Community Notebook: Rose Circle Park gets street crossing signage

Our weekly feature, Community Notebook, is filled with snippets of information, conversations, and reporting about the communities where we work.

By Brent Brewer, West End Fellow and Canopy Atlanta Board Member
September 19, 2025
How we reported this story:

This is a weekly feature called Community Notebook, filled with snippets of information, conversations, and reporting about the communities where we work. Canopy Atlanta Fellows and other community residents may contribute to this weekly reporting. The Community Notebook is featured in our newsletter Voices — sign up to find this in your inbox every week.

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Rose Circle Park gets street crossing signage

In June, the Atlanta BeltLine celebrated the opening of its longest continuous trail segment—more than seven miles stretching from Pittsburgh to Huff Road. But West End residents didn’t consider the Westside Trail truly complete until September, when long-awaited signage was installed at a critical intersection near Rose Circle Park.

Historically, the BeltLine has crossed into the West End neighborhood at two main points: Gordon White Park and Rose Circle Park. At Gordon White Park, drivers encounter a fully-equipped crossing, complete with solar-powered beacon lights that flash before pedestrians or cyclists enter the crosswalk. But at Rose Circle Park, where hundreds of students and neighbors cross daily, drivers had no advance warning that a major crossing lay ahead.

That gap is now closed. New signs along White Street warn drivers to slow down and watch for people on foot and bike before they reach the intersection. For the community, it’s a simple change that makes a big difference—helping secure one of the most-used connections between the BeltLine and residential West End, and reminding drivers that this is a place where people, not just cars, come first.

Still, neighbors note that Rose Circle’s crossing falls short of Gordon White Park’s beacon lights. Signs help, but flashing signals are needed to make this busy crossing truly safe. For now, the community welcomes the progress while continuing to push for beacons.

“When neighbors speak up, APS listens”

While many families are facing tough news during the Atlanta Public Schools repurposing discussions, there’s also a reminder of how community voices make a difference.

Did you know that Russell West End is the official nickname for Washington Cluster’s middle school? 

In 2021, Joseph E. Brown Middle School was officially renamed Herman J. Russell West End Academy. The new name was created as a hybrid of the top three community choices. At that time, West End residents made sure their neighborhood was included—a nod to both place-based identity and the community’s role in saving the school building years earlier.

This history shows that when neighbors speak up, APS listens. Your voice matters in the conversations ahead. Fill out a survey today: Comprehensive Long Range Facilities Plan – Scenarios Survey.

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