|
The Market at Sweet Apple
Village is closed for the 2009 calendar.
Please check back for our
2010 calendar.
FOLLOW US ON FACEBOOK
Please check back for more information.

We do not provide rental tents at this location. There is
a limited number of Free
spaces avaialble each weekend, with a reservation.
PLEASE NOTE: online reservations close at 6:00 pm on Thursday
before a weekend Market
(or sooner if the date is full).
WALK UPS
If you do not have a reservation, there is no guarantee
that you will be provided with a space. You must provide
your own tent and weights which meets AFFPS standards. Walk-ups
are $20 the day of the show.
If you would like to purchase a tent (please click here
for approved tent specifications:)
http://www.ezup.com/products/com/encore2.shtml ) from
a manufacturer please
click here to order online or/ you can call: 800-45-shade
for Ez-up direct.
ATTENTION
GROWERS!
We will be offering
FREE SPACE at the Sweet Apple Village Market for organic
produce merchants. You must bring your own tent.
To secure your space,
send a message on the Contact Us page of this website.
Put "Sweet Apple Village Market PRODUCE" in the subject
line. We'll get back to you right away!

Site plans for Sweet Apple
Village

Progress Photo:

|
|

SWEET APPLE VILLAGE BRINGS CHARM
AND FUNCTIONALITY
Cornerstone
Development Partners are reintroducing the village market
concept with Sweet Apple Village.
Rarely does a shopping
center or a mixed-use development combine a charming aesthetic
with an ambition to service the surrounding area. Cornerstone
Development Partners, an Atlanta-based commercial real estate
developer, and NORO Management, an Atlanta-based commercial
real estate lease and management group, plan to do just
that with the $21 million Sweet Apple Village. The companies
are seeking to enhance the cityscape of Roswell, Georgia,
by building a magnet for the community.
Sweet Apple Village
is a 70,000-square-foot development that Robb McKerrow,
vice president of Cornerstone Development Partners, describes
as a “light mixed-use” or “suburban mixed-use” center. Sweet
Apple Village does not fall into the category of a traditional
shopping center or a normal mixed-use development because
of the different components of the project.
“It’s a blend of what
people are doing with mixed-use and putting the apartments
or office on top, which tells everybody, ‘We’re going to
do a live-work-play,’ except for the ‘live’ is already here
because we’re in amongst 10,000 people in a mile,” McKerrow
says.
With Sweet Apple, Roswell’s
citizens will no longer need to drive to Atlanta for staples
of the city’s restaurant scene. In fact, some people won’t
even have to get into their cars.
Sweet Apple Village
has five restaurants lined up to satisfy the needs of every
mealtime, including Tara Humata, an upscale Mexican grill
and tequila bar. The restaurant is occupying a 4,500-square-foot
suite in the Oak Building. Also, there are plans for a breakfast
restaurant, a few lunchtime eateries and a couple casual
dining restaurants for dinner.
Since the development
is across the road from Sweet Apple Elementary School, Sweet
Apple Village will include an educational store, which plans
to occupy a 1,400 square foot suite. The other stores will
complement the demographics in the area. Prospective tenants
include an earth-friendly dry cleaner, a hair salon and
a wine store. There is also an office space component, which
will attract chiropractors and dentists.
Sweet Apple sits at
the corner of Etris and Crabapple roads in suburban Roswell,
which is a prime location for this development, McKerrow
says.
“You look at it on an
aerial photograph and you’re looking at all these roads
flowing into it; it’s like a crossroads,” McKerrow says.
There are 46,000 homes
located within 5 miles of Sweet Apple, with a total population
of 125,000 residents, and Roswell is estimated to grow by
an additional 4,000 households over the next 4 years.
“There are a thousand
rooftops that can literally connect by sidewalk,” McKerrow
says. “It’s probably the first time where a sidewalk in
front of your shopping center makes sense.”
More than 3,000 households
lie within a 1-mile radius of Sweet Apple Village. The development
features biking and walking trails, enticing nearby residents
to the complex, which also serves as a gathering place with
pet-friendly areas, a patio and picnic areas and a five-story
pavilion.
Another interesting
aspect of the development is the names of the buildings.
All of the buildings are given names of trees that are indigenous
to the South. Sweet Apple includes an oak park, a pecan
park and two gardens, with the Oak and Pecan buildings are
located in the parks of their namesake.
“We have certain species
of trees in each of these, so for example the Maple Building
is on Hardscrabble Road, which is lined with a row of maple
trees like in an old-fashioned small town,” McKerrow says.
One building that
is different from the rest is the ivy building, which is
the only building in the development that will have a single
restaurant as its tenant. Once the planted ivy trellises
bloom, the entire exterior will be overgrown with ivy.
Cornerstone has gone
to great lengths to ensure that Sweet Apple Village will
be functional as well as charming. Construction should begin
early next year.
|