70 Fairlie70 Fairlie Street NW
Currently an office building, 70 Fairlie is located in the heart of Atlanta’s Fairlie-Poplar district, a commercial district that served as the South’s primary office center for the first half of the 20th century.
70 Fairlie
90 Fairlie Lofts
90 Fairlie Lofts90 Fairlie Street NW
Constructed between 1919 and 1929 in the Art Deco style, 90 Fairlie is located in the middle of Atlanta’s Fairlie-Poplar district, the city’s most intact and concentrated area of late-19th and early-20th century commercial structures.
The Alhambra
The Alhambra2855 Peachtree Road NW
Constructed in 1927, the Alhambra Apartments were built in the Moorish style popular during the early twentieth century. The building is located in the heart of Buckhead along Peachtree Street. It was rehabilitated as apartments in 1985 and refurbished into luxury condominiums in 2005.
Bass Lofts
Bass Lofts1080 Euclid Avenue NE
Located at the edge of the Little Five Points district, this building was constructed by Morgan and Dillon as a junior high school. Built in a modified Art-Deco style, its rehabilitation into lofts earned it several preservation awards, including the Georgia Trust Award for Historic Preservation in 1999.
Biltmore Tower
Biltmore Tower150 5th Street
The 1924 Biltmore Tower was originally a ten-story “apartment hotel” connected with the larger and more famous Biltmore Hotel next to it. Designed by famed Atlanta architect Philip Schutze, it is built in a classic Neo-Georgian style. Placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1980, today this historic apartment building contains executive residences.
Block Candy
Block Candy512 Means Street NW
This building originally housed the Atlanta Spring Bed Company (1900-1909) and the Block Candy Company (1928-1936). It is classified architecturally as “utilitarian industrial,” with segmentally arched windows, recessed window bays, a brick belt course, double-hung and center-pivot windows, and a brick elevator tower. The building was rehabilitated in 1994 for use as office space and added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1995.
Brush Works
Brushworks19 Hilliard Street SW
Constructed in 1905, this building housed Atlanta’s first commercial laundry, Trio Steam Laundry. Designed in a folk Victorian style, the building features load-bearing walls with a stone and concrete foundation, and an exposed brick interior. In 1946, the Atlanta Brush Company purchased the building and converted it to a factory. In the early 1990’s, the building was rehabilitated for condominiums.
The Bottle Works
The Bottle Works63 Mangum Street SW
William W. Griffin built the Bottleworks in 1916 as a manufacturing facility in the Castleberry Hill district. The Bottleworks has a flat facade with a modest amount of detailing around the windows and central doorway. The Bottleworks were rehabilitated in 1993, one of many historic industrial buildings in the area that have been converted to loft apartment spaces.
Carriage Works
Carriage Works530 Means Street NW
Originally known as the Atlanta Buggy Company, this 1903 building was an assembly plant for buggies, including painting, and upholstering. The building’s functional design features load-bearing walls and post-and-beam construction. The building was converted in 1991 into a condominium complex and added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1992.
Crestwood
Crestwood2840 Peachtree Road NW
Currently a condominium complex, Creswood was built in 1928 by Gardner Spencer Associates as “The Canton Apartments.” Constructed in the English Renaissance style, it is significant architecturally as an example of apartment dwellings in the 1920’s that did not adhere to the common style of the garden apartment facing a courtyard.