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101 Marietta Street

Emporis template using building IDOffice buildings completed in 1975Skyscraper office buildings in AtlantaUse American English from October 2019Use mdy dates from October 2019
Centennial Tower Atlanta 1
Centennial Tower Atlanta 1

101 Marietta Street, formerly Centennial Tower, is a 140 m (460 ft), 36-story skyscraper in downtown Atlanta, Georgia. The building was completed in 1975 and renovated in 1998, resulting in a name change, new facade, and chevrons added to the building which increased its original 136 m (446 ft) height by 4 m (13 ft). The property is considered a class "A" office building consisting of 600,000 square feet.The U.S. Census Bureau has its Atlanta regional office in Centennial Tower.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article 101 Marietta Street (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

101 Marietta Street
Marietta Street, Atlanta

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Wikipedia: 101 Marietta StreetContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 33.7568 ° E -84.3919 °
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Address

Centennial Tower

Marietta Street 101
30318 Atlanta
Georgia, United States
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Centennial Tower Atlanta 1
Centennial Tower Atlanta 1
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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.