I think you meant to say "Gone with the Wind"!
While the fictional plantation never existed as a single standing house in Georgia, you can find its inspiration and various artifacts in the following locations: gone with the wind city
To understand Atlanta as the "Gone with the Wind City," you must first accept a contradiction. The city that Margaret Mitchell wrote about—the slow, magnolia-scented Atlanta of 1861—does not exist. In a very literal sense, it was gone with the wind of the Great Fire of 1864. Yet, the city remains, making it less a ghost town and more a testament to the survival that Scarlett O'Hara screamed for in the furrows of Tara. I think you meant to say "Gone with the Wind"
Imagine a skyline once jagged with ambition—steel spires reaching for clouds, bridges humming with the pulse of millions. Then, a turning point: an economic gale, a climate exodus, a war’s scorching breath, or simply the slow decay of neglect. The wind, once a messenger of seasons, becomes the city’s archivist. It whistles through shattered glass lobbies, turns empty plazas into dunes of dust, and scatters forgotten headlines down subway stairs choked with weeds. In a very literal sense, it was gone