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2214–2230 Peachtree Rd. 33°48′54″N 84°23′31″W / 33.815°N 84.3919°W / 33.815; -84.3919 ( Knox Apartments, Cauthorn House and Peachtree Road Apartments Historic Atlanta
Knox Apartments, Cauthorn House and Peachtree Road Apartments Historic District is a group of three Colonial Revival apartment buildings, one house and an original koi pond. The complex is now known as Peachtree Commons. The complex was listed with the National Register of Historic Places on March 19, 1998, with listing number 98000248. [2]
The Pinnacle is a 22-story skyscraper in the Buckhead district of Atlanta.Built at the corner of Lenox and Peachtree Roads, construction was finished in 1998. Given that Buckhead is the financial center of both Atlanta and the Southeast, many of the buildings tenants are in the financial sector, including brokerage and consulting firms such as Merrill Lynch and Morgan Stanley.
3344 Peachtree is a 50-story high-rise building of 635 feet (194 m) [2] height located in Atlanta's uptown business district of Buckhead on Peachtree Road, the northern extension of Peachtree Street. The building is a mixed-use tower that incorporates upscale dining , office space, and 82 condominia at 3344 Peachtree Road . [ 2 ]
One Ninety One Peachtree Tower is a 235 m (771 ft) 50-story skyscraper in Atlanta, Georgia. Designed by Johnson / Burgee Architects and Kendall/Heaton Associates Inc, the building was completed in 1990 and is the fourth tallest in the city , winning the BOMA Building of the Year Awards the next year, repeating in 1998 and 2003.
Peachtree Battle Avenue (commemorating the Battle of Peachtree Creek) Peachtree Dunwoody Road (running between Peachtree Street and Dunwoody, Georgia) Old Peachtree Road (traces part of the route of the original Peachtree Trail for which the road is named; in Gwinnett County.) Atlanta St. Patrick's Day Parade on Peachtree Street, 2013
Peachtree Park is a neighborhood in the Buckhead Community of Atlanta, Georgia. It is bounded by: [2] Peachtree Road and North Buckhead on the northwest; Georgia 400 and Lenox Square and Pine Hills on the east; MARTA north-south rail line and the Miami Circle design district of Lindbergh/Morosgo on the southeast
Constructed by Cornelius J. Sheehan as a single-family residence in a then-fashionable section of residential Peachtree Street, the building's original address was 806 Peachtree Street. The house was known as the Crescent Apartments when Mitchell and her husband lived in Apt. 1 on the ground floor from 1925 to 1932.