Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Edward Inman "Swan" House is a mansion in Atlanta, Georgia. It was designed by Philip T. Shutze and built in 1928 for Edward and Emily Inman. The house is currently part of the Atlanta History Center , and it has been featured in The Hunger Games: Catching Fire and The Hunger Games: Mockingjay, Part 2 .
The Museum was founded in 1926, and has a large campus featuring historic gardens and houses, including Swan House, Smith Farm, and Wood Family Cabin. Atlanta History Center's Midtown Campus includes the Margaret Mitchell House & Museum. Atlanta History Center holds one of the largest collections of Civil War artifacts in the United States.
The house is asserted to be a "superb example of the Regency Revival style in Atlanta". It is a five-bay central block building with one-story wings. Its Regency features include its apsodial entrance, its use of an elliptical window and an "eye-lid" dormer, and its stucco building material.
A house that looks like it was pulled directly from the set of “Beetlejuice” has landed on the real estate market in Atlanta for $1.995 million. ... Photos of the interior capture a breezy ...
Eerie photos taken by an urban explorer in 2022 show how the sprawling property was left empty after the music mogul purchased it for $2.6m in 2003 A swimming pool, chandeliers and dusty ...
The Fulton Bag and Cotton Mill in Atlanta appears as a setting in the movie Driving Miss Daisy. It also used as the principal setting for the 1992 film Trespass, which made heavy use of the then-derelict buildings and their interiors. The deteriorated condition of the property was evidenced by broken support beams, collapsed floors, damaged ...
Twilight fans are flocking to a home that was featured in the popular film series.. The Twilight Swan House, located in St. Helens, Ore., is now an Airbnb that fans can stay at.Owners Amber and ...
Street level view of the Westin Peachtree Plaza Hotel. The first building on the site was the first official Georgia Governor's Mansion in Atlanta, a Victorian-style home purchased by the state in 1870 at the southwest corner of Peachtree Street and Cain Street (later International Boulevard, now Andrew Young International Boulevard).