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Kriegshaber House

Beaux-Arts architecture in Georgia (U.S. state)City of Atlanta-designated historic sitesHouses completed in 1900Houses in AtlantaHouses on the National Register of Historic Places in Georgia (U.S. state)
National Register of Historic Places in AtlantaUse American English from December 2019Use mdy dates from December 2019Willis F. Denny buildings
Kriegshaber House Atlanta
Kriegshaber House Atlanta

The Kriegshaber House, now the Wrecking Bar Brewpub, is a historic Beaux-Arts mansion on 292 Moreland Avenue NW in Inman Park, Atlanta. It was built around 1900. Victor Hugo Kriegshaber (1859–1934) was founder and president of the Atlanta Terra Cotta Company as well as director of the Atlanta Art Glass Co. and vice-president of the National Builders' Supply Association.The building is listed on the National Register of Historic Places, both individually and as a contributing property to the Inman Park-Moreland Historic District but is also listed separately on the national register. The building is also designated as a historic building by the City of Atlanta.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Kriegshaber House (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Kriegshaber House
Moreland Avenue Northeast, Atlanta

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 33.762222222222 ° E -84.349166666667 °
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Address

Sherwin-Williams

Moreland Avenue Northeast
30306 Atlanta
Georgia, United States
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Kriegshaber House Atlanta
Kriegshaber House Atlanta
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Jimmy Carter Library and Museum
Jimmy Carter Library and Museum

The Jimmy Carter Library and Museum in Atlanta, Georgia houses U.S. President Jimmy Carter's papers and other material relating to the Carter administration and the Carter family's life. The library also hosts special exhibits, such as Carter's Nobel Peace Prize and a full-scale replica of the Oval Office as it was during the Carter Administration, including a reproduction of the Resolute desk. The Carter Library and Museum includes some parts that are owned and administered by the federal government, and some that are privately owned and operated. The library and museum are run by the National Archives and Records Administration and are part of the Presidential Library system of the federal government. Privately owned areas house Carter's offices and the offices of the Carter Center, a non-profit human rights agency. The building housing the library and museum makes up 69,750 square feet (6480 m²), with 15,269 square feet (1419 m²) of space for exhibits and 19,818 square feet (1841 m²) of archive and storage space. The library stacks house 27 million pages of documents; 500,000 photos, and 40,000 objects, along with films, videos, and audiotapes. These collections cover all areas of the Carter administration, from foreign and domestic policy to the personal lives of President and Mrs. Carter. The complex lies next to John Lewis Freedom Parkway, which was originally called "Presidential Parkway" (and at one point, "Jimmy Carter Parkway") in its planning stages. The land on which the museum sits was a part of General Sherman's headquarters during the Civil War's Battle of Atlanta.