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The 1937 Tifton Coca-Cola Bottling Plant is located at 820 Love Avenue. The building is a two-story, brick, commercial Beaux Arts -style building with tile roof, heavy modillions under the cornice, metal factory sash-windows, leaded-glass transoms over plate glass display windows, and decorative cast-concrete door surround.
In 1994, he was commissioned to complete the Coca-Cola Centennial Olympic Mural for the 1996 Olympic games. [12] This mural measured 800 square feet, spanning across a 15-story building, and took Cole two years to complete. [13] The mural depicts portraits of various people, along with the outline of the Coca-Cola bottle.
The Council Grove Downtown Historic District is a 25.8 acres (10.4 ha) historic district which was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2010. [ 1 ] The historic district contains seventy-one buildings dating from the mid and late 19th and early 20th century.
Special pages; Permanent link; ... Building at Jct. of KY 395 and 1779: December 27, 1988 ... Coca-Cola Plant: December 27, 1988
From the front the Coca-Cola Bottling Works building is most reflective of the 1964 renovation, which features a series of full-height bays covered with mosaic tiles, speckled with occasional ...
Charlottesville Coca-Cola Bottling Works; Coca-Cola Building (Chicago) Coca-Cola Bottling Plant (Cincinnati, Ohio) Club Cool; Coca-Cola Bottling Plant (Bogalusa, Louisiana) Coca-Cola Roxy; Coca-Cola Coliseum; Coca-Cola Bottling Company Building (Columbia, Missouri)
Joseph Augustus Biedenharn (December 13, 1866 – October 9, 1952) was an American businessman and confectioner credited in the summer of 1894 with having first bottled the soda fountain drink, Coca-Cola, at his wholesale candy company building in Vicksburg, Mississippi. As he expanded this business, he created a model of bottling-distributor ...
Coca-Cola Building (Los Angeles) (1939), an example of Streamline Moderne architecture Southern California Gas Company Complex including Derrah's 1942 extension Crossroads of the World in Los Angeles Robert V. Derrah was an American architect.