Why this end of Milton looks so different

Plus: a 189-year-old house gets a second chance — and early voting ends Friday.

Why This End of Milton Looks So Different

Head north out of Crabapple on Arnold Mill Road toward Canton, and you can feel Milton change. The polished downtown gives way to a more weathered, rural stretch — pastures and horse fences, historic homes and small churches, the occasional eclectic roadside business. If you've made that drive, you've probably wondered: what's the story with this part of town, and is any of it going to change?

As it turns out, the city spent two years answering exactly that.

Why it looks the way it does. Arnold Mill is State Route 140, a two-lane state highway that traces Milton's southwestern edge for about three miles before crossing the Little River into Cherokee County. The city calls it "a unique rural corridor" — farmland and equestrian facilities, historic homes, forested lots and churches. Most of it is zoned AG-1 (one-acre minimum), it has never had sewer, and much of what's there predates Milton itself, which wasn't incorporated until 2006 — when residents voted to carve their own city out of north Fulton County, under a bill from their longtime state representative, Jan Jones. (Yes: the same representative whose open seat is the HD47 runoff Milton is deciding this week.) That mix — old county-era zoning, no sewer, and deliberate preservation — is what kept the corridor rural while the rest of Milton boomed.

What the city's trying to do. Drawing on years of public workshops, the City Council in May 2025 adopted the Arnold Mill Small Area Plan and a new "hamlet" overlay built to preserve the corridor's rural character: keep most of the stretch as it is, steer new development into two small nodes — at Cox Road and Chadwick Road — and hold new buildings to design standards so they "read as Milton." The city has put real money behind it, too: in 2024 it agreed to spend about $1.75 million to buy land around the Cox Road node, which officials said would steer growth toward the highway and away from neighborhoods. The plan also leans on preservation. The city now owns one of the corridor's landmarks — the McConnell-Chadwick House, an 1837 Greek Revival cottage that may be the oldest house in Milton — and its fortunes are turning. Flagged by the Georgia Trust as a "Place in Peril" in 2023, it was just deemed eligible for the National Register of Historic Places. With the Milton Historical Society's push, it could become the city's first National Register property, opening the door to grants to restore it.

What's actually rising. The contrast is already visible at the Chadwick node. There, a private development called Chadwick Village — at Arnold Mill and Chadwick Farm Boulevard — has opened a Chevron gas station and convenience store, with a second phase of about 18,000 square feet of retail (three buildings, in a modern-farmhouse style meant to fit the corridor) now in the city's design review. It's a more conventional, car-oriented arrival than the rural "hamlet" the plan imagines — a reminder that an overlay mostly shapes how new development looks, not whether it comes.

The road itself is a separate question. Because SR 140 is a state highway, only GDOT can redesign it, and the state is studying the Milton stretch on its own timeline.

So if that northbound drive has ever made you wonder: this end of Arnold Mill is, in a real sense, older than the city around it — and how it changes from here will test whether Milton's rural-character rules can shape the growth that's already arriving.

Sources: City of Milton (Arnold Mill Small Area Plan, adopted May 5, 2025) and Design Review Board; Appen Media.

Coming to Crabapple

A couple of weeks ago we flagged a new commercial project taking shape at Market District at Crabapple — and the details are now firming up. The office building going up there will be the headquarters of Reliant Real Estate Management, relocating from Roswell. The development also adds a new multi-use park: the team behind it envisions a gathering green for live music and a farmers market, with hopes of adding a winter ice-skating rink down the road.

Sources: Market District at Crabapple; City of Milton.

A Scam to Watch For

A quick heads-up from City Hall: someone is impersonating the City of Milton's Design Review Board and demanding a bogus payment. The City flagged it on June 10 after a recent DRB applicant received an email titled “Final Notice – Application Approval Fee Invoice Settlement Required.” It's a scam. A couple of tells: the sender's email address isn't a real City address, and the City would never request payment this way — in fact, there are no fees tied to DRB demolition applications, which is what the message implied.

The broader reminder applies to all of us: if an email looks off — especially if it's pressing you to pay — slow down, be skeptical, and don't click anything before you verify it.

Source: City of Milton.

The World Cup Comes to the Green

With the World Cup bringing eight matches to Mercedes-Benz Stadium this summer, Milton is getting in on the action close to home. On Friday, June 19, the city hosts “Goals on the Green,” an outdoor watch party on the Green in downtown Milton, in collaboration with Crabapple Market and Rush Union Soccer. Things kick off at 1 p.m. with food trucks and family-friendly, soccer-inspired activities; at 3 p.m., the crowd settles in to watch the U.S. men's national team take on Australia. Can't make it? A second watch party is already set for the World Cup final on Sunday, July 19 (1–5 p.m., same spot).

Source: City of Milton.

Last Call: Early Voting Ends Tomorrow

One civic reminder before the weekend: early voting in the House District 47 runoff ends tomorrow — Friday, June 12 (7 a.m.–7 p.m.), with Election Day on Tuesday, June 16. If you haven't yet weighed in on the Jack Miller vs. Brian Cochran race for the seat Jan Jones is leaving, this is your last early window — find your polling place at My Voter Page.

And this Sunday, June 14, we'll run both candidates' full answers to our five questions — verbatim and side by side — two days before you vote.

Source: Fulton County Registration & Elections.