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Location of Lee County in Alabama. This is a list of the National Register of Historic Places listings in Lee County, Alabama. This is intended to be a complete list of the properties and districts on the National Register of Historic Places in Lee County, Alabama, United States. Latitude and longitude coordinates are provided for many National ...
The Auburn University Historic District comprises the historic core of Auburn University in Alabama. The 14.5-acre (5.9 ha) district includes buildings built between 1846 and 1951, with a consistent red brick material palette.
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Auburn Historic District may refer to: in the United States (by state) Auburn University Historic District, Auburn, AL, listed on the NRHP in Alabama; Old Auburn Historic District, Auburn, CA, listed on the NRHP in California; Auburn Mills Historic District, Yorklyn, DE, listed on the NRHP in Delaware
Auburn is a historic college town and is the home of Auburn University. It is Alabama's fastest-growing metropolitan area and the 19th-fastest-growing metro area in the United States as measured since 1990. [6] U.S. News ranked Auburn among its top ten list of best places to live in the United States for the year 2009. [7]
Two landmarks are located on Toomer's Corner, the Bank of Auburn (now a branch of PNC Bank) and Toomer's Drugs Pharmacy, which was the first establishment in the city with a telegraph, and the intersection is patterned in bricks forming the paw print logo of the Auburn Tigers athletic teams (it was formerly painted on regular concrete). [2] [3]
The study is to look at the possibility of rerouting the highway some 4 miles (6.4 km) west of Auburn, along the route of the proposed Auburn Outer Loop. The proposed relocation would begin at I-85 at the under-development Cox Road interchange (exit 50) and would travel north 13 miles (21 km) to connect with US 280 at mile marker 101.4, where ...
[1] [2] Its grounds, covering 13.5 acres (4.5 hectares) of Auburn University's campus, include cataloged living collections of associated tree and plant communities representative of Alabama's ecosystems, [1] among which is mixed oak forest, carnivorous bog, and longleaf pine savanna.