The Hideaway at Atlas
The Hideaway at Atlas is the most secluded expression of a larger collection — one of several design-forward cabins set across a working North Georgia farm, each distinct in character, all connected by the same quiet intention. Featured in Architectural Digest, the Atlas compound has become one of the region's most quietly celebrated retreats. Explore the full collection: the Atlas Pond House and the Atlas A-Frame.
The Hideaway is the smallest and most removed of the group. Tucked into the trees, away from the shared farm spaces, the landscape here becomes more filtered and still. Inside, the palette shifts darker and more grounded — warm wood textures, a lofted nook opening to the sky through a skylight, and a barrel sauna out back that extends the stay into heat, silence, and release.
It is designed for one or two people, with a focus on removal rather than addition. Less about what is included, more about what falls away.
Why Locèlle chose it:
Because it represents the power of subtraction. The Hideaway distills a stay down to its essential elements — light, heat, stillness, and nature. It leaves space for reset without distraction.
A place to land, slow down, and stay a while.
The Hideaway at Atlas is the most intimate expression of the Atlas collection — a single-bedroom retreat designed around stillness, warmth, and the quiet pleasure of being somewhere intentional. On a working farm in the North Georgia mountains, the pace here is set by nature, not notification.


Ted and Ben
Where you’ll be
Ellijay
,
Georgia
,
United States
Neighborhood highlights
Outdoor & Nature Apple picking at B.J. Reece, Hillcrest, and R&A Orchards (August–November), hayrides, corn mazes, and petting zoos at Hillcrest Orchards, hiking to Amicalola Falls, mountain biking the Pinhoti Trail, tubing and kayaking on the Cartecay River, boating and fishing on Carters Lake, trout fishing with local guides, walking the Cartecay River Trail, day hiking the Appalachian Trail from the southern terminus, swimming and biking at Fort Mountain State Park, exploring Chattahoochee-Oconee National Forest.
Food, Drink & Local Culture Wine tastings at Cartecay, Engelheim, Roo Mountain, and Ellijay River Vineyards, fresh apple cider and fried pies from the farm markets, the Ellijay Farmers & Artisans Market every Saturday (May–September), antique shops and boutiques in historic downtown Ellijay, the Georgia Apple Festival each October with 300+ vendors and a parade, Bacon Fest and the Blue Ridge Wine & Jazz Festival, vintage pinball at the Georgia Pinball Museum, holiday markets and the Merry Mountain Town Festival in winter, farm-to-table dining on the downtown square.
One cabin. One bedroom. Complete stillness.


















































