RocaPoint Partners and The Georgetown Co. are advancing the next phase of Campus 244 in Dunwoody with plans to add 350 new apartment units to the mixed-use development. The project, which is already underway, is anchored by an existing five-story office building, retail space and a 145-key Element by Marriott hotel. The additional residential component is part of a broader vision to expand the site’s mix of uses and intensify activity on the campus.
As part of this next phase, the development team has filed an application with the town of Dunwoody outlining a larger program for Campus 244. The proposal contemplates up to 600,000 square feet of office space, 400,000 square feet of multifamily residential, 150,000 square feet dedicated to hospitality uses, and 50,000 square feet for food and beverage and retail concepts. Within this overall entitlement request, the 350 planned apartments represent a significant portion of the residential allocation and would add a substantial number of housing options within the project.
The application also leaves room for additional office expansion beyond the existing building. The next stage of development could feature a new 200,000-square-foot office building on the site, further reinforcing Campus 244 as an employment and business hub even as the residential and hospitality components grow. This potential office addition would complement the current five-story office structure already in place at the property.
Leasing performance in the existing office building at Campus 244 is described as strong, with most of the space already committed. Transportation Insight and Insight Global have signed long-term leases in the property, which previously served as the headquarters for Gold Kist. The presence of these tenants underpins office demand at the project and demonstrates continued interest from corporate users in the location.
Together, the planned apartments, the operating Element by Marriott hotel, and the leased office footprint illustrate Campus 244’s evolution into a diversified mixed-use destination. The combination of office, residential, hospitality and retail components outlined in the filing with Dunwoody positions the project to draw a mix of residents, employees and visitors once future phases are completed, subject to local approvals and project execution. While the filing specifies programmatic square footages across uses, detailed financial terms, construction timelines and tenant rosters for the new phases have not been disclosed in the available information.


