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Constitution building, 1890 Atlanta Constitution Building, in abandoned state, 1995. Historic American Buildings Survey image.. In 1868, Carey Wentworth Styles, along with his joint venture partners James Anderson and (future Atlanta mayor) William Hemphill purchased a small newspaper, the Atlanta Daily Opinion which they renamed The Constitution, as it was originally known, was first ...
City of Atlanta designated landmark and historic buildings and sites Building/Site Name Street Address Date Designated Designation Type Also on NRHP? Academy of Medicine: 875 West Peachtree St., N.W. 1989-10-23 Landmark Yes Andrews-Dunn House 2801 Andrews Dr., NW 1992-12-2 Landmark Atlanta City Hall: 68 Mitchell St., SE 1989-10-23 Landmark Yes
Federal Correctional Institution, Atlanta; Fire Station 19 (Atlanta, Georgia) Ford Motor Company Assembly Plant (Atlanta) Forsyth-Walton Building; Fort Walker (Grant Park) Fulton Bag and Cotton Mills; Fulton County Airport (Georgia) Fulton County Courthouse (Georgia) Fulton County Jail
And at 1,023 feet (312 m), Atlanta's tallest skyscraper—the Bank of America Plaza (1992)—is the 61st-tallest building in the world and the 9th tallest building in the United States. [ 9 ] More recently, Atlanta's built environment has been getting more eclectic and diverse.
Antoine Graves (building) Atlanta Machine Works; Atlanta Rolling Mill; Atlanta Union Station (1853) Atlanta Union Station (1871) Atlanta Union Station (1930) Atlanta–Fulton County Stadium; Atlantic Steel; Augustus Hurt house
7 Stages Theatre (former Little 5 Points Theatre), Atlanta, 1940 Atlanta City Hall, Atlanta, 1930; Cheshire Square Shopping Center, Atlanta, 1967; Empire Manufacturing Company Building, Atlanta, 1939
Plans calls for a 5-story, 125-room boutique hotel connected to an existing parking structure at the intersection of Peachtree Dunwoody Road and Hammond Drive; a 5-story, 270-unit “high-end” apartment building atop a “concrete podium”; and 24,500 square feet of restaurant and retail space in three buildings.
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).