Fortress Builders Officially Opens New Kennesaw Townhome Community

Staff Report From Metro Atlanta CEO

Monday, December 3rd, 2018

Fortress Builders is excited to announce that Terraces at Depot Park is officially open. The builder recently hosted a Realtor Open House and Kennesaw Mayor Easterling cut the ribbon to ceremonially open the new Kennesaw townhome community.

Terraces at Depot Park in Kennesaw features townhomes from the $300,000s. The open-concept floor plans at Terraces at Depot Park will offer three-to-four bedrooms, terrace-level guest retreats for ultimate privacy, vaulted ceilings, luxurious owner’s suites and two-car garages.

With just 38 townhomes in a prime corner location where S. Main Street and Sardis Street meet, this community is selling fast. The six available townhome designs feature up to four bedrooms, two-car garages, quartz or granite kitchen countertops, hardwood floors throughout main levels, tile floors and showers in bathrooms and rear decks for entertaining family and friends.

Terraces at Depot Park is located walking distance from Historic Downtown Kennesaw and its available shopping and dining options. The community also provides convenient access to Kennesaw State University, Town Center Mall and McCollum International Airport.

The community’s cornerstone features a charming entrance to the Gateway Park. This pocket park is the first step in connecting parks and trails to the downtown Kennesaw district and is an example of a public private partnership as Fortress allocated the land for the park to the City of Kennesaw.

Gateway Park is the first portion of Depot Park – a 12-phase park project in Kennesaw – to be constructed. The park highlights public art because of the partnership between the City of Kennesaw and Kennesaw State University. Gateway Park includes a trailhead plaza with bike racks, a multi-use trail, shade structures, benches and a circular garden. The materials and forms incorporated into the Gateway Park sign pay homage to the railroad that runs adjacent to it and the historical significance of the railroad in the City of Kennesaw.