Intown Atlanta living room — a craftsman bungalow interior with warm wood floors and natural light
A boutique Atlanta brokerage
Est. 2016 · Intown Atlanta

Putting people before sales.

Founded by John Morgan & Drew Jackson. Two partners. The intown streets we know best.

The Portfolio · 166 Homes

Our listings, past and present.

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Candler Park, Atlanta
Field Notes

The intown neighborhoods we know.

We don't sell every house in Atlanta. We sell the ones in the neighborhoods we live in, walk through, and care about: 32 pockets of intown that share porches, gardens, and a slower pace than the rest of the city.

Pick one. We'll show you everything.

Ansley Park
Field Notes Vol. XII

Ansley Park

Atlanta's first planned garden suburb, just north of Midtown. Curving tree-lined streets, English Tudors and Colonial Revivals on big lots, two of the city's prettiest small parks.

Atkins Park
Field Notes Vol. XII

Atkins Park

Atkins Park is a small historic district inside the southern edge of Virginia Highlands, bounded roughly by Ponce…

Berkeley Park
Field Notes Vol. XII

Berkeley Park

Berkeley Park is a small intown residential pocket just west of Atlantic Station and north of the Westside…

Brookhaven
Field Notes Vol. XII

Brookhaven

Newly incorporated city of Brookhaven, just outside the perimeter northeast of Buckhead. Mid-century ranches, new construction, strong schools, family-oriented.

Buckhead
Field Notes Vol. XII

Buckhead

Atlanta's wealthiest district. Tudor mansions on West Paces Ferry, condo towers along Peachtree, Lenox Square and Phipps Plaza, and the city's strongest private schools.

Cabbagetown
Field Notes Vol. XII

Cabbagetown

Cabbagetown is the old mill village, built in the 1880s around the Fulton Bag and Cotton Mill, southeast…

Candler Park
Field Notes Vol. XII

Candler Park

East of Inman Park, west of Lake Claire. Craftsman bungalows around a 55-acre park with a golf course. Walking distance to Little Five Points and the Beltline.

Castleberry Hill
Field Notes Vol. XII

Castleberry Hill

Castleberry Hill is the historic warehouse district just southwest of downtown, between Mercedes-Benz Stadium and the connector. The…

Decatur
Field Notes Vol. XII

Decatur

Decatur is the only intown choice that's not actually inside Atlanta. It's the seat of DeKalb County, six…

Downtown Atlanta
Field Notes Vol. XII

Downtown Atlanta

Downtown Atlanta's residential stock is almost entirely vertical: condo towers, refurbished warehouse lofts, and a handful of mixed-use…

Druid Hills
Field Notes Vol. XII

Druid Hills

Druid Hills was designed by Frederick Law Olmsted's firm, his last major residential project before he died in…

East Atlanta
Field Notes Vol. XII

East Atlanta

Three miles southeast of downtown. East Atlanta Village is the commercial heart, with restaurants, bars, and a year-round farmers market. Craftsman bungalows on hilly streets.

Edgewood
Field Notes Vol. XII

Edgewood

Edgewood sits about three miles east of downtown, bordering Inman Park, Reynoldstown, and Kirkwood. It's the only intown…

Glenwood Park
Field Notes Vol. XII

Glenwood Park

Glenwood Park is a 28-acre new-urbanist development built between 2005 and 2010 on the former site of an…

Grant Park
Field Notes Vol. XII

Grant Park

Grant Park is one of Atlanta's oldest neighborhoods, founded in 1882 around the 131-acre namesake park (Zoo Atlanta…

Home Park
Field Notes Vol. XII

Home Park

Home Park sits west of Georgia Tech, between the connector and Howell Mill. Built in the 1910s-1920s as…

Inman Park
Field Notes Vol. XII

Inman Park

Atlanta's first planned suburb (1889). Victorian mansions on Edgewood Avenue, the springtime Inman Park Festival, and direct Beltline access. Walking distance to Little Five Points.

Kirkwood
Field Notes Vol. XII

Kirkwood

Kirkwood is a streetcar suburb that's held its scale, five miles east of downtown along Hosea L. Williams…

Lake Claire
Field Notes Vol. XII

Lake Claire

A tiny intown pocket between Candler Park and Druid Hills. Pre-WWII bungalows, dense tree canopy, the famed Lake Claire Land Trust, and one of the quietest streetscapes intown.

Lindbergh
Field Notes Vol. XII

Lindbergh

Lindbergh runs along the eastern slope of Buckhead's southern edge, centered on the Lindbergh-Morosgo MARTA transit-oriented development. The…

Little Five Points
Field Notes Vol. XII

Little Five Points

Little Five Points is the commercial core, not a residential neighborhood in the traditional sense. The half-mile stretch…

Loring Heights
Field Notes Vol. XII

Loring Heights

Loring Heights is a small intown enclave tucked between Atlantic Station to the south, Berkeley Park to the…

Midtown
Field Notes Vol. XII

Midtown

Atlanta's cultural core between Downtown and Buckhead. Piedmont Park, the Fox Theatre, the High Museum, Georgia Tech. Mostly condos and apartments; almost no single-family homes left.

Morningside
Field Notes Vol. XII

Morningside

Northeast Atlanta's quiet hill neighborhood, built in the 1920s and 1930s. Tudor-front cottages, deeply shaded streets, top-tier public schools, and walking access to Piedmont Park.

Old Fourth Ward
Field Notes Vol. XII

Old Fourth Ward

Old Fourth Ward sits east of downtown, bordered by Inman Park to the east and Sweet Auburn to…

Ormewood Park
Field Notes Vol. XII

Ormewood Park

Southeast Atlanta's quiet craftsman neighborhood, just east of Grant Park. 1920s bungalows, hilly streets, a block-by-block sense of itself, and steady appreciation since the early 2010s.

Poncey Highland
Field Notes Vol. XII

Poncey Highland

Poncey Highland sits at the intersection of Ponce de Leon and North Highland, wedged between Midtown to the…

Reynoldstown
Field Notes Vol. XII

Reynoldstown

Reynoldstown sits between Cabbagetown to the west and Edgewood to the east, just south of Inman Park. Named…

Sweet Auburn
Field Notes Vol. XII

Sweet Auburn

Sweet Auburn is the historic district along Auburn Avenue, running east of downtown into Old Fourth Ward. Once…

Virginia-Highland
Field Notes Vol. XII

Virginia-Highland

Anchored by the intersection of N. Highland Avenue and Virginia Avenue. Walkable village vibe with restaurants, bars, and shops. 1910s-20s bungalows in tight grids on flat streets.

West End
Field Notes Vol. XII

West End

West End is one of Atlanta's oldest historic neighborhoods, dating to the 1830s, southwest of downtown across the…

West Midtown
Field Notes Vol. XII

West Midtown

West Midtown is the post-industrial corridor along Howell Mill, Northside, and Marietta, west of the connector and north…

Work with us

Five common journeys.

Most of the people who hire us fall into one of these. Pick the one that fits, and you'll get a page written for exactly that situation, with the questions worth asking and the steps worth taking.

The Founding Partners

Two founders. One brokerage.

Park Realty is John Morgan and Drew Jackson. Partners since 2016, both intown homeowners, both deep in the streets they sell on.

01
John Morgan
Broker / Partner

John Morgan

Candler Park · Lake Claire · Decatur · Inman Park

John founded Park Realty in 2016 to build a local boutique brokerage focused on the intown market. He's been in real estate for over two decades, having bought his first investment property in 2000 — and grew up around the business through his mother (Harry Norman) and his grandfather (investor). Lives in Lake Claire with his family.

Real estate is the largest investment most people will ever make. I help them make it count, both for the investment and for the quality of life that comes with the right block.
02
Drew Jackson
Partner / Agent

Drew Jackson

Candler Park · Inman Park · Virginia Highlands · Old Fourth Ward

Drew is a third-generation real estate agent who grew up in DC and lived in San Francisco, Seattle, and Brooklyn before settling in Candler Park. His background in internet marketing, SEO, and real estate photography means your home gets the technical edge — and his investor's instinct means his clients see deals others miss.

Real estate is built on details. Which year the porch was rebuilt. Which way the kitchen faces. Whether the elementary school is on a redistricting list. The agents who survive intown are the ones who actually know.
The Field Notes Letter

Honest writing on the intown market.

A short letter when there's something worth saying: market shifts we're actually seeing, a neighborhood we're spending time in, an opinion we'd back with money. Roughly once a month. No drip, no template.