The long-vacant Bowen Homes site on Atlanta’s Westside is finally moving from years of dust and weeds to active construction. The roughly 74-acre public housing tract is being remade into a multi-phase community that city leaders say could deliver about 2,000 homes. The first phase is already underway, and early buildings are set to mix deeply affordable units, workforce housing and market-rate apartments as part of a broader push to keep legacy Westside neighborhoods in place, not pushed out.
What is planned at Bowen
Invest Atlanta and project partners describe the initial phase, Bowen Homes I, as a $63.6 million build that will bring 151 apartments back to the site. According to Urbanize Atlanta, 48 of those units are reserved for households at or below 30 percent of area median income, while 49 are capped at 60 percent AMI. The rest will be a mix of workforce and market-rate apartments, a blend officials argue is key to making the numbers work while still delivering deeply affordable homes.
Plans also call for community-focused amenities. A resources center and an innovation hub are expected to offer job training and affordable commercial space, with the goal of giving existing Westside residents more than just a new place to live, but also new ways to work and do business close to home.
Funding and partners
The Bowen overhaul leans heavily on a $40 million Choice Neighborhoods Implementation grant from HUD, which officials describe as the crucial seed money that made the rest of the financing stack possible. According to SaportaReport, that federal award helped unlock broader public-private commitments around the site.
City statements and reporting put total pledged support for the broader effort at more than $523 million. To steer all of that through years of construction, Atlanta Housing has tapped Bowen District Developers to lead the multi-phase buildout, a team led by The Benoit Group and McCormack Baron Salazar, per Rough Draft Atlanta.
Where the homes will go and the timeline
The Bowen site sits just inside I-285 near the junction of James Jackson Parkway and Donald Lee Hollowell Parkway, a corridor officials have been eyeing for reinvestment for years. Urbanize Atlanta reported that the first phase broke ground in March 2025, with officials expecting initial occupancy as construction moves along…