UPDATES: Ponce City Market Roof To Get Beer Garden, Details On ‘Skyline Park’

Space to feature Nine Mile Station beer garden, low tech entertainment concept Skyline Park.

Space to feature Nine Mile Station beer garden and low tech entertainment concept.

Ponce City Market’s roof will open to the public this summer.

Sign up now to get our Daily Breaking News Alerts

Opt out at anytime

According to Eater, the space will luckily feature a beer garden concept called “Nine Mile Station” where Atlantans can quench their thirst in the Georgia heat.

Slater Hospitality, from husband-and-wife team Kelvin and Mandy Slater, is partnering with PCM’s developer, Jamestown, to make the vision a reality.

Nine Mile Station’s “elevated concessions menu” will include snow cones, gourmet hot dogs, and more.

The menu will go well with the roof’s amusement park – now being called Skyline Park – details of which were revealed in the Wall Street Journal this morning.

The 1.7 acre park will also be operated by Slater Hospitality and is planned to feature miniature golf, food, a dunking booth, a steeplechase game, a giant slide and a ride called a Heege, which will simulate a free fall.

In a nod to an amusement park which stood at the site in the late 19th century, Jamestown chose low-tech rides to operate at Skyline Park.

The 6-acre roof will also be home to other restaurants, an event space that can host up to 500 people and private roof space for building tenants.

Ponce City Market Roof
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • LinkedIn
  • Gmail
Ponce City Market

What do you think of the roof’s amenities? Tell us below..

 

 

Julia Sirb

Julia Sirb

Julia studied Urban Planning and Economic Development at GSU's School of Policy Studies. She is interested in the way a city's built environment, policy decisions, and economy work together to shape its culture. When not typing, she's writing calligraphy or looking for the next great shot through the lens of her medium format film camera.
Julia Sirb

Julia Sirb

Julia studied Urban Planning and Economic Development at GSU's School of Policy Studies. She is interested in the way a city's built environment, policy decisions, and economy work together to shape its culture. When not typing, she's writing calligraphy or looking for the next great shot through the lens of her medium format film camera.
Search