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Bona Allen Building

Buildings and structures completed in 1917Buildings and structures in AtlantaEmporis template using building IDGeorgia (U.S. state) Registered Historic Place stubsHistoric sites in progress
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Turner Building, Atlanta, GA (46558859795)
Turner Building, Atlanta, GA (46558859795)

The Bona Allen Building is a historic nine-story office building, built in 1917, in downtown Atlanta, Georgia.It was designed by architect John F. Downing. It later became known as the Turner Building. Turner Building - Turner Enterprises - Ted Turner [1] Formerly home to the Atlanta Police Department and Visiting Nurses Corporation, the building now houses Turner Enterprises, Inc., Captain Planet Foundation, ... Turner Building| Downtown Atlanta, GA [2] Turner Building. Office Space. Address. 133 Luckie St NW Atlanta, GA 30303 ... Switchyards Downtown Club151 Ted Turner Dr NW (55 feet NE); Ted's Montana ... The Turner Building - Atlanta Better Buildings Challenge [3] Dec 23, 2014 - Property Address: 133 Luckie Street NW, Atlanta GA 30303. Website: www.tedturner.com/about/bona-allen-building. Year(s) Top Performer ... Where Ted Turner's name will no longer be in Atlanta - AJC.com [4] Mar 5, 2019 - A piece of Ted Turner's legacy is disappearing from Atlanta ... TNT, TBS and Turner Field were reminders in big letters on buildings and a ... Ted Turner - Atlanta Magazine Anniversary May 1, 2011 - In the forty years he has been in the public eye, Ted Turner has been ... his compact nine-floor office building on Luckie Street in Downtown. Bona-Allen Building, Atlanta | 193451 | EMPORIS [5] Bona-Allen Building is a 9-story low-rise building in Atlanta, Georgia, U.S.A.. ... Ted's Montana Grill restaurant, which serves buffalo meat from Ted Turner's ranch ...

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Bona Allen Building (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Bona Allen Building
Luckie Street Northwest, Atlanta

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Wikipedia: Bona Allen BuildingContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 33.758611111111 ° E -84.390555555556 °
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Bona-Allen Building

Luckie Street Northwest 133
30303 Atlanta
Georgia, United States
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Turner Building, Atlanta, GA (46558859795)
Turner Building, Atlanta, GA (46558859795)
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Fairlie–Poplar, Atlanta
Fairlie–Poplar, Atlanta

The Fairlie–Poplar Historic District is part of the central business district in downtown Atlanta. It is named for the two streets that cross at its center, northeast-only Fairlie and southeast-only Poplar. Fairlie–Poplar is immediately north of Five Points, the definitive centerpoint and longtime commercial heart of Atlanta. It is roughly bounded on the southwest by Marietta Street, on the southeast by Peachtree Street or Park Place, on the northeast by Luckie Street or Williams Street, and on the northwest by Cone Street or Spring Street. It has smaller city blocks than the rest of the city (about half by half), and the streets run at a 40° diagonal. Fairlie–Poplar contains many commercial and office buildings from the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Local interpretations of prevailing national architectural styles, including Chicago, Renaissance revival, neoclassical, commercial, art deco, Georgian revival, and Victorian styles, are found here. The buildings of the district also represent the shift in building technology from load-bearing masonry and timber walls to steel and concrete framing. Individual buildings listed in the National Register of Historic Places that lie within the Fairlie–Poplar Historic District include the Flatiron Building, Rhodes-Haverty Building, the Empire/C&S Building, the Healey Building, the Prudential/W.D. Grant Building, the Retail Credit Company Home Office Building, the Elbert P. Tuttle United States Court of Appeals Building.

Hotel Ansley
Hotel Ansley

The Hotel Ansley was a hotel that occupied the south side of Williams Street between Forsyth and Fairlie streets in the Fairlie-Poplar district of Downtown Atlanta. It was built in 1913 by Jerome B. Pound of Chattanooga, TN and named for Edwin P. Ansley, developer of the Ansley Park neighborhood; an estimated 5000 guests attended the opening of the $1,000,000 property. The property was originally managed by M.I. and Frank Harrell.In 1930 radio station WGST moved its studios to the hotel.In 1939, the hotel had 400 rooms each with en-suite bathroom and radio.In 1952 the property was sold to the Dinkler hotel chain (once boasting "3000 Rooms in Southern Hotels") and was renamed the Dinkler Ansley, and later in 1953 (40 years after its construction) renamed again to the Dinkler Plaza Hotel. Hotel Ansley was the second downtown Atlanta hotel purchase for Dinkler Hotels (the first being the Kimball House (Atlanta) Hotel), and it was here that the Dinkler corporate office was based. On January 30, 1961, 66-year-old Carling Dinkler Sr., then-president of Dinkler Hotels, plunged twelve stories to his death from his personal suite at the Dinkler Plaza Hotel (formerly Hotel Ansley). Fulton County Medical Examiner Dr. Tom Dillon determined the death "was caused from injuries received in a suicidal jump." No note was found. Dinkler Sr. had been ill and depressed following intestinal surgery he had undergone eight months earlier and Dinkler Jr. told Atlanta police that his father had endured "considerable pain of late" and feared a relapse of his sickness. In response to inquiries from the press, a spokesman acknowledged the family was "puzzled" because Dinkler Sr. had been in good spirits the night before. While the events leading to his death appeared to be quite clear, some felt that such a public act of suicide was the last thing to be expected of someone as private and reserved as Dinkler Sr. (whose modest and unassuming nature was evidenced by the fact that he had a chauffeur, but rode in a Chevrolet).The abrupt death of its president came at a time when Dinkler Hotels was planning to merge with New York-based Associated Hotels Corporation. Dinkler holdings included the Dinkler Plaza, the Tutwiler and the Andrew Jackson hotels as well as the Dinkler-Belvedere Motor Inn and the Belvedere Ice Rink in Decatur, Georgia. Dinkler Sr. owned a hobby farm in Decatur, an Atlanta suburb just minutes from Emory University, and his ice rink was reportedly the first to be constructed in the entire metropolitan Atlanta area. Upon his father's death, Carling Dinkler Jr. became president of Dinkler Hotels. In 1964 The city of Atlanta presented civil rights leader Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. with an historic congratulatory banquet, Atlanta's first biracial formal dinner, in the hotel's magnificent chandeliered ballroom upon his receiving the Nobel Peace Prize that year.The hotel was razed in 1972 and the acre of land on which the hotel had been located was sold for a reported $7.7 million in 1988.