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Are you thinking of moving to Atlanta, Georgia? Relocation can be stressful unless you have the information you need to make it easy. We will give you information on real estate, schools, employment, moving companies, expenses and most all of your moving needs. Trust us to help you with the entire move. Atlanta, Georgia real estate varies from area to area. The housing costs fluctuate in accordance with the different areas and the areas economies. However, there are plenty of housing options in Georgia. We have plenty of information on Georgia real estate, Georgia realtors and housing in Georgia. With our Home Search feature you are able to search through thousands of local area homes just like real estate agents do. Find new homes, luxury homes, town-homes and condos, in addition to property and land listings in the area. Welcome to your one stop shop for over 10,000 real estate listings in Atlanta, Alpharetta, Duluth, Kennesaw, Marietta, Roswell, Sandy Springs, Stone Mountain, Sugar Hill, Woodstock and More. View thousands of homes, houses, condominiums, town-homes, and real estate listings for sale in the Atlanta, Georgia area. If you are looking for residential real estate in Fulton County, Cobb County, Gwinnett County, De Kalb County, Hall County, Douglas County, Fayette County, you have come to the right place.

Georgia is a wonderful state. Moving to Georgia can be an exciting move for anyone. Georgia entered the Union on Jan. 2, 1788, as the fourth state. Once principally a confederate farming state, known for its considerable cotton output, Georgia in the early 2000s has an economy centered on manufacturing and service industries. Atlanta is the state’s capital.
Georgia has an area of 59,425 sq miles and is the 24th largest state and has the biggest land area east of the Mississippi. The elevations range from sea level to 4784 ft. Georgia has a varied landscape. There is an Atlantic coast region, a Piedmont Plateau region, The Appalachian Mt region and the Cumberland Plateau. Rivers in the area flow both to the Atlantic and to the Gulf of Mexico. There are no large natural lakes in Georgia but dams on rivers have formed a number of large bodies of water. These include Lake Seminole, Lake Sidney Lanier, Lake Sinclair and several others. The climate, as with the landscape, is varied. The temperature has a great range from below freezing to 112 degrees!
More than 60% of Georgia’s land area is covered with forest. The forests in different areas consist of a wide range of trees. There are hardwood tress, pines, and live oaks. There are the swamp trees, such as cypress and tupelo. The Piedmont region is mainly a mixture of oak and pine, while the north boasts beautiful flowering trees and shrubs such as the redbud, dogwood, and azalea.

According to the 2000 census, Georgia had 8,186,453 inhabitants. Ranked by percentage, Georgia in the 1990s was the fastest-growing state east of the Rocky Mountains. The largest cities are Atlanta, Augusta-Richmond, Columbus, Savannah, Athens-Clarke and Macon. Georgia has a vast transportation system, which includes roads, railroads, seaports, airports, buses and waterways.
Georgia’s children were educated in one-room rural schools in the Colonial era. Publicly financed elementary schools were organized in 1872. In the early 2000s, Georgia’s public educational facilities included 1969 public elementary and secondary schools, which each year enroll about 1,043,000 pupils in K-8 and 380,000 students in grades 9-12. Private schools enrolled 107,000 students annually in the late 1990s. In the same period Georgia had 104 degree-granting institutions of higher education. These include the University of Georgia, Emory U, Georgia State University and the Georgia Institute of Technology.
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Georgia has more than 360 public libraries. There are notable museums located in Georgia, including the High Museum of Art, the Museum of Contemporary Art of Georgia, the National Infantry Museum and the Museum of Coastal History. Atlanta and Savannah support symphony orchestras, and Atlanta and Augusta have opera companies. Atlanta also is home to one of the nation’s leading ballet ensembles.
In the early 2000s, millions of travelers visited Georgia each year and the sate annually earned more than $16 billion from tourism. Georgia’s best-known sports event is the Masters, a golf tournament held at Augusta every April. Swimming, hiking, fishing, hunting, and golfing are some favorite recreational activities in Georgia. There is also the Cumberland Island National Seashore, which includes unspoiled beaches, dunes, and marshes. The state’s professional sports teams are the Atlanta Braves in baseball, the Atlanta Thrashers in hockey, the Atlanta Falcons in football and the Atlanta Hawks in basketball.
Georgia living can be a most gratifying experience. To learn more about moving to Georgia, relocating to Georgia’s many areas, or general information on relocation please fill out the form below.
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