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The project was named for Alonzo F. Herndon, who was born a slave, and through founding the Atlanta Life Insurance Company became Atlanta's richest African American. [36] [37] On June 15, 2016, Atlanta Housing Authority announced a development team has been selected to create a mixed-use mixed-income community on the site, "Herndon Square". [38]
Techwood Homes New Georgia Encyclopedia; Techwood history at artery.org; Atlanta Housing Interplay; Historic American Buildings Survey (HABS) No. GA-2257, "Techwood Homes (Public Housing), Bounded by North Avenue, Parker Street, William Street & Lovejoy Street, Atlanta, Fulton County, GA", 30 photos, 4 measured drawings, 46 data pages, 6 photo caption pages, and 24 other entries for individual ...
Southern Railway's 1918 facility, named Peachtree Station but known locally as Brookwood Station, has been Atlanta's only long-distance passenger rail stop since 1970. Amtrak took over Southern's Crescent route in the '70s, which (as of 2015) continues to operate between New Orleans and N.Y. City .
Deserving Design, Atlanta Fire Department fire station #16, aired December 2008; My First Place "House Poor in Hotlanta" - March 2009-aired episode in Kennesaw (Mountain Oaks and Barrett Knoll) [1] "The Two-Bedroom Two-Step" (2008) on Belvedere near downtown Atlanta "Confounded by Condos" - a woman looks for a condo in Brookhaven, Buckhead, or ...
Underground Atlanta is a shopping and entertainment district in the Five Points neighborhood of ... (Block 1 of the 2017 redevelopment project) is occupied by ...
1840 Tulie Smith House (Moved to Atlanta) on the site of the Atlanta Historical Society; 1857 Judge William Wilson House 501 Fairburn Road SW, Atlanta, GA 30310; 1857 Hammonds House Museum in West End; 1860 Cascade Mansion, home of Dr. William F. Poole, 1530 Dodson Drive SW Atlanta, GA 30311, 1868 George Washington Collier home – 1649 Lady ...
The Gilbert House is described as significant as the home of one of Atlanta's earliest families, a rare example of fieldstone, mortar, and wood construction, and as a rare existing example of an Atlanta farmhouse. [2] After renovation in 1984, it was opened as a Cultural Arts Center operated by the City of Atlanta Office of Cultural Affairs. [2]
In 1944 May was named the first "Atlanta's Woman of the Year" for her charitable work. In 1958 the Abreus sold the house and retired to Sea Island, Georgia [11] where they lived in a beach house named South Wind, also designed by Shutze. [13] The Abreus sold the Atlanta house to Mary Phillips Rushton (1896–1984) founder of a toy company.