College Park, Georgia

Everything College Park is known for

16 songs mention this city 3 artists from here

College Park, Georgia, a city adjacent to the southern boundary of Atlanta, boasts a notable connection to the music world. This community, known for being part of the larger Atlanta metropolitan area, is home to hip-hop artists like Gunna and 2 Chainz.

The city's influence extends to many songs, with College Park being mentioned in tracks such as "Welcome To Atlanta" by Jermaine Dupri and "4 AM" by 2 Chainz.

Music in College Park

Songs About College Park

Taser Gun
Yung L.A.
95%
"Cuz I'm from the Ville"
Welcome To Atlanta
Jermaine Dupri
94%
"When Frozen Paradise was the place to be"
Welcome to Atlanta
Ludacris
55%
"early I moved to College Park"
Growing Pains
Ludacris
55%
"Lil' Fate payin homage to College Park"
ATLiens
OutKast
53%
"College Park in the house"
Mr. Carter
Lil Wayne
52%
"Like I'm from College Park"
Gossip Folks
Missy Elliott
51%
"Once upon a time in College Park"
Heat it Up
Bubba Bellin
22%
"Bubba Sparxxx, Collipark"
Matt Hardy 999
Trippie Redd
7%
"she give me titty, Tity Boi, 2 Chainz"
one of wun
Gunna
6%
"I know that young Wunna a catch"
How Did I Get Here
Offset
6%
"We was livin' up in College Park"
4 AM
2 Chainz
6%
"I dropped ColleGrove out the sky, ooh"
Cut Her Off Freestyle
Kevin Gates
4%
"Won't play the game like 2 Chainz, ain’t riding around but I'm gettin' it"
Premonition (Intro)
Eminem
4%
"Nobody said shit about 2 Chainz as long as he's been here, shit"
Stars
JID
4%
"A hundred miles an hour on the way to Lee-R"
One Hit Wonder
Afroman
2%
"2 Chain and Little Wayne"

Rivers & Roads in Song near College Park

Songs written about the waterways and highways that run near College Park.

History of College Park

Krog Street Tunnel: Atlanta's Ever-Changing Canvas RoadyGoat

1913

The Krog Street Tunnel is a narrow railroad underpass on Atlanta's east side, carrying Krog Street beneath the rail corridor and linking the historic Inman Park and Reynoldstown neighborhoods with Cabbagetown. More than a century old, it has become the city's best-known graffiti landmark, every surface layered in spray paint that is painted over and renewed so often that the tunnel is essentially never the same twice. It serves as a community bulletin board for flyers, proposals, and protest art. On October 22, 2014, roughly 100 people painted the entire tunnel gray overnight to protest a ticketed party the city had permitted there; the color returned within days. (Sources: Wikipedia; Atlanta Magazine.)

RoadyGoat → · 8.5 mi away

Mary Mac's Tea Room RoadyGoat

Mary MacKenzie opened her tea room in Midtown Atlanta in 1945, one of 16 tea rooms in the city. She's the last one standing. Every table gets a pencil and pad to write your own order — a tradition from the postwar years when help was scarce. The pot likker and cornbread arrive before you ask. It's the dining room of the South, where governors and construction workers eat the same fried chicken.

9.1 mi away

Waffle House Museum RoadyGoat

The original Waffle House opened in Avondale Estates, Georgia on Labor Day 1955. It's now a museum preserving the first counter, stools, and jukebox. The chain grew to 2,000 locations, all open 24/7. FEMA developed the unofficial Waffle House Index — if the local Waffle House is closed, the disaster is catastrophic. No other restaurant chain measures emergency severity.

12.2 mi away

Martin Luther King Jr. Birth Home

1929

The Queen Anne-style house at 501 Auburn Avenue where Martin Luther King Jr. was born on January 15, 1929.

8.3 mi away

Ebenezer Baptist Church

1886

The church where three generations of Kings preached and where Martin Luther King Jr.'s funeral was held in 1968.

8.3 mi away

Things to Do in College Park

Everything Near College Park

70 stories, landmarks & places within ~20 miles — the same local lore RoadyGoat plays as you drive through.

Explore College Park on the Map