The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Open containers OK’d at large mixed-use developmen­ts

- By Amanda C. Coyne Amanda.Coyne@coxinc.com

When Gwinnett’s new major mixed-use developmen­ts are complete, guests will be able to walk around with a drink in their hand.

The Gwinnett County Board of Commission­ers approved amendments to the county alcohol ordinance Tuesday, allowing open container alcohol consumptio­n within the boundaries of “largescale mixed-use developmen­ts.” The county defines “large-scale” as at least 500,000 square feet total with 100,000 square feet of commercial space and 100,000 square feet of residentia­l space.

The move to rewrite countywide guidelines to allow open-container drinking is unusual for metro Atlanta. Typically these types of laws are approved by municipali­ties hoping to make their entertainm­ent venues or festivals more attractive. Cities including Duluth and Suwanee already have small downtown open-container districts. But in Gwinnett, the majority of the county is unincorpor­ated, and large developmen­ts would need the county’s approval to allow drinks to be carried outside the business where it was served.

Two projects currently underway would easily satisfy the new alcohol ordinance requiremen­ts. Revel, a mixed-use developmen­t that will be adjacent to the Infinite Energy Center in Duluth, is expected to cover nearly a million square feet. The Exchange at Gwinnett, between Coolray Field and the Mall of Georgia, is expected to have about 1,000 apartments and more than 500,000 square feet of nonresiden­tial developmen­t.

Both projects are also expected to have food halls, which were also addressed in the ordinance changes. Customers will be able to move about food halls in Gwinnett with an alcoholic beverage in hand, as long as that beverage came from a vendor in the food hall. Food halls within mixed-use developmen­ts would have no minimum square footage, but those in a purely commercial setting would have to be at least 750,000 square feet for this new alcohol rule to apply.

The amendments were approved unanimousl­y by commission­ers Ben Ku, Jace Brooks,Marlene Fosque and Tommy Hunter. Chairman Charlotte Nash was not present.

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