Event Room at Omenala Griot Afrocentric Museum

Event Space in a Museum · Private space

337 Dargan Place Southwest, Atlanta, GA 30310
West End, Atlanta, GA

About this space

Looking for a space to host your next event in Atlanta?

Consider the Omenala Griot Museum.

Available for any wedding, book signing, birthday party, conference, festival, and much more.

Omenala Griot Museum is perfect for your next event. Equipped with two restrooms, a full kitchen, and free & secured parking.


Prices

Sunday
Closed
Note: All prices include sales tax.
500$/7 hour
Monday
Closed
Note: All prices include sales tax.
500$/7 hour
Tuesday
Closed
Note: All prices include sales tax.
500$/7 hour
Wednesday
10:00 am – 4:00 pm
from $500 hire fee per day
Per day
10:00 am – 4:00 pm
from $500 hire fee per day
Note: All prices include sales tax.
500$/7 hour
Thursday
10:00 am – 4:00 pm
from $500 hire fee per day
Per day
10:00 am – 4:00 pm
from $500 hire fee per day
Note: All prices include sales tax.
500$/7 hour
Friday
10:00 am – 4:00 pm
from $500 hire fee per day
Per day
10:00 am – 4:00 pm
from $500 hire fee per day
Note: All prices include sales tax.
500$/7 hour
Saturday
Closed
Note: All prices include sales tax.
500$/7 hour

Capacity

Standing
up to 200
Dining
up to 150

Catering and drinks

No in-house catering
External catering allowed
Venue doesn’t provide alcohol
BYO alcohol not allowed

Facilities

Wi-Fi
Natural light
Free parking is available on-site (60 spaces)
Full kitchen
Two restrooms
Projector
Flatscreen TV
Whiteboard
Flipchart
PA system / speakers
Conference call facilities
Air conditioning
Storage space
Quiet space
Accommodation available

Music & sound equipment

Own music allowed
Bring your own DJ
Noise restriction

Accessibility

Ground level
Wheelchair accessible

Rules of the space

Allowed events

Promoted and ticketed events
Wedding licence
Temporary event notices (TENs) available

Host rules

no smoking

Cancellation policy: Standard 60 day with Grace Period

Show cancellation details

Dr. Narvie Puls faithfully taught the children of Atlanta for over 35 years. During her teaching tenure dr. Puls became frustrated by only being allowed to teach the "cookie-cutter" version of African-American history. Dr. Puls retired in 1992 and was determined to teach the true story of African-American history.

In 1993 dr. Plus, her husband Richard Puls, and her son Kevin Williams opened the Omenala griot Afrocentric museum in the west end of Atlanta. Dr. Puls' dream was now fulfilled because the name Omenala griot translates into "the teaching of the true story".


Location