Tiny House Living in heart of ATL +secret backyard
Choose dates to view prices
Photo gallery for Tiny House Living in heart of ATL +secret backyard





Reviews
9.69.6 out of 10
Exceptional
Popular amenities
- Parking available
- Air conditioning
NZ$247
NZ$247
avg per night
Explore the area

Decatur, GA
- Emory University18 min walk
- Fernbank Museum of Natural History20 min walk
- Emory University Hospital3 min drive
- Atlanta, GA (PDK-DeKalb-Peachtree)20 min drive
Rooms & beds
1 bedroom (sleeps 2)
Bedroom 1
1 Queen Bed
1 bathroom
Bathroom 1
Spaces
Balcony
Garden
Room
- 23 sq m
- Sleeps 2
- 1 Queen Bed
avg per night
Have a question?
BetaGet instant answers with AI powered search of property information and reviews.
Similar properties

Druid Dreamscape by Minty Living
Druid Dreamscape by Minty Living
Atlanta
- Kitchen
- Washer
- Dryer
- Pet-friendly
The price is NZ$425
NZ$425
avg per night
31 Jul - 21 Aug

Tiny Medlock, a cozy haven!
Tiny Medlock, a cozy haven!
Decatur
- Air conditioning
- Parking available
- Laundry
- Microwave
10.0 out of 10, 12 reviews
10.0
12 reviews
The price is NZ$152
NZ$152
avg per night
27 Apr - 30 Apr

Executive Studio Walk to Emory
Executive Studio Walk to Emory
East Side
- Pet-friendly
- Air conditioning
- Parking available
- Microwave
8.0 out of 10, 11 reviews
8.0
11 reviews
The price is NZ$120
NZ$120
avg per night
3 Aug - 9 Aug

Groundfloor apartment with AC, and WiFi in marvelous Atlanta
Groundfloor apartment with AC, and WiFi in marvelous Atlanta
Virginia Highland
- Kitchen
- Washer
- Dryer
- Pet-friendly
10.0 out of 10, 2 reviews
10.0
2 reviews
The price is NZ$235
NZ$235
avg per night
2 May - 4 May

Druid Dazzle by Minty Living
Druid Dazzle by Minty Living
Atlanta
- Kitchen
- Washer
- Dryer
- Pet-friendly
The price is NZ$243
NZ$243
avg per night
15 Jul - 12 Aug

Druid Delight by Minty Living
Druid Delight by Minty Living
Atlanta
- Kitchen
- Washer
- Dryer
- Pet-friendly
8.0 out of 10, 1 review
8.0
1 review
The price is NZ$265
NZ$265
avg per night
12 Jun - 11 Jul

Calm peaceful getaway
Calm peaceful getaway
Atlanta
- Pool
- Kitchen
- Washer
- Dryer
9.8 out of 10, 17 reviews
9.8
17 reviews
The price is NZ$252
NZ$252
avg per night
19 Jun - 10 Jul

Checkmate by Minty Living
Checkmate by Minty Living
Virginia Highland
- Kitchen
- Washer
- Dryer
- Pet-friendly
The price is NZ$470
NZ$470
avg per night
20 Jun - 19 Jul

Modern 1BR Retreat Perfect for Long Term Stays
Modern 1BR Retreat Perfect for Long Term Stays
Atlanta
- Washer
- Dryer
- Air conditioning
- Gym
The price is NZ$167
NZ$167
avg per night
31 Jul - 14 Aug

Decatur Garden Studio Apartment
Decatur Garden Studio Apartment
Decatur
- Air conditioning
The price is NZ$142
NZ$142
avg per night
21 Jul - 21 Aug
About the area
Decatur
East Side, a neighbourhood in Decatur, is home to this guesthouse. World of Coca-Cola and Fox Theatre are cultural highlights, and travellers looking to shop may want to visit Ponce City Market and Perimeter Mall. Looking to enjoy an event or a game? See what's going on at Georgia World Congress Center, or consider Coca-Cola Roxy Theater for a night out.
What's nearby
- Emory University - 18 min walk - 1.5 km
- Fernbank Museum of Natural History - 20 min walk - 1.7 km
- Emory University Hospital - 3 min drive - 2.1 km
- Ponce City Market - 7 min drive - 5.3 km
- Georgia Aquarium - 10 min drive - 8.8 km
Getting around
- East Lake Station - 4 min drive
- Atlanta Peachtree Station - 16 min drive
- Atlanta, GA (PDK-DeKalb-Peachtree) - 20 min drive
Restaurants
- McDonald's - 4 min drive
- Egleston Cafeteria - 4 min drive
- Cox Hall - 4 min drive
- Panera Bread - 18 min walk
- Tea Leaf and Creamery - 4 min drive
About this property
Tiny House Living in heart of ATL +secret backyard
Welcome to your new favorite getaway tucked in one of ATL's most beautiful & centrally located neighborhoods. The carriage house is located in the back of main unit & has its own private entrance & fenced backyard. Our little carriage house punches far above its weight class when it comes to amenities and value. Even though its just one room, every inch has been designed to make sure our guests have everything they would ever need to relax, work, cook, and sleep in style and comfort.
Experience luxury living in this fully equipped carriage house featuring air conditioning, a full bathroom, spacious living room, and a convenient kitchenette. Relax and unwind in the comfort of a queen-size bed while enjoying your favorite shows on the 32 inch TV. Indulge in the ultimate level of comfort and style during your stay
Guests will be able to access the entire carriage house located behind the main home. The carriage house has its own private fenced in backyard. Guests are also welcome to use the outdoor fireplace and outdoor dining area but please note these spaces are shared with the main unit.
We live down the street and can be contacted through the Airbnb app or our cell phone.
ith its beautiful linear park and parkways designed at the turn of the 20th century by Frederick Law Olmsted, the Druid Hills Historic District richly deserves its designation on the National Register of Historic Places. Today, it resides remarkably near the center of Atlanta’s sprawling metropolitan area.
Some find it hard to believe that this magnificent urban neighborhood was conceived and executed as one of Atlanta’s first suburbs. Yet it continues to evoke the past with its winding roads, eclectic architecture, and green canopy. The U.S. Department of the Interior once declared Druid Hills to be “significant as the finest example of late 19th and early 20th century comprehensive planning and development in the Atlanta area, and one of the finest period suburbs in the Southeast.
In the early 1890s, Atlanta entrepreneur Joel Hurt, who had imaginatively developed transportation, utilities, and real estate in the city, assembled a large tract of land for residential use. He hired Frederick Law Olmsted, America’s premier landscape architect, to plan his “ideal residential suburb.”
By the time Olmsted began to design Druid Hills in 1893, he had already completed many prominent projects including Central Park in New York City, the grounds of the United States Capitol, the Biltmore Estate in North Carolina, Prospect Park in Brooklyn, and the Stanford University campus. He also designed numerous park and parkway systems Boston, Chicago, and other cities.
Early in his career Olmsted planned (with his colleague Calvin Vaux) the community of Riverside, Illinois, as the prototype of a planned suburb. Druid Hills, designed near the end of his career, demonstrates the evolution of his ideas about the relation of suburbs to the city. In fact, Olmsted expressed his philosophy of suburban living in an 1890 letter to Joel Hurt; he envisioned the homeowner returning hot and tired from the city to homes “well shaded by handsome, umbrageous, permanently thrifty trees” in a neighborhood with a “pleasing rural, or, at least, semi-rural, character of scenery . . . to be permanently enjoyed.
Olmsted’s vision of suburban living was eventually realized in Druid Hills. However, after several visits to Atlanta to meet with Hurt, financial setbacks halted the project for several years. Before work resumed the aging Olmsted retired and Hurt hired the successor firm of Olmsted Brothers to develop the design proposed by the elder landscape architect.
Landscape and urban scholars have established that Druid Hills represents a major innovation in suburban design. Its central corridor, Ponce de Leon Avenue, with separated vehicular and pleasure drives, functions as the central promenade of the community. It is a linear version of the traditional village green. Each of Ponce de Leon’s median parks is distinct in its landscaping. The parks range from relatively open greenswards to nearly impenetrable woods.
In an early proposal for Druid Hills, Olmsted wrote of“roads of moderate grace and curves, avoiding any great disturbance of the natural topography.” The neighborhood’s streets follow the natural terrain and its open spaces remind us of the picturesque vistas integral to late 19th-century landscape planning.
Modern development in Druid Hills preserved the environment of parks, streetscapes, and landscapes in the spirit of Olmsted’s original concept. Scholars believe the area fulfills the three major components of his vision of 20th century suburban living:
– a park or public space as the central focus of the suburbs
– a parkway conceived as both a connector and pleasure drive
– residences on large acreages that face the parks and winding streets.
Many well-known Atlanta architects including Neel Reid, Philip Trammel Shutze, Ernest Ivey, and Lewis Crook, Jr., are represented in Druid Hills.
Through the years, Olmsted’s design for Druid Hills strongly influenced suburban planning throughout Atlanta. Architects who gained experience from working in our neighborhood later shaped Ansley Park, Morningside, Garden Hills, and Avondale Estates. Design elements were emulated in Brookwood Hills, and the West Paces Ferry area. More recently, office parks that emphasize green space and natural terrain have harked back to Olmsted. In fact, some scholars maintain that had it not been for Frederick Law Olmsted’s Druid Hills, Atlanta would not be the park-like city it is today.
The vigilance of the Druid Hills Civic Association has enabled Olmsted’s last major suburb to retain its original lot configurations and open spaces. The Druid Hills National Register Historic District, about 1,400 acres, was designated in two stages in 1975 and 1979. “In a national context, Druid Hills is a rare example of Olmsted’s design intentions intact in its principal features,” the U.S. Department of the Interior has attested.
The carriage house doesn't have any driveway parking but we have plenty of safe and free street parking. Our space is very centrally located in Atlanta so uber/lyft rides are never too expensive
***Accurate guest count is required by Airbnb and our insurance. Please make sure when you book the house you enter the correct number of guests including all those that will be staying overnight or visiting. For example, if you plan on 2 people staying overnight and 2 people visiting during the day, the guest count is 4 people. If you have questions about this policy, please send us a message before you book.
***Please note a $300 pre-authorization hold (not a charge) will be placed on the credit card used to book your reservation 24 hours before check-in. This hold will be released after your stay, provided there are no damages or additional charges. Once the pre-authorization is successfully processed, we will send check-in instructions to the phone number associated with your VRBO account.
1. Please make sure the number of guests in your reservation is accurate. A guest is defined as any person who visits the property for at least 5 minutes. Additional visitors not included in the reservation must be approved in advance by host. Unapproved guests are subject to a $50 fee per person and/or immediate cancelation of remainder of reservation without refund.
2. Events, weddings, and parties are prohibited. If you are not sure your reservation qualifies as a party or event, please reach out to us and explain what you are trying to do and we can determine if its possible to host your event. Good communication is key.
3.SMOKING IS STRICTLY PROHIBITED. $500 smoking fee. Burning incense is also strictly prohibited.
4. No matter what the package says, flushable wipes or anything besides toilet paper and human waste should never be flushed down toilets.
5. Please remove makeup before getting in the beds.
6. Guests must provide an unaltered copy of their Driver's License or Passport to host through Airbnb message thread within 24 hours after booking so we can independently confirm your identity and finalize your reservation.
7. Our cleaning team charge a $350 biohazard fee if they have to clean up any bodily fluids (blood, urine, feces)
8. Glitter and confetti are strictly prohibited. Our cleaning team charges an additional $100 if they have to clean glitter or confetti.
Experience luxury living in this fully equipped carriage house featuring air conditioning, a full bathroom, spacious living room, and a convenient kitchenette. Relax and unwind in the comfort of a queen-size bed while enjoying your favorite shows on the 32 inch TV. Indulge in the ultimate level of comfort and style during your stay
Guests will be able to access the entire carriage house located behind the main home. The carriage house has its own private fenced in backyard. Guests are also welcome to use the outdoor fireplace and outdoor dining area but please note these spaces are shared with the main unit.
We live down the street and can be contacted through the Airbnb app or our cell phone.
ith its beautiful linear park and parkways designed at the turn of the 20th century by Frederick Law Olmsted, the Druid Hills Historic District richly deserves its designation on the National Register of Historic Places. Today, it resides remarkably near the center of Atlanta’s sprawling metropolitan area.
Some find it hard to believe that this magnificent urban neighborhood was conceived and executed as one of Atlanta’s first suburbs. Yet it continues to evoke the past with its winding roads, eclectic architecture, and green canopy. The U.S. Department of the Interior once declared Druid Hills to be “significant as the finest example of late 19th and early 20th century comprehensive planning and development in the Atlanta area, and one of the finest period suburbs in the Southeast.
In the early 1890s, Atlanta entrepreneur Joel Hurt, who had imaginatively developed transportation, utilities, and real estate in the city, assembled a large tract of land for residential use. He hired Frederick Law Olmsted, America’s premier landscape architect, to plan his “ideal residential suburb.”
By the time Olmsted began to design Druid Hills in 1893, he had already completed many prominent projects including Central Park in New York City, the grounds of the United States Capitol, the Biltmore Estate in North Carolina, Prospect Park in Brooklyn, and the Stanford University campus. He also designed numerous park and parkway systems Boston, Chicago, and other cities.
Early in his career Olmsted planned (with his colleague Calvin Vaux) the community of Riverside, Illinois, as the prototype of a planned suburb. Druid Hills, designed near the end of his career, demonstrates the evolution of his ideas about the relation of suburbs to the city. In fact, Olmsted expressed his philosophy of suburban living in an 1890 letter to Joel Hurt; he envisioned the homeowner returning hot and tired from the city to homes “well shaded by handsome, umbrageous, permanently thrifty trees” in a neighborhood with a “pleasing rural, or, at least, semi-rural, character of scenery . . . to be permanently enjoyed.
Olmsted’s vision of suburban living was eventually realized in Druid Hills. However, after several visits to Atlanta to meet with Hurt, financial setbacks halted the project for several years. Before work resumed the aging Olmsted retired and Hurt hired the successor firm of Olmsted Brothers to develop the design proposed by the elder landscape architect.
Landscape and urban scholars have established that Druid Hills represents a major innovation in suburban design. Its central corridor, Ponce de Leon Avenue, with separated vehicular and pleasure drives, functions as the central promenade of the community. It is a linear version of the traditional village green. Each of Ponce de Leon’s median parks is distinct in its landscaping. The parks range from relatively open greenswards to nearly impenetrable woods.
In an early proposal for Druid Hills, Olmsted wrote of“roads of moderate grace and curves, avoiding any great disturbance of the natural topography.” The neighborhood’s streets follow the natural terrain and its open spaces remind us of the picturesque vistas integral to late 19th-century landscape planning.
Modern development in Druid Hills preserved the environment of parks, streetscapes, and landscapes in the spirit of Olmsted’s original concept. Scholars believe the area fulfills the three major components of his vision of 20th century suburban living:
– a park or public space as the central focus of the suburbs
– a parkway conceived as both a connector and pleasure drive
– residences on large acreages that face the parks and winding streets.
Many well-known Atlanta architects including Neel Reid, Philip Trammel Shutze, Ernest Ivey, and Lewis Crook, Jr., are represented in Druid Hills.
Through the years, Olmsted’s design for Druid Hills strongly influenced suburban planning throughout Atlanta. Architects who gained experience from working in our neighborhood later shaped Ansley Park, Morningside, Garden Hills, and Avondale Estates. Design elements were emulated in Brookwood Hills, and the West Paces Ferry area. More recently, office parks that emphasize green space and natural terrain have harked back to Olmsted. In fact, some scholars maintain that had it not been for Frederick Law Olmsted’s Druid Hills, Atlanta would not be the park-like city it is today.
The vigilance of the Druid Hills Civic Association has enabled Olmsted’s last major suburb to retain its original lot configurations and open spaces. The Druid Hills National Register Historic District, about 1,400 acres, was designated in two stages in 1975 and 1979. “In a national context, Druid Hills is a rare example of Olmsted’s design intentions intact in its principal features,” the U.S. Department of the Interior has attested.
The carriage house doesn't have any driveway parking but we have plenty of safe and free street parking. Our space is very centrally located in Atlanta so uber/lyft rides are never too expensive
***Accurate guest count is required by Airbnb and our insurance. Please make sure when you book the house you enter the correct number of guests including all those that will be staying overnight or visiting. For example, if you plan on 2 people staying overnight and 2 people visiting during the day, the guest count is 4 people. If you have questions about this policy, please send us a message before you book.
***Please note a $300 pre-authorization hold (not a charge) will be placed on the credit card used to book your reservation 24 hours before check-in. This hold will be released after your stay, provided there are no damages or additional charges. Once the pre-authorization is successfully processed, we will send check-in instructions to the phone number associated with your VRBO account.
1. Please make sure the number of guests in your reservation is accurate. A guest is defined as any person who visits the property for at least 5 minutes. Additional visitors not included in the reservation must be approved in advance by host. Unapproved guests are subject to a $50 fee per person and/or immediate cancelation of remainder of reservation without refund.
2. Events, weddings, and parties are prohibited. If you are not sure your reservation qualifies as a party or event, please reach out to us and explain what you are trying to do and we can determine if its possible to host your event. Good communication is key.
3.SMOKING IS STRICTLY PROHIBITED. $500 smoking fee. Burning incense is also strictly prohibited.
4. No matter what the package says, flushable wipes or anything besides toilet paper and human waste should never be flushed down toilets.
5. Please remove makeup before getting in the beds.
6. Guests must provide an unaltered copy of their Driver's License or Passport to host through Airbnb message thread within 24 hours after booking so we can independently confirm your identity and finalize your reservation.
7. Our cleaning team charge a $350 biohazard fee if they have to clean up any bodily fluids (blood, urine, feces)
8. Glitter and confetti are strictly prohibited. Our cleaning team charges an additional $100 if they have to clean glitter or confetti.
Property manager
Michael Harvey
Premier Host
Languages
English, Spanish
Amenities
Air conditioning
Parking available
House Rules
Check in after 4:00 PM
Minimum age to rent: 21
Check out before 11:00 AM
Children
Children allowed: ages 0–17
Events
No events allowed
Pets
No pets allowed
Smoking
Smoking is not permitted
Important information
You need to know
Extra-person charges may apply and vary depending on property policy
Government-issued photo identification and a credit card, debit card or cash deposit may be required at check-in for incidental charges
Special requests are subject to availability upon check-in and may incur additional charges; special requests cannot be guaranteed
On-site parties or group events are strictly prohibited
Safety features at this property include a carbon monoxide detector, a fire extinguisher, a smoke detector and a first aid kit
Frequently asked questions
Is Tiny House Living in heart of ATL +secret backyard pet-friendly?
No, pets are not allowed at this property.
What time is check-in at Tiny House Living in heart of ATL +secret backyard?
Check-in begins at 4:00 PM.
What time is check-out at Tiny House Living in heart of ATL +secret backyard?
Checkout is at 11:00 AM.
Where is Tiny House Living in heart of ATL +secret backyard located?
Located in East Side, this guesthouse is within 1 mi (2 km) of Fernbank Science Center and Emory University. Fernbank Museum of Natural History and Emory University Hospital are also within 1 mile (2 km). Decatur Station is 28 minutes by foot.
Tiny House Living in heart of ATL +secret backyard Reviews
Reviews
Rating 10 - Excellent. 0 out of 0 reviews
10 - Excellent
0
Rating 8 - Good. 0 out of 0 reviews
8 - Good
0
Rating 6 - Okay. 0 out of 0 reviews
6 - Okay
0
Rating 4 - Poor. 0 out of 0 reviews
4 - Poor
0
Rating 2 - Terrible. 0 out of 0 reviews
2 - Terrible
0
Reviews
No reviews yet
Be the first to leave a review for this property after your stay.