About

NANA – the Northwoods Area Neighborhood Association – has been the official club supporting the Northwoods Historic District containing the Northwoods, Gordon Hills, Gordon Heights, Fleetwood Hills, and Sequoyah Woods neighborhoods in Doraville and DeKalb for more than 50 years. NANA was originally known as the Northwoods Civic Association.

In the more recent decades, we expanded our definition of what constitutes the Northwoods Area and now include homes located inside the 285-85-Chamblee Tucker Rd-Shallowford Rd-Buford Hwy pentagon, including the Hidden Colony, Arbor Creek, and Chestnut Place neighborhoods.

NANA is a voluntary, non-partisan civic association, and all residents in the Northwoods Area pentagon are welcome to join.  NANA operates on a not-for-profit basis.

The Story of Historic Northwoods

Breaking ground in 1952, Atlanta-area contractor Walter L. Tally had a vision of what would become one of the first planned unit developments in Georgia, and which still retains its vitality six decades later.

After a period of slow sales of the traditional ranch homes, Tally recruited two recently graduated Georgia Tech architects, Ernest Mastin and John Summer, to offer variety. Mastin and Summer designed state of the art, modern homes that would eventually sell before they were even finished. Northwoods boasted 6 floor plans, mostly ranch style, and Better Homes and Gardens even featured a Northwoods home in one of its 1953 editions, with an affordable starting price of $10,000.

Originally envisioned as a housing community for General Motors executives due to its proximity to PDK and the GM facility, Northwoods became such a popular place to live that it grew to over 700 homes by the subdivision’s completion in 1962. Northwoods featured its own parks, tennis courts, shopping center, church, service station, professional building and school. John Portman, a fellow classmate of Mastin and Summer, and who would go on to achieve worldwide acclaim for his architectural work, was hired to design the two main schools in the neighborhood (currently known as Cary Reynolds Elementary and Sequoyah Middle School – originally a high school).

Some of those original home owners still live in Northwoods and, while many of the homes have been enlarged, renovated and modernized over time, some of them maintain their original hardwood floors, fireplaces and even built-in retro appliances.

Northwoods first appeared on the Georgia Department of Natural Resources’ radar as part of the DeKalb History Center’s DeKalb Single Family Residential Post War Development project in 2009. Richard Laub, Director of the Historic Preservation Program at Georgia State University suggested Northwoods as a preservation project for his graduate students. Enlisting the support of the Northwoods Area Neighborhood Association (NANA) members and other residents in the area, the university students worked diligently to survey the Northwoods district’s homes, buildings, schools, churches, and parks gathering historic blueprints and old photos via site visits, community meetings, and resident interviews. As the research grew, parcel communities adjoining Northwoods would become absorbed into the project including Gordon Hills, Gordon Heights, Fleetwood Hills and Sequoyah Woods.

Additionally, it was discovered during the project’s research that Northwoods is one of only three known surviving planned unit developments left in Georgia. The other two are nearby Embry Hills and Fair Oaks, a Savannah subdivision.

In April of 2012, the GSU students presented their findings to a large and enthusiastic group of Northwoods area residents at the Church of the New Covenant on Chestnut Drive. Doraville Mayor Donna Pittman attended the presentation, as did surprise guest Ernest Mastin.

Shortly after that presentation, the students began the long process of nominating Northwoods to be listed on the National Register of Historic Places. The nomination went through multiple levels of approval; with the neighborhood finally being listed on the register on May 13, 2014. Follow this link to search for the neighborhood on the registry. .

The Northwoods Area Neighborhood Association is proud to represent this historic mid-Century district. Consider joining the group and make your mark on history today!

-Written by Bob Kelley, with contributions from Joseph Geierman

Historic Northwoods



Do you own a home in the Northwoods Historic District (Northwoods, Gordon Hills, Gordon Heights, Sequoyah Woods, or Fleetwood Hills)? Have you seen the historic district plaques on your neighbors’ homes and wondered how to get one? Look no further!
Follow this link to purchase one!

Instructions:
1.) In box #1, Edit your street address.
2.) In box #2, Edit the year your home was built.
Keep architects Mastin and Summer, unless you know with certainty the name of a different architect that designed your home.
3.) Press the “Update your Engraved Sign” button and check the proof.
4.) Click the “More Options” button to include mounting holes.
5.) Add one to your cart, and proceed to check out!

**From Wikipedia, “The primary developer of Northwoods, Walter Talley, hired
Georgia Tech architects Ernest Mastin and John Summer to design a variety of
contemporary homes and floor plans. With designs inspired by the successful
Northwoods neighborhood, the other neighborhoods in the district (Gordon
Hills, Gordon Heights, Sequoyah Woods and Fleetwood Hills) are generally
consistent in design and share many of the same architectural features as the
Northwoods neighborhood.”

Additional Articles of Interest: