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  2. Georgian Terrace Hotel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Georgian_Terrace_Hotel

    The original 10-story Georgian Terrace Hotel was designed to conform to Atlanta's early trolley rail lines that met at the corner of Peachtree Street and Ponce de Leon Avenue. It was one of the first hotels built outside of the city's downtown business district in a then residential neighborhood, which had been land originally owned by Richard ...

  3. Ponce de Leon Apartments - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ponce_de_Leon_Apartments

    In 1911, the Georgian Terrace Hotel, designed by architect William Lee Stoddart, opened at the intersection of Ponce de Leon Avenue and Peachtree Street in midtown Atlanta. [1] The building was the first hotel in Atlanta built outside of downtown and took over a year to construct. Prior to this, in 1909, Stoddart had designed a large apartment ...

  4. The best spa hotels in the UK: Where to go for a relaxing ...

    www.aol.com/news/best-spa-hotels-uk-where...

    The Georgian Hall-turned-90-room-hotel has comfortable rooms with colour-pop touches, 300 acres of gardens, a cinema, two golf courses and Horto, where the likes of courgette and feta tarts and ...

  5. Hotels in Atlanta - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hotels_in_Atlanta

    Georgian Terrace Hotel: 1911 William Lee Stoddart: Declared a contributing property to the Fox Theatre Historic District in 1978. Underwent renovations in 1991. [31] Ellis Hotel: 1913 William Lee Stoddart: Originally known as the Winecoff Hotel. Site of the 1946 Winecoff Hotel fire. [10] Reopened in 1951 as the Peachtree on Peachtree Hotel. [11]

  6. Alex Cooley's Electric Ballroom - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alex_Cooley's_Electric...

    Alex Cooley's Electric Ballroom was a music venue located in Atlanta, Georgia that existed between 1974 and 1979. [1] The original owners were Alex Cooley and Mark Golob. It was located in the Grand Ballroom of the Georgian Terrace Hotel at 663 Peachtree Street NE.

  7. Norfolk Crescent, Bath - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Norfolk_Crescent,_Bath

    Palmer's design for the facade of Norfolk Crescent. John Palmer's plan for Norfolk Crescent had nineteen three bay houses (No. 16 Great Stanhope Street and Nos. 1-18 Norfolk Crescent) in an arc with a radius of 420 ft. [11] As was common with late 18th century Bath houses, the mansard roof with dormer windows was dispensed with, the facade instead stretching all the way up to the top of the ...