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  2. Murphey Candler Park - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Murphey_Candler_Park

    Murphey Candler Park is a 135-acre multi-use park located in Brookhaven, Georgia, United States.The park is owned and operated by the City of Brookhaven. Park amenities include multi-use fields, tennis courts, a swimming pool, a playground, picnic areas, a lake, and trails.

  3. Dunwoody College of Technology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunwoody_College_of_Technology

    Dunwoody College was founded as a technical institute in 1914, when Minneapolis businessman William Hood Dunwoody left three million dollars in his will to "provide for all time a place where youth without distinction on account of race, color or religious prejudice, may learn the useful trades and crafts, and thereby fit themselves for the better performance of life's duties."

  4. Dunwoody, Georgia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunwoody,_Georgia

    Dunwoody is a city located in DeKalb County, Georgia, United States. As a northern suburb of Atlanta, Dunwoody is part of the Atlanta metropolitan area. It was incorporated as a city on December 1, 2008 but its area establishment dates back to the early 1830s. [3] [4] As of 2020, the city had a population of 51,683.

  5. Brookhaven, Georgia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brookhaven,_Georgia

    Ashford-Dunwoody Road. North-south access from Interstate 285. Peachtree Road. The main north–south road which is part of Georgia State Route 141 providing access from Atlanta and Chamblee. North Druid Hills Road. North-south access from Interstate 85. Buford Highway. North South access from Brookhaven to Buford, Ga.

  6. Dunwoody Village - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunwoody_Village

    Dunwoody Village is a non-profit Continuing Care Retirement Community located in Newtown Square, a western suburb of Philadelphia. The community is built on the grounds of an 83-acre (34 ha) campus that has a rich history of family ownership which reaches back to the time of the American Revolution.

  7. Dunwoody station - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunwoody_station

    The station serves Dunwoody as well as commuters from surrounding north DeKalb and Fulton counties. The Sandy Springs city limit is just 300 meters/1,000 feet west at the county line. It is the only Red Line station in DeKalb County, as the line (which otherwise runs in Fulton County, just west of the due north/south county line) swings east ...

  8. Milton County, Georgia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Milton_County,_Georgia

    Original Milton County in 1883, with (counterclockwise from lower right) Gwinnett to the southeast, Forsyth to the northeast, Cherokee to the northwest, Cobb to the southwest, and Fulton (Hammond, now Sandy Springs) and DeKalb (Chamblee and Dunwoody) to the south. The northern edge of DeKalb also now no longer touches the river, as it did then.

  9. History of Metropolitan Atlanta Rapid Transit Authority

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Metropolitan...

    The line reached Chamblee in 1987, and the Doraville terminus was finished in 1992. The section between Lenox and Doraville was redesignated the Northeast Line on June 8, 1996, when the North Line opened between Buckhead and Dunwoody stations, including a stretch in the Georgia 400 median. The last two North Line stations to open were Sandy ...