Garden City Moves Into New Digs
August 2009
Fewer than 10 miles separate Garden City's old City Hall and its new municipal headquarters off Dean Forest Road, just south of Interstate 16.
But take a glance inside each structure, and light years may be a more suitable unit of measurement.
"This is something we can really be proud of," Police Chief David Lyons said Friday, strolling through the new building's marble-tiled, wood-paneled interior. "It's been a long time coming, and we're glad to be at this point. We're thrilled to death with the building."
Friday marked a watershed moment in Garden City's relocation project, as city staff members hauled the last filing cabinets, printer stands and other office furniture out of the aging Ga. 25 building that was sold two years ago to the Georgia Ports Authority.
Officials, meanwhile, continued settling into the sleek and sprawling new digs on the south side of town, an opulent structure that will be officially unveiled at a ceremony later this fall.
"It's worked out very well - it's been a group effort," relocation coordinator Blanche Butler said of the move-out. "We've gotten it all done in two days. Everyone worked together to make it a smooth transition."
City Manager Brian Johnson said that despite 105 city employees picking up and moving out, public services have been largely uninterrupted.
"We're really only down for face-to-face business one day," Johnson said Friday. "And that's today."
Telephone lines were re-routed to public works offices, he said, and utility bills were being processed as usual.
At 33,000 square feet, the $7 million new building - next to Food Lion and across from the Southbridge subdivision - nearly doubles available space.
Offices are plentiful and spacious; flat-screen television monitors are mounted inside the main lobby and courtroom, where cushioned seats will accommodate 180 people.
Johnson, however, said such "stately governmental aura" is limited to portions intended for the public.





