
May 5, 2025
Although the center is now open, the Stop Cop City movement has vowed to continue its opposition
Atlanta’s controversial Atlanta Public Safety Training Center—better known to the public as “Cop City”—officially opened May 1 after a four-year development period marked by backlash and protests from Atlanta’s marginalized communities.
The 85-acre space will serve as a training ground for Atlanta’s police and fire departments.
According to Capital B News, criticism of the training center focused on concerns about the potential for increased police militarization in Atlanta’s Black communities, the $67 million cost to taxpayers, and the environmental impact on the forest where the center was being built.
The Cop City facility was first announced in April 2021 by then-Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms, who presented it as a measure to improve officer retention and morale within the Atlanta Police Department following the 2020 protests over the deaths of George Floyd and Breonna Taylor.
Immediately, a group of environmental and racial justice protestors started the Stop Cop City movement.
In January 2023, 26-year-old protester Manuel “Tortuguita” Paez Terán was killed by a SWAT unit from the Georgia Bureau of Investigation while demonstrating against the facility’s environmental impact. The incident drew national attention.
WHAT IS COP CITY? Atlanta police are trying to tear down forest land to take 350 ACRES of land to build a mock city of Atlanta on top of a former slave plantation and prison farm. The police want this mock city to test out urban warfare. Last week they killed a protestor pic.twitter.com/Q22EJyyHgA
— Olayemi Olurin (@msolurin) January 23, 2023
Despite the backlash following the shooting of Terán, protests on Atlanta college campuses, and a petition to put the facility on the ballot—backed by prominent Georgians including Stacey Abrams, Bernice King, and U.S. Senator Raphael Warnock—the city continued moving forward with the project.
Although the center is now open, groups like The People’s Campaign to Stop Cop City vow to continue the fight against the facility.
“Our fight isn’t over until Cop City falls and Atlanta reallocates funding towards services that actually keep our communities safe. Cop City may be built, but Atlantans’ resistance remains as strong and determined as ever,” the group said in a press release.
On social media, users pointed out that Cop City’s training curriculum includes protest response tactics, prompting concerns about how the facility might be used, particularly if officers are being prepared in ways some fear could lead to civil rights violations.
Wow so exciting that Cop City opened at enormous cost, both in public dollars and human and animal lives, so that they can pilot cutting edge new techniques like running people over with horses at protests!! pic.twitter.com/PtW6AtX9mZ
— Hannah Riley (@hannahcrileyy) April 29, 2025
WATCH: Today Atlanta officially opened the Public Safety Training Center, after years of controversy.
City and state leaders say this launches a new era of public safety in Atlanta. Critics, who called the project Cop City, say their movement isn’t over. pic.twitter.com/yzQyswz9Qo
— Patrick Quinn (@PatrickQuinnTV) April 30, 2025
Cop City is officially opening today, made possible only through extreme state violence –– including the murder of Tortuguita, clearcutting of forest land, and mass criminalization of protestors.
But the fight does go on. And support for those facing charges is still critical.
— pre-order no cop city no cop world?? (@micahinATL) April 29, 2025
In December, Capital B News toured the facility and saw a mounted patrol facility complete with stables, a mock city (hence the term “Cop City”), a walking trail, an education center, an emergency vehicle operations course, and a mock fire station.
Roderick Smith, the chief of Atlanta Fire and Rescue, assured the outlet that “Cop City” was necessary.
“We need this training center so that we can better service you,” Smith said. “No matter what stories you’ve heard about what’s going on or what’s transpiring here, we’ve been very transparent about what this facility means to each department and what services we intend to provide.”
RELATED CONTENT: ‘Cop City’ Opposition Accuse Atlanta Police Of ‘Constant Stalking’ By Harshly Surveilling Them