Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
In 1997, Aderhold Properties began the renovation and redevelopment of the historic Fulton Cotton Mill in Atlanta into a community of 505 loft apartments named "The Fulton Cotton Mill Lofts." In 1999, during the loft-conversion construction, a major fire broke out in one of the buildings under renovation. The shell survived but the entire ...
Beginning in 1996, the mill itself was renovated as the Fulton Cotton Mill Lofts, which the developer described as "the nation's largest residential loft community". [3] In April 1999, a five-alarm fire severely damaged the east building which was still being renovated and several nearby homes were destroyed.
Construction of the complex began in 1881 on the south side of the Georgia Railroad line, east of downtown Atlanta, on the site of the Atlanta Rolling Mill. The site now includes separate phases of multi-family dwellings including for-rent apartments (called The Fulton Cotton Mill Lofts) and for-sale condominiums (The Stacks). [7]
Examples are Ponce City Market, Krog Street Market, Telephone Factory Lofts, Fulton Bag and Cotton Mills, King Plow and Goat Farm Arts Centers and many others, particularly in the Old Fourth Ward, Inman Park Village, Cabbagetown and Reynoldstown, and the Marietta Street Artery. [citation needed]
A groundbreaking ceremony for the Warren Mill Lofts project will be held at 10 a.m. Friday at 512 Trestle Pass. Plans call for the preservation and renovation of the 190,677-square-foot Warren ...
1870 Oldest house on tax records for Fulton County is at 3880 Thaxton Rd. SW, Atlanta, GA 30331 – Formerly Campbell County; 1873 Shrine of the Immaculate Conception – 48 Martin Luther King, Jr. Dr. SW; 1881 Fulton Bag and Cotton Mill – 170 Boulevard SE (Cabbagetown) 1882 Fountain Hall (Morris Brown College) – 643 Martin Luther King, Jr ...
The 1914–1915 Fulton Bag and Cotton Mills strike was a labor strike involving several hundred textile workers from the Fulton Bag and Cotton Mills in Atlanta, Georgia, United States. The strike, which involved about 500 millworkers, began on May 20, 1914, and ended almost a year later on May 15, 1915, in failure for the strikers.
Get AOL Mail for FREE! Manage your email like never before with travel, photo & document views. Personalize your inbox with themes & tabs. You've Got Mail!