercial properties within a designated district, not residential-use properties. Once the business owners decide for themselves to form a CID, they are eligible to apply for state and federal grants to assist with infrastructure improvement plans within the specified corridor (roads, public safety, signage, streetscapes, etc.). It may seem strange to some people that commercial property owners would create more taxes for themselves, “but they see the value in protecting and increasing the value of their property in making the improvements to public right-of-way that likely aren’t going to get made by the city and county. They just take the bull by the horns and do it,” said Lynn Rainey, attorney at Rainey & Phillips in Marietta, who has helped to set up 18 CIDs in the region, including the three in Cobb County.

According to the Cobb County CID Act, the CID board must vote every six years whether they wish to continue with their project. That’s true of all the CIDs in Georgia. Rainey said that so far, no CID has decided to dissolve. The Cumberland CID, for example, has been active for more than 25 years.

The Gateway Marietta CID was established July 1, 2014, with the mission to help establish the Franklin Road corridor as one of the premier business centers in Metro Atlanta. Just two years later, this dream is becoming reality. The dilapidated apartment complexes are gone and 20 new businesses are calling Franklin Road home, including Atlanta United FC, which built its training facility there; and Home Depot and WellStar have made major property investments there as well. And yes, the companies all have become de facto members of the CID. The progress is amazing when you consider where this corridor was just a few years ago.

Rainey said there is now more than 600,000 square feet of office space that has been either renewed or newly leased in the corridor. Thus far, more than $350 million in public and private capital has been invested in the area, he added. Class “A” office space occupancy has gone from 45 percent to 97 percent. “It has been an extraordinary turnaround that’s just getting started,” Rainey said.

According to Heath Garrett, an attorney with Garrett McNatt Hennessey Carpenter 360 LLC and a founding partner of the Gateway Marietta CID, Franklin Road used to be a crime-ridden mess. Between 2008 and 2012, he said, almost every company that had a presence on the corridor moved. Moreover, the Gateway Marietta area had 12 apartment complexes within a one-mile stretch of road that had become all F-grade complexes essentially owned by slumlords. “It was really a drain on city resources. Something had to be done to stabilize the community,” he said. The city had begun efforts to redevelop this area, but then the Great Recession hit. So in 2012, a group of citizens, including Garrett and business partner Mitch Hunter, joined forces under the Revitalize Marietta moniker “which was designed to reignite the discussion about redevelopment and revitalization in the city of Marietta with the Franklin Road area being our first focus,” said Garrett.

This group worked with the Marietta City Council and the mayor to pass a $68-million redevelopment bond referendum. The referendum passed in Nov. 2013. Most of that money — $64 million — was allocated for redeveloping the Franklin Road corridor, primarily for the purpose of redeveloping the run-down apartments and commercial properties in that area. “And so the question became: How do you create a real sense of place and community? And how do you deal with the difficult issues, because you don’t want to necessarily displace people; you need to deal with the physical structures and the crime,” said Garrett. “The CID is the perfect vehicle because property owners along the corridor tax themselves and then they govern the use of those tax dollars. And in this case, the purposes for the CID were for enhanced security and for infrastructure projects.”

Joe Knight, another business partner of Garrett’s, actually went door to door to the businesses in the area, and informed the owners about the value of the CID and why they would benefit. “Those business owners saw the value in having an organization like a CID to be the catalyst, to be the organizer of the community, to raise money and then try to leverage that money to improve the area,” Garrett said. The initial board of directors consists of Chairman Jeff Shaw, Fairlead Commercial Real Estate; Vice Chair Mark Lawson, Kennesaw State University; Treasurer Bob Morgan, Cerqueda, Morgan & Collins; Tom Flanigan, Clarion Partners; Rube McMullan, McMullan Properties; Milton Dortch, Stowers & Company; and Roger Davis, Red Hare Brewing Company.

Once the team was in place, the newly formed Gateway Marietta CID set about to improve the safety and security of the corridor. In its first year of operation, Rainey said the CID generated $200,000 in taxes for improvement projects (based on a tax rate of 5 mils). “A CID is not just a revenue-generating entity; it’s also an advocacy group,” he said, adding that the primary impetus of the Gateway Marietta CID at this point is to try and improve the way the area looks. What the CID has been able to fund is a plan to improve two interchanges — I-75 at South Marietta Parkway and I-75 at Delk Road — to make the area more inviting to persons and companies to come into the area. Additionally, the CID is investing in upgraded security. “We just invested in the most advanced camera technology for businesses and for the police department,” Garrett said.

It should be noted that the CID doesn’t operate alone. The city of Marietta is a close and vital partner. Officials stay in contact with CID members, updating them on infrastructure projects in or near the gateway, as well as economic development plans and other city endeavors. “The city has put a lot of investment into the Franklin Gateway area, and has a lot of interest in seeing that continue. Moving forward, a big part of that is going to be the CID,” said Daniel Cummings, planning and development specialist with the city of Marietta.

The CID will continue to work with the city to purchase and revitalize other properties. And another goal is to expand the CID. There is interest among business owners outside the current CID borders to join the organization. “Hopefully, we’ll continue to see private development [in the Gateway Marietta CID],” Cummings said.

Made In Cobb

Cobb County is known for many things. As one of Georgia’s most affluent and educated counties, Cobb is home to great school systems, beautiful landscapes, important historical sites, and major institutions such as Dobbins Air Reserve Base and Kennesaw State University.

But what local residents may not realize is that a number of products used each and every day by consumers across the country and around the world also are produced right here in Cobb County.

Find out what “Made in Cobb” looks like by checking out these growing local businesses.

Arylessence, Inc.
1091 Lake Dr., Marietta
Arylessence.com
(770) 924-3775

Why Cobb: Arylessence makes flavors and scents for products such as ChapStick, Burt’s Bees, chewing gum, and candles. This is the 40th anniversary of the family-owned business, which is always giving back to the community.

“Arylessence is proud to call Cobb County our corporate headquarters home for the past 40 years,” said Cynthia Reichard, executive vice president and director of client services. “Our creative fragrances and flavors are strategically designed and manufactured in Marietta and shipped to brand-name manufacturers around the globe. Think of us as the people who create the scent of your favorite product or the taste of your favorite flavor that has you going back for it again and again.”

Reichard added that the county’s ideal location, progressive leadership, excellent education options, and diverse workforce are all factors in the growth and success of Arylessence. Currently, the company is planning for a multi-million-dollar research and development center expansion.

“We are more than confident that Cobb County’s economic development advancements and resolute commitment to business will support Arylessence’s dynamic future,” said Reichard. “It is exciting to know Arylessence’s success is contributing to the outstanding business growth statistics that Cobb County represents, not only to the state of Georgia, but to the nation.”

Knotty Pretzels
1930 Airport Industrial Park Drive, Marietta
KnottyPretzels.com
(404) 957-9900

Why Cobb: Casey May and co-owner Sean McSweeney founded Knotty Pretzels in 2013, using a family recipe to create pretzels designed to pair well with anything, especially beer. The two have been making pretzels since they were 13 years old, long before they officially founded the company. May and McSweeney are Cobb County natives who graduated from Kennesaw Mountain High School, and both still live and work here.

“Our family and friends always liked our pretzels, and after graduation we decided to try it as a business,” said May. “Marietta is constantly growing, so we thought it was a good place for us to start. We also like being close to the new Atlanta Braves stadium.”

Knotty Pretzels is located just off Highway 41 near the end of a runway at Dobbins Air Reserve Base. Their product is marketed as a great companion to the ever-expanding roster of craft brews created in Atlanta and elsewhere, with an official slogan of “The Official Pretzel of Beer.”

“The pretzels are a great tailgate snack,” says May. “Our goal is to be on the beer aisle in every grocery and convenience store.”

Atlanta Smokehouse Products
1700 Enterprise Way, Unit 107, Marietta
AtlantaSmokehouse.com
(770) 955-2133

Why Cobb: Gary Shuel chose to operate Atlanta Smokehouse Products in Cobb County because he was able to find a great facility that fit his needs. It also helped that he’d recently moved into the area after spending several years in Jacksonville, Fla. Both Shuel and his business partner, Seva Sagalchik, live in East Cobb.

“We were looking for a facility near [Sagalchik’s] house,” said Shuel. “We’re very glad that we are here because it’s a good area to be in and many of our customers are from local areas like Marietta and Roswell.”

Atlanta Smokehouse Products has been in business for more than 25 years, selling products such as smoked fish and caviar. Though their main facility is located in Cobb County, customers can and do order from across the country.

The company specializes in fish cured by smoking, with varieties including American Black Caviar, Alaskan Salmon Red Caviar, Nova Salmon, and Siberian Sturgeon.

High Road Craft Ice Cream
1730 B W. Oak Commons Ct., Marietta
HighRoadCraft.com
(678) 701-7623

Why Cobb: High Road Craft Ice Cream began as a group of chefs who wanted to make high-quality ice cream for other chefs to serve in restaurants, hotels, and resorts. The company focuses on great flavors and luscious textures in its products.

High Road’s factory is open to the public on Saturdays, and its products also can be found in grocery stores and specialty food shops across North America. But the company remains firmly rooted in Cobb County.

“Cobb County is home,” says Keith Schroeder, High Road’s founder and CEO. “We moved here in 1994, fell in love with the area and have since raised our children here. We’ve been able to attract amazing talent here in Cobb — at every level of our organization. Our access to the interstate is phenomenal, and we have a world-class plant in a beautiful, mixed-use setting.”

High Road purchases regionally sourced nuts, buttermilk, and berries for its products and aims to make every spoonful great. If you stop by their facility, check out flavors such as bourbon burnt sugar, cheesecake brownie, peanut butter & preserves, hazelnut latte, and white chocolate raspberry.

H2forLife
4374 Shallowford Industrial Parkway, Marietta
H2forLife.com
(678) 809-4319

Why Cobb: H2forLife has been in business on Shallowford Industrial Parkway since 2010. CEO Danny Day said he discovered the product while doing research on polyatomic hydrogen (hydrogen-rich water). He made a discovery that, when using a particular formula, the substance could reduce tumors in rats.

“My dad was later diagnosed with colon and liver cancer, and that’s when we made the connection,” said Day. “We had everything in the lab to make a product for him. Using the product, Dad’s cancer shrank by 90 percent in four months.”

Day began producing H2forLife for wider distribution after registering with the FDA as a dietary supplement manufacturer. According to the company’s website, H2forLife is colloidal platinum dissolved in purified spring water from the Blue Ridge Mountains of Georgia and saturated with molecular hydrogen under high pressure. Business has taken off and Day plans to stay here in Cobb County for the foreseeable future.

“Cobb County is a pro-business environment and it has a good quality of life,” says Day. “You add those two together and it’s a great place to

Drive 4 Knowledge Scholarship Golf Tournament

The annual Drive 4 Knowledge Scholarship Golf Tournament takes place on the City Club Marietta golf course. Come out and network and play a round of golf with city officials, educators, business owners, tv and radio personalities.

Date:
Friday, August 24th, 2018
Registration 9am
Start time 10am

Admission:
$125 per golfer
$450 for a foursome

Address:
City Club Marietta golf course
510 Powder Springs Street
Marietta GA 30064

For more information, please call 678-939-5078 or visit www.drive4knowledge.com

Free Movie Night at Custer Park

The City of Marietta is sponsoring a free movie night at Custer Park on July 29, 2017.  The event starts at 7 pm and features the movie “Moana” which starts at dark.

Date:
Saturday, July 29, 2017

Time:
The event begins at 7 pm, and the movie starts at dark

Admission:
Free

Address:
Custer Park
600 Kenneth E. Marcus Way
Marietta, GA 30060

For more information, please call (770) 794-5630.

300th Anniversary Celebration of Freemasonry

Freemasonry is the oldest, largest and most widely recognized fraternal organization in the world. Thirteen signers of the Constitution and 14 U.S. Presidents, among them George Washington, were Freemasons. Today, there are about 2 million Freemasons in North America alone. In the USA, the Freemasons give approximately $2 million per day to charitable causes.

This year the Masonic Fraternity will observe the 300th Anniversary of Modern Freemasonry.

St. John the Baptist Day (Saturday, June 24) 2017 marks the 300th Anniversary of the formation of the Grand Lodge of London and Westminster, from whence all modern Speculative Freemasonry and its bodies have their origins. Georgia Freemasons will celebrate this milestone in their illustrious history with a grand affair, including a parade and festival to be held in downtown Marietta, exactly 300 years to the day from the official founding of their Great Fraternity. They join Masonic organizations worldwide in this year-long celebration. Festivities will include a parade from the Marietta Masonic Temple (located at 547 Roswell Street NE) to Glover Park (Marietta Square), blood drive, GACHiP event, entertainment, public speakers, concessions, media attention, and information booths about their charities and appendant bodies. The public is welcome and invited to help them celebrate this momentous occasion in the history of Freemasonry. They’ll have fun for the whole family!

Brother Dr. Gary H. Leazer, Most Worshipful Grand Master of Free & Accepted Masons for the State of Georgia will be in attendance as well as many other Grand Lodge and District Officers. Also attending will be community officials and leaders and, of course, no Masonic Parade would be complete without the presence and shenanigans of The Shriners.

Brother Roy Barnes, a Member of one of the local Lodges and former Governor of Georgia, will serve as the Grand Marshal.

Event Times: Parade begins at 10:00am, Family Festival from 11:00am – 1:00pm!

Date:
Saturday, June 24, 2017 from 10:00 AM to 1:00 PM

Admission:
Free

Address:
From:
Marietta Masonic Temple
547 Roswell St NE
Marietta, GA 30060

To:
Glover Park (Marietta Square)
Marietta, GA 30060

For more information, please call 770-833-7297 or visit http://www.ssl721.com/300Celebration.html

Cinco de Mayo at Red Hare

Oye! Red Hare is celebrating Cinco de Mayo on Friday, May 5th, 2017 at the brewery from 5:30-7:30. Besides the beer, they’ll have DJ Q Money providing the soundtrack for the night, as well as free chips and salsa from On the Border as well as two special casks flowing— a Lagerita and an IPA with Simcoe.

Date:
Friday, May 5, 2017 from 5:30 pm to 7:30 pm

Admission:
$12 Tour/Tasting includes souvenir pint glass, 36 oz. of beer samples, and brewery tour.

$20 Tour/Tasting includes souvenir pint glass, 36 oz. of beer samples, brewery tour AND a 6-Pack to take home of our cans.

$5 Tickets for children and non-drinkers includes pint glass, brewery tour and 36 oz of Root Beer and Grapefruit sodas.

Address:
1998 Delk Industrial Blvd.
Marietta, GA 30067

For more information, please call 678-401-0600 or visit redharebrewing.com

A Piece of the Pie

“If I had to do this movie all over again and I didn’t even have a tax incentive, I would go to Georgia. Now you know why it’s called Hollywood East.” That’s a ringing endorsement from Theodore Melfi who directed “Hidden Figures,” and filmed the entire movie in Georgia in 2016.

In January, “Hidden Figures,” a film that tells the story of the African-American women working at NASA who helped launch astronaut John Glenn into orbit, premiered in theaters nationally. While the storyline took place at the Langley Research Center in Hampton, Virginia, in the 1960s, the movie was filmed in Georgia, with many of the scenes shot at Marietta’s very own Lockheed Martin and Clay National Guard Center.

According to a short documentary about filming in Georgia produced by the state’s economic development department, the director, executive producer and production designer all fell in love with the area when deciding where to shoot the movie. “Tax incentive aside, I can’t imagine shooting this film anywhere but Georgia. It was like the most remarkable place to work. The people are amazing and friendly. The crew is fantastic and kind and very professional and knows what they are doing, and the locations are like staggering,” Melfi said. “The town, the city and the state opens its arms to you and embraces you and they want you there and you feel needed.”

Melfi added that because of the wide range of well-preserved historic buildings throughout the state, he was able to easily recreate the look and feel of the ‘60s: “It’s just like a perfect place to shoot. … Lockheed Martin was incredible for us. We met great people there and they were just so supportive of the field.”

“Lockheed [Martin] has a wind tunnel that’s the same time period as the wind tunnel that was at Langley [Research Center] at the time, and that wind tunnel is no longer there. In fact, I think there are less than 10 wind tunnels like it in the country now and I think this is the only one we could have shot at,” said Executive Producer Kevin Halloran.

At Clay National Guard, the hangar was one of very few period correct hangars big enough to show the training of the astronauts in the film. “[It] was an opportunity for us to recreate a moment that really did happen. We recreated a press conference that happened in real time,” said Production Designer Wynn Thomas.

Other Georgia filming locations included Madison, Monroe, Morehouse College, Columbus, Canton, South Broad Street in downtown Atlanta and Fort McPherson.

You and I know just how great Georgia is — the historical uniqueness of the area, landscapes and friendly people. But to have some of Hollywood’s finest pick Georgia as “the place” to film a movie that is being recognized by more than a dozen awards organizations, including the Oscars, Golden Globes and Screen Actors Guild, really speaks to what we are doing here. I’m incredibly proud that Cobb County locations like Lockheed Martin and Clay National Guard are in the national spotlight and I hope that this opportunity opens doors for more chances to bring the West Coast our way, highlighting the rich history, as well as the exciting new developments we have here.

A Voice for Vietnam Veterans

Donna Rowe has always advocated for U.S. military veterans, especially those who fought in the Vietnam War. However, it wasn’t until a phone call almost 35 years after she served as head nurse at the 3rd Field Hospital in Saigon that she began to voice her opinion about how Vietnam veterans are perceived back home.

“I’m not afraid to talk about it,” Rowe says with passion in her eyes, reflecting on the targeted verbal abuse of her fellow men and women in service after they returned from war. “There are some men who are still very shy about defending themselves, but I am not.”

A longtime Cobb County resident and the first female inductee into the Georgia Military Veterans Hall of Fame in 2016, Rowe served in Vietnam in the emergency and triage area from 1968-1969. She was commissioned as a second lieutenant and promoted to captain while there, and served in the U.S. Army Nurse Corps between 1964-1969.

In 2003, Rowe received a phone call from the director of “In The Shadow of the Blade,” a documentary about a restored UH-1 helicopter on a flight to reunite Vietnam vets and families of the dead, asking if she could share her contact information with Kathleen Epps. Rowe and her corpsmen had rescued Epps as a child in Vietnam on May 15, 1969. According to Rowe, the 1st Infantry Division had radioed for an air evacuation in a small Vietnamese village that was wiped out by the enemy, requesting pick up of one small casualty. Though there was reportedly a firefight at the time of approach, the team was able to complete the evacuation and requested permission to bring the casualty to Rowe’s hospital, which at the time had strict priorities for accepting civilian casualties.

Upon arriving at the hospital, Rowe quickly learned that the casualty was an infant. The baby girl was brought to the hospital still locked in her dead mother’s arms, though suffering from fragment wounds in her chest and abdomen. Rowe had to break the mother’s arms to free the child, which immediately caused massive hemorrhaging. Rowe and her corpsmen rushed the child from triage to surgery, and requested that the chaplain baptize the baby on the way. If the girl survived surgery, Rowe knew she wouldn’t be able to stay in the hospital long, so a baptism would allow her to be taken to a Catholic orphanage. Rowe, a Methodist, and her corpsmen, one of whom was a Mormon and the other a Catholic, were officially named the infant’s Godparents and the child was named Kathleen after an Irish song and given the last name Fields because she came from the battlefield. Epps is her married name.

Later that day, the priest at the orphanage shared the story of the rescue during mass. After hearing the story, U.S. Navy Lt. Marvin Cords requested to see the child, later extending his deployment nine more months so he could adopt the child and return to Texas, where the little girl was welcomed by three more adopted siblings and a new mother.

The connection between Rowe and Epps came to light more than three decades later. During filming of “In the Shadow of the Blade,” Rowe revealed to the director that she had kept mementos of the rescue of the infant baby girl, dedicating scrapbook pages to images she received from a reporter who documented her team during that time of war. That footage of Rowe made the final cut and was mentioned in an Atlanta Journal-Constitution article detailing the Georgia filming of the documentary, which is how Epps found Rowe. “She was Googling the names [in the article] and that’s when it popped up. … This scrapbook started the whole thing,” Rowe says, holding a large black scrapbook, visibly worn along the edges and spine. Inside, Rowe keeps the history alive with detailed images of Epps’ rescue, her care team and the other men and women who served alongside her.

Epps had been looking for Rowe and her fellow corpsmen since she was 13 years old. She always wanted to meet the people who saved her life. “The flight medics who rescued her were absolute heroes,” Rowe says. “They flew into a firefight to save this baby. It took seven rounds in their aircraft just to pick her up.” On April 14, 2003, Epps was reunited with Rowe and Spc. Richard Hock, one of her corpsmen, in Austin, Texas. Lt. David Alderson, who flew the helicopter to save Epps, died 10 days shy of the reunion.

Until 2003, the story of Epps’ rescue had gone untold by Rowe. She believed the events of that day were just part of her duty. However traumatic, Rowe says the role she played in the rescue helped her realize the then-common misconceptions about Vietnam vets she recalled hearing upon her return were very untrue. “My mother said to me when this story broke, ‘You know, Donna, God has chosen you to be there and be willing to talk about the Vietnam vets because you are so forceful in your commitment to them.’ And I am because I am one of them and I can speak with credibility about it. … This story dispels all that and I’m not afraid to talk about it.”

Rowe spent 369 days at the hospital in Vietnam and returned home in 1969 with her husband, the late Col. (Ret.) Al Rowe, by her side. The couple married two years prior to their deployment and served together in Vietnam. Today, she speaks at community events and to students, explaining why members of the military deserve respect and compassion. “I talk about how great these men and women that served this country are and the sacrifices their families make,” Rowe says. “I know the plight of military families and I know the plight of the mothers and fathers back home because I know what my mother and father went through.”

She also stresses to students how young those who served in war were, especially Vietnam. “The average age of the men in Vietnam was 18, the average age of the women was 21, but what a lot of people don’t realize is that on the [Vietnam Veterans Memorial Wall] in Washington, D.C., of the 58, 267 names, 33,301 were 18, five were 17, two were 16 and one was 15. So, when I’m talking at high schools, I’m speaking to the age of the men who served.” Rowe says. “Yes, the Kathleen story is a good intro for them to understand how wonderful we really were, but this is a chance to tell the real story. I just feel it was my duty.”

Rowe also serves the veterans community as director of the Georgia Vietnam Veterans Alliance, Chapter One and is an active member of American Legion Post 29 and VFW Post 2681, both in Marietta. In addition, she is a board member with the Cobb County Veterans Memorial Foundation, which has plans to construct a veterans wall dedicated to all Cobb veterans, and she helped with the opening of the Military Family Support Center that opened last summer. The one-of-a-kind center is a public-private partnership between the Cobb Chamber of Commerce, Defense Commissary Agency, Georgia Department of Defense and Dobbins Air Reserve Base and serves active military personnel, as well as veterans.

JetSmarter Debuts in Cobb

JetSmarter, a private jet company, joined forces with singer, songwriter and actress Christina Milian in January at McCollum Airport for an exclusive VIP event to celebrate the launch of its services in Atlanta. Through JetSmarter’s membership program, flights on the company’s shared private JetShuttles to and from Atlanta are complimentary, allowing members to travel to New York, Chicago, Fort Lauderdale, Palm Beach, Los Angeles, Boston, Washington, D.C., San Diego, Scottsdale, Las Vegas and Dallas. Learn more at jetsmarter.com.

Red Hare St. Paddy’s Party

Red Hare is celebrating St. Patrick’s Day the Irish way – with some mugs o’ green beer!

Visitors to the brewery on St. Patrick’s Day can enjoy live music, a food truck, and of course their delicious beer is included in the Tour & Tasting purchase.

They’re awarding prizes for the most festive attire, so dress to impress. Don’t miss it or you’ll be green with envy!

Date:
Friday, March 17, 2017 from 5:30 pm to 8:30 pm

Admission:
$12 Tour/Tasting includes souvenir pint glass, 36 oz. of beer samples, and brewery tour.

$20 Tour/Tasting includes souvenir pint glass, 36 oz. of beer samples, brewery tour AND a 6-Pack to take home!

$5 Tickets for children and non-drinkers includes pint glass, brewery tour and 36 oz of Root Beer and Grapefruit sodas.

Address:
1998 Delk Industrial Blvd
Marietta, GA 30067

Parking:

For more information, please call 678-401-0600 or visit http://www.redharebrewing.com/st-pattys-party/