Home of the 1996 Olympic Games! Take a stroll around & check out the different monuments. Close to many things nearby including the aquarium, Coca Cola, Football Hall of Fame, & a huge ferris wheel!
Great view of the Atlanta Skyline! During the summer the water show from the Olympic Rings are a enjoyable experience to watch for families especially the kids enjoying the water works!
Amazing initiative: this park was partly funded by the donations of thousands coming from individuals who "bought" bricks engraved with a short message of their choice, still in the park.
Great park for the whole family to walk in the heart of the city. The park hosts many musicalevents especially during summer months. The water fountain is a fun place for kids to play.
Love visiting past OlympicParks and Villages... here, it's a sprawling modern park now with fountains and stages and grassy area and museums + lots of plaques/statues/memorials to the Olympics!!!
The benches at the Fountain of Rings allow you to enjoy the water and music spectacle—four times a day, tunes are timed to coincide with water displays that shoot sprays 15 feet to 30 feet high. Read more
A great place to come at night for a stroll in the park or for concerts. Lots of things go on in this park. Lots of opportunity to come & be a part of something.
Take a walk around and look at all the monuments. A nice park in the middle of downtown Atlanta close to a lot of other things like the Georgia dome, CNN, and college football hall of fame.
Walk this park originally built for the Olympic Games, checking out the downtown skyline, the concerts in the summer and CNN, Georgia Aquarium and the World of Coca-Cola that surround it.
There is something always going on. You may see food trucks, performers, and ice skating in the winter. Don't forget the new 200 hundred feet carousel near the park. Maybe just enjoy the weather.
Built for the 1996 Atlanta Olympic Ceremony, this park is one of the most photographed in Atlanta, mainly due to the children frollicking in the dancingfountain.
Host to millions of visitors a year and an annual Independence Day concert and fireworks display, the Atlanta 1996 OlympicPark is the place to check-in on Olympic Day June 23.
Come at night, when eight 65-foot lighting towers enhance the beauty of the park. They are stylized reproductions of the markers that led ancient Greeks to major public events.
Located in the center of downtown, Centennial Olympic Park is surrounded by Atlanta’s main attractions including the World of Coca-Cola, Georgia Aquarium and CNN Center.
What a family. Here's just some of Atlanta's 18 Sister Cities: Brussels, Belgium; Newcastle, U.K.; Port of Spain, Trinidad and Tobago; Ra'anana, Israel; Daegu, South Korea; and Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
Great for July 4th where they have a special celebration, concert and fireworks. Also, they usually have a mini ice skating rink set up around December. Nice place to come with family, friends or even
Don't get too close to the fountains when the music show is about to start or else the policeman will start blowing his whistle at you. Otherwise, have fun at the fountains.
End a romantic evening at Centennial Olympic Park at the ice skating rink. After a twirl around the rink warm up with a cup of hot chocolate and a s’more.
This is the largest downtown park in the country developed during the last 25 years and spans 21 acres. Each ring in the OlympicFountain is 25 feet in diameter which is large enough for 2 cars!
For excellent photographs of Centennial Olympic Park and Downtown Atlanta, take the elevator at the Glenn Hotel to their rooftop Skylounge. Open during the evenings Monday through Saturday.
This one is more touristy, but you can find some cool stuff here, like the World of Coke and the Georgia Aquarium. Take Marta to The Dome/CNN Center stop.
Great photo spot for tourists and locals. City views from the main lawn and nice shade by the waterfalls and rocks. Watch the sun set over CNN! http://www.FengLongPhoto.com
Designed as a town square at Atlanta's 1996 Olympics, it became a center of controversy when a bomb killed two people & injured 111 others. Militant anti-abortionist Eric Rudolph was held responsible.