Johnson/Burgee Architects and Kendall/Heaton Associates Inc.191 Peachtree (1990). Atlanta.123Looking up at the east facade of 191 PeachtreeTop of 191 PeachtreeLooking at 191 Peachtree from Forsyth Street, Fairlie-PoplarWindows on 191 PeachtreeParking podium of 191 PeachtreeLooking at 191 Peachtree from Old Fourth Ward
References
Walker, Tom. “‘Skyscraper era’ returns in Atlanta”. The Atlanta Constitution, May 6, 1988, p. 1C. ↩︎
“How much difference a tower makes”. The Atlanta Journal and Constitution, January 11, 1991, p. F-2. ↩︎
Smallwood Reynolds Stewart Stewart & Associates.Atrium of the Georgian Terrace Hotel Expansion (1991). Midtown, Atlanta.12
Atlanta’s overall architectural quality is among the worst of any major U.S. city, and you will never find a harsher critic than I of its subpar built environment.
May it never be said, though, that I do not praise the few works in the city that are actually worthy of admiration. Here’s one: the 1991 expansion of the Georgian Terrace Hotel, designed by Smallwood Reynolds Stewart Stewart & Associates of Atlanta.
The 20-story tower was attached to the original 1911 structure—the first of dozens of luxury hotels in the eastern United States designed by W.L. Stoddart of New York,345 who had deep ties to Atlanta,678 and designed several other buildings in the city, notably the Winecoff Hotel,910 site of the deadliest hotel fire in United States history.
W.L. Stoddart. South facade of the Georgian Terrace Hotel (1911), Atlanta.
Efficient and prolific, Stoddart became a wealthy man from his many projects, although his legacy is all but forgotten today. I would argue that’s because he spent the bulk of his career sacrificing his creative talent—and there is ample evidence that he had actual talent—by lazily repeating the same designs, which became increasingly flavorless and banal.
Compare Stoddart’s Poinsett Hotel in Greenville, South Carolina;11 the Francis Marion Hotel in Charleston, South Carolina;12 or the Hotel Savannah in Savannah, Georgia:13 the 3 buildings are nearly identical in appearance and plan.
Thomas Wolfe was scathingly accurate in his assessment of Stoddart’s Battery Park Hotel in Asheville, North Carolina: “It was being stamped out of the same mold, as if by some gigantic biscuit-cutter of hotels that had produced a thousand others like it all over the country.”14
After decades of neglect, the Georgian Terrace was abandoned in the 1980s and taken over by squatters, further damaged by a series of fires.1516 Spared from inevitable demolition, the structure was initially renovated into luxury apartments,171819 with Smallwood’s soaring glass-and-steel atrium, seen here, ingeniously connecting Stoddart’s hotel building with the modern addition.
Looking at the Georgian Terrace Hotel Expansion from the west
Considered radical at the time, the design met with some local opposition2021(isn’t that always the case?), but in the years since, the expanded Georgian Terrace—once again a hotel—has become an integral part of Midtown Atlanta, and is something rare for the city: a beautiful and unique space that preserves history.
Gallery
Looking up at the atrium of the Georgian Terrace Hotel Expansion, AtlantaExposed exterior wall of the original Georgian Terrace Hotel in theatrium of the Georgian Terrace Hotel Expansion, AtlantaLobby entrance in the Georgian Terrace Hotel Expansion, AtlantaFirst-floor lobby in the Georgian Terrace Hotel Expansion, AtlantaFirst-floor lobby in the Georgian Terrace Hotel Expansion, AtlantaStairwell in the lobby of the Georgian Terrace Hotel Expansion, AtlantaGround-floor lobby in the Georgian Terrace Hotel Expansion, AtlantaConference center in the Georgian Terrace Hotel Expansion, Atlanta
References
Patureau, Alan. “Landmark Gets New Lease On Life”. The Atlanta Journal and Constitution, December 9, 1989, p. A-1. ↩︎
Patureau, Alan. “A restored Georgian Terrace will shine again in city’s skyline”. The Atlanta Constitution, May 22, 1991, p. D1. ↩︎
“$500,000 Hotel On Mims Corner”. The Atlanta Constitution, February 16, 1910, p. 5. ↩︎
“New York Architect Is In The City”. The Atlanta Journal, August 13, 1910, p. 3. ↩︎
“Atlanta’s New Hotel.” The Atlanta Constitution, October 4, 1911, p. 4. ↩︎
“City Notes.” The Atlanta Constitution, March 26, 1892, p. 5. ↩︎
“Bird’s-Eye View Of The Cotton States And International Exposition – Atlanta, Georgia, V.S.A.”, The Atlanta Constitution, November 4, 1894, p. 14. ↩︎
“Miss Elizabeth Powell To Wed Mr. W.L. Stoddard”. The Atlanta Journal, February 19, 1898, p. 7. ↩︎
“Peachtree Hotel To Cost $500,000”. The Atlanta Constitution, June 26, 1912, p. 3. ↩︎
“15-Story Hotel To Grace Peachtree; Will Cost $600,000”. The Atlanta Journal, October 20, 1912, p. 1. ↩︎
“Cleveland Firm To Get It At $925,000 And Structure Will Soon Be Fine Reality”. The Greenville News (Greenville, South Carolina), May 30, 1924, p. 2. ↩︎
“Twelve-Story Structure For City Is Planned”. The Greenville News (Greenville, South Carolina), August 3, 1922, p. 1. ↩︎
Cordell, Actor. “Georgian Terrace, Imperial: old landmarks, new breed of ‘guests’”. The Atlanta Journal–Constitution, September 3, 1987, Intown Extra, p. 10D. ↩︎
White, Gayle. “Georgian Terrace Hotel Is Damaged by Fire”. The Atlanta Journal and Constitution, October 26, 1988, p. 5C. ↩︎
Patureau, Alan. “A restored Georgian Terrace will shine again in city’s skyline”. The Atlanta Constitution, May 22, 1991, p. D1. ↩︎
Cordell, Actor. “Georgian Terrace, in new clothes, makes bow”. The Atlanta Constitution, October 17, 1991, Intown Extra, p. D7. ↩︎
Royston, Deborah. “Grand Comeback”. The Atlanta Journal, October 17, 1991, p. E1. ↩︎
Fox, Catherine. “The Art of Adding On”. The Atlanta Journal and Constitution, June 24, 1990, p. E-1. ↩︎
Fox, Catherine. “With Preservation Ordinance in place, it’s a whole new ballgame for UDC”. The Atlanta Journal and Constitution, June 24, 1990, p. N-2. ↩︎