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The Hurt Building is an 18-story building located at 50 Hurt Plaza in Atlanta, Georgia with a unique triangular shape. One of the nation's earliest skyscrapers, the Hurt Building was built between 1913 and 1926, and was the initial home for the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta .
a two-story building at 21st Street, with Broadway on one side and a railroad track on the other side; it is 12 feet wide on one end and 65 feet wide on the other end) Howard Southern Triangle Building 1926 built 833 Howard Ave. (between Howard Ave. and St. Joseph St.)
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The Equitable Building, completed in 1892, is generally regarded as the first high-rise in the city. [3] Atlanta went through a major building boom from the mid-1980s to the early 1990s, during which the city saw the completion of 13 of its 40 tallest buildings, including the Bank of America Plaza, Truist Plaza, One Atlantic Center, and 191 Peachtree Tower.
Map all coordinates in "Category:Triangular buildings" using OpenStreetMap. Download coordinates as: KML; GPX (all coordinates) GPX (primary coordinates)
Peachtree Summit is a 125 m (410 ft), 30-story skyscraper in downtown Atlanta, Georgia.Completed in 1975, Peachtree Summit is shaped like a triangle due to the unusual shape of its building lot, which is hemmed in by the Downtown Connector, West Peachtree Street, and Ivan Allen Jr. Boulevard.
It was completed five years before New York's Flatiron Building, and shares a similar prominent flatiron shape as its counterpart. It was designed by Bradford Gilbert, a Chicago school contemporary of Daniel Burnham, the designer of the New York building. The building has 11 stories, and is the city's second and oldest standing skyscraper.
Earlier buildings with a similar shape include a triangular Roman temple built on a similarly constricted site in the city of Verulamium, Britannia; [72] [73] Bridge House, Leeds, England (1875); [74] the I.O.O.F. Centennial Building (1876) in Alpena, Michigan; [75] and the English-American Building in Atlanta (1897). [76]